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61,052 | 61052_JUGXNC33 | 12 | 1,009 | Gutenberg | Spawning Ground | 1954.0 | Del Rey, Lester | PS; Science fiction; Space colonies -- Fiction; Short stories; Human-alien encounters -- Fiction; Outer space -- Exploration -- Fiction | Spawning Ground
By LESTER DEL REY
They weren't human. They were something
more—and something less—they were,
in short, humanity's hopes for survival!
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of If Science Fiction, September 1961.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
The Starship
Pandora
creaked and groaned as her landing pads settled
unevenly in the mucky surface of the ugly world outside. She seemed to
be restless to end her fool's errand here, two hundred light years from
the waiting hordes on Earth. Straining metal plates twanged and echoed
through her hallways.
Captain Gwayne cursed and rolled over, reaching for his boots. He was
a big, rawboned man, barely forty; but ten years of responsibility
had pressed down his shoulders and put age-feigning hollows under his
reddened eyes. The starlanes between Earth and her potential colonies
were rough on the men who traveled them now. He shuffled toward the
control room, grumbling at the heavy gravity.
Lieutenant Jane Corey looked up, nodding a blonde head at him as he
moved toward the ever-waiting pot of murky coffee. "Morning, Bob. You
need a shave."
"Yeah." He swallowed the hot coffee without tasting it, then ran a
hand across the dark stubble on his chin. It could wait. "Anything new
during the night?"
"About a dozen blobs held something like a convention a little ways
north of us. They broke up about an hour ago and streaked off into the
clouds." The blobs were a peculiarity of this planet about which nobody
knew anything. They looked like overgrown fireballs, but seemed to have
an almost sentient curiosity about anything moving on the ground. "And
our two cadets sneaked out again. Barker followed them, but lost them
in the murk. I've kept a signal going to guide them back."
Gwayne swore softly to himself. Earth couldn't turn out enough starmen
in the schools, so promising kids were being shipped out for training
as cadets on their twelfth birthday. The two he'd drawn, Kaufman and
Pinelli, seemed to be totally devoid of any sense of caution.
Of course there was no obvious need for caution here. The blobs hadn't
seemed dangerous, and the local animals were apparently all herbivorous
and harmless. They were ugly enough, looking like insects in spite of
their internal skeletons, with anywhere from four to twelve legs each
on their segmented bodies. None acted like dangerous beasts.
But
something
had happened to the exploration party fifteen years
back, and to the more recent ship under Hennessy that was sent to check
up.
He turned to the port to stare out at the planet. The Sol-type sun
must be rising, since there was a dim light. But the thick clouds that
wrapped the entire world diffused its rays into a haze. For a change,
it wasn't raining, though the ground was covered by thick swirls of
fog. In the distance, the tops of shrubs that made a scrub forest
glowed yellow-green. Motions around them suggested a herd of feeding
animals. Details were impossible to see through the haze. Even the
deep gorge where they'd found Hennessy's carefully buried ship was
completely hidden by the fog.
There were three of the blobs dancing about over the grazing animals
now, as they often seemed to do. Gwayne stared at them for a minute,
trying to read sense into the things. If he had time to study them....
But there was no time.
Earth had ordered him to detour here, after leaving his load of
deep-sleep stored colonists on Official World 71, to check on any sign
of Hennessy. He'd been here a week longer than he should have stayed
already. If there was no sign in another day or so of what had happened
to the men who'd deserted their ship and its equipment, he'd have to
report back.
He would have left before, if a recent landslip hadn't exposed enough
of the buried ship for his metal locators to spot from the air by
luck. It had obviously been hidden deep enough to foil the detectors
originally.
"Bob!" Jane Corey's voice cut through his pondering. "Bob, there are
the kids!"
Before he could swing to follow her pointing finger, movement caught
his eye.
The blobs had left the herd. Now the three were streaking at fantastic
speed to a spot near the ship, to hover excitedly above something that
moved there.
He saw the two cadets then, heading back to the waiting ship, just
beyond the movement he'd seen through the mist.
Whatever was making the fog swirl must have reached higher ground.
Something began to heave upwards. It was too far to see clearly, but
Gwayne grabbed the microphone, yelling into the radio toward the cadets.
They must have seen whatever it was just as the call reached them.
Young Kaufman grabbed at Pinelli, and they swung around together.
Then the mists cleared.
Under the dancing blobs, a horde of things was heading for the cadets.
Shaggy heads, brute bodies vaguely man-like! One seemed to be almost
eight feet tall, leading the others directly toward the spacesuited
cadets. Some of the horde were carrying spears or sticks. There was a
momentary halt, and then the leader lifted one arm, as if motioning the
others forward.
"Get the jeeps out!" Gwayne yelled at Jane. He yanked the door of
the little officers' lift open and jabbed the down button. It was
agonizingly slow, but faster than climbing down. He ripped the door
back at the exit deck. Men were dashing in, stumbling around in
confusion. But someone was taking over now—one of the crew women. The
jeeps were lining up. One, at the front, was stuttering into life, and
Gwayne dashed for it as the exit port slid back.
There was no time for suits or helmets. The air on the planet was
irritating and vile smelling, but it could be breathed. He leaped to
the seat, to see that the driver was Doctor Barker. At a gesture, the
jeep rolled down the ramp, grinding its gears into second as it picked
up speed. The other two followed.
There was no sign of the cadets at first. Then Gwayne spotted them;
surrounded by the menacing horde. Seen from here, the things looked
horrible in a travesty of manhood.
The huge leader suddenly waved and pointed toward the jeeps that were
racing toward him. He made a fantastic leap backwards. Others swung
about, two of them grabbing up the cadets. The jeep was doing twenty
miles an hour now, but the horde began to increase the distance, in
spite of the load of the two struggling boys! The creatures dived
downward into lower ground, beginning to disappear into the mists.
"Follow the blobs," Gwayne yelled. He realized now he'd been a fool to
leave his suit; the radio would have let him keep in contact with the
kids. But it was too late to go back.
The blobs danced after the horde. Barker bounced the jeep downward into
a gorge. Somewhere the man had learned to drive superlatively; but he
had to slow as the fog thickened lower down.
Then it cleared to show the mob of creatures doubling back on their own
trail to confuse the pursuers.
There was no time to stop. The jeep plowed through them. Gwayne had a
glimpse of five-foot bodies tumbling out of the way. Monstrously coarse
faces were half hidden by thick hair. A spear crunched against the
windshield from behind, and Gwayne caught it before it could foul the
steering wheel. It had a wickedly beautiful point of stone.
The creatures vanished as Barker fought to turn to follow them. The
other jeeps were coming up, by the sound of their motors, but too late
to help. They'd have to get to the group with the cadets in a hurry or
the horde would all vanish in the uneven ground, hidden by the fog.
A blob dropped down, almost touching Gwayne.
He threw up an instinctive hand. There was a tingling as the creature
seemed to pass around it. It lifted a few inches and drifted off.
Abruptly, Barker's foot ground at the brake. Gwayne jolted forward
against the windshield, just as he made out the form of the eight-foot
leader. The thing was standing directly ahead of him, a cadet on each
shoulder.
The wheels locked and the jeep slid protestingly forward. The creature
leaped back. But Gwayne was out of the jeep before it stopped, diving
for the figure. It dropped the boys with a surprised grunt.
The arms were thin and grotesque below the massively distorted
shoulders, but amazingly strong. Gwayne felt them wrench at him as his
hands locked on the thick throat. A stench of alien flesh was in his
nose as the thing fell backwards. Doc Barker had hit it seconds after
the captain's attack. Its head hit rocky ground with a dull, heavy
sound, and it collapsed. Gwayne eased back slowly, but it made no
further move, though it was still breathing.
Another jeep had drawn up, and men were examining the cadets. Pinelli
was either laughing or crying, and Kaufman was trying to break free to
kick at the monster. But neither had been harmed. The two were loaded
onto a jeep while men helped Barker and Gwayne stow the bound monster
on another before heading back.
"No sign of skull fracture. My God, what a tough brute!" Barker shook
his own head, as if feeling the shock of the monster's landing.
"I hope so," Gwayne told him. "I want that thing to live—and you're
detailed to save it and revive it. Find out if it can make sign
language or draw pictures. I want to know what happened to Hennessy
and why that ship was buried against detection. This thing may be the
answer."
Barker nodded grimly. "I'll try, though I can't risk drugs on an alien
metabolism." He sucked in on the cigarette he'd dug out, then spat
sickly. Smoke and this air made a foul combination. "Bob, it still
makes no sense. We've scoured this planet by infra-red, and there was
no sign of native villages or culture. We should have found some."
"Troglodytes, maybe," Gwayne guessed. "Anyhow, send for me when you get
anything. I've got to get this ship back to Earth. We're overstaying
our time here already."
The reports from the cadets were satisfactory enough. They'd been
picked up and carried, but no harm had been done them. Now they were
busy being little heroes. Gwayne sentenced them to quarters as soon
as he could, knowing their stories would only get wilder and less
informative with retelling.
If they could get any story from the captured creature, they might save
time and be better off than trying to dig through Hennessy's ship. That
was almost certainly spoorless by now. The only possible answer seemed
to be that the exploring expedition and Hennessy's rescue group had
been overcome by the aliens.
It was an answer, but it left a lot of questions. How could the
primitives have gotten to the men inside Hennessy's ship? Why was its
fuel dumped? Only men would have known how to do that. And who told
these creatures that a space ship's metal finders could be fooled by a
little more than a hundred feet of solid rock? They'd buried the ship
cunningly, and only the accidental slippage had undone their work.
Maybe there would never be a full answer, but he had to find
something—and find it fast. Earth needed every world she could make
remotely habitable, or mankind was probably doomed to extinction.
The race had blundered safely through its discovery of atomic weapons
into a peace that had lasted two hundred years. It had managed to
prevent an interplanetary war with the Venus colonists. It had found
a drive that led to the stars, and hadn't even found intelligent life
there to be dangerous on the few worlds that had cultures of their own.
But forty years ago, observations from beyond the Solar System had
finally proved that the sun was going to go nova.
It wouldn't be much of an explosion, as such things go—but it would
render the whole Solar System uninhabitable for millenia. To survive,
man had to colonize.
And there were no worlds perfect for him, as Earth had been. The
explorers went out in desperation to find what they could; the
terraforming teams did what they could. And then the big starships
began filling worlds with colonists, carried in deep sleep to conserve
space.
Almost eighty worlds. The nearest a four month journey from Earth and
four more months back.
In another ten years, the sun would explode, leaving man only on the
footholds he was trying to dig among other solar systems. Maybe some
of the strange worlds would let men spread his seed again. Maybe none
would be spawning grounds for mankind in spite of the efforts. Each was
precious as a haven for the race.
If this world could be used, it would be nearer than most. If not, as
it now seemed, no more time could be wasted here.
Primitives could be overcome, maybe. It would be ruthless and unfair to
strip them of their world, but the first law was survival.
But how could primitives do what these must have done?
He studied the spear he had salvaged. It was on a staff made of
cemented bits of smaller wood from the scrub growth, skillfully
laminated. The point was of delicately chipped flint, done as no human
hand had been able to do for centuries.
"Beautiful primitive work," he muttered.
Jane pulled the coffee cup away from her lips and snorted. "You can
see a lot more of it out there," she suggested.
He went to the port and glanced out. About sixty of the things were
squatting in the clearing fog, holding lances and staring at the ship.
They were perhaps a thousand yards away, waiting patiently. For what?
For the return of their leader—or for something that would give the
ship to them?
Gwayne grabbed the phone and called Barker. "How's the captive coming?"
Barker's voice sounded odd.
"Physically fine. You can see him. But—"
Gwayne dropped the phone and headed for the little sick bay. He swore
at Doc for not calling him at once, and then at himself for not
checking up sooner. Then he stopped at the sound of voices.
There was the end of a question from Barker and a thick, harsh growling
sound that lifted the hair along the nape of Gwayne's neck. Barker
seemed to understand, and was making a comment as the captain dashed in.
The captive was sitting on the bunk, unbound and oddly unmenacing. The
thick features were relaxed and yet somehow intent. He seemed to make
some kind of a salute as he saw Gwayne enter, and his eyes burned up
unerringly toward the device on the officer's cap.
"Haarroo, Cabbaan!" the thing said.
"Captain Gwayne, may I present your former friend, Captain Hennessy?"
Barker said. There was a grin on the doctor's lips, but his face was
taut with strain.
The creature nodded slowly and drew something from the thick hair on
its head. It was the golden comet of a captain.
"He never meant to hurt the kids—just to talk to them," Barker cut in
quickly. "I've got some of the story. He's changed. He can't talk very
well. Says they've had to change the language around to make the sounds
fit, and he's forgotten how to use what normal English he can. But it
gets easier as you listen. It's Hennessy, all right. I'm certain."
Gwayne had his own ideas on that. It was easy for an alien to seize
on the gold ornament of a captive earthman, even to learn a little
English, maybe. But Hennessy had been his friend.
"How many barmaids in the Cheshire Cat? How many pups did your oldest
kid's dog have? How many were brown?"
The lips contorted into something vaguely like a smile, and the
curiously shaped fingers that could handle no human-designed equipment
spread out.
Three. Seven. Zero.
The answers were right.
By the time the session was over, Gwayne had begun to understand the
twisted speech from inhuman vocal cords better. But the story took a
long time telling.
When it was finished, Gwayne and Barker sat for long minutes in
silence. Finally Gwayne drew a shuddering breath and stood up. "Is it
possible, Doc?"
"No," Barker said flatly. He spread his hands and grimaced. "No. Not
by what I know. But it happened. I've looked at a few tissues under
the microscope. The changes are there. It's hard to believe about
their kids. Adults in eight years, but they stay shorter. It can't be
a hereditary change—the things that affect the body don't change the
germ plasm. But in this case, what changed Hennessy is real, so maybe
the fact that the change is passed on is as real as he claims."
Gwayne led the former Hennessy to the exit. The waiting blobs dropped
down to touch the monstrous man, then leaped up again. The crowd of
monsters began moving forward toward their leader. A few were almost as
tall as Hennessy, but most were not more than five feet high.
The kids of the exploring party....
Back in the control room, Gwayne found the emergency release levers,
set the combinations and pressed the studs. There was a hiss and gurgle
as the great tanks of fuel discharged their contents out onto the
ground where no ingenuity could ever recover it to bring life to the
ship again.
He'd have to tell the men and women of the crew later, after he'd had
time to organize things and present it all in a way they could accept,
however much they might hate it at first. But there was no putting off
giving the gist of it to Jane.
"It was the blobs," he summarized it. "They seem to be amused by men.
They don't require anything from us, but they like us around. Hennessy
doesn't know why. They can change our cells, adapt us. Before men came,
all life here had twelve legs. Now they're changing that, as we've seen.
"And they don't have to be close to do it. We've all been outside the
hull. It doesn't show yet—but we're changed. In another month, Earth
food would kill us. We've got to stay here. We'll bury the ships deeper
this time, and Earth won't find us. They can't risk trying a colony
where three ships vanish, so we'll just disappear. And they'll never
know."
Nobody would know. Their children—odd children who matured in eight
years—would be primitive savages in three generations. The Earth
tools would be useless, impossible for the hands so radically changed.
Nothing from the ship would last. Books could never be read by the new
eyes. And in time, Earth wouldn't even be a memory to this world.
She was silent a long time, staring out of the port toward what must
now be her home. Then she sighed. "You'll need practice, but the others
don't know you as well as I do, Bob. I guess we can fix it so they'll
believe it all. And it's too late now. But we haven't really been
changed yet, have we?"
"No," he admitted. Damn his voice! He'd never been good at lying. "No.
They have to touch us. I've been touched, but the rest could go back."
She nodded. He waited for the condemnation, but there was only
puzzlement in her face. "Why?"
And then, before he could answer, her own intelligence gave her the
same answer he had found for himself. "The spawning ground!"
It was the only thing they could do. Earth needed a place to plant her
seed, but no world other than Earth could ever be trusted to preserve
that seed for generation after generation. Some worlds already were
becoming uncertain.
Here, though, the blobs had adapted men to the alien world instead of
men having to adapt the whole planet to their needs. Here, the strange
children of man's race could grow, develop and begin the long trek back
to civilization. The gadgets would be lost for a time. But perhaps
some of the attitudes of civilized man would remain to make the next
rise to culture a better one.
"We're needed here," he told her, his voice pleading for the
understanding he couldn't yet fully give himself. "These people need
as rich a set of bloodlines as possible to give the new race strength.
The fifty men and women on this ship will be needed to start them with
a decent chance. We can't go to Earth, where nobody would believe or
accept the idea—or even let us come back. We have to stay here."
She smiled then and moved toward him, groping for his strength. "Be
fruitful," she whispered. "Be fruitful and spawn and replenish an
earth."
"No," he told her. "Replenish the stars."
But she was no longer listening, and that part of his idea could wait.
Some day, though, their children would find a way to the starlanes
again, looking for other worlds. With the blobs to help them, they
could adapt to most worlds. The unchanged spirit would lead them
through all space, and the changing bodies would claim worlds beyond
numbering.
Some day, the whole universe would be a spawning ground for the
children of men!
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/1/0/5/61052//61052-h//61052-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | Why was space exploration so important? | 61052_JUGXNC33_7 | [
"it was trendy to live on a different planet",
"there was a lot of interest in life on other planets",
"they were running out of time on Earth",
"people were trying to leave the wars on Earth"
] | 3 | 3 | [
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61,052 | 61052_JUGXNC33 | 12 | 1,009 | Gutenberg | Spawning Ground | 1954.0 | Del Rey, Lester | PS; Science fiction; Space colonies -- Fiction; Short stories; Human-alien encounters -- Fiction; Outer space -- Exploration -- Fiction | Spawning Ground
By LESTER DEL REY
They weren't human. They were something
more—and something less—they were,
in short, humanity's hopes for survival!
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of If Science Fiction, September 1961.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
The Starship
Pandora
creaked and groaned as her landing pads settled
unevenly in the mucky surface of the ugly world outside. She seemed to
be restless to end her fool's errand here, two hundred light years from
the waiting hordes on Earth. Straining metal plates twanged and echoed
through her hallways.
Captain Gwayne cursed and rolled over, reaching for his boots. He was
a big, rawboned man, barely forty; but ten years of responsibility
had pressed down his shoulders and put age-feigning hollows under his
reddened eyes. The starlanes between Earth and her potential colonies
were rough on the men who traveled them now. He shuffled toward the
control room, grumbling at the heavy gravity.
Lieutenant Jane Corey looked up, nodding a blonde head at him as he
moved toward the ever-waiting pot of murky coffee. "Morning, Bob. You
need a shave."
"Yeah." He swallowed the hot coffee without tasting it, then ran a
hand across the dark stubble on his chin. It could wait. "Anything new
during the night?"
"About a dozen blobs held something like a convention a little ways
north of us. They broke up about an hour ago and streaked off into the
clouds." The blobs were a peculiarity of this planet about which nobody
knew anything. They looked like overgrown fireballs, but seemed to have
an almost sentient curiosity about anything moving on the ground. "And
our two cadets sneaked out again. Barker followed them, but lost them
in the murk. I've kept a signal going to guide them back."
Gwayne swore softly to himself. Earth couldn't turn out enough starmen
in the schools, so promising kids were being shipped out for training
as cadets on their twelfth birthday. The two he'd drawn, Kaufman and
Pinelli, seemed to be totally devoid of any sense of caution.
Of course there was no obvious need for caution here. The blobs hadn't
seemed dangerous, and the local animals were apparently all herbivorous
and harmless. They were ugly enough, looking like insects in spite of
their internal skeletons, with anywhere from four to twelve legs each
on their segmented bodies. None acted like dangerous beasts.
But
something
had happened to the exploration party fifteen years
back, and to the more recent ship under Hennessy that was sent to check
up.
He turned to the port to stare out at the planet. The Sol-type sun
must be rising, since there was a dim light. But the thick clouds that
wrapped the entire world diffused its rays into a haze. For a change,
it wasn't raining, though the ground was covered by thick swirls of
fog. In the distance, the tops of shrubs that made a scrub forest
glowed yellow-green. Motions around them suggested a herd of feeding
animals. Details were impossible to see through the haze. Even the
deep gorge where they'd found Hennessy's carefully buried ship was
completely hidden by the fog.
There were three of the blobs dancing about over the grazing animals
now, as they often seemed to do. Gwayne stared at them for a minute,
trying to read sense into the things. If he had time to study them....
But there was no time.
Earth had ordered him to detour here, after leaving his load of
deep-sleep stored colonists on Official World 71, to check on any sign
of Hennessy. He'd been here a week longer than he should have stayed
already. If there was no sign in another day or so of what had happened
to the men who'd deserted their ship and its equipment, he'd have to
report back.
He would have left before, if a recent landslip hadn't exposed enough
of the buried ship for his metal locators to spot from the air by
luck. It had obviously been hidden deep enough to foil the detectors
originally.
"Bob!" Jane Corey's voice cut through his pondering. "Bob, there are
the kids!"
Before he could swing to follow her pointing finger, movement caught
his eye.
The blobs had left the herd. Now the three were streaking at fantastic
speed to a spot near the ship, to hover excitedly above something that
moved there.
He saw the two cadets then, heading back to the waiting ship, just
beyond the movement he'd seen through the mist.
Whatever was making the fog swirl must have reached higher ground.
Something began to heave upwards. It was too far to see clearly, but
Gwayne grabbed the microphone, yelling into the radio toward the cadets.
They must have seen whatever it was just as the call reached them.
Young Kaufman grabbed at Pinelli, and they swung around together.
Then the mists cleared.
Under the dancing blobs, a horde of things was heading for the cadets.
Shaggy heads, brute bodies vaguely man-like! One seemed to be almost
eight feet tall, leading the others directly toward the spacesuited
cadets. Some of the horde were carrying spears or sticks. There was a
momentary halt, and then the leader lifted one arm, as if motioning the
others forward.
"Get the jeeps out!" Gwayne yelled at Jane. He yanked the door of
the little officers' lift open and jabbed the down button. It was
agonizingly slow, but faster than climbing down. He ripped the door
back at the exit deck. Men were dashing in, stumbling around in
confusion. But someone was taking over now—one of the crew women. The
jeeps were lining up. One, at the front, was stuttering into life, and
Gwayne dashed for it as the exit port slid back.
There was no time for suits or helmets. The air on the planet was
irritating and vile smelling, but it could be breathed. He leaped to
the seat, to see that the driver was Doctor Barker. At a gesture, the
jeep rolled down the ramp, grinding its gears into second as it picked
up speed. The other two followed.
There was no sign of the cadets at first. Then Gwayne spotted them;
surrounded by the menacing horde. Seen from here, the things looked
horrible in a travesty of manhood.
The huge leader suddenly waved and pointed toward the jeeps that were
racing toward him. He made a fantastic leap backwards. Others swung
about, two of them grabbing up the cadets. The jeep was doing twenty
miles an hour now, but the horde began to increase the distance, in
spite of the load of the two struggling boys! The creatures dived
downward into lower ground, beginning to disappear into the mists.
"Follow the blobs," Gwayne yelled. He realized now he'd been a fool to
leave his suit; the radio would have let him keep in contact with the
kids. But it was too late to go back.
The blobs danced after the horde. Barker bounced the jeep downward into
a gorge. Somewhere the man had learned to drive superlatively; but he
had to slow as the fog thickened lower down.
Then it cleared to show the mob of creatures doubling back on their own
trail to confuse the pursuers.
There was no time to stop. The jeep plowed through them. Gwayne had a
glimpse of five-foot bodies tumbling out of the way. Monstrously coarse
faces were half hidden by thick hair. A spear crunched against the
windshield from behind, and Gwayne caught it before it could foul the
steering wheel. It had a wickedly beautiful point of stone.
The creatures vanished as Barker fought to turn to follow them. The
other jeeps were coming up, by the sound of their motors, but too late
to help. They'd have to get to the group with the cadets in a hurry or
the horde would all vanish in the uneven ground, hidden by the fog.
A blob dropped down, almost touching Gwayne.
He threw up an instinctive hand. There was a tingling as the creature
seemed to pass around it. It lifted a few inches and drifted off.
Abruptly, Barker's foot ground at the brake. Gwayne jolted forward
against the windshield, just as he made out the form of the eight-foot
leader. The thing was standing directly ahead of him, a cadet on each
shoulder.
The wheels locked and the jeep slid protestingly forward. The creature
leaped back. But Gwayne was out of the jeep before it stopped, diving
for the figure. It dropped the boys with a surprised grunt.
The arms were thin and grotesque below the massively distorted
shoulders, but amazingly strong. Gwayne felt them wrench at him as his
hands locked on the thick throat. A stench of alien flesh was in his
nose as the thing fell backwards. Doc Barker had hit it seconds after
the captain's attack. Its head hit rocky ground with a dull, heavy
sound, and it collapsed. Gwayne eased back slowly, but it made no
further move, though it was still breathing.
Another jeep had drawn up, and men were examining the cadets. Pinelli
was either laughing or crying, and Kaufman was trying to break free to
kick at the monster. But neither had been harmed. The two were loaded
onto a jeep while men helped Barker and Gwayne stow the bound monster
on another before heading back.
"No sign of skull fracture. My God, what a tough brute!" Barker shook
his own head, as if feeling the shock of the monster's landing.
"I hope so," Gwayne told him. "I want that thing to live—and you're
detailed to save it and revive it. Find out if it can make sign
language or draw pictures. I want to know what happened to Hennessy
and why that ship was buried against detection. This thing may be the
answer."
Barker nodded grimly. "I'll try, though I can't risk drugs on an alien
metabolism." He sucked in on the cigarette he'd dug out, then spat
sickly. Smoke and this air made a foul combination. "Bob, it still
makes no sense. We've scoured this planet by infra-red, and there was
no sign of native villages or culture. We should have found some."
"Troglodytes, maybe," Gwayne guessed. "Anyhow, send for me when you get
anything. I've got to get this ship back to Earth. We're overstaying
our time here already."
The reports from the cadets were satisfactory enough. They'd been
picked up and carried, but no harm had been done them. Now they were
busy being little heroes. Gwayne sentenced them to quarters as soon
as he could, knowing their stories would only get wilder and less
informative with retelling.
If they could get any story from the captured creature, they might save
time and be better off than trying to dig through Hennessy's ship. That
was almost certainly spoorless by now. The only possible answer seemed
to be that the exploring expedition and Hennessy's rescue group had
been overcome by the aliens.
It was an answer, but it left a lot of questions. How could the
primitives have gotten to the men inside Hennessy's ship? Why was its
fuel dumped? Only men would have known how to do that. And who told
these creatures that a space ship's metal finders could be fooled by a
little more than a hundred feet of solid rock? They'd buried the ship
cunningly, and only the accidental slippage had undone their work.
Maybe there would never be a full answer, but he had to find
something—and find it fast. Earth needed every world she could make
remotely habitable, or mankind was probably doomed to extinction.
The race had blundered safely through its discovery of atomic weapons
into a peace that had lasted two hundred years. It had managed to
prevent an interplanetary war with the Venus colonists. It had found
a drive that led to the stars, and hadn't even found intelligent life
there to be dangerous on the few worlds that had cultures of their own.
But forty years ago, observations from beyond the Solar System had
finally proved that the sun was going to go nova.
It wouldn't be much of an explosion, as such things go—but it would
render the whole Solar System uninhabitable for millenia. To survive,
man had to colonize.
And there were no worlds perfect for him, as Earth had been. The
explorers went out in desperation to find what they could; the
terraforming teams did what they could. And then the big starships
began filling worlds with colonists, carried in deep sleep to conserve
space.
Almost eighty worlds. The nearest a four month journey from Earth and
four more months back.
In another ten years, the sun would explode, leaving man only on the
footholds he was trying to dig among other solar systems. Maybe some
of the strange worlds would let men spread his seed again. Maybe none
would be spawning grounds for mankind in spite of the efforts. Each was
precious as a haven for the race.
If this world could be used, it would be nearer than most. If not, as
it now seemed, no more time could be wasted here.
Primitives could be overcome, maybe. It would be ruthless and unfair to
strip them of their world, but the first law was survival.
But how could primitives do what these must have done?
He studied the spear he had salvaged. It was on a staff made of
cemented bits of smaller wood from the scrub growth, skillfully
laminated. The point was of delicately chipped flint, done as no human
hand had been able to do for centuries.
"Beautiful primitive work," he muttered.
Jane pulled the coffee cup away from her lips and snorted. "You can
see a lot more of it out there," she suggested.
He went to the port and glanced out. About sixty of the things were
squatting in the clearing fog, holding lances and staring at the ship.
They were perhaps a thousand yards away, waiting patiently. For what?
For the return of their leader—or for something that would give the
ship to them?
Gwayne grabbed the phone and called Barker. "How's the captive coming?"
Barker's voice sounded odd.
"Physically fine. You can see him. But—"
Gwayne dropped the phone and headed for the little sick bay. He swore
at Doc for not calling him at once, and then at himself for not
checking up sooner. Then he stopped at the sound of voices.
There was the end of a question from Barker and a thick, harsh growling
sound that lifted the hair along the nape of Gwayne's neck. Barker
seemed to understand, and was making a comment as the captain dashed in.
The captive was sitting on the bunk, unbound and oddly unmenacing. The
thick features were relaxed and yet somehow intent. He seemed to make
some kind of a salute as he saw Gwayne enter, and his eyes burned up
unerringly toward the device on the officer's cap.
"Haarroo, Cabbaan!" the thing said.
"Captain Gwayne, may I present your former friend, Captain Hennessy?"
Barker said. There was a grin on the doctor's lips, but his face was
taut with strain.
The creature nodded slowly and drew something from the thick hair on
its head. It was the golden comet of a captain.
"He never meant to hurt the kids—just to talk to them," Barker cut in
quickly. "I've got some of the story. He's changed. He can't talk very
well. Says they've had to change the language around to make the sounds
fit, and he's forgotten how to use what normal English he can. But it
gets easier as you listen. It's Hennessy, all right. I'm certain."
Gwayne had his own ideas on that. It was easy for an alien to seize
on the gold ornament of a captive earthman, even to learn a little
English, maybe. But Hennessy had been his friend.
"How many barmaids in the Cheshire Cat? How many pups did your oldest
kid's dog have? How many were brown?"
The lips contorted into something vaguely like a smile, and the
curiously shaped fingers that could handle no human-designed equipment
spread out.
Three. Seven. Zero.
The answers were right.
By the time the session was over, Gwayne had begun to understand the
twisted speech from inhuman vocal cords better. But the story took a
long time telling.
When it was finished, Gwayne and Barker sat for long minutes in
silence. Finally Gwayne drew a shuddering breath and stood up. "Is it
possible, Doc?"
"No," Barker said flatly. He spread his hands and grimaced. "No. Not
by what I know. But it happened. I've looked at a few tissues under
the microscope. The changes are there. It's hard to believe about
their kids. Adults in eight years, but they stay shorter. It can't be
a hereditary change—the things that affect the body don't change the
germ plasm. But in this case, what changed Hennessy is real, so maybe
the fact that the change is passed on is as real as he claims."
Gwayne led the former Hennessy to the exit. The waiting blobs dropped
down to touch the monstrous man, then leaped up again. The crowd of
monsters began moving forward toward their leader. A few were almost as
tall as Hennessy, but most were not more than five feet high.
The kids of the exploring party....
Back in the control room, Gwayne found the emergency release levers,
set the combinations and pressed the studs. There was a hiss and gurgle
as the great tanks of fuel discharged their contents out onto the
ground where no ingenuity could ever recover it to bring life to the
ship again.
He'd have to tell the men and women of the crew later, after he'd had
time to organize things and present it all in a way they could accept,
however much they might hate it at first. But there was no putting off
giving the gist of it to Jane.
"It was the blobs," he summarized it. "They seem to be amused by men.
They don't require anything from us, but they like us around. Hennessy
doesn't know why. They can change our cells, adapt us. Before men came,
all life here had twelve legs. Now they're changing that, as we've seen.
"And they don't have to be close to do it. We've all been outside the
hull. It doesn't show yet—but we're changed. In another month, Earth
food would kill us. We've got to stay here. We'll bury the ships deeper
this time, and Earth won't find us. They can't risk trying a colony
where three ships vanish, so we'll just disappear. And they'll never
know."
Nobody would know. Their children—odd children who matured in eight
years—would be primitive savages in three generations. The Earth
tools would be useless, impossible for the hands so radically changed.
Nothing from the ship would last. Books could never be read by the new
eyes. And in time, Earth wouldn't even be a memory to this world.
She was silent a long time, staring out of the port toward what must
now be her home. Then she sighed. "You'll need practice, but the others
don't know you as well as I do, Bob. I guess we can fix it so they'll
believe it all. And it's too late now. But we haven't really been
changed yet, have we?"
"No," he admitted. Damn his voice! He'd never been good at lying. "No.
They have to touch us. I've been touched, but the rest could go back."
She nodded. He waited for the condemnation, but there was only
puzzlement in her face. "Why?"
And then, before he could answer, her own intelligence gave her the
same answer he had found for himself. "The spawning ground!"
It was the only thing they could do. Earth needed a place to plant her
seed, but no world other than Earth could ever be trusted to preserve
that seed for generation after generation. Some worlds already were
becoming uncertain.
Here, though, the blobs had adapted men to the alien world instead of
men having to adapt the whole planet to their needs. Here, the strange
children of man's race could grow, develop and begin the long trek back
to civilization. The gadgets would be lost for a time. But perhaps
some of the attitudes of civilized man would remain to make the next
rise to culture a better one.
"We're needed here," he told her, his voice pleading for the
understanding he couldn't yet fully give himself. "These people need
as rich a set of bloodlines as possible to give the new race strength.
The fifty men and women on this ship will be needed to start them with
a decent chance. We can't go to Earth, where nobody would believe or
accept the idea—or even let us come back. We have to stay here."
She smiled then and moved toward him, groping for his strength. "Be
fruitful," she whispered. "Be fruitful and spawn and replenish an
earth."
"No," he told her. "Replenish the stars."
But she was no longer listening, and that part of his idea could wait.
Some day, though, their children would find a way to the starlanes
again, looking for other worlds. With the blobs to help them, they
could adapt to most worlds. The unchanged spirit would lead them
through all space, and the changing bodies would claim worlds beyond
numbering.
Some day, the whole universe would be a spawning ground for the
children of men!
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/1/0/5/61052//61052-h//61052-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | Why was the fuel drained out of Hennessy's ship's tank? | 61052_JUGXNC33_8 | [
"Gwayne doesn't know",
"Hennessy drained it so they couldn't leave",
"it was destroyed by creatures from the planet",
"the blobs used it for energy"
] | 2 | 2 | [
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61,052 | 61052_JUGXNC33 | 12 | 1,009 | Gutenberg | Spawning Ground | 1954.0 | Del Rey, Lester | PS; Science fiction; Space colonies -- Fiction; Short stories; Human-alien encounters -- Fiction; Outer space -- Exploration -- Fiction | Spawning Ground
By LESTER DEL REY
They weren't human. They were something
more—and something less—they were,
in short, humanity's hopes for survival!
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of If Science Fiction, September 1961.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
The Starship
Pandora
creaked and groaned as her landing pads settled
unevenly in the mucky surface of the ugly world outside. She seemed to
be restless to end her fool's errand here, two hundred light years from
the waiting hordes on Earth. Straining metal plates twanged and echoed
through her hallways.
Captain Gwayne cursed and rolled over, reaching for his boots. He was
a big, rawboned man, barely forty; but ten years of responsibility
had pressed down his shoulders and put age-feigning hollows under his
reddened eyes. The starlanes between Earth and her potential colonies
were rough on the men who traveled them now. He shuffled toward the
control room, grumbling at the heavy gravity.
Lieutenant Jane Corey looked up, nodding a blonde head at him as he
moved toward the ever-waiting pot of murky coffee. "Morning, Bob. You
need a shave."
"Yeah." He swallowed the hot coffee without tasting it, then ran a
hand across the dark stubble on his chin. It could wait. "Anything new
during the night?"
"About a dozen blobs held something like a convention a little ways
north of us. They broke up about an hour ago and streaked off into the
clouds." The blobs were a peculiarity of this planet about which nobody
knew anything. They looked like overgrown fireballs, but seemed to have
an almost sentient curiosity about anything moving on the ground. "And
our two cadets sneaked out again. Barker followed them, but lost them
in the murk. I've kept a signal going to guide them back."
Gwayne swore softly to himself. Earth couldn't turn out enough starmen
in the schools, so promising kids were being shipped out for training
as cadets on their twelfth birthday. The two he'd drawn, Kaufman and
Pinelli, seemed to be totally devoid of any sense of caution.
Of course there was no obvious need for caution here. The blobs hadn't
seemed dangerous, and the local animals were apparently all herbivorous
and harmless. They were ugly enough, looking like insects in spite of
their internal skeletons, with anywhere from four to twelve legs each
on their segmented bodies. None acted like dangerous beasts.
But
something
had happened to the exploration party fifteen years
back, and to the more recent ship under Hennessy that was sent to check
up.
He turned to the port to stare out at the planet. The Sol-type sun
must be rising, since there was a dim light. But the thick clouds that
wrapped the entire world diffused its rays into a haze. For a change,
it wasn't raining, though the ground was covered by thick swirls of
fog. In the distance, the tops of shrubs that made a scrub forest
glowed yellow-green. Motions around them suggested a herd of feeding
animals. Details were impossible to see through the haze. Even the
deep gorge where they'd found Hennessy's carefully buried ship was
completely hidden by the fog.
There were three of the blobs dancing about over the grazing animals
now, as they often seemed to do. Gwayne stared at them for a minute,
trying to read sense into the things. If he had time to study them....
But there was no time.
Earth had ordered him to detour here, after leaving his load of
deep-sleep stored colonists on Official World 71, to check on any sign
of Hennessy. He'd been here a week longer than he should have stayed
already. If there was no sign in another day or so of what had happened
to the men who'd deserted their ship and its equipment, he'd have to
report back.
He would have left before, if a recent landslip hadn't exposed enough
of the buried ship for his metal locators to spot from the air by
luck. It had obviously been hidden deep enough to foil the detectors
originally.
"Bob!" Jane Corey's voice cut through his pondering. "Bob, there are
the kids!"
Before he could swing to follow her pointing finger, movement caught
his eye.
The blobs had left the herd. Now the three were streaking at fantastic
speed to a spot near the ship, to hover excitedly above something that
moved there.
He saw the two cadets then, heading back to the waiting ship, just
beyond the movement he'd seen through the mist.
Whatever was making the fog swirl must have reached higher ground.
Something began to heave upwards. It was too far to see clearly, but
Gwayne grabbed the microphone, yelling into the radio toward the cadets.
They must have seen whatever it was just as the call reached them.
Young Kaufman grabbed at Pinelli, and they swung around together.
Then the mists cleared.
Under the dancing blobs, a horde of things was heading for the cadets.
Shaggy heads, brute bodies vaguely man-like! One seemed to be almost
eight feet tall, leading the others directly toward the spacesuited
cadets. Some of the horde were carrying spears or sticks. There was a
momentary halt, and then the leader lifted one arm, as if motioning the
others forward.
"Get the jeeps out!" Gwayne yelled at Jane. He yanked the door of
the little officers' lift open and jabbed the down button. It was
agonizingly slow, but faster than climbing down. He ripped the door
back at the exit deck. Men were dashing in, stumbling around in
confusion. But someone was taking over now—one of the crew women. The
jeeps were lining up. One, at the front, was stuttering into life, and
Gwayne dashed for it as the exit port slid back.
There was no time for suits or helmets. The air on the planet was
irritating and vile smelling, but it could be breathed. He leaped to
the seat, to see that the driver was Doctor Barker. At a gesture, the
jeep rolled down the ramp, grinding its gears into second as it picked
up speed. The other two followed.
There was no sign of the cadets at first. Then Gwayne spotted them;
surrounded by the menacing horde. Seen from here, the things looked
horrible in a travesty of manhood.
The huge leader suddenly waved and pointed toward the jeeps that were
racing toward him. He made a fantastic leap backwards. Others swung
about, two of them grabbing up the cadets. The jeep was doing twenty
miles an hour now, but the horde began to increase the distance, in
spite of the load of the two struggling boys! The creatures dived
downward into lower ground, beginning to disappear into the mists.
"Follow the blobs," Gwayne yelled. He realized now he'd been a fool to
leave his suit; the radio would have let him keep in contact with the
kids. But it was too late to go back.
The blobs danced after the horde. Barker bounced the jeep downward into
a gorge. Somewhere the man had learned to drive superlatively; but he
had to slow as the fog thickened lower down.
Then it cleared to show the mob of creatures doubling back on their own
trail to confuse the pursuers.
There was no time to stop. The jeep plowed through them. Gwayne had a
glimpse of five-foot bodies tumbling out of the way. Monstrously coarse
faces were half hidden by thick hair. A spear crunched against the
windshield from behind, and Gwayne caught it before it could foul the
steering wheel. It had a wickedly beautiful point of stone.
The creatures vanished as Barker fought to turn to follow them. The
other jeeps were coming up, by the sound of their motors, but too late
to help. They'd have to get to the group with the cadets in a hurry or
the horde would all vanish in the uneven ground, hidden by the fog.
A blob dropped down, almost touching Gwayne.
He threw up an instinctive hand. There was a tingling as the creature
seemed to pass around it. It lifted a few inches and drifted off.
Abruptly, Barker's foot ground at the brake. Gwayne jolted forward
against the windshield, just as he made out the form of the eight-foot
leader. The thing was standing directly ahead of him, a cadet on each
shoulder.
The wheels locked and the jeep slid protestingly forward. The creature
leaped back. But Gwayne was out of the jeep before it stopped, diving
for the figure. It dropped the boys with a surprised grunt.
The arms were thin and grotesque below the massively distorted
shoulders, but amazingly strong. Gwayne felt them wrench at him as his
hands locked on the thick throat. A stench of alien flesh was in his
nose as the thing fell backwards. Doc Barker had hit it seconds after
the captain's attack. Its head hit rocky ground with a dull, heavy
sound, and it collapsed. Gwayne eased back slowly, but it made no
further move, though it was still breathing.
Another jeep had drawn up, and men were examining the cadets. Pinelli
was either laughing or crying, and Kaufman was trying to break free to
kick at the monster. But neither had been harmed. The two were loaded
onto a jeep while men helped Barker and Gwayne stow the bound monster
on another before heading back.
"No sign of skull fracture. My God, what a tough brute!" Barker shook
his own head, as if feeling the shock of the monster's landing.
"I hope so," Gwayne told him. "I want that thing to live—and you're
detailed to save it and revive it. Find out if it can make sign
language or draw pictures. I want to know what happened to Hennessy
and why that ship was buried against detection. This thing may be the
answer."
Barker nodded grimly. "I'll try, though I can't risk drugs on an alien
metabolism." He sucked in on the cigarette he'd dug out, then spat
sickly. Smoke and this air made a foul combination. "Bob, it still
makes no sense. We've scoured this planet by infra-red, and there was
no sign of native villages or culture. We should have found some."
"Troglodytes, maybe," Gwayne guessed. "Anyhow, send for me when you get
anything. I've got to get this ship back to Earth. We're overstaying
our time here already."
The reports from the cadets were satisfactory enough. They'd been
picked up and carried, but no harm had been done them. Now they were
busy being little heroes. Gwayne sentenced them to quarters as soon
as he could, knowing their stories would only get wilder and less
informative with retelling.
If they could get any story from the captured creature, they might save
time and be better off than trying to dig through Hennessy's ship. That
was almost certainly spoorless by now. The only possible answer seemed
to be that the exploring expedition and Hennessy's rescue group had
been overcome by the aliens.
It was an answer, but it left a lot of questions. How could the
primitives have gotten to the men inside Hennessy's ship? Why was its
fuel dumped? Only men would have known how to do that. And who told
these creatures that a space ship's metal finders could be fooled by a
little more than a hundred feet of solid rock? They'd buried the ship
cunningly, and only the accidental slippage had undone their work.
Maybe there would never be a full answer, but he had to find
something—and find it fast. Earth needed every world she could make
remotely habitable, or mankind was probably doomed to extinction.
The race had blundered safely through its discovery of atomic weapons
into a peace that had lasted two hundred years. It had managed to
prevent an interplanetary war with the Venus colonists. It had found
a drive that led to the stars, and hadn't even found intelligent life
there to be dangerous on the few worlds that had cultures of their own.
But forty years ago, observations from beyond the Solar System had
finally proved that the sun was going to go nova.
It wouldn't be much of an explosion, as such things go—but it would
render the whole Solar System uninhabitable for millenia. To survive,
man had to colonize.
And there were no worlds perfect for him, as Earth had been. The
explorers went out in desperation to find what they could; the
terraforming teams did what they could. And then the big starships
began filling worlds with colonists, carried in deep sleep to conserve
space.
Almost eighty worlds. The nearest a four month journey from Earth and
four more months back.
In another ten years, the sun would explode, leaving man only on the
footholds he was trying to dig among other solar systems. Maybe some
of the strange worlds would let men spread his seed again. Maybe none
would be spawning grounds for mankind in spite of the efforts. Each was
precious as a haven for the race.
If this world could be used, it would be nearer than most. If not, as
it now seemed, no more time could be wasted here.
Primitives could be overcome, maybe. It would be ruthless and unfair to
strip them of their world, but the first law was survival.
But how could primitives do what these must have done?
He studied the spear he had salvaged. It was on a staff made of
cemented bits of smaller wood from the scrub growth, skillfully
laminated. The point was of delicately chipped flint, done as no human
hand had been able to do for centuries.
"Beautiful primitive work," he muttered.
Jane pulled the coffee cup away from her lips and snorted. "You can
see a lot more of it out there," she suggested.
He went to the port and glanced out. About sixty of the things were
squatting in the clearing fog, holding lances and staring at the ship.
They were perhaps a thousand yards away, waiting patiently. For what?
For the return of their leader—or for something that would give the
ship to them?
Gwayne grabbed the phone and called Barker. "How's the captive coming?"
Barker's voice sounded odd.
"Physically fine. You can see him. But—"
Gwayne dropped the phone and headed for the little sick bay. He swore
at Doc for not calling him at once, and then at himself for not
checking up sooner. Then he stopped at the sound of voices.
There was the end of a question from Barker and a thick, harsh growling
sound that lifted the hair along the nape of Gwayne's neck. Barker
seemed to understand, and was making a comment as the captain dashed in.
The captive was sitting on the bunk, unbound and oddly unmenacing. The
thick features were relaxed and yet somehow intent. He seemed to make
some kind of a salute as he saw Gwayne enter, and his eyes burned up
unerringly toward the device on the officer's cap.
"Haarroo, Cabbaan!" the thing said.
"Captain Gwayne, may I present your former friend, Captain Hennessy?"
Barker said. There was a grin on the doctor's lips, but his face was
taut with strain.
The creature nodded slowly and drew something from the thick hair on
its head. It was the golden comet of a captain.
"He never meant to hurt the kids—just to talk to them," Barker cut in
quickly. "I've got some of the story. He's changed. He can't talk very
well. Says they've had to change the language around to make the sounds
fit, and he's forgotten how to use what normal English he can. But it
gets easier as you listen. It's Hennessy, all right. I'm certain."
Gwayne had his own ideas on that. It was easy for an alien to seize
on the gold ornament of a captive earthman, even to learn a little
English, maybe. But Hennessy had been his friend.
"How many barmaids in the Cheshire Cat? How many pups did your oldest
kid's dog have? How many were brown?"
The lips contorted into something vaguely like a smile, and the
curiously shaped fingers that could handle no human-designed equipment
spread out.
Three. Seven. Zero.
The answers were right.
By the time the session was over, Gwayne had begun to understand the
twisted speech from inhuman vocal cords better. But the story took a
long time telling.
When it was finished, Gwayne and Barker sat for long minutes in
silence. Finally Gwayne drew a shuddering breath and stood up. "Is it
possible, Doc?"
"No," Barker said flatly. He spread his hands and grimaced. "No. Not
by what I know. But it happened. I've looked at a few tissues under
the microscope. The changes are there. It's hard to believe about
their kids. Adults in eight years, but they stay shorter. It can't be
a hereditary change—the things that affect the body don't change the
germ plasm. But in this case, what changed Hennessy is real, so maybe
the fact that the change is passed on is as real as he claims."
Gwayne led the former Hennessy to the exit. The waiting blobs dropped
down to touch the monstrous man, then leaped up again. The crowd of
monsters began moving forward toward their leader. A few were almost as
tall as Hennessy, but most were not more than five feet high.
The kids of the exploring party....
Back in the control room, Gwayne found the emergency release levers,
set the combinations and pressed the studs. There was a hiss and gurgle
as the great tanks of fuel discharged their contents out onto the
ground where no ingenuity could ever recover it to bring life to the
ship again.
He'd have to tell the men and women of the crew later, after he'd had
time to organize things and present it all in a way they could accept,
however much they might hate it at first. But there was no putting off
giving the gist of it to Jane.
"It was the blobs," he summarized it. "They seem to be amused by men.
They don't require anything from us, but they like us around. Hennessy
doesn't know why. They can change our cells, adapt us. Before men came,
all life here had twelve legs. Now they're changing that, as we've seen.
"And they don't have to be close to do it. We've all been outside the
hull. It doesn't show yet—but we're changed. In another month, Earth
food would kill us. We've got to stay here. We'll bury the ships deeper
this time, and Earth won't find us. They can't risk trying a colony
where three ships vanish, so we'll just disappear. And they'll never
know."
Nobody would know. Their children—odd children who matured in eight
years—would be primitive savages in three generations. The Earth
tools would be useless, impossible for the hands so radically changed.
Nothing from the ship would last. Books could never be read by the new
eyes. And in time, Earth wouldn't even be a memory to this world.
She was silent a long time, staring out of the port toward what must
now be her home. Then she sighed. "You'll need practice, but the others
don't know you as well as I do, Bob. I guess we can fix it so they'll
believe it all. And it's too late now. But we haven't really been
changed yet, have we?"
"No," he admitted. Damn his voice! He'd never been good at lying. "No.
They have to touch us. I've been touched, but the rest could go back."
She nodded. He waited for the condemnation, but there was only
puzzlement in her face. "Why?"
And then, before he could answer, her own intelligence gave her the
same answer he had found for himself. "The spawning ground!"
It was the only thing they could do. Earth needed a place to plant her
seed, but no world other than Earth could ever be trusted to preserve
that seed for generation after generation. Some worlds already were
becoming uncertain.
Here, though, the blobs had adapted men to the alien world instead of
men having to adapt the whole planet to their needs. Here, the strange
children of man's race could grow, develop and begin the long trek back
to civilization. The gadgets would be lost for a time. But perhaps
some of the attitudes of civilized man would remain to make the next
rise to culture a better one.
"We're needed here," he told her, his voice pleading for the
understanding he couldn't yet fully give himself. "These people need
as rich a set of bloodlines as possible to give the new race strength.
The fifty men and women on this ship will be needed to start them with
a decent chance. We can't go to Earth, where nobody would believe or
accept the idea—or even let us come back. We have to stay here."
She smiled then and moved toward him, groping for his strength. "Be
fruitful," she whispered. "Be fruitful and spawn and replenish an
earth."
"No," he told her. "Replenish the stars."
But she was no longer listening, and that part of his idea could wait.
Some day, though, their children would find a way to the starlanes
again, looking for other worlds. With the blobs to help them, they
could adapt to most worlds. The unchanged spirit would lead them
through all space, and the changing bodies would claim worlds beyond
numbering.
Some day, the whole universe would be a spawning ground for the
children of men!
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/1/0/5/61052//61052-h//61052-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | Why did Gwayne decide that they all had to stay? | 61052_JUGXNC33_9 | [
"to discover all of the secrets on the planet",
"because it was the best chance at human survival",
"because everyone outside the hull is beyond saving",
"to try to save Hennessy and his crew"
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61,053 | 61053_LE36BG9H | 12 | 1,009 | Gutenberg | Tolliver's Orbit | 1958.0 | Fyfe, H. B. (Horace Bowne) | Ganymede (Satellite) -- Fiction; PS; Short stories; Science fiction; Embezzlement -- Fiction; Man-woman relationships -- Fiction | TOLLIVER'S ORBIT
was slow—but it wasn't boring. And
it would get you there—as long as
you weren't going anywhere anyhow!
By H. B. FYFE
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of If Science Fiction, September 1961.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
Johnny Tolliver scowled across the desk at his superior. His black
thatch was ruffled, as if he had been rubbed the wrong way.
"I didn't ask you to cut out your own graft, did I?" he demanded.
"Just don't try to sucker me in on the deal. I know you're operating
something sneaky all through the colony, but it's not for me."
The big moon-face of Jeffers, manager of the Ganymedan branch of
Koslow Spaceways, glowered back at him. Its reddish tinge brightened
the office noticeably, for such of Ganymede's surface as could be seen
through the transparent dome outside the office window was cold, dim
and rugged. The glowing semi-disk of Jupiter was more than half a
million miles distant.
"Try not to be simple—for once!" growled Jeffers. "A little percentage
here and there on the cargoes never shows by the time figures get back
to Earth. The big jets in the home office don't care. They count it on
the estimates."
"You asked any of them lately?" Tolliver prodded.
"Now,
listen
! Maybe they live soft back on Earth since the mines
and the Jovian satellite colonies grew; but they were out here in the
beginning, most of them.
They
know what it's like. D'ya think they
don't expect us to make what we can on the side?"
Tolliver rammed his fists into the side pockets of his loose blue
uniform jacket. He shook his head, grinning resignedly.
"You just don't listen to
me
," he complained. "You know I took this
piloting job just to scrape up money for an advanced engineering degree
back on Earth. I only want to finish my year—not get into something I
can't quit."
Jeffers fidgeted in his chair, causing it to creak under the bulk of
his body. It had been built for Ganymede, but not for Jeffers.
"Aw, it's not like that," the manager muttered. "You can ease out
whenever your contract's up. Think we'd bend a good orbit on your
account?"
Tolliver stared at him silently, but the other had difficulty meeting
his eye.
"All right, then!" Jeffers snapped after a long moment. "If you want it
that way, either you get in line with us or you're through right now!"
"You can't fire me," retorted the pilot pityingly. "I came out here
on a contract. Five hundred credits a week base pay, five hundred for
hazardous duty. How else can you get pilots out to Jupiter?"
"Okay I can't fire you legally—as long as you report for work,"
grumbled Jeffers, by now a shade more ruddy. "We'll see how long you
keep reporting. Because you're off the Callisto run as of now! Sit in
your quarters and see if the company calls
that
hazardous duty!"
"Doesn't matter," answered Tolliver, grinning amiably. "The hazardous
part is just being on the same moon as you for the next six months."
He winked and walked out, deliberately leaving the door open behind him
so as to enjoy the incoherent bellowing that followed him.
Looks like a little vacation
, he thought, unperturbed.
He'll come
around. I just want to get back to Earth with a clean rep. Let Jeffers
and his gang steal the Great Red Spot off Jupiter if they like! It's
their risk.
Tolliver began to have his doubts the next day; which was "Tuesday"
by the arbitrary calender constructed to match Ganymede's week-long
journey around Jupiter.
His contract guaranteed a pilot's rating, but someone had neglected to
specify the type of craft to be piloted.
On the bulletin board, Tolliver's name stood out beside the number
of one of the airtight tractors used between the dome city and the
spaceport, or for hauling cross-country to one of the mining domes.
He soon found that there was nothing for him to do but hang around the
garage in case a spaceship should land. The few runs to other domes
seemed to be assigned to drivers with larger vehicles.
The following day was just as boring, and the next more so. He swore
when he found the assignment unchanged by "Friday." Even the reflection
that it was payday was small consolation.
"Hey, Johnny!" said a voice at his shoulder. "The word is that they're
finally gonna trust you to take that creeper outside."
Tolliver turned to see Red Higgins, a regular driver.
"What do you mean?"
"They say some home-office relative is coming in on the
Javelin
."
"What's wrong with that?" asked Tolliver. "Outside of the way they keep
handing out soft jobs to nephews, I mean."
"Aah, these young punks just come out for a few months so they can go
back to Earth making noises like spacemen. Sometimes there's no reason
but them for sending a ship back with a crew instead of in an economy
orbit. Wait till you see the baggage you'll have to load!"
Later in the day-period, Tolliver recalled this warning. Under a
portable, double-chambered plastic dome blown up outside the ship's
airlock, a crewman helped him load two trunks and a collection of bags
into the tractor. He was struggling to suppress a feeling of outrage at
the waste of fuel involved when the home-office relative emerged.
She was about five feet four and moved as if she walked lightly even
in stronger gravity than Ganymede's. Her trim coiffure was a shade too
blonde which served to set off both the blue of her eyes and the cap
apparently won from one of the pilots. She wore gray slacks and a heavy
sweater, like a spacer.
"Sorry to keep you waiting," she said, sliding into the seat beside
Tolliver. "By the way, just call me Betty."
"Sure," agreed Tolliver thinking,
Ohmigod! Trying already to be just
one of the gang, instead of Lady Betty! Is her old man the treasurer,
or does he just know where bodies are buried?
"They were making dates," said the girl. "Were they ribbing me, or is
it true that none of the four of them goes back with the ship?"
"It's true enough," Tolliver assured her. "We need people out here, and
it costs a lot to make the trip. They found they could send back loaded
ships by 'automatic' flight—that is, a long, slow, economical orbit
and automatic signalling equipment. Then they're boarded approaching
Earth's orbit and landed by pilots who don't have to waste their time
making the entire trip."
He followed the signals of a spacesuited member of the port staff and
maneuvered out of the dome. Then he headed the tractor across the
frozen surface of Ganymede toward the permanent domes of the city.
"How is it here?" asked the girl. "They told me it's pretty rough."
"What did you expect?" asked Tolliver. "Square dances with champagne?"
"Don't be silly. Daddy says I'm supposed to learn traffic routing and
the business management of a local branch. They probably won't let me
see much else."
"You never can tell," said the pilot, yielding to temptation. "Any
square inch of Ganymede is likely to be dangerous."
I'll be sorry later
, he reflected,
but if Jeffers keeps me jockeying
this creeper, I'm entitled to some amusement. And Daddy's little girl
is trying too hard to sound like one of the gang.
"Yeah," he went on, "right now, I don't do a thing but drive missions
from the city to the spaceport."
"Missions! You call driving a mile or so a
mission
?"
Tolliver pursed his lips and put on a shrewd expression.
"Don't sneer at Ganymede, honey!" he warned portentously. "Many a
man who did isn't here today. Take the fellow who used to drive this
mission!"
"You can call me Betty. What happened to him?"
"I'll tell you some day," Tolliver promised darkly. "This moon can
strike like a vicious animal."
"Oh, they told me there was nothing alive on Ganymede!"
"I was thinking of the mountain slides," said the pilot. "Not to
mention volcanic puffballs that pop out through the frozen crust where
you'd least expect. That's why I draw such high pay for driving an
unarmored tractor."
"You use armored vehicles?" gasped the girl.
She was now sitting bolt upright in the swaying seat. Tolliver
deliberately dipped one track into an icy hollow. In the light gravity,
the tractor responded with a weird, floating lurch.
"Those slides," he continued. "Ganymede's only about the size of
Mercury, something like 3200 miles in diameter, so things get heaped up
at steep angles. When the rock and ice are set to sliding, they come
at you practically horizontally. It doesn't need much start, and it
barrels on for a long way before there's enough friction to stop it. If
you're in the way—well, it's just too bad!"
Say, that's pretty good!
he told himself.
What a liar you are,
Tolliver!
He enlarged upon other dangers to be encountered on the satellite,
taking care to impress the newcomer with the daredeviltry of John
Tolliver, driver of "missions" across the menacing wastes between dome
and port.
In the end, he displayed conclusive evidence in the form of the weekly
paycheck he had received that morning. It did not, naturally, indicate
he was drawing the salary of a space pilot. Betty looked thoughtful.
"I'm retiring in six months if I'm still alive," he said bravely,
edging the tractor into the airlock at their destination. "Made my
pile. No use pushing your luck too far."
His charge seemed noticeably subdued, but cleared her throat to request
that Tolliver guide her to the office of the manager. She trailed along
as if with a burden of worry upon her mind, and the pilot's conscience
prickled.
I'll get hold of her after Jeffers is through and set her straight
,
he resolved.
It isn't really funny if the sucker is too ignorant to
know better.
Remembering his grudge against the manager, he took pleasure in walking
in without knocking.
"Jeffers," he announced, "this is ... just call her Betty."
The manager's jowled features twisted into an expression of welcome as
jovial as that of a hungry crocodile.
"Miss Koslow!" he beamed, like a politician the day before the voting.
"It certainly is an honor to have you on Ganymede with us! That's all,
Tolliver, you can go. Yes, indeed! Mr. Koslow—the president, that is:
your father—sent a message about you. I repeat, it will be an honor to
show you the ropes. Did you want something else, Tolliver?"
"Never mind him, Mr. Jeffers," snapped the girl, in a tone new to
Tolliver. "We won't be working together, I'm afraid. You've already had
enough rope."
Jeffers seemed to stagger standing still behind his desk. His loose
lips twitched uncertainly, and he looked questioningly to Tolliver. The
pilot stared at Betty, trying to recall pictures he had seen of the
elder Koslow. He was also trying to remember some of the lies he had
told en route from the spaceport.
"Wh-wh-what do you mean, Miss Koslow?" Jeffers stammered.
He darted a suspicious glare at Tolliver.
"Mr. Jeffers," said the girl, "I may look like just another spoiled
little blonde, but the best part of this company will be mine someday.
I was not allowed to reach twenty-two without learning something about
holding on to it."
Tolliver blinked. He had taken her for three or four years older.
Jeffers now ignored him, intent upon the girl.
"Daddy gave me the title of tenth vice-president mostly as a joke, when
he told me to find out what was wrong with operations on Ganymede.
I have
some
authority, though. And you look like the source of the
trouble to me."
"You can't prove anything," declared Jeffers hoarsely.
"Oh, can't I? I've already seen certain evidence, and the rest won't
be hard to find. Where are your books, Mr. Jeffers? You're as good as
fired!"
The manager dropped heavily to his chair. He stared unbelievingly at
Betty, and Tolliver thought he muttered something about "just landed."
After a moment, the big man came out of his daze enough to stab an
intercom button with his finger. He growled at someone on the other end
to come in without a countdown.
Tolliver, hardly thinking about it, expected the someone to be
a secretary, but it turned out to be three members of Jeffers'
headquarters staff. He recognized one as Rawlins, a warehouse chief,
and guessed that the other two might be his assistants. They were large
enough.
"No stupid questions!" Jeffers ordered. "Lock these two up while I
think!"
Tolliver started for the door immediately, but was blocked off.
"Where should we lock—?" the fellow paused to ask.
Tolliver brought up a snappy uppercut to the man's chin, feeling that
it was a poor time to engage Jeffers in fruitless debate.
In the gravity of Ganymede, the man was knocked off balance as much as
he was hurt, and sprawled on the floor.
"I
told
you no questions!" bawled Jeffers.
The fallen hero, upon arising, had to content himself with grabbing
Betty. The others were swarming over Tolliver. Jeffers came around his
desk to assist.
Tolliver found himself dumped on the floor of an empty office in the
adjoining warehouse building. It seemed to him that a long time had
been spent in carrying him there.
He heard an indignant yelp, and realized that the girl had been pitched
in with him. The snapping of a lock was followed by the tramp of
departing footsteps and then by silence.
After considering the idea a few minutes, Tolliver managed to sit up.
He had his wind back. But when he fingered the swelling lump behind his
left ear, a sensation befuddled him momentarily.
"I'm sorry about that," murmured Betty.
Tolliver grunted. Sorrow would not reduce the throbbing, nor was he
in a mood to undertake an explanation of why Jeffers did not like him
anyway.
"I think perhaps you're going to have a shiner," remarked the girl.
"Thanks for letting me know in time," said Tolliver.
The skin under his right eye did feel a trifle tight, but he could see
well enough. The abandoned and empty look of the office worried him.
"What can we use to get out of here?" he mused.
"Why should we try?" asked the girl. "What can he do?"
"You'd be surprised. How did you catch on to him so soon?"
"Your paycheck," said Betty. "As soon as I saw that ridiculous amount,
it was obvious that there was gross mismanagement here. It had to be
Jeffers."
Tolliver groaned.
"Then, on the way over here, he as good as admitted everything. You
didn't hear him, I guess. Well, he seemed to be caught all unaware, and
seemed to blame you for it."
"Sure!" grumbled the pilot. "He thinks I told you he was grafting or
smuggling, or whatever he has going for him here. That's why I want to
get out of here—before I find myself involved in some kind of fatal
accident!"
"What do you know about the crooked goings-on here?" asked Betty after
a startled pause.
"Nothing," retorted Tolliver. "Except that there are some. There are
rumors, and I had a halfway invitation to join in. I think he sells
things to the mining colonies and makes a double profit for himself by
claiming the stuff lost in transit. You didn't think you scared him
that bad over a little slack managing?"
The picture of Jeffers huddled with his partners in the headquarters
building, plotting the next move, brought Tolliver to his feet.
There was nothing in the unused office but an old table and half a
dozen plastic crates. He saw that the latter contained a mess of
discarded records.
"Better than nothing at all," he muttered.
He ripped out a double handful of the forms, crumpled them into a pile
at the doorway, and pulled out his cigarette lighter.
"What do you think you're up to?" asked Betty with some concern.
"This plastic is tough," said Tolliver, "but it will bend with enough
heat. If I can kick loose a hinge, maybe we can fool them yet!"
He got a little fire going, and fed it judiciously with more papers.
"You know," he reflected, "it might be better for you to stay here.
He can't do much about you, and you don't have any real proof just by
yourself."
"I'll come along with you, Tolliver," said the girl.
"No, I don't think you'd better."
"Why not?"
"Well ... after all, what would he dare do? Arranging an accident to
the daughter of the boss isn't something that he can pull off without a
lot of investigation. He'd be better off just running for it."
"Let's not argue about it," said Betty, a trifle pale but looking
determined. "I'm coming with you. Is that stuff getting soft yet?"
Tolliver kicked at the edge of the door experimentally. It seemed to
give slightly, so he knocked the burning papers aside and drove his
heel hard at the corner below the hinge.
The plastic yielded.
"That's enough already, Tolliver," whispered the girl. "We can crawl
through!"
Hardly sixty seconds later, he led her into a maze of stacked crates
in the warehouse proper. The building was not much longer than wide,
for each of the structures in the colony had its own hemispherical
emergency dome of transparent plastic. They soon reached the other end.
"I think there's a storeroom for spacesuits around here," muttered
Tolliver.
"Why do you want them?"
"Honey, I just don't think it will be so easy to lay hands on a
tractor. I bet Jeffers already phoned the garage and all the airlocks
with some good lie that will keep me from getting through."
After a brief search, he located the spacesuits. Many, evidently
intended for replacements, had never been unpacked, but there were a
dozen or so serviced and standing ready for emergencies. He showed
Betty how to climb into one, and checked her seals and valves after
donning a suit himself.
"That switch under your chin," he said, touching helmets so she could
hear him. "Leave it turned off.
Anybody
might be listening!"
He led the way out a rear door of the warehouse. With the heavy knife
that was standard suit equipment, he deliberately slashed a four-foot
square section out of the dome. He motioned to Betty to step through,
then trailed along with the plastic under his arm.
He caught up and touched helmets again.
"Just act as if you're on business," he told her. "For all anyone can
see, we might be inspecting the dome."
"Where are you going?" asked Betty.
"Right through the wall, and then head for the nearest mine. Jeffers
can't be running
everything
!"
"Is there any way to get to a TV?" asked the girl. "I ... uh ... Daddy
gave me a good number to call if I needed help."
"How good?"
"Pretty official, as a matter of fact."
"All right," Tolliver decided. "We'll try the ship you just came in on.
They might have finished refueling and left her empty."
They had to cross one open lane between buildings, and Tolliver was
very conscious of moving figures in the distance; but no one seemed to
look their way.
Reaching the foot of the main dome over the establishment, he glanced
furtively about, then plunged his knife into the transparent material.
From the corner of his eye, he thought he saw Betty make a startled
gesture, but he had his work cut out for him. This was tougher than the
interior dome.
Finally, he managed to saw a ragged slit through which they could
squeeze. There was room to walk between the inner and outer layer, so
he moved along a few yards. A little dust began to blow about where
they had gone through. He touched helmets once more.
"This time," he said, "the air will really start to blow, so get
through as fast as you can. If I can slap this piece of plastic over
the rip, it may stow down the loss of pressure enough to give us quite
a lead before the alarms go off."
Through the faceplates, he saw the girl nod, wide-eyed.
As soon as he plunged the knife into the outer layer, he could see
dusty, moist air puffing out into the near-vacuum of Ganymede's
surface. Fumbling, he cut as fast as he could and shoved Betty through
the small opening.
Squeezing through in his turn, he left one arm inside to spread the
plastic sheet as best he could. The internal air pressure slapped it
against the inside of the dome as if glued, although it immediately
showed an alarming tendency to balloon through the ruptured spot.
They'll find it, all right
, Tolliver reminded himself.
Don't be here
when they do!
He grabbed Betty by the wrist of her spacesuit and headed for the
nearest outcropping of rock.
It promptly developed that she had something to learn about running on
ice in such low gravity. Until they were out of direct line of sight
from the settlement, Tolliver simply dragged her.
Then, when he decided that it was safe enough to pause and tell her
how to manage better, the sight of her outraged scowl through the
face-plate made him think better of it.
By the time we reach the ship, she'll have learned
, he consoled
himself.
It was a long mile, even at the pace human muscles could achieve on
Ganymede. They took one short rest, during which Tolliver was forced
to explain away the dangers of slides and volcanic puffballs. He
admitted to having exaggerated slightly. In the end, they reached the
spaceship.
There seemed to be no one about. The landing dome had been collapsed
and stored, and the ship's airlock port was closed.
"That's all right," Tolliver told the girl. "We can get in with no
trouble."
It was when he looked about to make sure that they were unobserved that
he caught a glimpse of motion back toward the city. He peered at the
spot through the dim light. After a moment, he definitely recognized
the outline of a tractor breasting a rise in the ground and tilting
downward again.
"In fact, we
have
to get in to stay out of trouble," he said to Betty.
He located the switch-cover in the hull, opened it and activated the
mechanism that swung open the airlock and extended the ladder.
It took him considerable scrambling to boost the girl up the ladder and
inside, but he managed. They passed through the airlock, fretting at
the time required to seal, pump air and open the inner hatch; and then
Tolliver led the way up another ladder to the control room. It was a
clumsy trip in their spacesuits, but he wanted to save time.
In the control room, he shoved the girl into an acceleration seat,
glanced at the gauges and showed her how to open her helmet.
"Leave the suit on," he ordered, getting in the first word while she
was still shaking her head. "It will help a little on the takeoff."
"Takeoff!" shrilled Betty. "What do you think you're going to do? I
just want to use the radio or TV!"
"That tractor will get here in a minute or two. They might cut your
conversation kind of short. Now shut up and let me look over these
dials!"
He ran a practiced eye over the board, reading the condition of the
ship. It pleased him. Everything was ready for a takeoff into an
economy orbit for Earth. He busied himself making a few adjustments,
doing his best to ignore the protests from his partner in crime. He
warned her the trip might be long.
"I told you not to come," he said at last. "Now sit back!"
He sat down and pushed a button to start the igniting process.
In a moment, he could feel the rumble of the rockets through the deck,
and then it was out of his hands for several minutes.
"That wasn't so bad," Betty admitted some time later. "Did you go in
the right direction?"
"Who knows?" retorted Tolliver. "There wasn't time to check
everything
. We'll worry about that after we make your call."
"Oh!" Betty looked helpless. "It's in my pocket."
Tolliver sighed. In their weightless state, it was no easy task to pry
her out of the spacesuit. He thought of inquiring if she needed any
further help, but reminded himself that this was the boss's daughter.
When Betty produced a memo giving frequency and call sign, he set about
making contact.
It took only a few minutes, as if the channel had been monitored
expectantly, and the man who flickered into life on the screen wore a
uniform.
"Space Patrol?" whispered Tolliver incredulously.
"That's right," said Betty. "Uh ... Daddy made arrangements for me."
Tolliver held her in front of the screen so she would not float out
of range of the scanner and microphone. As she spoke, he stared
exasperatedly at a bulkhead, marveling at the influence of a man who
could arrange for a cruiser to escort his daughter to Ganymede and
wondering what was behind it all.
When he heard Betty requesting assistance in arresting Jeffers and
reporting the manager as the head of a ring of crooks, he began to
suspect. He also noticed certain peculiarities about the remarks of the
Patrolman.
For one thing, though the officer seemed well acquainted with Betty, he
never addressed her by the name of Koslow. For another, he accepted the
request as if he had been hanging in orbit merely until learning who to
go down after.
They really sent her out to nail someone
, Tolliver realized.
Of
course, she stumbled onto Jeffers by plain dumb luck. But she had an
idea of what to look for. How do I get into these things? She might
have got me killed!
"We do have one trouble," he heard Betty saying. "This tractor driver,
Tolliver, saved my neck by making the ship take off somehow, but he
says it's set for a six-month orbit, or economy flight. Whatever they
call it. I don't think he has any idea where we're headed."
Tolliver pulled her back, holding her in mid-air by the slack of her
sweater.
"Actually, I have a fine idea," he informed the officer coldly. "I
happen to be a qualified space pilot. Everything here is under control.
If Miss Koslow thinks you should arrest Jeffers, you can call us later
on this channel."
"Miss Koslow?" repeated the spacer. "Did she tell you—well, no matter!
If you'll be okay, we'll attend to the other affair immediately."
He signed off promptly. The pilot faced Betty, who looked more offended
than reassured at discovering his status.
"This 'Miss Koslow' business," he said suspiciously. "He sounded funny
about that."
The girl grinned.
"Relax, Tolliver," she told him. "Did you really believe Daddy would
send his own little girl way out here to Ganymede to look for whoever
was gypping him?"
"You ... you...?"
"Sure. The name's Betty Hanlon. I work for a private investigating
firm. If old Koslow had a son to impersonate—"
"I'd be stuck for six months in this orbit with some brash young man,"
Tolliver finished for her. "I guess it's better this way," he said
meditatively a moment later.
"Oh, come
on
! Can't they get us back? How can you tell where we're
going?"
"I know enough to check takeoff time. It was practically due anyhow, so
we'll float into the vicinity of Earth at about the right time to be
picked up."
He went on to explain something of the tremendous cost in fuel
necessary to make more than minor corrections to their course. Even
though the Patrol ship could easily catch the slow freighter, bringing
along enough fuel to head back would be something else again.
"We'll just have to ride it out," he said sympathetically. "The ship is
provisioned according to law, and you were probably going back anyhow."
"I didn't expect to so soon."
"Yeah, you were pretty lucky. They'll think you're a marvel to crack
the case in about three hours on Ganymede."
"Great!" muttered Betty. "What a lucky girl I am!"
"Yes," admitted Tolliver, "there
are
problems. If you like, we might
get the captain of that Patrol ship to legalize the situation by TV."
"I can see you're used to sweeping girls off their feet," she commented
sourly.
"The main problem is whether you can cook."
Betty frowned at him.
"I'm pretty good with a pistol," she offered, "or going over crooked
books. But cook? Sorry."
"Well, one of us had better learn, and I'll have other things to do."
"I'll think about it," promised the girl, staring thoughtfully at the
deck.
Tolliver anchored himself in a seat and grinned as he thought about it
too.
After a while
, he promised himself,
I'll explain how I cut the fuel
flow and see if she's detective enough to suspect that we're just
orbiting Ganymede!
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/1/0/5/61053//61053-h//61053-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | Which word doesn't describe Jeffers? | 61053_LE36BG9H_1 | [
"clever",
"persistent",
"hot-headed",
"cocky"
] | 1 | 1 | [
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61,053 | 61053_LE36BG9H | 12 | 1,009 | Gutenberg | Tolliver's Orbit | 1958.0 | Fyfe, H. B. (Horace Bowne) | Ganymede (Satellite) -- Fiction; PS; Short stories; Science fiction; Embezzlement -- Fiction; Man-woman relationships -- Fiction | TOLLIVER'S ORBIT
was slow—but it wasn't boring. And
it would get you there—as long as
you weren't going anywhere anyhow!
By H. B. FYFE
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of If Science Fiction, September 1961.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
Johnny Tolliver scowled across the desk at his superior. His black
thatch was ruffled, as if he had been rubbed the wrong way.
"I didn't ask you to cut out your own graft, did I?" he demanded.
"Just don't try to sucker me in on the deal. I know you're operating
something sneaky all through the colony, but it's not for me."
The big moon-face of Jeffers, manager of the Ganymedan branch of
Koslow Spaceways, glowered back at him. Its reddish tinge brightened
the office noticeably, for such of Ganymede's surface as could be seen
through the transparent dome outside the office window was cold, dim
and rugged. The glowing semi-disk of Jupiter was more than half a
million miles distant.
"Try not to be simple—for once!" growled Jeffers. "A little percentage
here and there on the cargoes never shows by the time figures get back
to Earth. The big jets in the home office don't care. They count it on
the estimates."
"You asked any of them lately?" Tolliver prodded.
"Now,
listen
! Maybe they live soft back on Earth since the mines
and the Jovian satellite colonies grew; but they were out here in the
beginning, most of them.
They
know what it's like. D'ya think they
don't expect us to make what we can on the side?"
Tolliver rammed his fists into the side pockets of his loose blue
uniform jacket. He shook his head, grinning resignedly.
"You just don't listen to
me
," he complained. "You know I took this
piloting job just to scrape up money for an advanced engineering degree
back on Earth. I only want to finish my year—not get into something I
can't quit."
Jeffers fidgeted in his chair, causing it to creak under the bulk of
his body. It had been built for Ganymede, but not for Jeffers.
"Aw, it's not like that," the manager muttered. "You can ease out
whenever your contract's up. Think we'd bend a good orbit on your
account?"
Tolliver stared at him silently, but the other had difficulty meeting
his eye.
"All right, then!" Jeffers snapped after a long moment. "If you want it
that way, either you get in line with us or you're through right now!"
"You can't fire me," retorted the pilot pityingly. "I came out here
on a contract. Five hundred credits a week base pay, five hundred for
hazardous duty. How else can you get pilots out to Jupiter?"
"Okay I can't fire you legally—as long as you report for work,"
grumbled Jeffers, by now a shade more ruddy. "We'll see how long you
keep reporting. Because you're off the Callisto run as of now! Sit in
your quarters and see if the company calls
that
hazardous duty!"
"Doesn't matter," answered Tolliver, grinning amiably. "The hazardous
part is just being on the same moon as you for the next six months."
He winked and walked out, deliberately leaving the door open behind him
so as to enjoy the incoherent bellowing that followed him.
Looks like a little vacation
, he thought, unperturbed.
He'll come
around. I just want to get back to Earth with a clean rep. Let Jeffers
and his gang steal the Great Red Spot off Jupiter if they like! It's
their risk.
Tolliver began to have his doubts the next day; which was "Tuesday"
by the arbitrary calender constructed to match Ganymede's week-long
journey around Jupiter.
His contract guaranteed a pilot's rating, but someone had neglected to
specify the type of craft to be piloted.
On the bulletin board, Tolliver's name stood out beside the number
of one of the airtight tractors used between the dome city and the
spaceport, or for hauling cross-country to one of the mining domes.
He soon found that there was nothing for him to do but hang around the
garage in case a spaceship should land. The few runs to other domes
seemed to be assigned to drivers with larger vehicles.
The following day was just as boring, and the next more so. He swore
when he found the assignment unchanged by "Friday." Even the reflection
that it was payday was small consolation.
"Hey, Johnny!" said a voice at his shoulder. "The word is that they're
finally gonna trust you to take that creeper outside."
Tolliver turned to see Red Higgins, a regular driver.
"What do you mean?"
"They say some home-office relative is coming in on the
Javelin
."
"What's wrong with that?" asked Tolliver. "Outside of the way they keep
handing out soft jobs to nephews, I mean."
"Aah, these young punks just come out for a few months so they can go
back to Earth making noises like spacemen. Sometimes there's no reason
but them for sending a ship back with a crew instead of in an economy
orbit. Wait till you see the baggage you'll have to load!"
Later in the day-period, Tolliver recalled this warning. Under a
portable, double-chambered plastic dome blown up outside the ship's
airlock, a crewman helped him load two trunks and a collection of bags
into the tractor. He was struggling to suppress a feeling of outrage at
the waste of fuel involved when the home-office relative emerged.
She was about five feet four and moved as if she walked lightly even
in stronger gravity than Ganymede's. Her trim coiffure was a shade too
blonde which served to set off both the blue of her eyes and the cap
apparently won from one of the pilots. She wore gray slacks and a heavy
sweater, like a spacer.
"Sorry to keep you waiting," she said, sliding into the seat beside
Tolliver. "By the way, just call me Betty."
"Sure," agreed Tolliver thinking,
Ohmigod! Trying already to be just
one of the gang, instead of Lady Betty! Is her old man the treasurer,
or does he just know where bodies are buried?
"They were making dates," said the girl. "Were they ribbing me, or is
it true that none of the four of them goes back with the ship?"
"It's true enough," Tolliver assured her. "We need people out here, and
it costs a lot to make the trip. They found they could send back loaded
ships by 'automatic' flight—that is, a long, slow, economical orbit
and automatic signalling equipment. Then they're boarded approaching
Earth's orbit and landed by pilots who don't have to waste their time
making the entire trip."
He followed the signals of a spacesuited member of the port staff and
maneuvered out of the dome. Then he headed the tractor across the
frozen surface of Ganymede toward the permanent domes of the city.
"How is it here?" asked the girl. "They told me it's pretty rough."
"What did you expect?" asked Tolliver. "Square dances with champagne?"
"Don't be silly. Daddy says I'm supposed to learn traffic routing and
the business management of a local branch. They probably won't let me
see much else."
"You never can tell," said the pilot, yielding to temptation. "Any
square inch of Ganymede is likely to be dangerous."
I'll be sorry later
, he reflected,
but if Jeffers keeps me jockeying
this creeper, I'm entitled to some amusement. And Daddy's little girl
is trying too hard to sound like one of the gang.
"Yeah," he went on, "right now, I don't do a thing but drive missions
from the city to the spaceport."
"Missions! You call driving a mile or so a
mission
?"
Tolliver pursed his lips and put on a shrewd expression.
"Don't sneer at Ganymede, honey!" he warned portentously. "Many a
man who did isn't here today. Take the fellow who used to drive this
mission!"
"You can call me Betty. What happened to him?"
"I'll tell you some day," Tolliver promised darkly. "This moon can
strike like a vicious animal."
"Oh, they told me there was nothing alive on Ganymede!"
"I was thinking of the mountain slides," said the pilot. "Not to
mention volcanic puffballs that pop out through the frozen crust where
you'd least expect. That's why I draw such high pay for driving an
unarmored tractor."
"You use armored vehicles?" gasped the girl.
She was now sitting bolt upright in the swaying seat. Tolliver
deliberately dipped one track into an icy hollow. In the light gravity,
the tractor responded with a weird, floating lurch.
"Those slides," he continued. "Ganymede's only about the size of
Mercury, something like 3200 miles in diameter, so things get heaped up
at steep angles. When the rock and ice are set to sliding, they come
at you practically horizontally. It doesn't need much start, and it
barrels on for a long way before there's enough friction to stop it. If
you're in the way—well, it's just too bad!"
Say, that's pretty good!
he told himself.
What a liar you are,
Tolliver!
He enlarged upon other dangers to be encountered on the satellite,
taking care to impress the newcomer with the daredeviltry of John
Tolliver, driver of "missions" across the menacing wastes between dome
and port.
In the end, he displayed conclusive evidence in the form of the weekly
paycheck he had received that morning. It did not, naturally, indicate
he was drawing the salary of a space pilot. Betty looked thoughtful.
"I'm retiring in six months if I'm still alive," he said bravely,
edging the tractor into the airlock at their destination. "Made my
pile. No use pushing your luck too far."
His charge seemed noticeably subdued, but cleared her throat to request
that Tolliver guide her to the office of the manager. She trailed along
as if with a burden of worry upon her mind, and the pilot's conscience
prickled.
I'll get hold of her after Jeffers is through and set her straight
,
he resolved.
It isn't really funny if the sucker is too ignorant to
know better.
Remembering his grudge against the manager, he took pleasure in walking
in without knocking.
"Jeffers," he announced, "this is ... just call her Betty."
The manager's jowled features twisted into an expression of welcome as
jovial as that of a hungry crocodile.
"Miss Koslow!" he beamed, like a politician the day before the voting.
"It certainly is an honor to have you on Ganymede with us! That's all,
Tolliver, you can go. Yes, indeed! Mr. Koslow—the president, that is:
your father—sent a message about you. I repeat, it will be an honor to
show you the ropes. Did you want something else, Tolliver?"
"Never mind him, Mr. Jeffers," snapped the girl, in a tone new to
Tolliver. "We won't be working together, I'm afraid. You've already had
enough rope."
Jeffers seemed to stagger standing still behind his desk. His loose
lips twitched uncertainly, and he looked questioningly to Tolliver. The
pilot stared at Betty, trying to recall pictures he had seen of the
elder Koslow. He was also trying to remember some of the lies he had
told en route from the spaceport.
"Wh-wh-what do you mean, Miss Koslow?" Jeffers stammered.
He darted a suspicious glare at Tolliver.
"Mr. Jeffers," said the girl, "I may look like just another spoiled
little blonde, but the best part of this company will be mine someday.
I was not allowed to reach twenty-two without learning something about
holding on to it."
Tolliver blinked. He had taken her for three or four years older.
Jeffers now ignored him, intent upon the girl.
"Daddy gave me the title of tenth vice-president mostly as a joke, when
he told me to find out what was wrong with operations on Ganymede.
I have
some
authority, though. And you look like the source of the
trouble to me."
"You can't prove anything," declared Jeffers hoarsely.
"Oh, can't I? I've already seen certain evidence, and the rest won't
be hard to find. Where are your books, Mr. Jeffers? You're as good as
fired!"
The manager dropped heavily to his chair. He stared unbelievingly at
Betty, and Tolliver thought he muttered something about "just landed."
After a moment, the big man came out of his daze enough to stab an
intercom button with his finger. He growled at someone on the other end
to come in without a countdown.
Tolliver, hardly thinking about it, expected the someone to be
a secretary, but it turned out to be three members of Jeffers'
headquarters staff. He recognized one as Rawlins, a warehouse chief,
and guessed that the other two might be his assistants. They were large
enough.
"No stupid questions!" Jeffers ordered. "Lock these two up while I
think!"
Tolliver started for the door immediately, but was blocked off.
"Where should we lock—?" the fellow paused to ask.
Tolliver brought up a snappy uppercut to the man's chin, feeling that
it was a poor time to engage Jeffers in fruitless debate.
In the gravity of Ganymede, the man was knocked off balance as much as
he was hurt, and sprawled on the floor.
"I
told
you no questions!" bawled Jeffers.
The fallen hero, upon arising, had to content himself with grabbing
Betty. The others were swarming over Tolliver. Jeffers came around his
desk to assist.
Tolliver found himself dumped on the floor of an empty office in the
adjoining warehouse building. It seemed to him that a long time had
been spent in carrying him there.
He heard an indignant yelp, and realized that the girl had been pitched
in with him. The snapping of a lock was followed by the tramp of
departing footsteps and then by silence.
After considering the idea a few minutes, Tolliver managed to sit up.
He had his wind back. But when he fingered the swelling lump behind his
left ear, a sensation befuddled him momentarily.
"I'm sorry about that," murmured Betty.
Tolliver grunted. Sorrow would not reduce the throbbing, nor was he
in a mood to undertake an explanation of why Jeffers did not like him
anyway.
"I think perhaps you're going to have a shiner," remarked the girl.
"Thanks for letting me know in time," said Tolliver.
The skin under his right eye did feel a trifle tight, but he could see
well enough. The abandoned and empty look of the office worried him.
"What can we use to get out of here?" he mused.
"Why should we try?" asked the girl. "What can he do?"
"You'd be surprised. How did you catch on to him so soon?"
"Your paycheck," said Betty. "As soon as I saw that ridiculous amount,
it was obvious that there was gross mismanagement here. It had to be
Jeffers."
Tolliver groaned.
"Then, on the way over here, he as good as admitted everything. You
didn't hear him, I guess. Well, he seemed to be caught all unaware, and
seemed to blame you for it."
"Sure!" grumbled the pilot. "He thinks I told you he was grafting or
smuggling, or whatever he has going for him here. That's why I want to
get out of here—before I find myself involved in some kind of fatal
accident!"
"What do you know about the crooked goings-on here?" asked Betty after
a startled pause.
"Nothing," retorted Tolliver. "Except that there are some. There are
rumors, and I had a halfway invitation to join in. I think he sells
things to the mining colonies and makes a double profit for himself by
claiming the stuff lost in transit. You didn't think you scared him
that bad over a little slack managing?"
The picture of Jeffers huddled with his partners in the headquarters
building, plotting the next move, brought Tolliver to his feet.
There was nothing in the unused office but an old table and half a
dozen plastic crates. He saw that the latter contained a mess of
discarded records.
"Better than nothing at all," he muttered.
He ripped out a double handful of the forms, crumpled them into a pile
at the doorway, and pulled out his cigarette lighter.
"What do you think you're up to?" asked Betty with some concern.
"This plastic is tough," said Tolliver, "but it will bend with enough
heat. If I can kick loose a hinge, maybe we can fool them yet!"
He got a little fire going, and fed it judiciously with more papers.
"You know," he reflected, "it might be better for you to stay here.
He can't do much about you, and you don't have any real proof just by
yourself."
"I'll come along with you, Tolliver," said the girl.
"No, I don't think you'd better."
"Why not?"
"Well ... after all, what would he dare do? Arranging an accident to
the daughter of the boss isn't something that he can pull off without a
lot of investigation. He'd be better off just running for it."
"Let's not argue about it," said Betty, a trifle pale but looking
determined. "I'm coming with you. Is that stuff getting soft yet?"
Tolliver kicked at the edge of the door experimentally. It seemed to
give slightly, so he knocked the burning papers aside and drove his
heel hard at the corner below the hinge.
The plastic yielded.
"That's enough already, Tolliver," whispered the girl. "We can crawl
through!"
Hardly sixty seconds later, he led her into a maze of stacked crates
in the warehouse proper. The building was not much longer than wide,
for each of the structures in the colony had its own hemispherical
emergency dome of transparent plastic. They soon reached the other end.
"I think there's a storeroom for spacesuits around here," muttered
Tolliver.
"Why do you want them?"
"Honey, I just don't think it will be so easy to lay hands on a
tractor. I bet Jeffers already phoned the garage and all the airlocks
with some good lie that will keep me from getting through."
After a brief search, he located the spacesuits. Many, evidently
intended for replacements, had never been unpacked, but there were a
dozen or so serviced and standing ready for emergencies. He showed
Betty how to climb into one, and checked her seals and valves after
donning a suit himself.
"That switch under your chin," he said, touching helmets so she could
hear him. "Leave it turned off.
Anybody
might be listening!"
He led the way out a rear door of the warehouse. With the heavy knife
that was standard suit equipment, he deliberately slashed a four-foot
square section out of the dome. He motioned to Betty to step through,
then trailed along with the plastic under his arm.
He caught up and touched helmets again.
"Just act as if you're on business," he told her. "For all anyone can
see, we might be inspecting the dome."
"Where are you going?" asked Betty.
"Right through the wall, and then head for the nearest mine. Jeffers
can't be running
everything
!"
"Is there any way to get to a TV?" asked the girl. "I ... uh ... Daddy
gave me a good number to call if I needed help."
"How good?"
"Pretty official, as a matter of fact."
"All right," Tolliver decided. "We'll try the ship you just came in on.
They might have finished refueling and left her empty."
They had to cross one open lane between buildings, and Tolliver was
very conscious of moving figures in the distance; but no one seemed to
look their way.
Reaching the foot of the main dome over the establishment, he glanced
furtively about, then plunged his knife into the transparent material.
From the corner of his eye, he thought he saw Betty make a startled
gesture, but he had his work cut out for him. This was tougher than the
interior dome.
Finally, he managed to saw a ragged slit through which they could
squeeze. There was room to walk between the inner and outer layer, so
he moved along a few yards. A little dust began to blow about where
they had gone through. He touched helmets once more.
"This time," he said, "the air will really start to blow, so get
through as fast as you can. If I can slap this piece of plastic over
the rip, it may stow down the loss of pressure enough to give us quite
a lead before the alarms go off."
Through the faceplates, he saw the girl nod, wide-eyed.
As soon as he plunged the knife into the outer layer, he could see
dusty, moist air puffing out into the near-vacuum of Ganymede's
surface. Fumbling, he cut as fast as he could and shoved Betty through
the small opening.
Squeezing through in his turn, he left one arm inside to spread the
plastic sheet as best he could. The internal air pressure slapped it
against the inside of the dome as if glued, although it immediately
showed an alarming tendency to balloon through the ruptured spot.
They'll find it, all right
, Tolliver reminded himself.
Don't be here
when they do!
He grabbed Betty by the wrist of her spacesuit and headed for the
nearest outcropping of rock.
It promptly developed that she had something to learn about running on
ice in such low gravity. Until they were out of direct line of sight
from the settlement, Tolliver simply dragged her.
Then, when he decided that it was safe enough to pause and tell her
how to manage better, the sight of her outraged scowl through the
face-plate made him think better of it.
By the time we reach the ship, she'll have learned
, he consoled
himself.
It was a long mile, even at the pace human muscles could achieve on
Ganymede. They took one short rest, during which Tolliver was forced
to explain away the dangers of slides and volcanic puffballs. He
admitted to having exaggerated slightly. In the end, they reached the
spaceship.
There seemed to be no one about. The landing dome had been collapsed
and stored, and the ship's airlock port was closed.
"That's all right," Tolliver told the girl. "We can get in with no
trouble."
It was when he looked about to make sure that they were unobserved that
he caught a glimpse of motion back toward the city. He peered at the
spot through the dim light. After a moment, he definitely recognized
the outline of a tractor breasting a rise in the ground and tilting
downward again.
"In fact, we
have
to get in to stay out of trouble," he said to Betty.
He located the switch-cover in the hull, opened it and activated the
mechanism that swung open the airlock and extended the ladder.
It took him considerable scrambling to boost the girl up the ladder and
inside, but he managed. They passed through the airlock, fretting at
the time required to seal, pump air and open the inner hatch; and then
Tolliver led the way up another ladder to the control room. It was a
clumsy trip in their spacesuits, but he wanted to save time.
In the control room, he shoved the girl into an acceleration seat,
glanced at the gauges and showed her how to open her helmet.
"Leave the suit on," he ordered, getting in the first word while she
was still shaking her head. "It will help a little on the takeoff."
"Takeoff!" shrilled Betty. "What do you think you're going to do? I
just want to use the radio or TV!"
"That tractor will get here in a minute or two. They might cut your
conversation kind of short. Now shut up and let me look over these
dials!"
He ran a practiced eye over the board, reading the condition of the
ship. It pleased him. Everything was ready for a takeoff into an
economy orbit for Earth. He busied himself making a few adjustments,
doing his best to ignore the protests from his partner in crime. He
warned her the trip might be long.
"I told you not to come," he said at last. "Now sit back!"
He sat down and pushed a button to start the igniting process.
In a moment, he could feel the rumble of the rockets through the deck,
and then it was out of his hands for several minutes.
"That wasn't so bad," Betty admitted some time later. "Did you go in
the right direction?"
"Who knows?" retorted Tolliver. "There wasn't time to check
everything
. We'll worry about that after we make your call."
"Oh!" Betty looked helpless. "It's in my pocket."
Tolliver sighed. In their weightless state, it was no easy task to pry
her out of the spacesuit. He thought of inquiring if she needed any
further help, but reminded himself that this was the boss's daughter.
When Betty produced a memo giving frequency and call sign, he set about
making contact.
It took only a few minutes, as if the channel had been monitored
expectantly, and the man who flickered into life on the screen wore a
uniform.
"Space Patrol?" whispered Tolliver incredulously.
"That's right," said Betty. "Uh ... Daddy made arrangements for me."
Tolliver held her in front of the screen so she would not float out
of range of the scanner and microphone. As she spoke, he stared
exasperatedly at a bulkhead, marveling at the influence of a man who
could arrange for a cruiser to escort his daughter to Ganymede and
wondering what was behind it all.
When he heard Betty requesting assistance in arresting Jeffers and
reporting the manager as the head of a ring of crooks, he began to
suspect. He also noticed certain peculiarities about the remarks of the
Patrolman.
For one thing, though the officer seemed well acquainted with Betty, he
never addressed her by the name of Koslow. For another, he accepted the
request as if he had been hanging in orbit merely until learning who to
go down after.
They really sent her out to nail someone
, Tolliver realized.
Of
course, she stumbled onto Jeffers by plain dumb luck. But she had an
idea of what to look for. How do I get into these things? She might
have got me killed!
"We do have one trouble," he heard Betty saying. "This tractor driver,
Tolliver, saved my neck by making the ship take off somehow, but he
says it's set for a six-month orbit, or economy flight. Whatever they
call it. I don't think he has any idea where we're headed."
Tolliver pulled her back, holding her in mid-air by the slack of her
sweater.
"Actually, I have a fine idea," he informed the officer coldly. "I
happen to be a qualified space pilot. Everything here is under control.
If Miss Koslow thinks you should arrest Jeffers, you can call us later
on this channel."
"Miss Koslow?" repeated the spacer. "Did she tell you—well, no matter!
If you'll be okay, we'll attend to the other affair immediately."
He signed off promptly. The pilot faced Betty, who looked more offended
than reassured at discovering his status.
"This 'Miss Koslow' business," he said suspiciously. "He sounded funny
about that."
The girl grinned.
"Relax, Tolliver," she told him. "Did you really believe Daddy would
send his own little girl way out here to Ganymede to look for whoever
was gypping him?"
"You ... you...?"
"Sure. The name's Betty Hanlon. I work for a private investigating
firm. If old Koslow had a son to impersonate—"
"I'd be stuck for six months in this orbit with some brash young man,"
Tolliver finished for her. "I guess it's better this way," he said
meditatively a moment later.
"Oh, come
on
! Can't they get us back? How can you tell where we're
going?"
"I know enough to check takeoff time. It was practically due anyhow, so
we'll float into the vicinity of Earth at about the right time to be
picked up."
He went on to explain something of the tremendous cost in fuel
necessary to make more than minor corrections to their course. Even
though the Patrol ship could easily catch the slow freighter, bringing
along enough fuel to head back would be something else again.
"We'll just have to ride it out," he said sympathetically. "The ship is
provisioned according to law, and you were probably going back anyhow."
"I didn't expect to so soon."
"Yeah, you were pretty lucky. They'll think you're a marvel to crack
the case in about three hours on Ganymede."
"Great!" muttered Betty. "What a lucky girl I am!"
"Yes," admitted Tolliver, "there
are
problems. If you like, we might
get the captain of that Patrol ship to legalize the situation by TV."
"I can see you're used to sweeping girls off their feet," she commented
sourly.
"The main problem is whether you can cook."
Betty frowned at him.
"I'm pretty good with a pistol," she offered, "or going over crooked
books. But cook? Sorry."
"Well, one of us had better learn, and I'll have other things to do."
"I'll think about it," promised the girl, staring thoughtfully at the
deck.
Tolliver anchored himself in a seat and grinned as he thought about it
too.
After a while
, he promised himself,
I'll explain how I cut the fuel
flow and see if she's detective enough to suspect that we're just
orbiting Ganymede!
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/1/0/5/61053//61053-h//61053-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | Which word doesn't describe Tolliver? | 61053_LE36BG9H_2 | [
"hot-headed",
"stubborn",
"clever",
"liar"
] | 1 | 1 | [
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61,053 | 61053_LE36BG9H | 12 | 1,009 | Gutenberg | Tolliver's Orbit | 1958.0 | Fyfe, H. B. (Horace Bowne) | Ganymede (Satellite) -- Fiction; PS; Short stories; Science fiction; Embezzlement -- Fiction; Man-woman relationships -- Fiction | TOLLIVER'S ORBIT
was slow—but it wasn't boring. And
it would get you there—as long as
you weren't going anywhere anyhow!
By H. B. FYFE
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of If Science Fiction, September 1961.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
Johnny Tolliver scowled across the desk at his superior. His black
thatch was ruffled, as if he had been rubbed the wrong way.
"I didn't ask you to cut out your own graft, did I?" he demanded.
"Just don't try to sucker me in on the deal. I know you're operating
something sneaky all through the colony, but it's not for me."
The big moon-face of Jeffers, manager of the Ganymedan branch of
Koslow Spaceways, glowered back at him. Its reddish tinge brightened
the office noticeably, for such of Ganymede's surface as could be seen
through the transparent dome outside the office window was cold, dim
and rugged. The glowing semi-disk of Jupiter was more than half a
million miles distant.
"Try not to be simple—for once!" growled Jeffers. "A little percentage
here and there on the cargoes never shows by the time figures get back
to Earth. The big jets in the home office don't care. They count it on
the estimates."
"You asked any of them lately?" Tolliver prodded.
"Now,
listen
! Maybe they live soft back on Earth since the mines
and the Jovian satellite colonies grew; but they were out here in the
beginning, most of them.
They
know what it's like. D'ya think they
don't expect us to make what we can on the side?"
Tolliver rammed his fists into the side pockets of his loose blue
uniform jacket. He shook his head, grinning resignedly.
"You just don't listen to
me
," he complained. "You know I took this
piloting job just to scrape up money for an advanced engineering degree
back on Earth. I only want to finish my year—not get into something I
can't quit."
Jeffers fidgeted in his chair, causing it to creak under the bulk of
his body. It had been built for Ganymede, but not for Jeffers.
"Aw, it's not like that," the manager muttered. "You can ease out
whenever your contract's up. Think we'd bend a good orbit on your
account?"
Tolliver stared at him silently, but the other had difficulty meeting
his eye.
"All right, then!" Jeffers snapped after a long moment. "If you want it
that way, either you get in line with us or you're through right now!"
"You can't fire me," retorted the pilot pityingly. "I came out here
on a contract. Five hundred credits a week base pay, five hundred for
hazardous duty. How else can you get pilots out to Jupiter?"
"Okay I can't fire you legally—as long as you report for work,"
grumbled Jeffers, by now a shade more ruddy. "We'll see how long you
keep reporting. Because you're off the Callisto run as of now! Sit in
your quarters and see if the company calls
that
hazardous duty!"
"Doesn't matter," answered Tolliver, grinning amiably. "The hazardous
part is just being on the same moon as you for the next six months."
He winked and walked out, deliberately leaving the door open behind him
so as to enjoy the incoherent bellowing that followed him.
Looks like a little vacation
, he thought, unperturbed.
He'll come
around. I just want to get back to Earth with a clean rep. Let Jeffers
and his gang steal the Great Red Spot off Jupiter if they like! It's
their risk.
Tolliver began to have his doubts the next day; which was "Tuesday"
by the arbitrary calender constructed to match Ganymede's week-long
journey around Jupiter.
His contract guaranteed a pilot's rating, but someone had neglected to
specify the type of craft to be piloted.
On the bulletin board, Tolliver's name stood out beside the number
of one of the airtight tractors used between the dome city and the
spaceport, or for hauling cross-country to one of the mining domes.
He soon found that there was nothing for him to do but hang around the
garage in case a spaceship should land. The few runs to other domes
seemed to be assigned to drivers with larger vehicles.
The following day was just as boring, and the next more so. He swore
when he found the assignment unchanged by "Friday." Even the reflection
that it was payday was small consolation.
"Hey, Johnny!" said a voice at his shoulder. "The word is that they're
finally gonna trust you to take that creeper outside."
Tolliver turned to see Red Higgins, a regular driver.
"What do you mean?"
"They say some home-office relative is coming in on the
Javelin
."
"What's wrong with that?" asked Tolliver. "Outside of the way they keep
handing out soft jobs to nephews, I mean."
"Aah, these young punks just come out for a few months so they can go
back to Earth making noises like spacemen. Sometimes there's no reason
but them for sending a ship back with a crew instead of in an economy
orbit. Wait till you see the baggage you'll have to load!"
Later in the day-period, Tolliver recalled this warning. Under a
portable, double-chambered plastic dome blown up outside the ship's
airlock, a crewman helped him load two trunks and a collection of bags
into the tractor. He was struggling to suppress a feeling of outrage at
the waste of fuel involved when the home-office relative emerged.
She was about five feet four and moved as if she walked lightly even
in stronger gravity than Ganymede's. Her trim coiffure was a shade too
blonde which served to set off both the blue of her eyes and the cap
apparently won from one of the pilots. She wore gray slacks and a heavy
sweater, like a spacer.
"Sorry to keep you waiting," she said, sliding into the seat beside
Tolliver. "By the way, just call me Betty."
"Sure," agreed Tolliver thinking,
Ohmigod! Trying already to be just
one of the gang, instead of Lady Betty! Is her old man the treasurer,
or does he just know where bodies are buried?
"They were making dates," said the girl. "Were they ribbing me, or is
it true that none of the four of them goes back with the ship?"
"It's true enough," Tolliver assured her. "We need people out here, and
it costs a lot to make the trip. They found they could send back loaded
ships by 'automatic' flight—that is, a long, slow, economical orbit
and automatic signalling equipment. Then they're boarded approaching
Earth's orbit and landed by pilots who don't have to waste their time
making the entire trip."
He followed the signals of a spacesuited member of the port staff and
maneuvered out of the dome. Then he headed the tractor across the
frozen surface of Ganymede toward the permanent domes of the city.
"How is it here?" asked the girl. "They told me it's pretty rough."
"What did you expect?" asked Tolliver. "Square dances with champagne?"
"Don't be silly. Daddy says I'm supposed to learn traffic routing and
the business management of a local branch. They probably won't let me
see much else."
"You never can tell," said the pilot, yielding to temptation. "Any
square inch of Ganymede is likely to be dangerous."
I'll be sorry later
, he reflected,
but if Jeffers keeps me jockeying
this creeper, I'm entitled to some amusement. And Daddy's little girl
is trying too hard to sound like one of the gang.
"Yeah," he went on, "right now, I don't do a thing but drive missions
from the city to the spaceport."
"Missions! You call driving a mile or so a
mission
?"
Tolliver pursed his lips and put on a shrewd expression.
"Don't sneer at Ganymede, honey!" he warned portentously. "Many a
man who did isn't here today. Take the fellow who used to drive this
mission!"
"You can call me Betty. What happened to him?"
"I'll tell you some day," Tolliver promised darkly. "This moon can
strike like a vicious animal."
"Oh, they told me there was nothing alive on Ganymede!"
"I was thinking of the mountain slides," said the pilot. "Not to
mention volcanic puffballs that pop out through the frozen crust where
you'd least expect. That's why I draw such high pay for driving an
unarmored tractor."
"You use armored vehicles?" gasped the girl.
She was now sitting bolt upright in the swaying seat. Tolliver
deliberately dipped one track into an icy hollow. In the light gravity,
the tractor responded with a weird, floating lurch.
"Those slides," he continued. "Ganymede's only about the size of
Mercury, something like 3200 miles in diameter, so things get heaped up
at steep angles. When the rock and ice are set to sliding, they come
at you practically horizontally. It doesn't need much start, and it
barrels on for a long way before there's enough friction to stop it. If
you're in the way—well, it's just too bad!"
Say, that's pretty good!
he told himself.
What a liar you are,
Tolliver!
He enlarged upon other dangers to be encountered on the satellite,
taking care to impress the newcomer with the daredeviltry of John
Tolliver, driver of "missions" across the menacing wastes between dome
and port.
In the end, he displayed conclusive evidence in the form of the weekly
paycheck he had received that morning. It did not, naturally, indicate
he was drawing the salary of a space pilot. Betty looked thoughtful.
"I'm retiring in six months if I'm still alive," he said bravely,
edging the tractor into the airlock at their destination. "Made my
pile. No use pushing your luck too far."
His charge seemed noticeably subdued, but cleared her throat to request
that Tolliver guide her to the office of the manager. She trailed along
as if with a burden of worry upon her mind, and the pilot's conscience
prickled.
I'll get hold of her after Jeffers is through and set her straight
,
he resolved.
It isn't really funny if the sucker is too ignorant to
know better.
Remembering his grudge against the manager, he took pleasure in walking
in without knocking.
"Jeffers," he announced, "this is ... just call her Betty."
The manager's jowled features twisted into an expression of welcome as
jovial as that of a hungry crocodile.
"Miss Koslow!" he beamed, like a politician the day before the voting.
"It certainly is an honor to have you on Ganymede with us! That's all,
Tolliver, you can go. Yes, indeed! Mr. Koslow—the president, that is:
your father—sent a message about you. I repeat, it will be an honor to
show you the ropes. Did you want something else, Tolliver?"
"Never mind him, Mr. Jeffers," snapped the girl, in a tone new to
Tolliver. "We won't be working together, I'm afraid. You've already had
enough rope."
Jeffers seemed to stagger standing still behind his desk. His loose
lips twitched uncertainly, and he looked questioningly to Tolliver. The
pilot stared at Betty, trying to recall pictures he had seen of the
elder Koslow. He was also trying to remember some of the lies he had
told en route from the spaceport.
"Wh-wh-what do you mean, Miss Koslow?" Jeffers stammered.
He darted a suspicious glare at Tolliver.
"Mr. Jeffers," said the girl, "I may look like just another spoiled
little blonde, but the best part of this company will be mine someday.
I was not allowed to reach twenty-two without learning something about
holding on to it."
Tolliver blinked. He had taken her for three or four years older.
Jeffers now ignored him, intent upon the girl.
"Daddy gave me the title of tenth vice-president mostly as a joke, when
he told me to find out what was wrong with operations on Ganymede.
I have
some
authority, though. And you look like the source of the
trouble to me."
"You can't prove anything," declared Jeffers hoarsely.
"Oh, can't I? I've already seen certain evidence, and the rest won't
be hard to find. Where are your books, Mr. Jeffers? You're as good as
fired!"
The manager dropped heavily to his chair. He stared unbelievingly at
Betty, and Tolliver thought he muttered something about "just landed."
After a moment, the big man came out of his daze enough to stab an
intercom button with his finger. He growled at someone on the other end
to come in without a countdown.
Tolliver, hardly thinking about it, expected the someone to be
a secretary, but it turned out to be three members of Jeffers'
headquarters staff. He recognized one as Rawlins, a warehouse chief,
and guessed that the other two might be his assistants. They were large
enough.
"No stupid questions!" Jeffers ordered. "Lock these two up while I
think!"
Tolliver started for the door immediately, but was blocked off.
"Where should we lock—?" the fellow paused to ask.
Tolliver brought up a snappy uppercut to the man's chin, feeling that
it was a poor time to engage Jeffers in fruitless debate.
In the gravity of Ganymede, the man was knocked off balance as much as
he was hurt, and sprawled on the floor.
"I
told
you no questions!" bawled Jeffers.
The fallen hero, upon arising, had to content himself with grabbing
Betty. The others were swarming over Tolliver. Jeffers came around his
desk to assist.
Tolliver found himself dumped on the floor of an empty office in the
adjoining warehouse building. It seemed to him that a long time had
been spent in carrying him there.
He heard an indignant yelp, and realized that the girl had been pitched
in with him. The snapping of a lock was followed by the tramp of
departing footsteps and then by silence.
After considering the idea a few minutes, Tolliver managed to sit up.
He had his wind back. But when he fingered the swelling lump behind his
left ear, a sensation befuddled him momentarily.
"I'm sorry about that," murmured Betty.
Tolliver grunted. Sorrow would not reduce the throbbing, nor was he
in a mood to undertake an explanation of why Jeffers did not like him
anyway.
"I think perhaps you're going to have a shiner," remarked the girl.
"Thanks for letting me know in time," said Tolliver.
The skin under his right eye did feel a trifle tight, but he could see
well enough. The abandoned and empty look of the office worried him.
"What can we use to get out of here?" he mused.
"Why should we try?" asked the girl. "What can he do?"
"You'd be surprised. How did you catch on to him so soon?"
"Your paycheck," said Betty. "As soon as I saw that ridiculous amount,
it was obvious that there was gross mismanagement here. It had to be
Jeffers."
Tolliver groaned.
"Then, on the way over here, he as good as admitted everything. You
didn't hear him, I guess. Well, he seemed to be caught all unaware, and
seemed to blame you for it."
"Sure!" grumbled the pilot. "He thinks I told you he was grafting or
smuggling, or whatever he has going for him here. That's why I want to
get out of here—before I find myself involved in some kind of fatal
accident!"
"What do you know about the crooked goings-on here?" asked Betty after
a startled pause.
"Nothing," retorted Tolliver. "Except that there are some. There are
rumors, and I had a halfway invitation to join in. I think he sells
things to the mining colonies and makes a double profit for himself by
claiming the stuff lost in transit. You didn't think you scared him
that bad over a little slack managing?"
The picture of Jeffers huddled with his partners in the headquarters
building, plotting the next move, brought Tolliver to his feet.
There was nothing in the unused office but an old table and half a
dozen plastic crates. He saw that the latter contained a mess of
discarded records.
"Better than nothing at all," he muttered.
He ripped out a double handful of the forms, crumpled them into a pile
at the doorway, and pulled out his cigarette lighter.
"What do you think you're up to?" asked Betty with some concern.
"This plastic is tough," said Tolliver, "but it will bend with enough
heat. If I can kick loose a hinge, maybe we can fool them yet!"
He got a little fire going, and fed it judiciously with more papers.
"You know," he reflected, "it might be better for you to stay here.
He can't do much about you, and you don't have any real proof just by
yourself."
"I'll come along with you, Tolliver," said the girl.
"No, I don't think you'd better."
"Why not?"
"Well ... after all, what would he dare do? Arranging an accident to
the daughter of the boss isn't something that he can pull off without a
lot of investigation. He'd be better off just running for it."
"Let's not argue about it," said Betty, a trifle pale but looking
determined. "I'm coming with you. Is that stuff getting soft yet?"
Tolliver kicked at the edge of the door experimentally. It seemed to
give slightly, so he knocked the burning papers aside and drove his
heel hard at the corner below the hinge.
The plastic yielded.
"That's enough already, Tolliver," whispered the girl. "We can crawl
through!"
Hardly sixty seconds later, he led her into a maze of stacked crates
in the warehouse proper. The building was not much longer than wide,
for each of the structures in the colony had its own hemispherical
emergency dome of transparent plastic. They soon reached the other end.
"I think there's a storeroom for spacesuits around here," muttered
Tolliver.
"Why do you want them?"
"Honey, I just don't think it will be so easy to lay hands on a
tractor. I bet Jeffers already phoned the garage and all the airlocks
with some good lie that will keep me from getting through."
After a brief search, he located the spacesuits. Many, evidently
intended for replacements, had never been unpacked, but there were a
dozen or so serviced and standing ready for emergencies. He showed
Betty how to climb into one, and checked her seals and valves after
donning a suit himself.
"That switch under your chin," he said, touching helmets so she could
hear him. "Leave it turned off.
Anybody
might be listening!"
He led the way out a rear door of the warehouse. With the heavy knife
that was standard suit equipment, he deliberately slashed a four-foot
square section out of the dome. He motioned to Betty to step through,
then trailed along with the plastic under his arm.
He caught up and touched helmets again.
"Just act as if you're on business," he told her. "For all anyone can
see, we might be inspecting the dome."
"Where are you going?" asked Betty.
"Right through the wall, and then head for the nearest mine. Jeffers
can't be running
everything
!"
"Is there any way to get to a TV?" asked the girl. "I ... uh ... Daddy
gave me a good number to call if I needed help."
"How good?"
"Pretty official, as a matter of fact."
"All right," Tolliver decided. "We'll try the ship you just came in on.
They might have finished refueling and left her empty."
They had to cross one open lane between buildings, and Tolliver was
very conscious of moving figures in the distance; but no one seemed to
look their way.
Reaching the foot of the main dome over the establishment, he glanced
furtively about, then plunged his knife into the transparent material.
From the corner of his eye, he thought he saw Betty make a startled
gesture, but he had his work cut out for him. This was tougher than the
interior dome.
Finally, he managed to saw a ragged slit through which they could
squeeze. There was room to walk between the inner and outer layer, so
he moved along a few yards. A little dust began to blow about where
they had gone through. He touched helmets once more.
"This time," he said, "the air will really start to blow, so get
through as fast as you can. If I can slap this piece of plastic over
the rip, it may stow down the loss of pressure enough to give us quite
a lead before the alarms go off."
Through the faceplates, he saw the girl nod, wide-eyed.
As soon as he plunged the knife into the outer layer, he could see
dusty, moist air puffing out into the near-vacuum of Ganymede's
surface. Fumbling, he cut as fast as he could and shoved Betty through
the small opening.
Squeezing through in his turn, he left one arm inside to spread the
plastic sheet as best he could. The internal air pressure slapped it
against the inside of the dome as if glued, although it immediately
showed an alarming tendency to balloon through the ruptured spot.
They'll find it, all right
, Tolliver reminded himself.
Don't be here
when they do!
He grabbed Betty by the wrist of her spacesuit and headed for the
nearest outcropping of rock.
It promptly developed that she had something to learn about running on
ice in such low gravity. Until they were out of direct line of sight
from the settlement, Tolliver simply dragged her.
Then, when he decided that it was safe enough to pause and tell her
how to manage better, the sight of her outraged scowl through the
face-plate made him think better of it.
By the time we reach the ship, she'll have learned
, he consoled
himself.
It was a long mile, even at the pace human muscles could achieve on
Ganymede. They took one short rest, during which Tolliver was forced
to explain away the dangers of slides and volcanic puffballs. He
admitted to having exaggerated slightly. In the end, they reached the
spaceship.
There seemed to be no one about. The landing dome had been collapsed
and stored, and the ship's airlock port was closed.
"That's all right," Tolliver told the girl. "We can get in with no
trouble."
It was when he looked about to make sure that they were unobserved that
he caught a glimpse of motion back toward the city. He peered at the
spot through the dim light. After a moment, he definitely recognized
the outline of a tractor breasting a rise in the ground and tilting
downward again.
"In fact, we
have
to get in to stay out of trouble," he said to Betty.
He located the switch-cover in the hull, opened it and activated the
mechanism that swung open the airlock and extended the ladder.
It took him considerable scrambling to boost the girl up the ladder and
inside, but he managed. They passed through the airlock, fretting at
the time required to seal, pump air and open the inner hatch; and then
Tolliver led the way up another ladder to the control room. It was a
clumsy trip in their spacesuits, but he wanted to save time.
In the control room, he shoved the girl into an acceleration seat,
glanced at the gauges and showed her how to open her helmet.
"Leave the suit on," he ordered, getting in the first word while she
was still shaking her head. "It will help a little on the takeoff."
"Takeoff!" shrilled Betty. "What do you think you're going to do? I
just want to use the radio or TV!"
"That tractor will get here in a minute or two. They might cut your
conversation kind of short. Now shut up and let me look over these
dials!"
He ran a practiced eye over the board, reading the condition of the
ship. It pleased him. Everything was ready for a takeoff into an
economy orbit for Earth. He busied himself making a few adjustments,
doing his best to ignore the protests from his partner in crime. He
warned her the trip might be long.
"I told you not to come," he said at last. "Now sit back!"
He sat down and pushed a button to start the igniting process.
In a moment, he could feel the rumble of the rockets through the deck,
and then it was out of his hands for several minutes.
"That wasn't so bad," Betty admitted some time later. "Did you go in
the right direction?"
"Who knows?" retorted Tolliver. "There wasn't time to check
everything
. We'll worry about that after we make your call."
"Oh!" Betty looked helpless. "It's in my pocket."
Tolliver sighed. In their weightless state, it was no easy task to pry
her out of the spacesuit. He thought of inquiring if she needed any
further help, but reminded himself that this was the boss's daughter.
When Betty produced a memo giving frequency and call sign, he set about
making contact.
It took only a few minutes, as if the channel had been monitored
expectantly, and the man who flickered into life on the screen wore a
uniform.
"Space Patrol?" whispered Tolliver incredulously.
"That's right," said Betty. "Uh ... Daddy made arrangements for me."
Tolliver held her in front of the screen so she would not float out
of range of the scanner and microphone. As she spoke, he stared
exasperatedly at a bulkhead, marveling at the influence of a man who
could arrange for a cruiser to escort his daughter to Ganymede and
wondering what was behind it all.
When he heard Betty requesting assistance in arresting Jeffers and
reporting the manager as the head of a ring of crooks, he began to
suspect. He also noticed certain peculiarities about the remarks of the
Patrolman.
For one thing, though the officer seemed well acquainted with Betty, he
never addressed her by the name of Koslow. For another, he accepted the
request as if he had been hanging in orbit merely until learning who to
go down after.
They really sent her out to nail someone
, Tolliver realized.
Of
course, she stumbled onto Jeffers by plain dumb luck. But she had an
idea of what to look for. How do I get into these things? She might
have got me killed!
"We do have one trouble," he heard Betty saying. "This tractor driver,
Tolliver, saved my neck by making the ship take off somehow, but he
says it's set for a six-month orbit, or economy flight. Whatever they
call it. I don't think he has any idea where we're headed."
Tolliver pulled her back, holding her in mid-air by the slack of her
sweater.
"Actually, I have a fine idea," he informed the officer coldly. "I
happen to be a qualified space pilot. Everything here is under control.
If Miss Koslow thinks you should arrest Jeffers, you can call us later
on this channel."
"Miss Koslow?" repeated the spacer. "Did she tell you—well, no matter!
If you'll be okay, we'll attend to the other affair immediately."
He signed off promptly. The pilot faced Betty, who looked more offended
than reassured at discovering his status.
"This 'Miss Koslow' business," he said suspiciously. "He sounded funny
about that."
The girl grinned.
"Relax, Tolliver," she told him. "Did you really believe Daddy would
send his own little girl way out here to Ganymede to look for whoever
was gypping him?"
"You ... you...?"
"Sure. The name's Betty Hanlon. I work for a private investigating
firm. If old Koslow had a son to impersonate—"
"I'd be stuck for six months in this orbit with some brash young man,"
Tolliver finished for her. "I guess it's better this way," he said
meditatively a moment later.
"Oh, come
on
! Can't they get us back? How can you tell where we're
going?"
"I know enough to check takeoff time. It was practically due anyhow, so
we'll float into the vicinity of Earth at about the right time to be
picked up."
He went on to explain something of the tremendous cost in fuel
necessary to make more than minor corrections to their course. Even
though the Patrol ship could easily catch the slow freighter, bringing
along enough fuel to head back would be something else again.
"We'll just have to ride it out," he said sympathetically. "The ship is
provisioned according to law, and you were probably going back anyhow."
"I didn't expect to so soon."
"Yeah, you were pretty lucky. They'll think you're a marvel to crack
the case in about three hours on Ganymede."
"Great!" muttered Betty. "What a lucky girl I am!"
"Yes," admitted Tolliver, "there
are
problems. If you like, we might
get the captain of that Patrol ship to legalize the situation by TV."
"I can see you're used to sweeping girls off their feet," she commented
sourly.
"The main problem is whether you can cook."
Betty frowned at him.
"I'm pretty good with a pistol," she offered, "or going over crooked
books. But cook? Sorry."
"Well, one of us had better learn, and I'll have other things to do."
"I'll think about it," promised the girl, staring thoughtfully at the
deck.
Tolliver anchored himself in a seat and grinned as he thought about it
too.
After a while
, he promised himself,
I'll explain how I cut the fuel
flow and see if she's detective enough to suspect that we're just
orbiting Ganymede!
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/1/0/5/61053//61053-h//61053-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | How does Tolliver feel about Betty at first? | 61053_LE36BG9H_3 | [
"she's a rich man's daughter deserving of the company",
"she's attractive and someone he should get to know",
"she's an entitled girl that doesn't know what she's getting into",
"she's a fun girl to joke around with while on Ganymede"
] | 3 | 3 | [
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61,053 | 61053_LE36BG9H | 12 | 1,009 | Gutenberg | Tolliver's Orbit | 1958.0 | Fyfe, H. B. (Horace Bowne) | Ganymede (Satellite) -- Fiction; PS; Short stories; Science fiction; Embezzlement -- Fiction; Man-woman relationships -- Fiction | TOLLIVER'S ORBIT
was slow—but it wasn't boring. And
it would get you there—as long as
you weren't going anywhere anyhow!
By H. B. FYFE
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of If Science Fiction, September 1961.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
Johnny Tolliver scowled across the desk at his superior. His black
thatch was ruffled, as if he had been rubbed the wrong way.
"I didn't ask you to cut out your own graft, did I?" he demanded.
"Just don't try to sucker me in on the deal. I know you're operating
something sneaky all through the colony, but it's not for me."
The big moon-face of Jeffers, manager of the Ganymedan branch of
Koslow Spaceways, glowered back at him. Its reddish tinge brightened
the office noticeably, for such of Ganymede's surface as could be seen
through the transparent dome outside the office window was cold, dim
and rugged. The glowing semi-disk of Jupiter was more than half a
million miles distant.
"Try not to be simple—for once!" growled Jeffers. "A little percentage
here and there on the cargoes never shows by the time figures get back
to Earth. The big jets in the home office don't care. They count it on
the estimates."
"You asked any of them lately?" Tolliver prodded.
"Now,
listen
! Maybe they live soft back on Earth since the mines
and the Jovian satellite colonies grew; but they were out here in the
beginning, most of them.
They
know what it's like. D'ya think they
don't expect us to make what we can on the side?"
Tolliver rammed his fists into the side pockets of his loose blue
uniform jacket. He shook his head, grinning resignedly.
"You just don't listen to
me
," he complained. "You know I took this
piloting job just to scrape up money for an advanced engineering degree
back on Earth. I only want to finish my year—not get into something I
can't quit."
Jeffers fidgeted in his chair, causing it to creak under the bulk of
his body. It had been built for Ganymede, but not for Jeffers.
"Aw, it's not like that," the manager muttered. "You can ease out
whenever your contract's up. Think we'd bend a good orbit on your
account?"
Tolliver stared at him silently, but the other had difficulty meeting
his eye.
"All right, then!" Jeffers snapped after a long moment. "If you want it
that way, either you get in line with us or you're through right now!"
"You can't fire me," retorted the pilot pityingly. "I came out here
on a contract. Five hundred credits a week base pay, five hundred for
hazardous duty. How else can you get pilots out to Jupiter?"
"Okay I can't fire you legally—as long as you report for work,"
grumbled Jeffers, by now a shade more ruddy. "We'll see how long you
keep reporting. Because you're off the Callisto run as of now! Sit in
your quarters and see if the company calls
that
hazardous duty!"
"Doesn't matter," answered Tolliver, grinning amiably. "The hazardous
part is just being on the same moon as you for the next six months."
He winked and walked out, deliberately leaving the door open behind him
so as to enjoy the incoherent bellowing that followed him.
Looks like a little vacation
, he thought, unperturbed.
He'll come
around. I just want to get back to Earth with a clean rep. Let Jeffers
and his gang steal the Great Red Spot off Jupiter if they like! It's
their risk.
Tolliver began to have his doubts the next day; which was "Tuesday"
by the arbitrary calender constructed to match Ganymede's week-long
journey around Jupiter.
His contract guaranteed a pilot's rating, but someone had neglected to
specify the type of craft to be piloted.
On the bulletin board, Tolliver's name stood out beside the number
of one of the airtight tractors used between the dome city and the
spaceport, or for hauling cross-country to one of the mining domes.
He soon found that there was nothing for him to do but hang around the
garage in case a spaceship should land. The few runs to other domes
seemed to be assigned to drivers with larger vehicles.
The following day was just as boring, and the next more so. He swore
when he found the assignment unchanged by "Friday." Even the reflection
that it was payday was small consolation.
"Hey, Johnny!" said a voice at his shoulder. "The word is that they're
finally gonna trust you to take that creeper outside."
Tolliver turned to see Red Higgins, a regular driver.
"What do you mean?"
"They say some home-office relative is coming in on the
Javelin
."
"What's wrong with that?" asked Tolliver. "Outside of the way they keep
handing out soft jobs to nephews, I mean."
"Aah, these young punks just come out for a few months so they can go
back to Earth making noises like spacemen. Sometimes there's no reason
but them for sending a ship back with a crew instead of in an economy
orbit. Wait till you see the baggage you'll have to load!"
Later in the day-period, Tolliver recalled this warning. Under a
portable, double-chambered plastic dome blown up outside the ship's
airlock, a crewman helped him load two trunks and a collection of bags
into the tractor. He was struggling to suppress a feeling of outrage at
the waste of fuel involved when the home-office relative emerged.
She was about five feet four and moved as if she walked lightly even
in stronger gravity than Ganymede's. Her trim coiffure was a shade too
blonde which served to set off both the blue of her eyes and the cap
apparently won from one of the pilots. She wore gray slacks and a heavy
sweater, like a spacer.
"Sorry to keep you waiting," she said, sliding into the seat beside
Tolliver. "By the way, just call me Betty."
"Sure," agreed Tolliver thinking,
Ohmigod! Trying already to be just
one of the gang, instead of Lady Betty! Is her old man the treasurer,
or does he just know where bodies are buried?
"They were making dates," said the girl. "Were they ribbing me, or is
it true that none of the four of them goes back with the ship?"
"It's true enough," Tolliver assured her. "We need people out here, and
it costs a lot to make the trip. They found they could send back loaded
ships by 'automatic' flight—that is, a long, slow, economical orbit
and automatic signalling equipment. Then they're boarded approaching
Earth's orbit and landed by pilots who don't have to waste their time
making the entire trip."
He followed the signals of a spacesuited member of the port staff and
maneuvered out of the dome. Then he headed the tractor across the
frozen surface of Ganymede toward the permanent domes of the city.
"How is it here?" asked the girl. "They told me it's pretty rough."
"What did you expect?" asked Tolliver. "Square dances with champagne?"
"Don't be silly. Daddy says I'm supposed to learn traffic routing and
the business management of a local branch. They probably won't let me
see much else."
"You never can tell," said the pilot, yielding to temptation. "Any
square inch of Ganymede is likely to be dangerous."
I'll be sorry later
, he reflected,
but if Jeffers keeps me jockeying
this creeper, I'm entitled to some amusement. And Daddy's little girl
is trying too hard to sound like one of the gang.
"Yeah," he went on, "right now, I don't do a thing but drive missions
from the city to the spaceport."
"Missions! You call driving a mile or so a
mission
?"
Tolliver pursed his lips and put on a shrewd expression.
"Don't sneer at Ganymede, honey!" he warned portentously. "Many a
man who did isn't here today. Take the fellow who used to drive this
mission!"
"You can call me Betty. What happened to him?"
"I'll tell you some day," Tolliver promised darkly. "This moon can
strike like a vicious animal."
"Oh, they told me there was nothing alive on Ganymede!"
"I was thinking of the mountain slides," said the pilot. "Not to
mention volcanic puffballs that pop out through the frozen crust where
you'd least expect. That's why I draw such high pay for driving an
unarmored tractor."
"You use armored vehicles?" gasped the girl.
She was now sitting bolt upright in the swaying seat. Tolliver
deliberately dipped one track into an icy hollow. In the light gravity,
the tractor responded with a weird, floating lurch.
"Those slides," he continued. "Ganymede's only about the size of
Mercury, something like 3200 miles in diameter, so things get heaped up
at steep angles. When the rock and ice are set to sliding, they come
at you practically horizontally. It doesn't need much start, and it
barrels on for a long way before there's enough friction to stop it. If
you're in the way—well, it's just too bad!"
Say, that's pretty good!
he told himself.
What a liar you are,
Tolliver!
He enlarged upon other dangers to be encountered on the satellite,
taking care to impress the newcomer with the daredeviltry of John
Tolliver, driver of "missions" across the menacing wastes between dome
and port.
In the end, he displayed conclusive evidence in the form of the weekly
paycheck he had received that morning. It did not, naturally, indicate
he was drawing the salary of a space pilot. Betty looked thoughtful.
"I'm retiring in six months if I'm still alive," he said bravely,
edging the tractor into the airlock at their destination. "Made my
pile. No use pushing your luck too far."
His charge seemed noticeably subdued, but cleared her throat to request
that Tolliver guide her to the office of the manager. She trailed along
as if with a burden of worry upon her mind, and the pilot's conscience
prickled.
I'll get hold of her after Jeffers is through and set her straight
,
he resolved.
It isn't really funny if the sucker is too ignorant to
know better.
Remembering his grudge against the manager, he took pleasure in walking
in without knocking.
"Jeffers," he announced, "this is ... just call her Betty."
The manager's jowled features twisted into an expression of welcome as
jovial as that of a hungry crocodile.
"Miss Koslow!" he beamed, like a politician the day before the voting.
"It certainly is an honor to have you on Ganymede with us! That's all,
Tolliver, you can go. Yes, indeed! Mr. Koslow—the president, that is:
your father—sent a message about you. I repeat, it will be an honor to
show you the ropes. Did you want something else, Tolliver?"
"Never mind him, Mr. Jeffers," snapped the girl, in a tone new to
Tolliver. "We won't be working together, I'm afraid. You've already had
enough rope."
Jeffers seemed to stagger standing still behind his desk. His loose
lips twitched uncertainly, and he looked questioningly to Tolliver. The
pilot stared at Betty, trying to recall pictures he had seen of the
elder Koslow. He was also trying to remember some of the lies he had
told en route from the spaceport.
"Wh-wh-what do you mean, Miss Koslow?" Jeffers stammered.
He darted a suspicious glare at Tolliver.
"Mr. Jeffers," said the girl, "I may look like just another spoiled
little blonde, but the best part of this company will be mine someday.
I was not allowed to reach twenty-two without learning something about
holding on to it."
Tolliver blinked. He had taken her for three or four years older.
Jeffers now ignored him, intent upon the girl.
"Daddy gave me the title of tenth vice-president mostly as a joke, when
he told me to find out what was wrong with operations on Ganymede.
I have
some
authority, though. And you look like the source of the
trouble to me."
"You can't prove anything," declared Jeffers hoarsely.
"Oh, can't I? I've already seen certain evidence, and the rest won't
be hard to find. Where are your books, Mr. Jeffers? You're as good as
fired!"
The manager dropped heavily to his chair. He stared unbelievingly at
Betty, and Tolliver thought he muttered something about "just landed."
After a moment, the big man came out of his daze enough to stab an
intercom button with his finger. He growled at someone on the other end
to come in without a countdown.
Tolliver, hardly thinking about it, expected the someone to be
a secretary, but it turned out to be three members of Jeffers'
headquarters staff. He recognized one as Rawlins, a warehouse chief,
and guessed that the other two might be his assistants. They were large
enough.
"No stupid questions!" Jeffers ordered. "Lock these two up while I
think!"
Tolliver started for the door immediately, but was blocked off.
"Where should we lock—?" the fellow paused to ask.
Tolliver brought up a snappy uppercut to the man's chin, feeling that
it was a poor time to engage Jeffers in fruitless debate.
In the gravity of Ganymede, the man was knocked off balance as much as
he was hurt, and sprawled on the floor.
"I
told
you no questions!" bawled Jeffers.
The fallen hero, upon arising, had to content himself with grabbing
Betty. The others were swarming over Tolliver. Jeffers came around his
desk to assist.
Tolliver found himself dumped on the floor of an empty office in the
adjoining warehouse building. It seemed to him that a long time had
been spent in carrying him there.
He heard an indignant yelp, and realized that the girl had been pitched
in with him. The snapping of a lock was followed by the tramp of
departing footsteps and then by silence.
After considering the idea a few minutes, Tolliver managed to sit up.
He had his wind back. But when he fingered the swelling lump behind his
left ear, a sensation befuddled him momentarily.
"I'm sorry about that," murmured Betty.
Tolliver grunted. Sorrow would not reduce the throbbing, nor was he
in a mood to undertake an explanation of why Jeffers did not like him
anyway.
"I think perhaps you're going to have a shiner," remarked the girl.
"Thanks for letting me know in time," said Tolliver.
The skin under his right eye did feel a trifle tight, but he could see
well enough. The abandoned and empty look of the office worried him.
"What can we use to get out of here?" he mused.
"Why should we try?" asked the girl. "What can he do?"
"You'd be surprised. How did you catch on to him so soon?"
"Your paycheck," said Betty. "As soon as I saw that ridiculous amount,
it was obvious that there was gross mismanagement here. It had to be
Jeffers."
Tolliver groaned.
"Then, on the way over here, he as good as admitted everything. You
didn't hear him, I guess. Well, he seemed to be caught all unaware, and
seemed to blame you for it."
"Sure!" grumbled the pilot. "He thinks I told you he was grafting or
smuggling, or whatever he has going for him here. That's why I want to
get out of here—before I find myself involved in some kind of fatal
accident!"
"What do you know about the crooked goings-on here?" asked Betty after
a startled pause.
"Nothing," retorted Tolliver. "Except that there are some. There are
rumors, and I had a halfway invitation to join in. I think he sells
things to the mining colonies and makes a double profit for himself by
claiming the stuff lost in transit. You didn't think you scared him
that bad over a little slack managing?"
The picture of Jeffers huddled with his partners in the headquarters
building, plotting the next move, brought Tolliver to his feet.
There was nothing in the unused office but an old table and half a
dozen plastic crates. He saw that the latter contained a mess of
discarded records.
"Better than nothing at all," he muttered.
He ripped out a double handful of the forms, crumpled them into a pile
at the doorway, and pulled out his cigarette lighter.
"What do you think you're up to?" asked Betty with some concern.
"This plastic is tough," said Tolliver, "but it will bend with enough
heat. If I can kick loose a hinge, maybe we can fool them yet!"
He got a little fire going, and fed it judiciously with more papers.
"You know," he reflected, "it might be better for you to stay here.
He can't do much about you, and you don't have any real proof just by
yourself."
"I'll come along with you, Tolliver," said the girl.
"No, I don't think you'd better."
"Why not?"
"Well ... after all, what would he dare do? Arranging an accident to
the daughter of the boss isn't something that he can pull off without a
lot of investigation. He'd be better off just running for it."
"Let's not argue about it," said Betty, a trifle pale but looking
determined. "I'm coming with you. Is that stuff getting soft yet?"
Tolliver kicked at the edge of the door experimentally. It seemed to
give slightly, so he knocked the burning papers aside and drove his
heel hard at the corner below the hinge.
The plastic yielded.
"That's enough already, Tolliver," whispered the girl. "We can crawl
through!"
Hardly sixty seconds later, he led her into a maze of stacked crates
in the warehouse proper. The building was not much longer than wide,
for each of the structures in the colony had its own hemispherical
emergency dome of transparent plastic. They soon reached the other end.
"I think there's a storeroom for spacesuits around here," muttered
Tolliver.
"Why do you want them?"
"Honey, I just don't think it will be so easy to lay hands on a
tractor. I bet Jeffers already phoned the garage and all the airlocks
with some good lie that will keep me from getting through."
After a brief search, he located the spacesuits. Many, evidently
intended for replacements, had never been unpacked, but there were a
dozen or so serviced and standing ready for emergencies. He showed
Betty how to climb into one, and checked her seals and valves after
donning a suit himself.
"That switch under your chin," he said, touching helmets so she could
hear him. "Leave it turned off.
Anybody
might be listening!"
He led the way out a rear door of the warehouse. With the heavy knife
that was standard suit equipment, he deliberately slashed a four-foot
square section out of the dome. He motioned to Betty to step through,
then trailed along with the plastic under his arm.
He caught up and touched helmets again.
"Just act as if you're on business," he told her. "For all anyone can
see, we might be inspecting the dome."
"Where are you going?" asked Betty.
"Right through the wall, and then head for the nearest mine. Jeffers
can't be running
everything
!"
"Is there any way to get to a TV?" asked the girl. "I ... uh ... Daddy
gave me a good number to call if I needed help."
"How good?"
"Pretty official, as a matter of fact."
"All right," Tolliver decided. "We'll try the ship you just came in on.
They might have finished refueling and left her empty."
They had to cross one open lane between buildings, and Tolliver was
very conscious of moving figures in the distance; but no one seemed to
look their way.
Reaching the foot of the main dome over the establishment, he glanced
furtively about, then plunged his knife into the transparent material.
From the corner of his eye, he thought he saw Betty make a startled
gesture, but he had his work cut out for him. This was tougher than the
interior dome.
Finally, he managed to saw a ragged slit through which they could
squeeze. There was room to walk between the inner and outer layer, so
he moved along a few yards. A little dust began to blow about where
they had gone through. He touched helmets once more.
"This time," he said, "the air will really start to blow, so get
through as fast as you can. If I can slap this piece of plastic over
the rip, it may stow down the loss of pressure enough to give us quite
a lead before the alarms go off."
Through the faceplates, he saw the girl nod, wide-eyed.
As soon as he plunged the knife into the outer layer, he could see
dusty, moist air puffing out into the near-vacuum of Ganymede's
surface. Fumbling, he cut as fast as he could and shoved Betty through
the small opening.
Squeezing through in his turn, he left one arm inside to spread the
plastic sheet as best he could. The internal air pressure slapped it
against the inside of the dome as if glued, although it immediately
showed an alarming tendency to balloon through the ruptured spot.
They'll find it, all right
, Tolliver reminded himself.
Don't be here
when they do!
He grabbed Betty by the wrist of her spacesuit and headed for the
nearest outcropping of rock.
It promptly developed that she had something to learn about running on
ice in such low gravity. Until they were out of direct line of sight
from the settlement, Tolliver simply dragged her.
Then, when he decided that it was safe enough to pause and tell her
how to manage better, the sight of her outraged scowl through the
face-plate made him think better of it.
By the time we reach the ship, she'll have learned
, he consoled
himself.
It was a long mile, even at the pace human muscles could achieve on
Ganymede. They took one short rest, during which Tolliver was forced
to explain away the dangers of slides and volcanic puffballs. He
admitted to having exaggerated slightly. In the end, they reached the
spaceship.
There seemed to be no one about. The landing dome had been collapsed
and stored, and the ship's airlock port was closed.
"That's all right," Tolliver told the girl. "We can get in with no
trouble."
It was when he looked about to make sure that they were unobserved that
he caught a glimpse of motion back toward the city. He peered at the
spot through the dim light. After a moment, he definitely recognized
the outline of a tractor breasting a rise in the ground and tilting
downward again.
"In fact, we
have
to get in to stay out of trouble," he said to Betty.
He located the switch-cover in the hull, opened it and activated the
mechanism that swung open the airlock and extended the ladder.
It took him considerable scrambling to boost the girl up the ladder and
inside, but he managed. They passed through the airlock, fretting at
the time required to seal, pump air and open the inner hatch; and then
Tolliver led the way up another ladder to the control room. It was a
clumsy trip in their spacesuits, but he wanted to save time.
In the control room, he shoved the girl into an acceleration seat,
glanced at the gauges and showed her how to open her helmet.
"Leave the suit on," he ordered, getting in the first word while she
was still shaking her head. "It will help a little on the takeoff."
"Takeoff!" shrilled Betty. "What do you think you're going to do? I
just want to use the radio or TV!"
"That tractor will get here in a minute or two. They might cut your
conversation kind of short. Now shut up and let me look over these
dials!"
He ran a practiced eye over the board, reading the condition of the
ship. It pleased him. Everything was ready for a takeoff into an
economy orbit for Earth. He busied himself making a few adjustments,
doing his best to ignore the protests from his partner in crime. He
warned her the trip might be long.
"I told you not to come," he said at last. "Now sit back!"
He sat down and pushed a button to start the igniting process.
In a moment, he could feel the rumble of the rockets through the deck,
and then it was out of his hands for several minutes.
"That wasn't so bad," Betty admitted some time later. "Did you go in
the right direction?"
"Who knows?" retorted Tolliver. "There wasn't time to check
everything
. We'll worry about that after we make your call."
"Oh!" Betty looked helpless. "It's in my pocket."
Tolliver sighed. In their weightless state, it was no easy task to pry
her out of the spacesuit. He thought of inquiring if she needed any
further help, but reminded himself that this was the boss's daughter.
When Betty produced a memo giving frequency and call sign, he set about
making contact.
It took only a few minutes, as if the channel had been monitored
expectantly, and the man who flickered into life on the screen wore a
uniform.
"Space Patrol?" whispered Tolliver incredulously.
"That's right," said Betty. "Uh ... Daddy made arrangements for me."
Tolliver held her in front of the screen so she would not float out
of range of the scanner and microphone. As she spoke, he stared
exasperatedly at a bulkhead, marveling at the influence of a man who
could arrange for a cruiser to escort his daughter to Ganymede and
wondering what was behind it all.
When he heard Betty requesting assistance in arresting Jeffers and
reporting the manager as the head of a ring of crooks, he began to
suspect. He also noticed certain peculiarities about the remarks of the
Patrolman.
For one thing, though the officer seemed well acquainted with Betty, he
never addressed her by the name of Koslow. For another, he accepted the
request as if he had been hanging in orbit merely until learning who to
go down after.
They really sent her out to nail someone
, Tolliver realized.
Of
course, she stumbled onto Jeffers by plain dumb luck. But she had an
idea of what to look for. How do I get into these things? She might
have got me killed!
"We do have one trouble," he heard Betty saying. "This tractor driver,
Tolliver, saved my neck by making the ship take off somehow, but he
says it's set for a six-month orbit, or economy flight. Whatever they
call it. I don't think he has any idea where we're headed."
Tolliver pulled her back, holding her in mid-air by the slack of her
sweater.
"Actually, I have a fine idea," he informed the officer coldly. "I
happen to be a qualified space pilot. Everything here is under control.
If Miss Koslow thinks you should arrest Jeffers, you can call us later
on this channel."
"Miss Koslow?" repeated the spacer. "Did she tell you—well, no matter!
If you'll be okay, we'll attend to the other affair immediately."
He signed off promptly. The pilot faced Betty, who looked more offended
than reassured at discovering his status.
"This 'Miss Koslow' business," he said suspiciously. "He sounded funny
about that."
The girl grinned.
"Relax, Tolliver," she told him. "Did you really believe Daddy would
send his own little girl way out here to Ganymede to look for whoever
was gypping him?"
"You ... you...?"
"Sure. The name's Betty Hanlon. I work for a private investigating
firm. If old Koslow had a son to impersonate—"
"I'd be stuck for six months in this orbit with some brash young man,"
Tolliver finished for her. "I guess it's better this way," he said
meditatively a moment later.
"Oh, come
on
! Can't they get us back? How can you tell where we're
going?"
"I know enough to check takeoff time. It was practically due anyhow, so
we'll float into the vicinity of Earth at about the right time to be
picked up."
He went on to explain something of the tremendous cost in fuel
necessary to make more than minor corrections to their course. Even
though the Patrol ship could easily catch the slow freighter, bringing
along enough fuel to head back would be something else again.
"We'll just have to ride it out," he said sympathetically. "The ship is
provisioned according to law, and you were probably going back anyhow."
"I didn't expect to so soon."
"Yeah, you were pretty lucky. They'll think you're a marvel to crack
the case in about three hours on Ganymede."
"Great!" muttered Betty. "What a lucky girl I am!"
"Yes," admitted Tolliver, "there
are
problems. If you like, we might
get the captain of that Patrol ship to legalize the situation by TV."
"I can see you're used to sweeping girls off their feet," she commented
sourly.
"The main problem is whether you can cook."
Betty frowned at him.
"I'm pretty good with a pistol," she offered, "or going over crooked
books. But cook? Sorry."
"Well, one of us had better learn, and I'll have other things to do."
"I'll think about it," promised the girl, staring thoughtfully at the
deck.
Tolliver anchored himself in a seat and grinned as he thought about it
too.
After a while
, he promised himself,
I'll explain how I cut the fuel
flow and see if she's detective enough to suspect that we're just
orbiting Ganymede!
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/1/0/5/61053//61053-h//61053-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | What did Tolliver tell Betty that was actually true? | 61053_LE36BG9H_4 | [
"he regularly drives armored vehicles on missions",
"the rock and ice slides kill people often",
"volcanic puffballs pop out through the frozen crust",
"how much he's making to work on Ganymede"
] | 4 | 4 | [
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61,053 | 61053_LE36BG9H | 12 | 1,009 | Gutenberg | Tolliver's Orbit | 1958.0 | Fyfe, H. B. (Horace Bowne) | Ganymede (Satellite) -- Fiction; PS; Short stories; Science fiction; Embezzlement -- Fiction; Man-woman relationships -- Fiction | TOLLIVER'S ORBIT
was slow—but it wasn't boring. And
it would get you there—as long as
you weren't going anywhere anyhow!
By H. B. FYFE
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of If Science Fiction, September 1961.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
Johnny Tolliver scowled across the desk at his superior. His black
thatch was ruffled, as if he had been rubbed the wrong way.
"I didn't ask you to cut out your own graft, did I?" he demanded.
"Just don't try to sucker me in on the deal. I know you're operating
something sneaky all through the colony, but it's not for me."
The big moon-face of Jeffers, manager of the Ganymedan branch of
Koslow Spaceways, glowered back at him. Its reddish tinge brightened
the office noticeably, for such of Ganymede's surface as could be seen
through the transparent dome outside the office window was cold, dim
and rugged. The glowing semi-disk of Jupiter was more than half a
million miles distant.
"Try not to be simple—for once!" growled Jeffers. "A little percentage
here and there on the cargoes never shows by the time figures get back
to Earth. The big jets in the home office don't care. They count it on
the estimates."
"You asked any of them lately?" Tolliver prodded.
"Now,
listen
! Maybe they live soft back on Earth since the mines
and the Jovian satellite colonies grew; but they were out here in the
beginning, most of them.
They
know what it's like. D'ya think they
don't expect us to make what we can on the side?"
Tolliver rammed his fists into the side pockets of his loose blue
uniform jacket. He shook his head, grinning resignedly.
"You just don't listen to
me
," he complained. "You know I took this
piloting job just to scrape up money for an advanced engineering degree
back on Earth. I only want to finish my year—not get into something I
can't quit."
Jeffers fidgeted in his chair, causing it to creak under the bulk of
his body. It had been built for Ganymede, but not for Jeffers.
"Aw, it's not like that," the manager muttered. "You can ease out
whenever your contract's up. Think we'd bend a good orbit on your
account?"
Tolliver stared at him silently, but the other had difficulty meeting
his eye.
"All right, then!" Jeffers snapped after a long moment. "If you want it
that way, either you get in line with us or you're through right now!"
"You can't fire me," retorted the pilot pityingly. "I came out here
on a contract. Five hundred credits a week base pay, five hundred for
hazardous duty. How else can you get pilots out to Jupiter?"
"Okay I can't fire you legally—as long as you report for work,"
grumbled Jeffers, by now a shade more ruddy. "We'll see how long you
keep reporting. Because you're off the Callisto run as of now! Sit in
your quarters and see if the company calls
that
hazardous duty!"
"Doesn't matter," answered Tolliver, grinning amiably. "The hazardous
part is just being on the same moon as you for the next six months."
He winked and walked out, deliberately leaving the door open behind him
so as to enjoy the incoherent bellowing that followed him.
Looks like a little vacation
, he thought, unperturbed.
He'll come
around. I just want to get back to Earth with a clean rep. Let Jeffers
and his gang steal the Great Red Spot off Jupiter if they like! It's
their risk.
Tolliver began to have his doubts the next day; which was "Tuesday"
by the arbitrary calender constructed to match Ganymede's week-long
journey around Jupiter.
His contract guaranteed a pilot's rating, but someone had neglected to
specify the type of craft to be piloted.
On the bulletin board, Tolliver's name stood out beside the number
of one of the airtight tractors used between the dome city and the
spaceport, or for hauling cross-country to one of the mining domes.
He soon found that there was nothing for him to do but hang around the
garage in case a spaceship should land. The few runs to other domes
seemed to be assigned to drivers with larger vehicles.
The following day was just as boring, and the next more so. He swore
when he found the assignment unchanged by "Friday." Even the reflection
that it was payday was small consolation.
"Hey, Johnny!" said a voice at his shoulder. "The word is that they're
finally gonna trust you to take that creeper outside."
Tolliver turned to see Red Higgins, a regular driver.
"What do you mean?"
"They say some home-office relative is coming in on the
Javelin
."
"What's wrong with that?" asked Tolliver. "Outside of the way they keep
handing out soft jobs to nephews, I mean."
"Aah, these young punks just come out for a few months so they can go
back to Earth making noises like spacemen. Sometimes there's no reason
but them for sending a ship back with a crew instead of in an economy
orbit. Wait till you see the baggage you'll have to load!"
Later in the day-period, Tolliver recalled this warning. Under a
portable, double-chambered plastic dome blown up outside the ship's
airlock, a crewman helped him load two trunks and a collection of bags
into the tractor. He was struggling to suppress a feeling of outrage at
the waste of fuel involved when the home-office relative emerged.
She was about five feet four and moved as if she walked lightly even
in stronger gravity than Ganymede's. Her trim coiffure was a shade too
blonde which served to set off both the blue of her eyes and the cap
apparently won from one of the pilots. She wore gray slacks and a heavy
sweater, like a spacer.
"Sorry to keep you waiting," she said, sliding into the seat beside
Tolliver. "By the way, just call me Betty."
"Sure," agreed Tolliver thinking,
Ohmigod! Trying already to be just
one of the gang, instead of Lady Betty! Is her old man the treasurer,
or does he just know where bodies are buried?
"They were making dates," said the girl. "Were they ribbing me, or is
it true that none of the four of them goes back with the ship?"
"It's true enough," Tolliver assured her. "We need people out here, and
it costs a lot to make the trip. They found they could send back loaded
ships by 'automatic' flight—that is, a long, slow, economical orbit
and automatic signalling equipment. Then they're boarded approaching
Earth's orbit and landed by pilots who don't have to waste their time
making the entire trip."
He followed the signals of a spacesuited member of the port staff and
maneuvered out of the dome. Then he headed the tractor across the
frozen surface of Ganymede toward the permanent domes of the city.
"How is it here?" asked the girl. "They told me it's pretty rough."
"What did you expect?" asked Tolliver. "Square dances with champagne?"
"Don't be silly. Daddy says I'm supposed to learn traffic routing and
the business management of a local branch. They probably won't let me
see much else."
"You never can tell," said the pilot, yielding to temptation. "Any
square inch of Ganymede is likely to be dangerous."
I'll be sorry later
, he reflected,
but if Jeffers keeps me jockeying
this creeper, I'm entitled to some amusement. And Daddy's little girl
is trying too hard to sound like one of the gang.
"Yeah," he went on, "right now, I don't do a thing but drive missions
from the city to the spaceport."
"Missions! You call driving a mile or so a
mission
?"
Tolliver pursed his lips and put on a shrewd expression.
"Don't sneer at Ganymede, honey!" he warned portentously. "Many a
man who did isn't here today. Take the fellow who used to drive this
mission!"
"You can call me Betty. What happened to him?"
"I'll tell you some day," Tolliver promised darkly. "This moon can
strike like a vicious animal."
"Oh, they told me there was nothing alive on Ganymede!"
"I was thinking of the mountain slides," said the pilot. "Not to
mention volcanic puffballs that pop out through the frozen crust where
you'd least expect. That's why I draw such high pay for driving an
unarmored tractor."
"You use armored vehicles?" gasped the girl.
She was now sitting bolt upright in the swaying seat. Tolliver
deliberately dipped one track into an icy hollow. In the light gravity,
the tractor responded with a weird, floating lurch.
"Those slides," he continued. "Ganymede's only about the size of
Mercury, something like 3200 miles in diameter, so things get heaped up
at steep angles. When the rock and ice are set to sliding, they come
at you practically horizontally. It doesn't need much start, and it
barrels on for a long way before there's enough friction to stop it. If
you're in the way—well, it's just too bad!"
Say, that's pretty good!
he told himself.
What a liar you are,
Tolliver!
He enlarged upon other dangers to be encountered on the satellite,
taking care to impress the newcomer with the daredeviltry of John
Tolliver, driver of "missions" across the menacing wastes between dome
and port.
In the end, he displayed conclusive evidence in the form of the weekly
paycheck he had received that morning. It did not, naturally, indicate
he was drawing the salary of a space pilot. Betty looked thoughtful.
"I'm retiring in six months if I'm still alive," he said bravely,
edging the tractor into the airlock at their destination. "Made my
pile. No use pushing your luck too far."
His charge seemed noticeably subdued, but cleared her throat to request
that Tolliver guide her to the office of the manager. She trailed along
as if with a burden of worry upon her mind, and the pilot's conscience
prickled.
I'll get hold of her after Jeffers is through and set her straight
,
he resolved.
It isn't really funny if the sucker is too ignorant to
know better.
Remembering his grudge against the manager, he took pleasure in walking
in without knocking.
"Jeffers," he announced, "this is ... just call her Betty."
The manager's jowled features twisted into an expression of welcome as
jovial as that of a hungry crocodile.
"Miss Koslow!" he beamed, like a politician the day before the voting.
"It certainly is an honor to have you on Ganymede with us! That's all,
Tolliver, you can go. Yes, indeed! Mr. Koslow—the president, that is:
your father—sent a message about you. I repeat, it will be an honor to
show you the ropes. Did you want something else, Tolliver?"
"Never mind him, Mr. Jeffers," snapped the girl, in a tone new to
Tolliver. "We won't be working together, I'm afraid. You've already had
enough rope."
Jeffers seemed to stagger standing still behind his desk. His loose
lips twitched uncertainly, and he looked questioningly to Tolliver. The
pilot stared at Betty, trying to recall pictures he had seen of the
elder Koslow. He was also trying to remember some of the lies he had
told en route from the spaceport.
"Wh-wh-what do you mean, Miss Koslow?" Jeffers stammered.
He darted a suspicious glare at Tolliver.
"Mr. Jeffers," said the girl, "I may look like just another spoiled
little blonde, but the best part of this company will be mine someday.
I was not allowed to reach twenty-two without learning something about
holding on to it."
Tolliver blinked. He had taken her for three or four years older.
Jeffers now ignored him, intent upon the girl.
"Daddy gave me the title of tenth vice-president mostly as a joke, when
he told me to find out what was wrong with operations on Ganymede.
I have
some
authority, though. And you look like the source of the
trouble to me."
"You can't prove anything," declared Jeffers hoarsely.
"Oh, can't I? I've already seen certain evidence, and the rest won't
be hard to find. Where are your books, Mr. Jeffers? You're as good as
fired!"
The manager dropped heavily to his chair. He stared unbelievingly at
Betty, and Tolliver thought he muttered something about "just landed."
After a moment, the big man came out of his daze enough to stab an
intercom button with his finger. He growled at someone on the other end
to come in without a countdown.
Tolliver, hardly thinking about it, expected the someone to be
a secretary, but it turned out to be three members of Jeffers'
headquarters staff. He recognized one as Rawlins, a warehouse chief,
and guessed that the other two might be his assistants. They were large
enough.
"No stupid questions!" Jeffers ordered. "Lock these two up while I
think!"
Tolliver started for the door immediately, but was blocked off.
"Where should we lock—?" the fellow paused to ask.
Tolliver brought up a snappy uppercut to the man's chin, feeling that
it was a poor time to engage Jeffers in fruitless debate.
In the gravity of Ganymede, the man was knocked off balance as much as
he was hurt, and sprawled on the floor.
"I
told
you no questions!" bawled Jeffers.
The fallen hero, upon arising, had to content himself with grabbing
Betty. The others were swarming over Tolliver. Jeffers came around his
desk to assist.
Tolliver found himself dumped on the floor of an empty office in the
adjoining warehouse building. It seemed to him that a long time had
been spent in carrying him there.
He heard an indignant yelp, and realized that the girl had been pitched
in with him. The snapping of a lock was followed by the tramp of
departing footsteps and then by silence.
After considering the idea a few minutes, Tolliver managed to sit up.
He had his wind back. But when he fingered the swelling lump behind his
left ear, a sensation befuddled him momentarily.
"I'm sorry about that," murmured Betty.
Tolliver grunted. Sorrow would not reduce the throbbing, nor was he
in a mood to undertake an explanation of why Jeffers did not like him
anyway.
"I think perhaps you're going to have a shiner," remarked the girl.
"Thanks for letting me know in time," said Tolliver.
The skin under his right eye did feel a trifle tight, but he could see
well enough. The abandoned and empty look of the office worried him.
"What can we use to get out of here?" he mused.
"Why should we try?" asked the girl. "What can he do?"
"You'd be surprised. How did you catch on to him so soon?"
"Your paycheck," said Betty. "As soon as I saw that ridiculous amount,
it was obvious that there was gross mismanagement here. It had to be
Jeffers."
Tolliver groaned.
"Then, on the way over here, he as good as admitted everything. You
didn't hear him, I guess. Well, he seemed to be caught all unaware, and
seemed to blame you for it."
"Sure!" grumbled the pilot. "He thinks I told you he was grafting or
smuggling, or whatever he has going for him here. That's why I want to
get out of here—before I find myself involved in some kind of fatal
accident!"
"What do you know about the crooked goings-on here?" asked Betty after
a startled pause.
"Nothing," retorted Tolliver. "Except that there are some. There are
rumors, and I had a halfway invitation to join in. I think he sells
things to the mining colonies and makes a double profit for himself by
claiming the stuff lost in transit. You didn't think you scared him
that bad over a little slack managing?"
The picture of Jeffers huddled with his partners in the headquarters
building, plotting the next move, brought Tolliver to his feet.
There was nothing in the unused office but an old table and half a
dozen plastic crates. He saw that the latter contained a mess of
discarded records.
"Better than nothing at all," he muttered.
He ripped out a double handful of the forms, crumpled them into a pile
at the doorway, and pulled out his cigarette lighter.
"What do you think you're up to?" asked Betty with some concern.
"This plastic is tough," said Tolliver, "but it will bend with enough
heat. If I can kick loose a hinge, maybe we can fool them yet!"
He got a little fire going, and fed it judiciously with more papers.
"You know," he reflected, "it might be better for you to stay here.
He can't do much about you, and you don't have any real proof just by
yourself."
"I'll come along with you, Tolliver," said the girl.
"No, I don't think you'd better."
"Why not?"
"Well ... after all, what would he dare do? Arranging an accident to
the daughter of the boss isn't something that he can pull off without a
lot of investigation. He'd be better off just running for it."
"Let's not argue about it," said Betty, a trifle pale but looking
determined. "I'm coming with you. Is that stuff getting soft yet?"
Tolliver kicked at the edge of the door experimentally. It seemed to
give slightly, so he knocked the burning papers aside and drove his
heel hard at the corner below the hinge.
The plastic yielded.
"That's enough already, Tolliver," whispered the girl. "We can crawl
through!"
Hardly sixty seconds later, he led her into a maze of stacked crates
in the warehouse proper. The building was not much longer than wide,
for each of the structures in the colony had its own hemispherical
emergency dome of transparent plastic. They soon reached the other end.
"I think there's a storeroom for spacesuits around here," muttered
Tolliver.
"Why do you want them?"
"Honey, I just don't think it will be so easy to lay hands on a
tractor. I bet Jeffers already phoned the garage and all the airlocks
with some good lie that will keep me from getting through."
After a brief search, he located the spacesuits. Many, evidently
intended for replacements, had never been unpacked, but there were a
dozen or so serviced and standing ready for emergencies. He showed
Betty how to climb into one, and checked her seals and valves after
donning a suit himself.
"That switch under your chin," he said, touching helmets so she could
hear him. "Leave it turned off.
Anybody
might be listening!"
He led the way out a rear door of the warehouse. With the heavy knife
that was standard suit equipment, he deliberately slashed a four-foot
square section out of the dome. He motioned to Betty to step through,
then trailed along with the plastic under his arm.
He caught up and touched helmets again.
"Just act as if you're on business," he told her. "For all anyone can
see, we might be inspecting the dome."
"Where are you going?" asked Betty.
"Right through the wall, and then head for the nearest mine. Jeffers
can't be running
everything
!"
"Is there any way to get to a TV?" asked the girl. "I ... uh ... Daddy
gave me a good number to call if I needed help."
"How good?"
"Pretty official, as a matter of fact."
"All right," Tolliver decided. "We'll try the ship you just came in on.
They might have finished refueling and left her empty."
They had to cross one open lane between buildings, and Tolliver was
very conscious of moving figures in the distance; but no one seemed to
look their way.
Reaching the foot of the main dome over the establishment, he glanced
furtively about, then plunged his knife into the transparent material.
From the corner of his eye, he thought he saw Betty make a startled
gesture, but he had his work cut out for him. This was tougher than the
interior dome.
Finally, he managed to saw a ragged slit through which they could
squeeze. There was room to walk between the inner and outer layer, so
he moved along a few yards. A little dust began to blow about where
they had gone through. He touched helmets once more.
"This time," he said, "the air will really start to blow, so get
through as fast as you can. If I can slap this piece of plastic over
the rip, it may stow down the loss of pressure enough to give us quite
a lead before the alarms go off."
Through the faceplates, he saw the girl nod, wide-eyed.
As soon as he plunged the knife into the outer layer, he could see
dusty, moist air puffing out into the near-vacuum of Ganymede's
surface. Fumbling, he cut as fast as he could and shoved Betty through
the small opening.
Squeezing through in his turn, he left one arm inside to spread the
plastic sheet as best he could. The internal air pressure slapped it
against the inside of the dome as if glued, although it immediately
showed an alarming tendency to balloon through the ruptured spot.
They'll find it, all right
, Tolliver reminded himself.
Don't be here
when they do!
He grabbed Betty by the wrist of her spacesuit and headed for the
nearest outcropping of rock.
It promptly developed that she had something to learn about running on
ice in such low gravity. Until they were out of direct line of sight
from the settlement, Tolliver simply dragged her.
Then, when he decided that it was safe enough to pause and tell her
how to manage better, the sight of her outraged scowl through the
face-plate made him think better of it.
By the time we reach the ship, she'll have learned
, he consoled
himself.
It was a long mile, even at the pace human muscles could achieve on
Ganymede. They took one short rest, during which Tolliver was forced
to explain away the dangers of slides and volcanic puffballs. He
admitted to having exaggerated slightly. In the end, they reached the
spaceship.
There seemed to be no one about. The landing dome had been collapsed
and stored, and the ship's airlock port was closed.
"That's all right," Tolliver told the girl. "We can get in with no
trouble."
It was when he looked about to make sure that they were unobserved that
he caught a glimpse of motion back toward the city. He peered at the
spot through the dim light. After a moment, he definitely recognized
the outline of a tractor breasting a rise in the ground and tilting
downward again.
"In fact, we
have
to get in to stay out of trouble," he said to Betty.
He located the switch-cover in the hull, opened it and activated the
mechanism that swung open the airlock and extended the ladder.
It took him considerable scrambling to boost the girl up the ladder and
inside, but he managed. They passed through the airlock, fretting at
the time required to seal, pump air and open the inner hatch; and then
Tolliver led the way up another ladder to the control room. It was a
clumsy trip in their spacesuits, but he wanted to save time.
In the control room, he shoved the girl into an acceleration seat,
glanced at the gauges and showed her how to open her helmet.
"Leave the suit on," he ordered, getting in the first word while she
was still shaking her head. "It will help a little on the takeoff."
"Takeoff!" shrilled Betty. "What do you think you're going to do? I
just want to use the radio or TV!"
"That tractor will get here in a minute or two. They might cut your
conversation kind of short. Now shut up and let me look over these
dials!"
He ran a practiced eye over the board, reading the condition of the
ship. It pleased him. Everything was ready for a takeoff into an
economy orbit for Earth. He busied himself making a few adjustments,
doing his best to ignore the protests from his partner in crime. He
warned her the trip might be long.
"I told you not to come," he said at last. "Now sit back!"
He sat down and pushed a button to start the igniting process.
In a moment, he could feel the rumble of the rockets through the deck,
and then it was out of his hands for several minutes.
"That wasn't so bad," Betty admitted some time later. "Did you go in
the right direction?"
"Who knows?" retorted Tolliver. "There wasn't time to check
everything
. We'll worry about that after we make your call."
"Oh!" Betty looked helpless. "It's in my pocket."
Tolliver sighed. In their weightless state, it was no easy task to pry
her out of the spacesuit. He thought of inquiring if she needed any
further help, but reminded himself that this was the boss's daughter.
When Betty produced a memo giving frequency and call sign, he set about
making contact.
It took only a few minutes, as if the channel had been monitored
expectantly, and the man who flickered into life on the screen wore a
uniform.
"Space Patrol?" whispered Tolliver incredulously.
"That's right," said Betty. "Uh ... Daddy made arrangements for me."
Tolliver held her in front of the screen so she would not float out
of range of the scanner and microphone. As she spoke, he stared
exasperatedly at a bulkhead, marveling at the influence of a man who
could arrange for a cruiser to escort his daughter to Ganymede and
wondering what was behind it all.
When he heard Betty requesting assistance in arresting Jeffers and
reporting the manager as the head of a ring of crooks, he began to
suspect. He also noticed certain peculiarities about the remarks of the
Patrolman.
For one thing, though the officer seemed well acquainted with Betty, he
never addressed her by the name of Koslow. For another, he accepted the
request as if he had been hanging in orbit merely until learning who to
go down after.
They really sent her out to nail someone
, Tolliver realized.
Of
course, she stumbled onto Jeffers by plain dumb luck. But she had an
idea of what to look for. How do I get into these things? She might
have got me killed!
"We do have one trouble," he heard Betty saying. "This tractor driver,
Tolliver, saved my neck by making the ship take off somehow, but he
says it's set for a six-month orbit, or economy flight. Whatever they
call it. I don't think he has any idea where we're headed."
Tolliver pulled her back, holding her in mid-air by the slack of her
sweater.
"Actually, I have a fine idea," he informed the officer coldly. "I
happen to be a qualified space pilot. Everything here is under control.
If Miss Koslow thinks you should arrest Jeffers, you can call us later
on this channel."
"Miss Koslow?" repeated the spacer. "Did she tell you—well, no matter!
If you'll be okay, we'll attend to the other affair immediately."
He signed off promptly. The pilot faced Betty, who looked more offended
than reassured at discovering his status.
"This 'Miss Koslow' business," he said suspiciously. "He sounded funny
about that."
The girl grinned.
"Relax, Tolliver," she told him. "Did you really believe Daddy would
send his own little girl way out here to Ganymede to look for whoever
was gypping him?"
"You ... you...?"
"Sure. The name's Betty Hanlon. I work for a private investigating
firm. If old Koslow had a son to impersonate—"
"I'd be stuck for six months in this orbit with some brash young man,"
Tolliver finished for her. "I guess it's better this way," he said
meditatively a moment later.
"Oh, come
on
! Can't they get us back? How can you tell where we're
going?"
"I know enough to check takeoff time. It was practically due anyhow, so
we'll float into the vicinity of Earth at about the right time to be
picked up."
He went on to explain something of the tremendous cost in fuel
necessary to make more than minor corrections to their course. Even
though the Patrol ship could easily catch the slow freighter, bringing
along enough fuel to head back would be something else again.
"We'll just have to ride it out," he said sympathetically. "The ship is
provisioned according to law, and you were probably going back anyhow."
"I didn't expect to so soon."
"Yeah, you were pretty lucky. They'll think you're a marvel to crack
the case in about three hours on Ganymede."
"Great!" muttered Betty. "What a lucky girl I am!"
"Yes," admitted Tolliver, "there
are
problems. If you like, we might
get the captain of that Patrol ship to legalize the situation by TV."
"I can see you're used to sweeping girls off their feet," she commented
sourly.
"The main problem is whether you can cook."
Betty frowned at him.
"I'm pretty good with a pistol," she offered, "or going over crooked
books. But cook? Sorry."
"Well, one of us had better learn, and I'll have other things to do."
"I'll think about it," promised the girl, staring thoughtfully at the
deck.
Tolliver anchored himself in a seat and grinned as he thought about it
too.
After a while
, he promised himself,
I'll explain how I cut the fuel
flow and see if she's detective enough to suspect that we're just
orbiting Ganymede!
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/1/0/5/61053//61053-h//61053-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | Why had Betty really come to Ganymede? | 61053_LE36BG9H_5 | [
"to stay as long as it takes to discover who was behaving illegally",
"to arrest Jeffers for the crimes they knew he committed",
"to study how the business was run",
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20,012 | 20012_1W525LU6 | 12 | 1,009 | Slate | Krugman's Life of Brian | 1998.0 | Paul Krugman | Periodicals; Specialized Magazine; Media Coverage | Krugman's Life of Brian
Where it all started: Paul Krugman's "The Legend of Arthur."
Letter from John Cassidy
Paul Krugman replies to John Cassidy
Letter from M. Mitchell Waldrop
Paul Krugman replies to M. Mitchell Waldrop
Letter from Kenneth J. Arrow
Letter from Ted C. Fishman
David Warsh's July 3, 1994, Boston Globe
Letter from John Cassidy:
Paul Krugman loves to berate journalists for their ignorance of economics, particularly his economics, but on this occasion, I fear, his logic is more addled than usual. I am reluctant to dignify his hatchet job with a lengthy reply, but some of his claims are so defamatory that they should be addressed, if only for the record.
1) Krugman claims that my opening sentence--"In a way, Bill Gates's current troubles with the Justice Department grew out of an economics seminar that took place thirteen years ago, at Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government"--is "pure fiction." Perhaps so, but in that case somebody should tell this to Joel Klein, the assistant attorney general in charge of the antitrust division. When I interviewed Klein for my piece about the Microsoft case, he singled out Brian Arthur as the economist who has most influenced his thinking about the way in which high-technology markets operate. It was Klein's words, not those of Arthur, that prompted me to use Arthur in the lead of the story.
2) Krugman wrote: "Cassidy's article tells the story of how Stanford Professor Brian Arthur came up with the idea of increasing returns." I wrote no such thing, and Arthur has never, to my knowledge, claimed any such thing. The notion of increasing returns has been around since Adam Smith, and it was written about at length by Alfred Marshall in 1890. What I did say in my article was that increasing returns was largely ignored by mainstream economists for much of the postwar era, a claim that simply isn't controversial. (As Krugman notes, one reason for this was technical, not ideological. Allowing for the possibility of increasing returns tends to rob economic models of two properties that economists cherish: simplicity and determinism. As long ago as 1939, Sir John Hicks, one of the founders of modern economics, noted that increasing returns, if tolerated, could lead to the "wreckage" of a large part of economic theory.)
3) Pace Krugman, I also did not claim that Arthur bears principal responsibility for the rediscovery of increasing returns by economists in the 1970s and 1980s. As Krugman notes, several scholars (himself included) who were working in the fields of game theory and international trade published articles incorporating increasing returns before Arthur did. My claim was simply that Arthur applied increasing returns to high-technology markets, and that his work influenced how other economists and government officials think about these markets. Krugman apart, virtually every economist I have spoken to, including Daniel Rubinfeld, a former Berkeley professor who is now the chief economist at the Justice Department's antitrust division, told me this was the case. (Rubinfeld also mentioned several other economists who did influential work, and I cited three of them in the article.)
4) Krugman appears to suggest that I made up some quotes, a charge that, if it came from a more objective source, I would consider to be a serious matter. In effect, he is accusing Brian Arthur, a man he calls a "nice guy," of being a fabricator or a liar. The quotes in question came from Arthur, and they were based on his recollections of two meetings that he attended some years ago. After Krugman's article appeared, the Santa Fe professor called me to say that he still recalled the meetings in question as I described them. Krugman, as he admits, wasn't present at either of the meetings.
5) For a man who takes his own cogitations extremely seriously, Krugman is remarkably cavalier about attributing motives and beliefs to others. "Cassidy has made it clear in earlier writing that he does not like mainstream economists, and he may have been overly eager to accept a story that puts them in a bad light," he pronounces. I presume this statement refers to a critical piece I wrote in 1996 about the direction that economic research, principally macroeconomic research, has taken over the past two decades. In response to that article, I received dozens of messages of appreciation from mainstream economists, including from two former presidents of the American Economic Association. Among the sources quoted in that piece were the then-chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers (Joseph Stiglitz), a governor of the Federal Reserve Board (Laurence Meyer), and a well-known Harvard professor (Gregory Mankiw). To claim, as Krugman does, that I "don't like mainstream economists" and that I am out to denigrate their work is malicious hogwash. The fact of the matter is that I spend much of my life reading the work of mainstream economists, speaking to them, and trying to find something they have written that might interest the general public. In my experience, most economists appreciate the attention.
6) I might attach more weight to Krugman's criticisms if I hadn't recently reread his informative 1994 book Peddling Prosperity , in which he devotes a chapter to the rediscovery of increasing returns by contemporary economists. Who are the first scholars Krugman mentions in his account? Paul David, an economic historian who wrote a famous paper about how the QWERTYUIOP typewriter keyboard evolved and, you guessed it, Brian Arthur. "Why QWERTYUIOP?" Krugman wrote. "In the early 1980s, Paul David and his Stanford colleague Brian Arthur asked that question, and quickly realized that it led them into surprisingly deep waters. ... What Paul David, Brian Arthur, and a growing number of other economists began to realize in the late seventies and early eighties was that stories like that of the typewriter keyboard are, in fact, pervasive in the economy." Evidently, Krugman felt four years ago that Arthur's contribution was important enough to merit a prominent mention in his book. Now, he dismisses the same work, saying it "didn't tell me anything that I didn't already know." Doubtless, this change in attitude on Krugman's part is unconnected to the fact that Arthur has started to receive some public recognition. The eminent MIT professor, whose early academic work received widespread media attention, is far too generous a scholar to succumb to such pettiness.
--John Cassidy
Paul Krugman replies to John Cassidy:
I think that David Warsh's 1994 in the Boston Globe says it all. If other journalists would do as much homework as he did, I wouldn't have had to write that article.
Letter from M. Mitchell Waldrop:
Thanks to Paul Krugman for his lament about credulous reporters who refuse to let facts stand in the way of a good story ("The Legend of Arthur"). As a professional journalist, I found his points well taken--even when he cites my own book, Complexity as a classic example of the gullibility genre.
Among many other things, Complexity tells the story of the Irish-born economist Brian Arthur and how he came to champion a principle known as "increasing returns." The recent New Yorker article explains how that principle has since become the intellectual foundation of the Clinton administration's antitrust case against Microsoft. Krugman's complaint is that the popular press--including Complexity and The New Yorker --is now hailing Brian Arthur as the originator of increasing returns, even though Krugman and many others had worked on the idea long before Arthur did.
I leave it for others to decide whether I was too gullible in writing Complexity . For the record, however, I would like to inject a few facts into Krugman's story, which he summarizes nicely in the final paragraph:
When Waldrop's book came out, I wrote him as politely as I could, asking exactly how he had managed to come up with his version of events. He did, to his credit, write back. He explained that while he had become aware of some other people working on increasing returns, trying to put them in would have pulled his story line out of shape. ... So what we really learn from the legend of Arthur is that some journalists like a good story too much to find out whether it is really true.
Now, I will admit to many sins, not the least of them being a profound ignorance of graduate-level economics; I spent my graduate-school career in the physics department instead, writing a Ph.D. dissertation on the quantum-field theory of elementary particle collisions at relativistic energies. However, I am not so ignorant of the canons of journalism (and of common sense) that I would take a plausible fellow like Brian Arthur at face value without checking up on him. During my research for Complexity I spoke to a number of economists about his work, including Nobel laureate Kenneth Arrow, co-creator of the General Equilibrium Theory of economics that Brian so eloquently criticizes. They generally agreed that Brian was a maverick in the field--and perhaps a bit too much in love with his own self-image as a misunderstood outsider--but basically sound. None of them warned me that he was usurping credit where credit was not due.
Which brings me to Professor Krugman's letter, and my reply. I remember the exchange very well. Obviously, however, my reply failed to make clear what I was really trying to say. So I'll try again:
a) During our interviews, Brian went out of his way to impress upon me that many other economists had done work in increasing returns--Paul Krugman among them. He was anxious that they be given due credit in anything I wrote. So was I.
b) Accordingly, I included a passage in Complexity in which Brian does indeed describe what others had done in the field--Paul Krugman among them. Elsewhere in that same chapter, I tried to make it clear that the concept of increasing returns was already well known to Brian's professors at Berkeley, where he first learned of it. Indeed, I quote Brian pointing out that increasing returns had been extensively discussed by the great English economist Alfred Marshall in 1891.
c) So, when I received Krugman's letter shortly after Complexity came out, I was puzzled: He was complaining that I hadn't referenced others in the increasing-returns field--Paul Krugman among them--although I had explicitly done so.
d) But, when I checked the published text, I was chagrined to discover that the critical passage mentioning Krugman wasn't there.
e) Only then did I realize what had happened. After I had submitted the manuscript, my editor at Simon & Schuster had suggested a number of cuts to streamline what was already a long and involved chapter on Brian's ideas. I accepted some of the cuts, and restored others--including (I thought) the passage that mentioned Krugman. In the rush to get Complexity to press, however, that passage somehow wound up on the cutting-room floor anyway, and I didn't notice until too late.
That oversight was my fault entirely, not my editor's, and certainly not Brian Arthur's. I take full responsibility, I regret it, and--if Simon & Schuster only published an errata column--I would happily correct it publicly. However, contrary to what Professor Krugman implies, it was an oversight, not a breezy disregard of facts for the sake of a good story.
--M. Mitchell Waldrop Washington
Paul Krugman replies to M. Mitchell Waldrop:
I am truly sorry that The New Yorker has not yet established a Web presence so that we could include a link directly to the Cassidy piece. However, you can get a pretty good idea of what the piece said by reading the summary of it presented in "Tasty Bits from the Technology Front." Cassidy did not present a story about one guy among many who worked on increasing returns. On the contrary: He presented a morality play in which a lonely hero struggled to make his ideas heard against the unified opposition of a narrow-minded profession both intellectually and politically conservative. As TBTF's host--not exactly a naive reader--put it, "These ideas were anathema to mainstream economists in 1984 when Arthur first tried to publish them."
That morality play--not the question of who deserves credit--was the main point of my column, because it is a pure (and malicious) fantasy that has nonetheless become part of the story line people tell about increasing returns and its relationship to mainstream economics.
The fact, which is easily documented, is that during the years that, according to the legend, increasing returns was unacceptable in mainstream economics, papers about increasing returns were in fact being cheerfully published by all the major journals. And as I pointed out in the chronology I provided with the article, even standard reference volumes like the Handbook of International Economics (published in 1984, the year Arthur supposedly met a blank wall of resistance) have long contained chapters on increasing returns. Whatever the reason that Arthur had trouble getting his own paper published, ideological rigidity had nothing to do with it.
How did this fantasy come to be so widely believed? I am glad to hear that you tried to tell a more balanced story, Mr. Waldrop, even if sloppy paperwork kept it from seeing the light of day. And I am glad that you talked to Ken Arrow. But Nobel laureates, who have wide responsibilities and much on their mind, are not necessarily on top of what has been going on in research outside their usual field. I happen to know of one laureate who, circa 1991, was quite unaware that anyone had thought about increasing returns in either growth or trade. Did you try talking to anyone else--say, to one of the economists who are the straight men in the stories you tell? For example, your book starts with the story of Arthur's meeting in 1987 with Al Fishlow at Berkeley, in which Fishlow supposedly said, "We know that increasing returns can't exist"--and Arthur went away in despair over the unwillingness of economists to think the unthinkable. Did you call Fishlow to ask whether he said it, and what he meant? Since by 1987 Paul Romer's 1986 papers on increasing returns and growth had started an avalanche of derivative work, he was certainly joking--what he probably meant was "Oh no, not you too." And let me say that I simply cannot believe that you could have talked about increasing returns with any significant number of economists outside Santa Fe without Romer's name popping up in the first 30 seconds of every conversation--unless you were very selective about whom you talked to. And oh, by the way, there are such things as libraries, where you can browse actual economics journals and see what they contain.
The point is that it's not just a matter of failing to cite a few more people. Your book, like the Cassidy article, didn't just tell the story of Brian Arthur; it also painted a picture of the economics profession, its intellectual bigotry and prejudice, which happens to be a complete fabrication (with some real, named people cast as villains) that somehow someone managed to sell you. I wonder who?
Even more to the point: How did Cassidy come by his story? Is it possible that he completely misunderstood what Brian Arthur was saying--that the whole business about the seminar at Harvard where nobody would accept increasing returns, about the lonely struggle of Arthur in the face of ideological rigidity, even the quotation from Arthur about economists being unwilling to consider the possibility of imperfect markets because of the Cold War (give me a break!) were all in Cassidy's imagination?
Let me say that I am actually quite grateful to Cassidy and The New Yorker . A number of people have long been furious about your book--for example, Victor Norman, whom you portrayed as the first of many economists too dumb or perhaps narrow-minded to understand Arthur's brilliant innovation. Norman e-mailed me to say that "I have read the tales from the Vienna woods before and had hoped that it could be cleared up by someone at some point." Yet up to now there was nothing anyone could do about the situation. The trouble was that while "heroic rebel defies orthodoxy" is a story so good that nobody even tries to check it out, "guy makes minor contribution to well-established field, proclaims himself its founder" is so boring as to be unpublishable. (David Warsh's 1994 series of columns in the Boston Globe on the increasing-returns revolution in economics, the basis for a forthcoming book from Harvard University Press, is far and away the best reporting on the subject, did include a sympathetic but devastating exposé of Arthur's pretensions--but to little effect. [Click to read Warsh on Arthur.]) Only now did I have a publishable story: "guy makes minor contribution to well-established field, portrays himself as heroic rebel--and The New Yorker believes him."
Thank you, Mr. Cassidy.
Letter from Kenneth J. Arrow:
Paul Krugman's attack on Brian Arthur ("The Legend of Arthur") requires a correction of its misrepresentations of fact. Arthur is a reputable and significant scholar whose work is indeed having influence in the field of industrial organization and in particular public policy toward antitrust policy in high-tech industries. Krugman admits that he wrote the article because he was "just pissed off," not a very good state for a judicious statement of facts, as his column shows.
His theme is stated in his first paragraph: "Cassidy's article [in The New Yorker of Jan. 12] tells the story of how Stanford Professor Brian Arthur came up with the idea of increasing returns." Cassidy, however, said nothing of the sort. The concept of increasing returns is indeed very old, and Cassidy at no point attributed that idea to Arthur. Indeed, the phrase "increasing returns" appears just once in Cassidy's article and then merely to say that Arthur had used the term while others refer to network externalities. Further, Arthur has never made any such preposterous claim at any other time. On the contrary, his papers have fully cited the history of the field and made references to the previous papers, including those of Paul Krugman. (See Arthur's papers collected in the volume Increasing Returns and Path Dependence in the Economy, especially his preface and my foreword for longer comments on Arthur's work in historic perspective. Click to see the foreword.) Hence, Krugman's whole attack is directed at a statement made neither by Arthur nor by Cassidy. Krugman has not read Cassidy's piece with any care nor has he bothered to review what Arthur has in fact said.
What Cassidy in fact did in his article was to trace a line of influence between one of Arthur's early articles and the current claims of the Department of Justice against Microsoft. It appears that Cassidy based his article on several interviews, not just one.
The point that Arthur has emphasized and which is influential in the current debates about antitrust policy is the dynamic implication of increasing returns. It is the concept of path-dependence, that small events, whether random or the result of corporate strategic choice, may have large consequences because of increasing returns of various kinds. Initial small advantages become magnified, for example, by creating a large installed base, and direct the future, possibly in an inefficient direction. Techniques of production may be locked in at an early stage. Similar considerations apply to regional development and learning.
--Kenneth J. Arrow Nobel laureate and Joan Kenney professor of economics emeritus Stanford University
Letter from Ted C. Fishman:
After reading Paul Krugman vent his spleen against fellow economist Brian Arthur in "The Legend of Arthur," I couldn't help wondering whose reputation he was out to trash, Arthur's or his own. Krugman seems to fear a plot to deny economists their intellectual due. If one exists, Arthur is not a likely suspect. In a series of long interviews with me a year ago (for Worth magazine), I tried, vainly, to get Arthur to tell me how his ideas about increasing returns have encouraged a new strain of economic investigations. Despite much prodding, Arthur obliged only by placing himself in a long line of theorists dating back to Adam Smith and Alfred Marshall. I also found him disarmingly generous in giving credit to the biologists, physicists, and fellow economists who have helped advance his own thinking. Savvy to the journalist's quest for heroes, Arthur urged me to focus on his ideas, not his rank among his peers. Krugman has made a career out of telling other economists to pay better attention to the facts, yet as a chronicler of Arthur's career and inner life, Krugman seems to have listened only to his own demons.
--Ted C. Fishman
(For additional background on the history of "increasing returns" and Brian Arthur's standing in the field, click for David Warsh's July 3, 1994, Boston Globe article on Brian Arthur)
| https://www.anc.org/OANC/license.txt | Who seems to be writing the most falsehoods? | 20012_1W525LU6_1 | [
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20,012 | 20012_1W525LU6 | 12 | 1,009 | Slate | Krugman's Life of Brian | 1998.0 | Paul Krugman | Periodicals; Specialized Magazine; Media Coverage | Krugman's Life of Brian
Where it all started: Paul Krugman's "The Legend of Arthur."
Letter from John Cassidy
Paul Krugman replies to John Cassidy
Letter from M. Mitchell Waldrop
Paul Krugman replies to M. Mitchell Waldrop
Letter from Kenneth J. Arrow
Letter from Ted C. Fishman
David Warsh's July 3, 1994, Boston Globe
Letter from John Cassidy:
Paul Krugman loves to berate journalists for their ignorance of economics, particularly his economics, but on this occasion, I fear, his logic is more addled than usual. I am reluctant to dignify his hatchet job with a lengthy reply, but some of his claims are so defamatory that they should be addressed, if only for the record.
1) Krugman claims that my opening sentence--"In a way, Bill Gates's current troubles with the Justice Department grew out of an economics seminar that took place thirteen years ago, at Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government"--is "pure fiction." Perhaps so, but in that case somebody should tell this to Joel Klein, the assistant attorney general in charge of the antitrust division. When I interviewed Klein for my piece about the Microsoft case, he singled out Brian Arthur as the economist who has most influenced his thinking about the way in which high-technology markets operate. It was Klein's words, not those of Arthur, that prompted me to use Arthur in the lead of the story.
2) Krugman wrote: "Cassidy's article tells the story of how Stanford Professor Brian Arthur came up with the idea of increasing returns." I wrote no such thing, and Arthur has never, to my knowledge, claimed any such thing. The notion of increasing returns has been around since Adam Smith, and it was written about at length by Alfred Marshall in 1890. What I did say in my article was that increasing returns was largely ignored by mainstream economists for much of the postwar era, a claim that simply isn't controversial. (As Krugman notes, one reason for this was technical, not ideological. Allowing for the possibility of increasing returns tends to rob economic models of two properties that economists cherish: simplicity and determinism. As long ago as 1939, Sir John Hicks, one of the founders of modern economics, noted that increasing returns, if tolerated, could lead to the "wreckage" of a large part of economic theory.)
3) Pace Krugman, I also did not claim that Arthur bears principal responsibility for the rediscovery of increasing returns by economists in the 1970s and 1980s. As Krugman notes, several scholars (himself included) who were working in the fields of game theory and international trade published articles incorporating increasing returns before Arthur did. My claim was simply that Arthur applied increasing returns to high-technology markets, and that his work influenced how other economists and government officials think about these markets. Krugman apart, virtually every economist I have spoken to, including Daniel Rubinfeld, a former Berkeley professor who is now the chief economist at the Justice Department's antitrust division, told me this was the case. (Rubinfeld also mentioned several other economists who did influential work, and I cited three of them in the article.)
4) Krugman appears to suggest that I made up some quotes, a charge that, if it came from a more objective source, I would consider to be a serious matter. In effect, he is accusing Brian Arthur, a man he calls a "nice guy," of being a fabricator or a liar. The quotes in question came from Arthur, and they were based on his recollections of two meetings that he attended some years ago. After Krugman's article appeared, the Santa Fe professor called me to say that he still recalled the meetings in question as I described them. Krugman, as he admits, wasn't present at either of the meetings.
5) For a man who takes his own cogitations extremely seriously, Krugman is remarkably cavalier about attributing motives and beliefs to others. "Cassidy has made it clear in earlier writing that he does not like mainstream economists, and he may have been overly eager to accept a story that puts them in a bad light," he pronounces. I presume this statement refers to a critical piece I wrote in 1996 about the direction that economic research, principally macroeconomic research, has taken over the past two decades. In response to that article, I received dozens of messages of appreciation from mainstream economists, including from two former presidents of the American Economic Association. Among the sources quoted in that piece were the then-chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers (Joseph Stiglitz), a governor of the Federal Reserve Board (Laurence Meyer), and a well-known Harvard professor (Gregory Mankiw). To claim, as Krugman does, that I "don't like mainstream economists" and that I am out to denigrate their work is malicious hogwash. The fact of the matter is that I spend much of my life reading the work of mainstream economists, speaking to them, and trying to find something they have written that might interest the general public. In my experience, most economists appreciate the attention.
6) I might attach more weight to Krugman's criticisms if I hadn't recently reread his informative 1994 book Peddling Prosperity , in which he devotes a chapter to the rediscovery of increasing returns by contemporary economists. Who are the first scholars Krugman mentions in his account? Paul David, an economic historian who wrote a famous paper about how the QWERTYUIOP typewriter keyboard evolved and, you guessed it, Brian Arthur. "Why QWERTYUIOP?" Krugman wrote. "In the early 1980s, Paul David and his Stanford colleague Brian Arthur asked that question, and quickly realized that it led them into surprisingly deep waters. ... What Paul David, Brian Arthur, and a growing number of other economists began to realize in the late seventies and early eighties was that stories like that of the typewriter keyboard are, in fact, pervasive in the economy." Evidently, Krugman felt four years ago that Arthur's contribution was important enough to merit a prominent mention in his book. Now, he dismisses the same work, saying it "didn't tell me anything that I didn't already know." Doubtless, this change in attitude on Krugman's part is unconnected to the fact that Arthur has started to receive some public recognition. The eminent MIT professor, whose early academic work received widespread media attention, is far too generous a scholar to succumb to such pettiness.
--John Cassidy
Paul Krugman replies to John Cassidy:
I think that David Warsh's 1994 in the Boston Globe says it all. If other journalists would do as much homework as he did, I wouldn't have had to write that article.
Letter from M. Mitchell Waldrop:
Thanks to Paul Krugman for his lament about credulous reporters who refuse to let facts stand in the way of a good story ("The Legend of Arthur"). As a professional journalist, I found his points well taken--even when he cites my own book, Complexity as a classic example of the gullibility genre.
Among many other things, Complexity tells the story of the Irish-born economist Brian Arthur and how he came to champion a principle known as "increasing returns." The recent New Yorker article explains how that principle has since become the intellectual foundation of the Clinton administration's antitrust case against Microsoft. Krugman's complaint is that the popular press--including Complexity and The New Yorker --is now hailing Brian Arthur as the originator of increasing returns, even though Krugman and many others had worked on the idea long before Arthur did.
I leave it for others to decide whether I was too gullible in writing Complexity . For the record, however, I would like to inject a few facts into Krugman's story, which he summarizes nicely in the final paragraph:
When Waldrop's book came out, I wrote him as politely as I could, asking exactly how he had managed to come up with his version of events. He did, to his credit, write back. He explained that while he had become aware of some other people working on increasing returns, trying to put them in would have pulled his story line out of shape. ... So what we really learn from the legend of Arthur is that some journalists like a good story too much to find out whether it is really true.
Now, I will admit to many sins, not the least of them being a profound ignorance of graduate-level economics; I spent my graduate-school career in the physics department instead, writing a Ph.D. dissertation on the quantum-field theory of elementary particle collisions at relativistic energies. However, I am not so ignorant of the canons of journalism (and of common sense) that I would take a plausible fellow like Brian Arthur at face value without checking up on him. During my research for Complexity I spoke to a number of economists about his work, including Nobel laureate Kenneth Arrow, co-creator of the General Equilibrium Theory of economics that Brian so eloquently criticizes. They generally agreed that Brian was a maverick in the field--and perhaps a bit too much in love with his own self-image as a misunderstood outsider--but basically sound. None of them warned me that he was usurping credit where credit was not due.
Which brings me to Professor Krugman's letter, and my reply. I remember the exchange very well. Obviously, however, my reply failed to make clear what I was really trying to say. So I'll try again:
a) During our interviews, Brian went out of his way to impress upon me that many other economists had done work in increasing returns--Paul Krugman among them. He was anxious that they be given due credit in anything I wrote. So was I.
b) Accordingly, I included a passage in Complexity in which Brian does indeed describe what others had done in the field--Paul Krugman among them. Elsewhere in that same chapter, I tried to make it clear that the concept of increasing returns was already well known to Brian's professors at Berkeley, where he first learned of it. Indeed, I quote Brian pointing out that increasing returns had been extensively discussed by the great English economist Alfred Marshall in 1891.
c) So, when I received Krugman's letter shortly after Complexity came out, I was puzzled: He was complaining that I hadn't referenced others in the increasing-returns field--Paul Krugman among them--although I had explicitly done so.
d) But, when I checked the published text, I was chagrined to discover that the critical passage mentioning Krugman wasn't there.
e) Only then did I realize what had happened. After I had submitted the manuscript, my editor at Simon & Schuster had suggested a number of cuts to streamline what was already a long and involved chapter on Brian's ideas. I accepted some of the cuts, and restored others--including (I thought) the passage that mentioned Krugman. In the rush to get Complexity to press, however, that passage somehow wound up on the cutting-room floor anyway, and I didn't notice until too late.
That oversight was my fault entirely, not my editor's, and certainly not Brian Arthur's. I take full responsibility, I regret it, and--if Simon & Schuster only published an errata column--I would happily correct it publicly. However, contrary to what Professor Krugman implies, it was an oversight, not a breezy disregard of facts for the sake of a good story.
--M. Mitchell Waldrop Washington
Paul Krugman replies to M. Mitchell Waldrop:
I am truly sorry that The New Yorker has not yet established a Web presence so that we could include a link directly to the Cassidy piece. However, you can get a pretty good idea of what the piece said by reading the summary of it presented in "Tasty Bits from the Technology Front." Cassidy did not present a story about one guy among many who worked on increasing returns. On the contrary: He presented a morality play in which a lonely hero struggled to make his ideas heard against the unified opposition of a narrow-minded profession both intellectually and politically conservative. As TBTF's host--not exactly a naive reader--put it, "These ideas were anathema to mainstream economists in 1984 when Arthur first tried to publish them."
That morality play--not the question of who deserves credit--was the main point of my column, because it is a pure (and malicious) fantasy that has nonetheless become part of the story line people tell about increasing returns and its relationship to mainstream economics.
The fact, which is easily documented, is that during the years that, according to the legend, increasing returns was unacceptable in mainstream economics, papers about increasing returns were in fact being cheerfully published by all the major journals. And as I pointed out in the chronology I provided with the article, even standard reference volumes like the Handbook of International Economics (published in 1984, the year Arthur supposedly met a blank wall of resistance) have long contained chapters on increasing returns. Whatever the reason that Arthur had trouble getting his own paper published, ideological rigidity had nothing to do with it.
How did this fantasy come to be so widely believed? I am glad to hear that you tried to tell a more balanced story, Mr. Waldrop, even if sloppy paperwork kept it from seeing the light of day. And I am glad that you talked to Ken Arrow. But Nobel laureates, who have wide responsibilities and much on their mind, are not necessarily on top of what has been going on in research outside their usual field. I happen to know of one laureate who, circa 1991, was quite unaware that anyone had thought about increasing returns in either growth or trade. Did you try talking to anyone else--say, to one of the economists who are the straight men in the stories you tell? For example, your book starts with the story of Arthur's meeting in 1987 with Al Fishlow at Berkeley, in which Fishlow supposedly said, "We know that increasing returns can't exist"--and Arthur went away in despair over the unwillingness of economists to think the unthinkable. Did you call Fishlow to ask whether he said it, and what he meant? Since by 1987 Paul Romer's 1986 papers on increasing returns and growth had started an avalanche of derivative work, he was certainly joking--what he probably meant was "Oh no, not you too." And let me say that I simply cannot believe that you could have talked about increasing returns with any significant number of economists outside Santa Fe without Romer's name popping up in the first 30 seconds of every conversation--unless you were very selective about whom you talked to. And oh, by the way, there are such things as libraries, where you can browse actual economics journals and see what they contain.
The point is that it's not just a matter of failing to cite a few more people. Your book, like the Cassidy article, didn't just tell the story of Brian Arthur; it also painted a picture of the economics profession, its intellectual bigotry and prejudice, which happens to be a complete fabrication (with some real, named people cast as villains) that somehow someone managed to sell you. I wonder who?
Even more to the point: How did Cassidy come by his story? Is it possible that he completely misunderstood what Brian Arthur was saying--that the whole business about the seminar at Harvard where nobody would accept increasing returns, about the lonely struggle of Arthur in the face of ideological rigidity, even the quotation from Arthur about economists being unwilling to consider the possibility of imperfect markets because of the Cold War (give me a break!) were all in Cassidy's imagination?
Let me say that I am actually quite grateful to Cassidy and The New Yorker . A number of people have long been furious about your book--for example, Victor Norman, whom you portrayed as the first of many economists too dumb or perhaps narrow-minded to understand Arthur's brilliant innovation. Norman e-mailed me to say that "I have read the tales from the Vienna woods before and had hoped that it could be cleared up by someone at some point." Yet up to now there was nothing anyone could do about the situation. The trouble was that while "heroic rebel defies orthodoxy" is a story so good that nobody even tries to check it out, "guy makes minor contribution to well-established field, proclaims himself its founder" is so boring as to be unpublishable. (David Warsh's 1994 series of columns in the Boston Globe on the increasing-returns revolution in economics, the basis for a forthcoming book from Harvard University Press, is far and away the best reporting on the subject, did include a sympathetic but devastating exposé of Arthur's pretensions--but to little effect. [Click to read Warsh on Arthur.]) Only now did I have a publishable story: "guy makes minor contribution to well-established field, portrays himself as heroic rebel--and The New Yorker believes him."
Thank you, Mr. Cassidy.
Letter from Kenneth J. Arrow:
Paul Krugman's attack on Brian Arthur ("The Legend of Arthur") requires a correction of its misrepresentations of fact. Arthur is a reputable and significant scholar whose work is indeed having influence in the field of industrial organization and in particular public policy toward antitrust policy in high-tech industries. Krugman admits that he wrote the article because he was "just pissed off," not a very good state for a judicious statement of facts, as his column shows.
His theme is stated in his first paragraph: "Cassidy's article [in The New Yorker of Jan. 12] tells the story of how Stanford Professor Brian Arthur came up with the idea of increasing returns." Cassidy, however, said nothing of the sort. The concept of increasing returns is indeed very old, and Cassidy at no point attributed that idea to Arthur. Indeed, the phrase "increasing returns" appears just once in Cassidy's article and then merely to say that Arthur had used the term while others refer to network externalities. Further, Arthur has never made any such preposterous claim at any other time. On the contrary, his papers have fully cited the history of the field and made references to the previous papers, including those of Paul Krugman. (See Arthur's papers collected in the volume Increasing Returns and Path Dependence in the Economy, especially his preface and my foreword for longer comments on Arthur's work in historic perspective. Click to see the foreword.) Hence, Krugman's whole attack is directed at a statement made neither by Arthur nor by Cassidy. Krugman has not read Cassidy's piece with any care nor has he bothered to review what Arthur has in fact said.
What Cassidy in fact did in his article was to trace a line of influence between one of Arthur's early articles and the current claims of the Department of Justice against Microsoft. It appears that Cassidy based his article on several interviews, not just one.
The point that Arthur has emphasized and which is influential in the current debates about antitrust policy is the dynamic implication of increasing returns. It is the concept of path-dependence, that small events, whether random or the result of corporate strategic choice, may have large consequences because of increasing returns of various kinds. Initial small advantages become magnified, for example, by creating a large installed base, and direct the future, possibly in an inefficient direction. Techniques of production may be locked in at an early stage. Similar considerations apply to regional development and learning.
--Kenneth J. Arrow Nobel laureate and Joan Kenney professor of economics emeritus Stanford University
Letter from Ted C. Fishman:
After reading Paul Krugman vent his spleen against fellow economist Brian Arthur in "The Legend of Arthur," I couldn't help wondering whose reputation he was out to trash, Arthur's or his own. Krugman seems to fear a plot to deny economists their intellectual due. If one exists, Arthur is not a likely suspect. In a series of long interviews with me a year ago (for Worth magazine), I tried, vainly, to get Arthur to tell me how his ideas about increasing returns have encouraged a new strain of economic investigations. Despite much prodding, Arthur obliged only by placing himself in a long line of theorists dating back to Adam Smith and Alfred Marshall. I also found him disarmingly generous in giving credit to the biologists, physicists, and fellow economists who have helped advance his own thinking. Savvy to the journalist's quest for heroes, Arthur urged me to focus on his ideas, not his rank among his peers. Krugman has made a career out of telling other economists to pay better attention to the facts, yet as a chronicler of Arthur's career and inner life, Krugman seems to have listened only to his own demons.
--Ted C. Fishman
(For additional background on the history of "increasing returns" and Brian Arthur's standing in the field, click for David Warsh's July 3, 1994, Boston Globe article on Brian Arthur)
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20,012 | 20012_1W525LU6 | 12 | 1,009 | Slate | Krugman's Life of Brian | 1998.0 | Paul Krugman | Periodicals; Specialized Magazine; Media Coverage | Krugman's Life of Brian
Where it all started: Paul Krugman's "The Legend of Arthur."
Letter from John Cassidy
Paul Krugman replies to John Cassidy
Letter from M. Mitchell Waldrop
Paul Krugman replies to M. Mitchell Waldrop
Letter from Kenneth J. Arrow
Letter from Ted C. Fishman
David Warsh's July 3, 1994, Boston Globe
Letter from John Cassidy:
Paul Krugman loves to berate journalists for their ignorance of economics, particularly his economics, but on this occasion, I fear, his logic is more addled than usual. I am reluctant to dignify his hatchet job with a lengthy reply, but some of his claims are so defamatory that they should be addressed, if only for the record.
1) Krugman claims that my opening sentence--"In a way, Bill Gates's current troubles with the Justice Department grew out of an economics seminar that took place thirteen years ago, at Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government"--is "pure fiction." Perhaps so, but in that case somebody should tell this to Joel Klein, the assistant attorney general in charge of the antitrust division. When I interviewed Klein for my piece about the Microsoft case, he singled out Brian Arthur as the economist who has most influenced his thinking about the way in which high-technology markets operate. It was Klein's words, not those of Arthur, that prompted me to use Arthur in the lead of the story.
2) Krugman wrote: "Cassidy's article tells the story of how Stanford Professor Brian Arthur came up with the idea of increasing returns." I wrote no such thing, and Arthur has never, to my knowledge, claimed any such thing. The notion of increasing returns has been around since Adam Smith, and it was written about at length by Alfred Marshall in 1890. What I did say in my article was that increasing returns was largely ignored by mainstream economists for much of the postwar era, a claim that simply isn't controversial. (As Krugman notes, one reason for this was technical, not ideological. Allowing for the possibility of increasing returns tends to rob economic models of two properties that economists cherish: simplicity and determinism. As long ago as 1939, Sir John Hicks, one of the founders of modern economics, noted that increasing returns, if tolerated, could lead to the "wreckage" of a large part of economic theory.)
3) Pace Krugman, I also did not claim that Arthur bears principal responsibility for the rediscovery of increasing returns by economists in the 1970s and 1980s. As Krugman notes, several scholars (himself included) who were working in the fields of game theory and international trade published articles incorporating increasing returns before Arthur did. My claim was simply that Arthur applied increasing returns to high-technology markets, and that his work influenced how other economists and government officials think about these markets. Krugman apart, virtually every economist I have spoken to, including Daniel Rubinfeld, a former Berkeley professor who is now the chief economist at the Justice Department's antitrust division, told me this was the case. (Rubinfeld also mentioned several other economists who did influential work, and I cited three of them in the article.)
4) Krugman appears to suggest that I made up some quotes, a charge that, if it came from a more objective source, I would consider to be a serious matter. In effect, he is accusing Brian Arthur, a man he calls a "nice guy," of being a fabricator or a liar. The quotes in question came from Arthur, and they were based on his recollections of two meetings that he attended some years ago. After Krugman's article appeared, the Santa Fe professor called me to say that he still recalled the meetings in question as I described them. Krugman, as he admits, wasn't present at either of the meetings.
5) For a man who takes his own cogitations extremely seriously, Krugman is remarkably cavalier about attributing motives and beliefs to others. "Cassidy has made it clear in earlier writing that he does not like mainstream economists, and he may have been overly eager to accept a story that puts them in a bad light," he pronounces. I presume this statement refers to a critical piece I wrote in 1996 about the direction that economic research, principally macroeconomic research, has taken over the past two decades. In response to that article, I received dozens of messages of appreciation from mainstream economists, including from two former presidents of the American Economic Association. Among the sources quoted in that piece were the then-chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers (Joseph Stiglitz), a governor of the Federal Reserve Board (Laurence Meyer), and a well-known Harvard professor (Gregory Mankiw). To claim, as Krugman does, that I "don't like mainstream economists" and that I am out to denigrate their work is malicious hogwash. The fact of the matter is that I spend much of my life reading the work of mainstream economists, speaking to them, and trying to find something they have written that might interest the general public. In my experience, most economists appreciate the attention.
6) I might attach more weight to Krugman's criticisms if I hadn't recently reread his informative 1994 book Peddling Prosperity , in which he devotes a chapter to the rediscovery of increasing returns by contemporary economists. Who are the first scholars Krugman mentions in his account? Paul David, an economic historian who wrote a famous paper about how the QWERTYUIOP typewriter keyboard evolved and, you guessed it, Brian Arthur. "Why QWERTYUIOP?" Krugman wrote. "In the early 1980s, Paul David and his Stanford colleague Brian Arthur asked that question, and quickly realized that it led them into surprisingly deep waters. ... What Paul David, Brian Arthur, and a growing number of other economists began to realize in the late seventies and early eighties was that stories like that of the typewriter keyboard are, in fact, pervasive in the economy." Evidently, Krugman felt four years ago that Arthur's contribution was important enough to merit a prominent mention in his book. Now, he dismisses the same work, saying it "didn't tell me anything that I didn't already know." Doubtless, this change in attitude on Krugman's part is unconnected to the fact that Arthur has started to receive some public recognition. The eminent MIT professor, whose early academic work received widespread media attention, is far too generous a scholar to succumb to such pettiness.
--John Cassidy
Paul Krugman replies to John Cassidy:
I think that David Warsh's 1994 in the Boston Globe says it all. If other journalists would do as much homework as he did, I wouldn't have had to write that article.
Letter from M. Mitchell Waldrop:
Thanks to Paul Krugman for his lament about credulous reporters who refuse to let facts stand in the way of a good story ("The Legend of Arthur"). As a professional journalist, I found his points well taken--even when he cites my own book, Complexity as a classic example of the gullibility genre.
Among many other things, Complexity tells the story of the Irish-born economist Brian Arthur and how he came to champion a principle known as "increasing returns." The recent New Yorker article explains how that principle has since become the intellectual foundation of the Clinton administration's antitrust case against Microsoft. Krugman's complaint is that the popular press--including Complexity and The New Yorker --is now hailing Brian Arthur as the originator of increasing returns, even though Krugman and many others had worked on the idea long before Arthur did.
I leave it for others to decide whether I was too gullible in writing Complexity . For the record, however, I would like to inject a few facts into Krugman's story, which he summarizes nicely in the final paragraph:
When Waldrop's book came out, I wrote him as politely as I could, asking exactly how he had managed to come up with his version of events. He did, to his credit, write back. He explained that while he had become aware of some other people working on increasing returns, trying to put them in would have pulled his story line out of shape. ... So what we really learn from the legend of Arthur is that some journalists like a good story too much to find out whether it is really true.
Now, I will admit to many sins, not the least of them being a profound ignorance of graduate-level economics; I spent my graduate-school career in the physics department instead, writing a Ph.D. dissertation on the quantum-field theory of elementary particle collisions at relativistic energies. However, I am not so ignorant of the canons of journalism (and of common sense) that I would take a plausible fellow like Brian Arthur at face value without checking up on him. During my research for Complexity I spoke to a number of economists about his work, including Nobel laureate Kenneth Arrow, co-creator of the General Equilibrium Theory of economics that Brian so eloquently criticizes. They generally agreed that Brian was a maverick in the field--and perhaps a bit too much in love with his own self-image as a misunderstood outsider--but basically sound. None of them warned me that he was usurping credit where credit was not due.
Which brings me to Professor Krugman's letter, and my reply. I remember the exchange very well. Obviously, however, my reply failed to make clear what I was really trying to say. So I'll try again:
a) During our interviews, Brian went out of his way to impress upon me that many other economists had done work in increasing returns--Paul Krugman among them. He was anxious that they be given due credit in anything I wrote. So was I.
b) Accordingly, I included a passage in Complexity in which Brian does indeed describe what others had done in the field--Paul Krugman among them. Elsewhere in that same chapter, I tried to make it clear that the concept of increasing returns was already well known to Brian's professors at Berkeley, where he first learned of it. Indeed, I quote Brian pointing out that increasing returns had been extensively discussed by the great English economist Alfred Marshall in 1891.
c) So, when I received Krugman's letter shortly after Complexity came out, I was puzzled: He was complaining that I hadn't referenced others in the increasing-returns field--Paul Krugman among them--although I had explicitly done so.
d) But, when I checked the published text, I was chagrined to discover that the critical passage mentioning Krugman wasn't there.
e) Only then did I realize what had happened. After I had submitted the manuscript, my editor at Simon & Schuster had suggested a number of cuts to streamline what was already a long and involved chapter on Brian's ideas. I accepted some of the cuts, and restored others--including (I thought) the passage that mentioned Krugman. In the rush to get Complexity to press, however, that passage somehow wound up on the cutting-room floor anyway, and I didn't notice until too late.
That oversight was my fault entirely, not my editor's, and certainly not Brian Arthur's. I take full responsibility, I regret it, and--if Simon & Schuster only published an errata column--I would happily correct it publicly. However, contrary to what Professor Krugman implies, it was an oversight, not a breezy disregard of facts for the sake of a good story.
--M. Mitchell Waldrop Washington
Paul Krugman replies to M. Mitchell Waldrop:
I am truly sorry that The New Yorker has not yet established a Web presence so that we could include a link directly to the Cassidy piece. However, you can get a pretty good idea of what the piece said by reading the summary of it presented in "Tasty Bits from the Technology Front." Cassidy did not present a story about one guy among many who worked on increasing returns. On the contrary: He presented a morality play in which a lonely hero struggled to make his ideas heard against the unified opposition of a narrow-minded profession both intellectually and politically conservative. As TBTF's host--not exactly a naive reader--put it, "These ideas were anathema to mainstream economists in 1984 when Arthur first tried to publish them."
That morality play--not the question of who deserves credit--was the main point of my column, because it is a pure (and malicious) fantasy that has nonetheless become part of the story line people tell about increasing returns and its relationship to mainstream economics.
The fact, which is easily documented, is that during the years that, according to the legend, increasing returns was unacceptable in mainstream economics, papers about increasing returns were in fact being cheerfully published by all the major journals. And as I pointed out in the chronology I provided with the article, even standard reference volumes like the Handbook of International Economics (published in 1984, the year Arthur supposedly met a blank wall of resistance) have long contained chapters on increasing returns. Whatever the reason that Arthur had trouble getting his own paper published, ideological rigidity had nothing to do with it.
How did this fantasy come to be so widely believed? I am glad to hear that you tried to tell a more balanced story, Mr. Waldrop, even if sloppy paperwork kept it from seeing the light of day. And I am glad that you talked to Ken Arrow. But Nobel laureates, who have wide responsibilities and much on their mind, are not necessarily on top of what has been going on in research outside their usual field. I happen to know of one laureate who, circa 1991, was quite unaware that anyone had thought about increasing returns in either growth or trade. Did you try talking to anyone else--say, to one of the economists who are the straight men in the stories you tell? For example, your book starts with the story of Arthur's meeting in 1987 with Al Fishlow at Berkeley, in which Fishlow supposedly said, "We know that increasing returns can't exist"--and Arthur went away in despair over the unwillingness of economists to think the unthinkable. Did you call Fishlow to ask whether he said it, and what he meant? Since by 1987 Paul Romer's 1986 papers on increasing returns and growth had started an avalanche of derivative work, he was certainly joking--what he probably meant was "Oh no, not you too." And let me say that I simply cannot believe that you could have talked about increasing returns with any significant number of economists outside Santa Fe without Romer's name popping up in the first 30 seconds of every conversation--unless you were very selective about whom you talked to. And oh, by the way, there are such things as libraries, where you can browse actual economics journals and see what they contain.
The point is that it's not just a matter of failing to cite a few more people. Your book, like the Cassidy article, didn't just tell the story of Brian Arthur; it also painted a picture of the economics profession, its intellectual bigotry and prejudice, which happens to be a complete fabrication (with some real, named people cast as villains) that somehow someone managed to sell you. I wonder who?
Even more to the point: How did Cassidy come by his story? Is it possible that he completely misunderstood what Brian Arthur was saying--that the whole business about the seminar at Harvard where nobody would accept increasing returns, about the lonely struggle of Arthur in the face of ideological rigidity, even the quotation from Arthur about economists being unwilling to consider the possibility of imperfect markets because of the Cold War (give me a break!) were all in Cassidy's imagination?
Let me say that I am actually quite grateful to Cassidy and The New Yorker . A number of people have long been furious about your book--for example, Victor Norman, whom you portrayed as the first of many economists too dumb or perhaps narrow-minded to understand Arthur's brilliant innovation. Norman e-mailed me to say that "I have read the tales from the Vienna woods before and had hoped that it could be cleared up by someone at some point." Yet up to now there was nothing anyone could do about the situation. The trouble was that while "heroic rebel defies orthodoxy" is a story so good that nobody even tries to check it out, "guy makes minor contribution to well-established field, proclaims himself its founder" is so boring as to be unpublishable. (David Warsh's 1994 series of columns in the Boston Globe on the increasing-returns revolution in economics, the basis for a forthcoming book from Harvard University Press, is far and away the best reporting on the subject, did include a sympathetic but devastating exposé of Arthur's pretensions--but to little effect. [Click to read Warsh on Arthur.]) Only now did I have a publishable story: "guy makes minor contribution to well-established field, portrays himself as heroic rebel--and The New Yorker believes him."
Thank you, Mr. Cassidy.
Letter from Kenneth J. Arrow:
Paul Krugman's attack on Brian Arthur ("The Legend of Arthur") requires a correction of its misrepresentations of fact. Arthur is a reputable and significant scholar whose work is indeed having influence in the field of industrial organization and in particular public policy toward antitrust policy in high-tech industries. Krugman admits that he wrote the article because he was "just pissed off," not a very good state for a judicious statement of facts, as his column shows.
His theme is stated in his first paragraph: "Cassidy's article [in The New Yorker of Jan. 12] tells the story of how Stanford Professor Brian Arthur came up with the idea of increasing returns." Cassidy, however, said nothing of the sort. The concept of increasing returns is indeed very old, and Cassidy at no point attributed that idea to Arthur. Indeed, the phrase "increasing returns" appears just once in Cassidy's article and then merely to say that Arthur had used the term while others refer to network externalities. Further, Arthur has never made any such preposterous claim at any other time. On the contrary, his papers have fully cited the history of the field and made references to the previous papers, including those of Paul Krugman. (See Arthur's papers collected in the volume Increasing Returns and Path Dependence in the Economy, especially his preface and my foreword for longer comments on Arthur's work in historic perspective. Click to see the foreword.) Hence, Krugman's whole attack is directed at a statement made neither by Arthur nor by Cassidy. Krugman has not read Cassidy's piece with any care nor has he bothered to review what Arthur has in fact said.
What Cassidy in fact did in his article was to trace a line of influence between one of Arthur's early articles and the current claims of the Department of Justice against Microsoft. It appears that Cassidy based his article on several interviews, not just one.
The point that Arthur has emphasized and which is influential in the current debates about antitrust policy is the dynamic implication of increasing returns. It is the concept of path-dependence, that small events, whether random or the result of corporate strategic choice, may have large consequences because of increasing returns of various kinds. Initial small advantages become magnified, for example, by creating a large installed base, and direct the future, possibly in an inefficient direction. Techniques of production may be locked in at an early stage. Similar considerations apply to regional development and learning.
--Kenneth J. Arrow Nobel laureate and Joan Kenney professor of economics emeritus Stanford University
Letter from Ted C. Fishman:
After reading Paul Krugman vent his spleen against fellow economist Brian Arthur in "The Legend of Arthur," I couldn't help wondering whose reputation he was out to trash, Arthur's or his own. Krugman seems to fear a plot to deny economists their intellectual due. If one exists, Arthur is not a likely suspect. In a series of long interviews with me a year ago (for Worth magazine), I tried, vainly, to get Arthur to tell me how his ideas about increasing returns have encouraged a new strain of economic investigations. Despite much prodding, Arthur obliged only by placing himself in a long line of theorists dating back to Adam Smith and Alfred Marshall. I also found him disarmingly generous in giving credit to the biologists, physicists, and fellow economists who have helped advance his own thinking. Savvy to the journalist's quest for heroes, Arthur urged me to focus on his ideas, not his rank among his peers. Krugman has made a career out of telling other economists to pay better attention to the facts, yet as a chronicler of Arthur's career and inner life, Krugman seems to have listened only to his own demons.
--Ted C. Fishman
(For additional background on the history of "increasing returns" and Brian Arthur's standing in the field, click for David Warsh's July 3, 1994, Boston Globe article on Brian Arthur)
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20,012 | 20012_1W525LU6 | 12 | 1,009 | Slate | Krugman's Life of Brian | 1998.0 | Paul Krugman | Periodicals; Specialized Magazine; Media Coverage | Krugman's Life of Brian
Where it all started: Paul Krugman's "The Legend of Arthur."
Letter from John Cassidy
Paul Krugman replies to John Cassidy
Letter from M. Mitchell Waldrop
Paul Krugman replies to M. Mitchell Waldrop
Letter from Kenneth J. Arrow
Letter from Ted C. Fishman
David Warsh's July 3, 1994, Boston Globe
Letter from John Cassidy:
Paul Krugman loves to berate journalists for their ignorance of economics, particularly his economics, but on this occasion, I fear, his logic is more addled than usual. I am reluctant to dignify his hatchet job with a lengthy reply, but some of his claims are so defamatory that they should be addressed, if only for the record.
1) Krugman claims that my opening sentence--"In a way, Bill Gates's current troubles with the Justice Department grew out of an economics seminar that took place thirteen years ago, at Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government"--is "pure fiction." Perhaps so, but in that case somebody should tell this to Joel Klein, the assistant attorney general in charge of the antitrust division. When I interviewed Klein for my piece about the Microsoft case, he singled out Brian Arthur as the economist who has most influenced his thinking about the way in which high-technology markets operate. It was Klein's words, not those of Arthur, that prompted me to use Arthur in the lead of the story.
2) Krugman wrote: "Cassidy's article tells the story of how Stanford Professor Brian Arthur came up with the idea of increasing returns." I wrote no such thing, and Arthur has never, to my knowledge, claimed any such thing. The notion of increasing returns has been around since Adam Smith, and it was written about at length by Alfred Marshall in 1890. What I did say in my article was that increasing returns was largely ignored by mainstream economists for much of the postwar era, a claim that simply isn't controversial. (As Krugman notes, one reason for this was technical, not ideological. Allowing for the possibility of increasing returns tends to rob economic models of two properties that economists cherish: simplicity and determinism. As long ago as 1939, Sir John Hicks, one of the founders of modern economics, noted that increasing returns, if tolerated, could lead to the "wreckage" of a large part of economic theory.)
3) Pace Krugman, I also did not claim that Arthur bears principal responsibility for the rediscovery of increasing returns by economists in the 1970s and 1980s. As Krugman notes, several scholars (himself included) who were working in the fields of game theory and international trade published articles incorporating increasing returns before Arthur did. My claim was simply that Arthur applied increasing returns to high-technology markets, and that his work influenced how other economists and government officials think about these markets. Krugman apart, virtually every economist I have spoken to, including Daniel Rubinfeld, a former Berkeley professor who is now the chief economist at the Justice Department's antitrust division, told me this was the case. (Rubinfeld also mentioned several other economists who did influential work, and I cited three of them in the article.)
4) Krugman appears to suggest that I made up some quotes, a charge that, if it came from a more objective source, I would consider to be a serious matter. In effect, he is accusing Brian Arthur, a man he calls a "nice guy," of being a fabricator or a liar. The quotes in question came from Arthur, and they were based on his recollections of two meetings that he attended some years ago. After Krugman's article appeared, the Santa Fe professor called me to say that he still recalled the meetings in question as I described them. Krugman, as he admits, wasn't present at either of the meetings.
5) For a man who takes his own cogitations extremely seriously, Krugman is remarkably cavalier about attributing motives and beliefs to others. "Cassidy has made it clear in earlier writing that he does not like mainstream economists, and he may have been overly eager to accept a story that puts them in a bad light," he pronounces. I presume this statement refers to a critical piece I wrote in 1996 about the direction that economic research, principally macroeconomic research, has taken over the past two decades. In response to that article, I received dozens of messages of appreciation from mainstream economists, including from two former presidents of the American Economic Association. Among the sources quoted in that piece were the then-chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers (Joseph Stiglitz), a governor of the Federal Reserve Board (Laurence Meyer), and a well-known Harvard professor (Gregory Mankiw). To claim, as Krugman does, that I "don't like mainstream economists" and that I am out to denigrate their work is malicious hogwash. The fact of the matter is that I spend much of my life reading the work of mainstream economists, speaking to them, and trying to find something they have written that might interest the general public. In my experience, most economists appreciate the attention.
6) I might attach more weight to Krugman's criticisms if I hadn't recently reread his informative 1994 book Peddling Prosperity , in which he devotes a chapter to the rediscovery of increasing returns by contemporary economists. Who are the first scholars Krugman mentions in his account? Paul David, an economic historian who wrote a famous paper about how the QWERTYUIOP typewriter keyboard evolved and, you guessed it, Brian Arthur. "Why QWERTYUIOP?" Krugman wrote. "In the early 1980s, Paul David and his Stanford colleague Brian Arthur asked that question, and quickly realized that it led them into surprisingly deep waters. ... What Paul David, Brian Arthur, and a growing number of other economists began to realize in the late seventies and early eighties was that stories like that of the typewriter keyboard are, in fact, pervasive in the economy." Evidently, Krugman felt four years ago that Arthur's contribution was important enough to merit a prominent mention in his book. Now, he dismisses the same work, saying it "didn't tell me anything that I didn't already know." Doubtless, this change in attitude on Krugman's part is unconnected to the fact that Arthur has started to receive some public recognition. The eminent MIT professor, whose early academic work received widespread media attention, is far too generous a scholar to succumb to such pettiness.
--John Cassidy
Paul Krugman replies to John Cassidy:
I think that David Warsh's 1994 in the Boston Globe says it all. If other journalists would do as much homework as he did, I wouldn't have had to write that article.
Letter from M. Mitchell Waldrop:
Thanks to Paul Krugman for his lament about credulous reporters who refuse to let facts stand in the way of a good story ("The Legend of Arthur"). As a professional journalist, I found his points well taken--even when he cites my own book, Complexity as a classic example of the gullibility genre.
Among many other things, Complexity tells the story of the Irish-born economist Brian Arthur and how he came to champion a principle known as "increasing returns." The recent New Yorker article explains how that principle has since become the intellectual foundation of the Clinton administration's antitrust case against Microsoft. Krugman's complaint is that the popular press--including Complexity and The New Yorker --is now hailing Brian Arthur as the originator of increasing returns, even though Krugman and many others had worked on the idea long before Arthur did.
I leave it for others to decide whether I was too gullible in writing Complexity . For the record, however, I would like to inject a few facts into Krugman's story, which he summarizes nicely in the final paragraph:
When Waldrop's book came out, I wrote him as politely as I could, asking exactly how he had managed to come up with his version of events. He did, to his credit, write back. He explained that while he had become aware of some other people working on increasing returns, trying to put them in would have pulled his story line out of shape. ... So what we really learn from the legend of Arthur is that some journalists like a good story too much to find out whether it is really true.
Now, I will admit to many sins, not the least of them being a profound ignorance of graduate-level economics; I spent my graduate-school career in the physics department instead, writing a Ph.D. dissertation on the quantum-field theory of elementary particle collisions at relativistic energies. However, I am not so ignorant of the canons of journalism (and of common sense) that I would take a plausible fellow like Brian Arthur at face value without checking up on him. During my research for Complexity I spoke to a number of economists about his work, including Nobel laureate Kenneth Arrow, co-creator of the General Equilibrium Theory of economics that Brian so eloquently criticizes. They generally agreed that Brian was a maverick in the field--and perhaps a bit too much in love with his own self-image as a misunderstood outsider--but basically sound. None of them warned me that he was usurping credit where credit was not due.
Which brings me to Professor Krugman's letter, and my reply. I remember the exchange very well. Obviously, however, my reply failed to make clear what I was really trying to say. So I'll try again:
a) During our interviews, Brian went out of his way to impress upon me that many other economists had done work in increasing returns--Paul Krugman among them. He was anxious that they be given due credit in anything I wrote. So was I.
b) Accordingly, I included a passage in Complexity in which Brian does indeed describe what others had done in the field--Paul Krugman among them. Elsewhere in that same chapter, I tried to make it clear that the concept of increasing returns was already well known to Brian's professors at Berkeley, where he first learned of it. Indeed, I quote Brian pointing out that increasing returns had been extensively discussed by the great English economist Alfred Marshall in 1891.
c) So, when I received Krugman's letter shortly after Complexity came out, I was puzzled: He was complaining that I hadn't referenced others in the increasing-returns field--Paul Krugman among them--although I had explicitly done so.
d) But, when I checked the published text, I was chagrined to discover that the critical passage mentioning Krugman wasn't there.
e) Only then did I realize what had happened. After I had submitted the manuscript, my editor at Simon & Schuster had suggested a number of cuts to streamline what was already a long and involved chapter on Brian's ideas. I accepted some of the cuts, and restored others--including (I thought) the passage that mentioned Krugman. In the rush to get Complexity to press, however, that passage somehow wound up on the cutting-room floor anyway, and I didn't notice until too late.
That oversight was my fault entirely, not my editor's, and certainly not Brian Arthur's. I take full responsibility, I regret it, and--if Simon & Schuster only published an errata column--I would happily correct it publicly. However, contrary to what Professor Krugman implies, it was an oversight, not a breezy disregard of facts for the sake of a good story.
--M. Mitchell Waldrop Washington
Paul Krugman replies to M. Mitchell Waldrop:
I am truly sorry that The New Yorker has not yet established a Web presence so that we could include a link directly to the Cassidy piece. However, you can get a pretty good idea of what the piece said by reading the summary of it presented in "Tasty Bits from the Technology Front." Cassidy did not present a story about one guy among many who worked on increasing returns. On the contrary: He presented a morality play in which a lonely hero struggled to make his ideas heard against the unified opposition of a narrow-minded profession both intellectually and politically conservative. As TBTF's host--not exactly a naive reader--put it, "These ideas were anathema to mainstream economists in 1984 when Arthur first tried to publish them."
That morality play--not the question of who deserves credit--was the main point of my column, because it is a pure (and malicious) fantasy that has nonetheless become part of the story line people tell about increasing returns and its relationship to mainstream economics.
The fact, which is easily documented, is that during the years that, according to the legend, increasing returns was unacceptable in mainstream economics, papers about increasing returns were in fact being cheerfully published by all the major journals. And as I pointed out in the chronology I provided with the article, even standard reference volumes like the Handbook of International Economics (published in 1984, the year Arthur supposedly met a blank wall of resistance) have long contained chapters on increasing returns. Whatever the reason that Arthur had trouble getting his own paper published, ideological rigidity had nothing to do with it.
How did this fantasy come to be so widely believed? I am glad to hear that you tried to tell a more balanced story, Mr. Waldrop, even if sloppy paperwork kept it from seeing the light of day. And I am glad that you talked to Ken Arrow. But Nobel laureates, who have wide responsibilities and much on their mind, are not necessarily on top of what has been going on in research outside their usual field. I happen to know of one laureate who, circa 1991, was quite unaware that anyone had thought about increasing returns in either growth or trade. Did you try talking to anyone else--say, to one of the economists who are the straight men in the stories you tell? For example, your book starts with the story of Arthur's meeting in 1987 with Al Fishlow at Berkeley, in which Fishlow supposedly said, "We know that increasing returns can't exist"--and Arthur went away in despair over the unwillingness of economists to think the unthinkable. Did you call Fishlow to ask whether he said it, and what he meant? Since by 1987 Paul Romer's 1986 papers on increasing returns and growth had started an avalanche of derivative work, he was certainly joking--what he probably meant was "Oh no, not you too." And let me say that I simply cannot believe that you could have talked about increasing returns with any significant number of economists outside Santa Fe without Romer's name popping up in the first 30 seconds of every conversation--unless you were very selective about whom you talked to. And oh, by the way, there are such things as libraries, where you can browse actual economics journals and see what they contain.
The point is that it's not just a matter of failing to cite a few more people. Your book, like the Cassidy article, didn't just tell the story of Brian Arthur; it also painted a picture of the economics profession, its intellectual bigotry and prejudice, which happens to be a complete fabrication (with some real, named people cast as villains) that somehow someone managed to sell you. I wonder who?
Even more to the point: How did Cassidy come by his story? Is it possible that he completely misunderstood what Brian Arthur was saying--that the whole business about the seminar at Harvard where nobody would accept increasing returns, about the lonely struggle of Arthur in the face of ideological rigidity, even the quotation from Arthur about economists being unwilling to consider the possibility of imperfect markets because of the Cold War (give me a break!) were all in Cassidy's imagination?
Let me say that I am actually quite grateful to Cassidy and The New Yorker . A number of people have long been furious about your book--for example, Victor Norman, whom you portrayed as the first of many economists too dumb or perhaps narrow-minded to understand Arthur's brilliant innovation. Norman e-mailed me to say that "I have read the tales from the Vienna woods before and had hoped that it could be cleared up by someone at some point." Yet up to now there was nothing anyone could do about the situation. The trouble was that while "heroic rebel defies orthodoxy" is a story so good that nobody even tries to check it out, "guy makes minor contribution to well-established field, proclaims himself its founder" is so boring as to be unpublishable. (David Warsh's 1994 series of columns in the Boston Globe on the increasing-returns revolution in economics, the basis for a forthcoming book from Harvard University Press, is far and away the best reporting on the subject, did include a sympathetic but devastating exposé of Arthur's pretensions--but to little effect. [Click to read Warsh on Arthur.]) Only now did I have a publishable story: "guy makes minor contribution to well-established field, portrays himself as heroic rebel--and The New Yorker believes him."
Thank you, Mr. Cassidy.
Letter from Kenneth J. Arrow:
Paul Krugman's attack on Brian Arthur ("The Legend of Arthur") requires a correction of its misrepresentations of fact. Arthur is a reputable and significant scholar whose work is indeed having influence in the field of industrial organization and in particular public policy toward antitrust policy in high-tech industries. Krugman admits that he wrote the article because he was "just pissed off," not a very good state for a judicious statement of facts, as his column shows.
His theme is stated in his first paragraph: "Cassidy's article [in The New Yorker of Jan. 12] tells the story of how Stanford Professor Brian Arthur came up with the idea of increasing returns." Cassidy, however, said nothing of the sort. The concept of increasing returns is indeed very old, and Cassidy at no point attributed that idea to Arthur. Indeed, the phrase "increasing returns" appears just once in Cassidy's article and then merely to say that Arthur had used the term while others refer to network externalities. Further, Arthur has never made any such preposterous claim at any other time. On the contrary, his papers have fully cited the history of the field and made references to the previous papers, including those of Paul Krugman. (See Arthur's papers collected in the volume Increasing Returns and Path Dependence in the Economy, especially his preface and my foreword for longer comments on Arthur's work in historic perspective. Click to see the foreword.) Hence, Krugman's whole attack is directed at a statement made neither by Arthur nor by Cassidy. Krugman has not read Cassidy's piece with any care nor has he bothered to review what Arthur has in fact said.
What Cassidy in fact did in his article was to trace a line of influence between one of Arthur's early articles and the current claims of the Department of Justice against Microsoft. It appears that Cassidy based his article on several interviews, not just one.
The point that Arthur has emphasized and which is influential in the current debates about antitrust policy is the dynamic implication of increasing returns. It is the concept of path-dependence, that small events, whether random or the result of corporate strategic choice, may have large consequences because of increasing returns of various kinds. Initial small advantages become magnified, for example, by creating a large installed base, and direct the future, possibly in an inefficient direction. Techniques of production may be locked in at an early stage. Similar considerations apply to regional development and learning.
--Kenneth J. Arrow Nobel laureate and Joan Kenney professor of economics emeritus Stanford University
Letter from Ted C. Fishman:
After reading Paul Krugman vent his spleen against fellow economist Brian Arthur in "The Legend of Arthur," I couldn't help wondering whose reputation he was out to trash, Arthur's or his own. Krugman seems to fear a plot to deny economists their intellectual due. If one exists, Arthur is not a likely suspect. In a series of long interviews with me a year ago (for Worth magazine), I tried, vainly, to get Arthur to tell me how his ideas about increasing returns have encouraged a new strain of economic investigations. Despite much prodding, Arthur obliged only by placing himself in a long line of theorists dating back to Adam Smith and Alfred Marshall. I also found him disarmingly generous in giving credit to the biologists, physicists, and fellow economists who have helped advance his own thinking. Savvy to the journalist's quest for heroes, Arthur urged me to focus on his ideas, not his rank among his peers. Krugman has made a career out of telling other economists to pay better attention to the facts, yet as a chronicler of Arthur's career and inner life, Krugman seems to have listened only to his own demons.
--Ted C. Fishman
(For additional background on the history of "increasing returns" and Brian Arthur's standing in the field, click for David Warsh's July 3, 1994, Boston Globe article on Brian Arthur)
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20,012 | 20012_1W525LU6 | 12 | 1,009 | Slate | Krugman's Life of Brian | 1998.0 | Paul Krugman | Periodicals; Specialized Magazine; Media Coverage | Krugman's Life of Brian
Where it all started: Paul Krugman's "The Legend of Arthur."
Letter from John Cassidy
Paul Krugman replies to John Cassidy
Letter from M. Mitchell Waldrop
Paul Krugman replies to M. Mitchell Waldrop
Letter from Kenneth J. Arrow
Letter from Ted C. Fishman
David Warsh's July 3, 1994, Boston Globe
Letter from John Cassidy:
Paul Krugman loves to berate journalists for their ignorance of economics, particularly his economics, but on this occasion, I fear, his logic is more addled than usual. I am reluctant to dignify his hatchet job with a lengthy reply, but some of his claims are so defamatory that they should be addressed, if only for the record.
1) Krugman claims that my opening sentence--"In a way, Bill Gates's current troubles with the Justice Department grew out of an economics seminar that took place thirteen years ago, at Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government"--is "pure fiction." Perhaps so, but in that case somebody should tell this to Joel Klein, the assistant attorney general in charge of the antitrust division. When I interviewed Klein for my piece about the Microsoft case, he singled out Brian Arthur as the economist who has most influenced his thinking about the way in which high-technology markets operate. It was Klein's words, not those of Arthur, that prompted me to use Arthur in the lead of the story.
2) Krugman wrote: "Cassidy's article tells the story of how Stanford Professor Brian Arthur came up with the idea of increasing returns." I wrote no such thing, and Arthur has never, to my knowledge, claimed any such thing. The notion of increasing returns has been around since Adam Smith, and it was written about at length by Alfred Marshall in 1890. What I did say in my article was that increasing returns was largely ignored by mainstream economists for much of the postwar era, a claim that simply isn't controversial. (As Krugman notes, one reason for this was technical, not ideological. Allowing for the possibility of increasing returns tends to rob economic models of two properties that economists cherish: simplicity and determinism. As long ago as 1939, Sir John Hicks, one of the founders of modern economics, noted that increasing returns, if tolerated, could lead to the "wreckage" of a large part of economic theory.)
3) Pace Krugman, I also did not claim that Arthur bears principal responsibility for the rediscovery of increasing returns by economists in the 1970s and 1980s. As Krugman notes, several scholars (himself included) who were working in the fields of game theory and international trade published articles incorporating increasing returns before Arthur did. My claim was simply that Arthur applied increasing returns to high-technology markets, and that his work influenced how other economists and government officials think about these markets. Krugman apart, virtually every economist I have spoken to, including Daniel Rubinfeld, a former Berkeley professor who is now the chief economist at the Justice Department's antitrust division, told me this was the case. (Rubinfeld also mentioned several other economists who did influential work, and I cited three of them in the article.)
4) Krugman appears to suggest that I made up some quotes, a charge that, if it came from a more objective source, I would consider to be a serious matter. In effect, he is accusing Brian Arthur, a man he calls a "nice guy," of being a fabricator or a liar. The quotes in question came from Arthur, and they were based on his recollections of two meetings that he attended some years ago. After Krugman's article appeared, the Santa Fe professor called me to say that he still recalled the meetings in question as I described them. Krugman, as he admits, wasn't present at either of the meetings.
5) For a man who takes his own cogitations extremely seriously, Krugman is remarkably cavalier about attributing motives and beliefs to others. "Cassidy has made it clear in earlier writing that he does not like mainstream economists, and he may have been overly eager to accept a story that puts them in a bad light," he pronounces. I presume this statement refers to a critical piece I wrote in 1996 about the direction that economic research, principally macroeconomic research, has taken over the past two decades. In response to that article, I received dozens of messages of appreciation from mainstream economists, including from two former presidents of the American Economic Association. Among the sources quoted in that piece were the then-chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers (Joseph Stiglitz), a governor of the Federal Reserve Board (Laurence Meyer), and a well-known Harvard professor (Gregory Mankiw). To claim, as Krugman does, that I "don't like mainstream economists" and that I am out to denigrate their work is malicious hogwash. The fact of the matter is that I spend much of my life reading the work of mainstream economists, speaking to them, and trying to find something they have written that might interest the general public. In my experience, most economists appreciate the attention.
6) I might attach more weight to Krugman's criticisms if I hadn't recently reread his informative 1994 book Peddling Prosperity , in which he devotes a chapter to the rediscovery of increasing returns by contemporary economists. Who are the first scholars Krugman mentions in his account? Paul David, an economic historian who wrote a famous paper about how the QWERTYUIOP typewriter keyboard evolved and, you guessed it, Brian Arthur. "Why QWERTYUIOP?" Krugman wrote. "In the early 1980s, Paul David and his Stanford colleague Brian Arthur asked that question, and quickly realized that it led them into surprisingly deep waters. ... What Paul David, Brian Arthur, and a growing number of other economists began to realize in the late seventies and early eighties was that stories like that of the typewriter keyboard are, in fact, pervasive in the economy." Evidently, Krugman felt four years ago that Arthur's contribution was important enough to merit a prominent mention in his book. Now, he dismisses the same work, saying it "didn't tell me anything that I didn't already know." Doubtless, this change in attitude on Krugman's part is unconnected to the fact that Arthur has started to receive some public recognition. The eminent MIT professor, whose early academic work received widespread media attention, is far too generous a scholar to succumb to such pettiness.
--John Cassidy
Paul Krugman replies to John Cassidy:
I think that David Warsh's 1994 in the Boston Globe says it all. If other journalists would do as much homework as he did, I wouldn't have had to write that article.
Letter from M. Mitchell Waldrop:
Thanks to Paul Krugman for his lament about credulous reporters who refuse to let facts stand in the way of a good story ("The Legend of Arthur"). As a professional journalist, I found his points well taken--even when he cites my own book, Complexity as a classic example of the gullibility genre.
Among many other things, Complexity tells the story of the Irish-born economist Brian Arthur and how he came to champion a principle known as "increasing returns." The recent New Yorker article explains how that principle has since become the intellectual foundation of the Clinton administration's antitrust case against Microsoft. Krugman's complaint is that the popular press--including Complexity and The New Yorker --is now hailing Brian Arthur as the originator of increasing returns, even though Krugman and many others had worked on the idea long before Arthur did.
I leave it for others to decide whether I was too gullible in writing Complexity . For the record, however, I would like to inject a few facts into Krugman's story, which he summarizes nicely in the final paragraph:
When Waldrop's book came out, I wrote him as politely as I could, asking exactly how he had managed to come up with his version of events. He did, to his credit, write back. He explained that while he had become aware of some other people working on increasing returns, trying to put them in would have pulled his story line out of shape. ... So what we really learn from the legend of Arthur is that some journalists like a good story too much to find out whether it is really true.
Now, I will admit to many sins, not the least of them being a profound ignorance of graduate-level economics; I spent my graduate-school career in the physics department instead, writing a Ph.D. dissertation on the quantum-field theory of elementary particle collisions at relativistic energies. However, I am not so ignorant of the canons of journalism (and of common sense) that I would take a plausible fellow like Brian Arthur at face value without checking up on him. During my research for Complexity I spoke to a number of economists about his work, including Nobel laureate Kenneth Arrow, co-creator of the General Equilibrium Theory of economics that Brian so eloquently criticizes. They generally agreed that Brian was a maverick in the field--and perhaps a bit too much in love with his own self-image as a misunderstood outsider--but basically sound. None of them warned me that he was usurping credit where credit was not due.
Which brings me to Professor Krugman's letter, and my reply. I remember the exchange very well. Obviously, however, my reply failed to make clear what I was really trying to say. So I'll try again:
a) During our interviews, Brian went out of his way to impress upon me that many other economists had done work in increasing returns--Paul Krugman among them. He was anxious that they be given due credit in anything I wrote. So was I.
b) Accordingly, I included a passage in Complexity in which Brian does indeed describe what others had done in the field--Paul Krugman among them. Elsewhere in that same chapter, I tried to make it clear that the concept of increasing returns was already well known to Brian's professors at Berkeley, where he first learned of it. Indeed, I quote Brian pointing out that increasing returns had been extensively discussed by the great English economist Alfred Marshall in 1891.
c) So, when I received Krugman's letter shortly after Complexity came out, I was puzzled: He was complaining that I hadn't referenced others in the increasing-returns field--Paul Krugman among them--although I had explicitly done so.
d) But, when I checked the published text, I was chagrined to discover that the critical passage mentioning Krugman wasn't there.
e) Only then did I realize what had happened. After I had submitted the manuscript, my editor at Simon & Schuster had suggested a number of cuts to streamline what was already a long and involved chapter on Brian's ideas. I accepted some of the cuts, and restored others--including (I thought) the passage that mentioned Krugman. In the rush to get Complexity to press, however, that passage somehow wound up on the cutting-room floor anyway, and I didn't notice until too late.
That oversight was my fault entirely, not my editor's, and certainly not Brian Arthur's. I take full responsibility, I regret it, and--if Simon & Schuster only published an errata column--I would happily correct it publicly. However, contrary to what Professor Krugman implies, it was an oversight, not a breezy disregard of facts for the sake of a good story.
--M. Mitchell Waldrop Washington
Paul Krugman replies to M. Mitchell Waldrop:
I am truly sorry that The New Yorker has not yet established a Web presence so that we could include a link directly to the Cassidy piece. However, you can get a pretty good idea of what the piece said by reading the summary of it presented in "Tasty Bits from the Technology Front." Cassidy did not present a story about one guy among many who worked on increasing returns. On the contrary: He presented a morality play in which a lonely hero struggled to make his ideas heard against the unified opposition of a narrow-minded profession both intellectually and politically conservative. As TBTF's host--not exactly a naive reader--put it, "These ideas were anathema to mainstream economists in 1984 when Arthur first tried to publish them."
That morality play--not the question of who deserves credit--was the main point of my column, because it is a pure (and malicious) fantasy that has nonetheless become part of the story line people tell about increasing returns and its relationship to mainstream economics.
The fact, which is easily documented, is that during the years that, according to the legend, increasing returns was unacceptable in mainstream economics, papers about increasing returns were in fact being cheerfully published by all the major journals. And as I pointed out in the chronology I provided with the article, even standard reference volumes like the Handbook of International Economics (published in 1984, the year Arthur supposedly met a blank wall of resistance) have long contained chapters on increasing returns. Whatever the reason that Arthur had trouble getting his own paper published, ideological rigidity had nothing to do with it.
How did this fantasy come to be so widely believed? I am glad to hear that you tried to tell a more balanced story, Mr. Waldrop, even if sloppy paperwork kept it from seeing the light of day. And I am glad that you talked to Ken Arrow. But Nobel laureates, who have wide responsibilities and much on their mind, are not necessarily on top of what has been going on in research outside their usual field. I happen to know of one laureate who, circa 1991, was quite unaware that anyone had thought about increasing returns in either growth or trade. Did you try talking to anyone else--say, to one of the economists who are the straight men in the stories you tell? For example, your book starts with the story of Arthur's meeting in 1987 with Al Fishlow at Berkeley, in which Fishlow supposedly said, "We know that increasing returns can't exist"--and Arthur went away in despair over the unwillingness of economists to think the unthinkable. Did you call Fishlow to ask whether he said it, and what he meant? Since by 1987 Paul Romer's 1986 papers on increasing returns and growth had started an avalanche of derivative work, he was certainly joking--what he probably meant was "Oh no, not you too." And let me say that I simply cannot believe that you could have talked about increasing returns with any significant number of economists outside Santa Fe without Romer's name popping up in the first 30 seconds of every conversation--unless you were very selective about whom you talked to. And oh, by the way, there are such things as libraries, where you can browse actual economics journals and see what they contain.
The point is that it's not just a matter of failing to cite a few more people. Your book, like the Cassidy article, didn't just tell the story of Brian Arthur; it also painted a picture of the economics profession, its intellectual bigotry and prejudice, which happens to be a complete fabrication (with some real, named people cast as villains) that somehow someone managed to sell you. I wonder who?
Even more to the point: How did Cassidy come by his story? Is it possible that he completely misunderstood what Brian Arthur was saying--that the whole business about the seminar at Harvard where nobody would accept increasing returns, about the lonely struggle of Arthur in the face of ideological rigidity, even the quotation from Arthur about economists being unwilling to consider the possibility of imperfect markets because of the Cold War (give me a break!) were all in Cassidy's imagination?
Let me say that I am actually quite grateful to Cassidy and The New Yorker . A number of people have long been furious about your book--for example, Victor Norman, whom you portrayed as the first of many economists too dumb or perhaps narrow-minded to understand Arthur's brilliant innovation. Norman e-mailed me to say that "I have read the tales from the Vienna woods before and had hoped that it could be cleared up by someone at some point." Yet up to now there was nothing anyone could do about the situation. The trouble was that while "heroic rebel defies orthodoxy" is a story so good that nobody even tries to check it out, "guy makes minor contribution to well-established field, proclaims himself its founder" is so boring as to be unpublishable. (David Warsh's 1994 series of columns in the Boston Globe on the increasing-returns revolution in economics, the basis for a forthcoming book from Harvard University Press, is far and away the best reporting on the subject, did include a sympathetic but devastating exposé of Arthur's pretensions--but to little effect. [Click to read Warsh on Arthur.]) Only now did I have a publishable story: "guy makes minor contribution to well-established field, portrays himself as heroic rebel--and The New Yorker believes him."
Thank you, Mr. Cassidy.
Letter from Kenneth J. Arrow:
Paul Krugman's attack on Brian Arthur ("The Legend of Arthur") requires a correction of its misrepresentations of fact. Arthur is a reputable and significant scholar whose work is indeed having influence in the field of industrial organization and in particular public policy toward antitrust policy in high-tech industries. Krugman admits that he wrote the article because he was "just pissed off," not a very good state for a judicious statement of facts, as his column shows.
His theme is stated in his first paragraph: "Cassidy's article [in The New Yorker of Jan. 12] tells the story of how Stanford Professor Brian Arthur came up with the idea of increasing returns." Cassidy, however, said nothing of the sort. The concept of increasing returns is indeed very old, and Cassidy at no point attributed that idea to Arthur. Indeed, the phrase "increasing returns" appears just once in Cassidy's article and then merely to say that Arthur had used the term while others refer to network externalities. Further, Arthur has never made any such preposterous claim at any other time. On the contrary, his papers have fully cited the history of the field and made references to the previous papers, including those of Paul Krugman. (See Arthur's papers collected in the volume Increasing Returns and Path Dependence in the Economy, especially his preface and my foreword for longer comments on Arthur's work in historic perspective. Click to see the foreword.) Hence, Krugman's whole attack is directed at a statement made neither by Arthur nor by Cassidy. Krugman has not read Cassidy's piece with any care nor has he bothered to review what Arthur has in fact said.
What Cassidy in fact did in his article was to trace a line of influence between one of Arthur's early articles and the current claims of the Department of Justice against Microsoft. It appears that Cassidy based his article on several interviews, not just one.
The point that Arthur has emphasized and which is influential in the current debates about antitrust policy is the dynamic implication of increasing returns. It is the concept of path-dependence, that small events, whether random or the result of corporate strategic choice, may have large consequences because of increasing returns of various kinds. Initial small advantages become magnified, for example, by creating a large installed base, and direct the future, possibly in an inefficient direction. Techniques of production may be locked in at an early stage. Similar considerations apply to regional development and learning.
--Kenneth J. Arrow Nobel laureate and Joan Kenney professor of economics emeritus Stanford University
Letter from Ted C. Fishman:
After reading Paul Krugman vent his spleen against fellow economist Brian Arthur in "The Legend of Arthur," I couldn't help wondering whose reputation he was out to trash, Arthur's or his own. Krugman seems to fear a plot to deny economists their intellectual due. If one exists, Arthur is not a likely suspect. In a series of long interviews with me a year ago (for Worth magazine), I tried, vainly, to get Arthur to tell me how his ideas about increasing returns have encouraged a new strain of economic investigations. Despite much prodding, Arthur obliged only by placing himself in a long line of theorists dating back to Adam Smith and Alfred Marshall. I also found him disarmingly generous in giving credit to the biologists, physicists, and fellow economists who have helped advance his own thinking. Savvy to the journalist's quest for heroes, Arthur urged me to focus on his ideas, not his rank among his peers. Krugman has made a career out of telling other economists to pay better attention to the facts, yet as a chronicler of Arthur's career and inner life, Krugman seems to have listened only to his own demons.
--Ted C. Fishman
(For additional background on the history of "increasing returns" and Brian Arthur's standing in the field, click for David Warsh's July 3, 1994, Boston Globe article on Brian Arthur)
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20,012 | 20012_1W525LU6 | 12 | 1,009 | Slate | Krugman's Life of Brian | 1998.0 | Paul Krugman | Periodicals; Specialized Magazine; Media Coverage | Krugman's Life of Brian
Where it all started: Paul Krugman's "The Legend of Arthur."
Letter from John Cassidy
Paul Krugman replies to John Cassidy
Letter from M. Mitchell Waldrop
Paul Krugman replies to M. Mitchell Waldrop
Letter from Kenneth J. Arrow
Letter from Ted C. Fishman
David Warsh's July 3, 1994, Boston Globe
Letter from John Cassidy:
Paul Krugman loves to berate journalists for their ignorance of economics, particularly his economics, but on this occasion, I fear, his logic is more addled than usual. I am reluctant to dignify his hatchet job with a lengthy reply, but some of his claims are so defamatory that they should be addressed, if only for the record.
1) Krugman claims that my opening sentence--"In a way, Bill Gates's current troubles with the Justice Department grew out of an economics seminar that took place thirteen years ago, at Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government"--is "pure fiction." Perhaps so, but in that case somebody should tell this to Joel Klein, the assistant attorney general in charge of the antitrust division. When I interviewed Klein for my piece about the Microsoft case, he singled out Brian Arthur as the economist who has most influenced his thinking about the way in which high-technology markets operate. It was Klein's words, not those of Arthur, that prompted me to use Arthur in the lead of the story.
2) Krugman wrote: "Cassidy's article tells the story of how Stanford Professor Brian Arthur came up with the idea of increasing returns." I wrote no such thing, and Arthur has never, to my knowledge, claimed any such thing. The notion of increasing returns has been around since Adam Smith, and it was written about at length by Alfred Marshall in 1890. What I did say in my article was that increasing returns was largely ignored by mainstream economists for much of the postwar era, a claim that simply isn't controversial. (As Krugman notes, one reason for this was technical, not ideological. Allowing for the possibility of increasing returns tends to rob economic models of two properties that economists cherish: simplicity and determinism. As long ago as 1939, Sir John Hicks, one of the founders of modern economics, noted that increasing returns, if tolerated, could lead to the "wreckage" of a large part of economic theory.)
3) Pace Krugman, I also did not claim that Arthur bears principal responsibility for the rediscovery of increasing returns by economists in the 1970s and 1980s. As Krugman notes, several scholars (himself included) who were working in the fields of game theory and international trade published articles incorporating increasing returns before Arthur did. My claim was simply that Arthur applied increasing returns to high-technology markets, and that his work influenced how other economists and government officials think about these markets. Krugman apart, virtually every economist I have spoken to, including Daniel Rubinfeld, a former Berkeley professor who is now the chief economist at the Justice Department's antitrust division, told me this was the case. (Rubinfeld also mentioned several other economists who did influential work, and I cited three of them in the article.)
4) Krugman appears to suggest that I made up some quotes, a charge that, if it came from a more objective source, I would consider to be a serious matter. In effect, he is accusing Brian Arthur, a man he calls a "nice guy," of being a fabricator or a liar. The quotes in question came from Arthur, and they were based on his recollections of two meetings that he attended some years ago. After Krugman's article appeared, the Santa Fe professor called me to say that he still recalled the meetings in question as I described them. Krugman, as he admits, wasn't present at either of the meetings.
5) For a man who takes his own cogitations extremely seriously, Krugman is remarkably cavalier about attributing motives and beliefs to others. "Cassidy has made it clear in earlier writing that he does not like mainstream economists, and he may have been overly eager to accept a story that puts them in a bad light," he pronounces. I presume this statement refers to a critical piece I wrote in 1996 about the direction that economic research, principally macroeconomic research, has taken over the past two decades. In response to that article, I received dozens of messages of appreciation from mainstream economists, including from two former presidents of the American Economic Association. Among the sources quoted in that piece were the then-chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers (Joseph Stiglitz), a governor of the Federal Reserve Board (Laurence Meyer), and a well-known Harvard professor (Gregory Mankiw). To claim, as Krugman does, that I "don't like mainstream economists" and that I am out to denigrate their work is malicious hogwash. The fact of the matter is that I spend much of my life reading the work of mainstream economists, speaking to them, and trying to find something they have written that might interest the general public. In my experience, most economists appreciate the attention.
6) I might attach more weight to Krugman's criticisms if I hadn't recently reread his informative 1994 book Peddling Prosperity , in which he devotes a chapter to the rediscovery of increasing returns by contemporary economists. Who are the first scholars Krugman mentions in his account? Paul David, an economic historian who wrote a famous paper about how the QWERTYUIOP typewriter keyboard evolved and, you guessed it, Brian Arthur. "Why QWERTYUIOP?" Krugman wrote. "In the early 1980s, Paul David and his Stanford colleague Brian Arthur asked that question, and quickly realized that it led them into surprisingly deep waters. ... What Paul David, Brian Arthur, and a growing number of other economists began to realize in the late seventies and early eighties was that stories like that of the typewriter keyboard are, in fact, pervasive in the economy." Evidently, Krugman felt four years ago that Arthur's contribution was important enough to merit a prominent mention in his book. Now, he dismisses the same work, saying it "didn't tell me anything that I didn't already know." Doubtless, this change in attitude on Krugman's part is unconnected to the fact that Arthur has started to receive some public recognition. The eminent MIT professor, whose early academic work received widespread media attention, is far too generous a scholar to succumb to such pettiness.
--John Cassidy
Paul Krugman replies to John Cassidy:
I think that David Warsh's 1994 in the Boston Globe says it all. If other journalists would do as much homework as he did, I wouldn't have had to write that article.
Letter from M. Mitchell Waldrop:
Thanks to Paul Krugman for his lament about credulous reporters who refuse to let facts stand in the way of a good story ("The Legend of Arthur"). As a professional journalist, I found his points well taken--even when he cites my own book, Complexity as a classic example of the gullibility genre.
Among many other things, Complexity tells the story of the Irish-born economist Brian Arthur and how he came to champion a principle known as "increasing returns." The recent New Yorker article explains how that principle has since become the intellectual foundation of the Clinton administration's antitrust case against Microsoft. Krugman's complaint is that the popular press--including Complexity and The New Yorker --is now hailing Brian Arthur as the originator of increasing returns, even though Krugman and many others had worked on the idea long before Arthur did.
I leave it for others to decide whether I was too gullible in writing Complexity . For the record, however, I would like to inject a few facts into Krugman's story, which he summarizes nicely in the final paragraph:
When Waldrop's book came out, I wrote him as politely as I could, asking exactly how he had managed to come up with his version of events. He did, to his credit, write back. He explained that while he had become aware of some other people working on increasing returns, trying to put them in would have pulled his story line out of shape. ... So what we really learn from the legend of Arthur is that some journalists like a good story too much to find out whether it is really true.
Now, I will admit to many sins, not the least of them being a profound ignorance of graduate-level economics; I spent my graduate-school career in the physics department instead, writing a Ph.D. dissertation on the quantum-field theory of elementary particle collisions at relativistic energies. However, I am not so ignorant of the canons of journalism (and of common sense) that I would take a plausible fellow like Brian Arthur at face value without checking up on him. During my research for Complexity I spoke to a number of economists about his work, including Nobel laureate Kenneth Arrow, co-creator of the General Equilibrium Theory of economics that Brian so eloquently criticizes. They generally agreed that Brian was a maverick in the field--and perhaps a bit too much in love with his own self-image as a misunderstood outsider--but basically sound. None of them warned me that he was usurping credit where credit was not due.
Which brings me to Professor Krugman's letter, and my reply. I remember the exchange very well. Obviously, however, my reply failed to make clear what I was really trying to say. So I'll try again:
a) During our interviews, Brian went out of his way to impress upon me that many other economists had done work in increasing returns--Paul Krugman among them. He was anxious that they be given due credit in anything I wrote. So was I.
b) Accordingly, I included a passage in Complexity in which Brian does indeed describe what others had done in the field--Paul Krugman among them. Elsewhere in that same chapter, I tried to make it clear that the concept of increasing returns was already well known to Brian's professors at Berkeley, where he first learned of it. Indeed, I quote Brian pointing out that increasing returns had been extensively discussed by the great English economist Alfred Marshall in 1891.
c) So, when I received Krugman's letter shortly after Complexity came out, I was puzzled: He was complaining that I hadn't referenced others in the increasing-returns field--Paul Krugman among them--although I had explicitly done so.
d) But, when I checked the published text, I was chagrined to discover that the critical passage mentioning Krugman wasn't there.
e) Only then did I realize what had happened. After I had submitted the manuscript, my editor at Simon & Schuster had suggested a number of cuts to streamline what was already a long and involved chapter on Brian's ideas. I accepted some of the cuts, and restored others--including (I thought) the passage that mentioned Krugman. In the rush to get Complexity to press, however, that passage somehow wound up on the cutting-room floor anyway, and I didn't notice until too late.
That oversight was my fault entirely, not my editor's, and certainly not Brian Arthur's. I take full responsibility, I regret it, and--if Simon & Schuster only published an errata column--I would happily correct it publicly. However, contrary to what Professor Krugman implies, it was an oversight, not a breezy disregard of facts for the sake of a good story.
--M. Mitchell Waldrop Washington
Paul Krugman replies to M. Mitchell Waldrop:
I am truly sorry that The New Yorker has not yet established a Web presence so that we could include a link directly to the Cassidy piece. However, you can get a pretty good idea of what the piece said by reading the summary of it presented in "Tasty Bits from the Technology Front." Cassidy did not present a story about one guy among many who worked on increasing returns. On the contrary: He presented a morality play in which a lonely hero struggled to make his ideas heard against the unified opposition of a narrow-minded profession both intellectually and politically conservative. As TBTF's host--not exactly a naive reader--put it, "These ideas were anathema to mainstream economists in 1984 when Arthur first tried to publish them."
That morality play--not the question of who deserves credit--was the main point of my column, because it is a pure (and malicious) fantasy that has nonetheless become part of the story line people tell about increasing returns and its relationship to mainstream economics.
The fact, which is easily documented, is that during the years that, according to the legend, increasing returns was unacceptable in mainstream economics, papers about increasing returns were in fact being cheerfully published by all the major journals. And as I pointed out in the chronology I provided with the article, even standard reference volumes like the Handbook of International Economics (published in 1984, the year Arthur supposedly met a blank wall of resistance) have long contained chapters on increasing returns. Whatever the reason that Arthur had trouble getting his own paper published, ideological rigidity had nothing to do with it.
How did this fantasy come to be so widely believed? I am glad to hear that you tried to tell a more balanced story, Mr. Waldrop, even if sloppy paperwork kept it from seeing the light of day. And I am glad that you talked to Ken Arrow. But Nobel laureates, who have wide responsibilities and much on their mind, are not necessarily on top of what has been going on in research outside their usual field. I happen to know of one laureate who, circa 1991, was quite unaware that anyone had thought about increasing returns in either growth or trade. Did you try talking to anyone else--say, to one of the economists who are the straight men in the stories you tell? For example, your book starts with the story of Arthur's meeting in 1987 with Al Fishlow at Berkeley, in which Fishlow supposedly said, "We know that increasing returns can't exist"--and Arthur went away in despair over the unwillingness of economists to think the unthinkable. Did you call Fishlow to ask whether he said it, and what he meant? Since by 1987 Paul Romer's 1986 papers on increasing returns and growth had started an avalanche of derivative work, he was certainly joking--what he probably meant was "Oh no, not you too." And let me say that I simply cannot believe that you could have talked about increasing returns with any significant number of economists outside Santa Fe without Romer's name popping up in the first 30 seconds of every conversation--unless you were very selective about whom you talked to. And oh, by the way, there are such things as libraries, where you can browse actual economics journals and see what they contain.
The point is that it's not just a matter of failing to cite a few more people. Your book, like the Cassidy article, didn't just tell the story of Brian Arthur; it also painted a picture of the economics profession, its intellectual bigotry and prejudice, which happens to be a complete fabrication (with some real, named people cast as villains) that somehow someone managed to sell you. I wonder who?
Even more to the point: How did Cassidy come by his story? Is it possible that he completely misunderstood what Brian Arthur was saying--that the whole business about the seminar at Harvard where nobody would accept increasing returns, about the lonely struggle of Arthur in the face of ideological rigidity, even the quotation from Arthur about economists being unwilling to consider the possibility of imperfect markets because of the Cold War (give me a break!) were all in Cassidy's imagination?
Let me say that I am actually quite grateful to Cassidy and The New Yorker . A number of people have long been furious about your book--for example, Victor Norman, whom you portrayed as the first of many economists too dumb or perhaps narrow-minded to understand Arthur's brilliant innovation. Norman e-mailed me to say that "I have read the tales from the Vienna woods before and had hoped that it could be cleared up by someone at some point." Yet up to now there was nothing anyone could do about the situation. The trouble was that while "heroic rebel defies orthodoxy" is a story so good that nobody even tries to check it out, "guy makes minor contribution to well-established field, proclaims himself its founder" is so boring as to be unpublishable. (David Warsh's 1994 series of columns in the Boston Globe on the increasing-returns revolution in economics, the basis for a forthcoming book from Harvard University Press, is far and away the best reporting on the subject, did include a sympathetic but devastating exposé of Arthur's pretensions--but to little effect. [Click to read Warsh on Arthur.]) Only now did I have a publishable story: "guy makes minor contribution to well-established field, portrays himself as heroic rebel--and The New Yorker believes him."
Thank you, Mr. Cassidy.
Letter from Kenneth J. Arrow:
Paul Krugman's attack on Brian Arthur ("The Legend of Arthur") requires a correction of its misrepresentations of fact. Arthur is a reputable and significant scholar whose work is indeed having influence in the field of industrial organization and in particular public policy toward antitrust policy in high-tech industries. Krugman admits that he wrote the article because he was "just pissed off," not a very good state for a judicious statement of facts, as his column shows.
His theme is stated in his first paragraph: "Cassidy's article [in The New Yorker of Jan. 12] tells the story of how Stanford Professor Brian Arthur came up with the idea of increasing returns." Cassidy, however, said nothing of the sort. The concept of increasing returns is indeed very old, and Cassidy at no point attributed that idea to Arthur. Indeed, the phrase "increasing returns" appears just once in Cassidy's article and then merely to say that Arthur had used the term while others refer to network externalities. Further, Arthur has never made any such preposterous claim at any other time. On the contrary, his papers have fully cited the history of the field and made references to the previous papers, including those of Paul Krugman. (See Arthur's papers collected in the volume Increasing Returns and Path Dependence in the Economy, especially his preface and my foreword for longer comments on Arthur's work in historic perspective. Click to see the foreword.) Hence, Krugman's whole attack is directed at a statement made neither by Arthur nor by Cassidy. Krugman has not read Cassidy's piece with any care nor has he bothered to review what Arthur has in fact said.
What Cassidy in fact did in his article was to trace a line of influence between one of Arthur's early articles and the current claims of the Department of Justice against Microsoft. It appears that Cassidy based his article on several interviews, not just one.
The point that Arthur has emphasized and which is influential in the current debates about antitrust policy is the dynamic implication of increasing returns. It is the concept of path-dependence, that small events, whether random or the result of corporate strategic choice, may have large consequences because of increasing returns of various kinds. Initial small advantages become magnified, for example, by creating a large installed base, and direct the future, possibly in an inefficient direction. Techniques of production may be locked in at an early stage. Similar considerations apply to regional development and learning.
--Kenneth J. Arrow Nobel laureate and Joan Kenney professor of economics emeritus Stanford University
Letter from Ted C. Fishman:
After reading Paul Krugman vent his spleen against fellow economist Brian Arthur in "The Legend of Arthur," I couldn't help wondering whose reputation he was out to trash, Arthur's or his own. Krugman seems to fear a plot to deny economists their intellectual due. If one exists, Arthur is not a likely suspect. In a series of long interviews with me a year ago (for Worth magazine), I tried, vainly, to get Arthur to tell me how his ideas about increasing returns have encouraged a new strain of economic investigations. Despite much prodding, Arthur obliged only by placing himself in a long line of theorists dating back to Adam Smith and Alfred Marshall. I also found him disarmingly generous in giving credit to the biologists, physicists, and fellow economists who have helped advance his own thinking. Savvy to the journalist's quest for heroes, Arthur urged me to focus on his ideas, not his rank among his peers. Krugman has made a career out of telling other economists to pay better attention to the facts, yet as a chronicler of Arthur's career and inner life, Krugman seems to have listened only to his own demons.
--Ted C. Fishman
(For additional background on the history of "increasing returns" and Brian Arthur's standing in the field, click for David Warsh's July 3, 1994, Boston Globe article on Brian Arthur)
| https://www.anc.org/OANC/license.txt | Which of the following most likely happened to Krugman after these letters? | 20012_1W525LU6_6 | [
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20,010 | 20010_SGZEVK7E | 12 | 1,009 | Slate | The Bell Curve Flattened | 1997.0 | Nicholas Lemann | Periodicals; Specialized Magazine; Media Coverage | The Bell Curve Flattened
Charles Murray is a publicity genius, and the publication of his and Richard Herrnstein's book, The Bell Curve: Intelligence and Class Structure in American Life , in the fall of 1994 was his masterpiece.
Virtually all ambitious trade hardcover books are preceded by an edition of 100 to 200 flimsy "galley proofs." These are sent out to people who might generate buzz for the book: blurbists, bookers for television talk shows, editors, and--most important--book critics. There is an ethos of letting the chips fall where they may about the sending out of galleys: Now the book will begin to receive uncontrolled reaction. (For example, back in 1991, Murray somehow got hold of the galleys of my own last book, and wrote me heatedly denying that he was working on a book about black genetic intellectual inferiority, as I had asserted. I left the passage in, but softened it.)
The Bell Curve was not circulated in galleys before publication. The effect was, first, to increase the allure of the book (There must be something really hot in there!), and second, to ensure that no one inclined to be skeptical would be able to weigh in at the moment of publication. The people who had galley proofs were handpicked by Murray and his publisher. The ordinary routine of neutral reviewers having a month or two to go over the book with care did not occur. Another handpicked group was flown to Washington at the expense of the American Enterprise Institute and given a weekend-long personal briefing on the book's contents by Murray himself (Herrnstein had died very recently), just before publication. The result was what you'd expect: The first wave of publicity was either credulous or angry, but short on evidence, because nobody had had time to digest and evaluate the book carefully.
The Bell Curve isn't a typical work of trade nonfiction. It is gotten up as a work of original scholarly research. Most works containing fresh regression analysis and historical argument from primary sources would be published in academic quarterlies that send manuscripts out for elaborate, lengthy evaluation before deciding whether to publish them. Herrnstein and Murray didn't do this, so it wasn't until a full year or more after The Bell Curve was published that the leading experts on its subject had a chance to go through the underlying data with care. Therefore, as time went on, the knowledgeability of the Bell Curve discussion grew, but the attention paid to that discussion inevitably shrank.
The debate on publication day was conducted in the mass media by people with no independent ability to assess the book. Over the next few months, intellectuals took some pretty good shots at it in smaller publications like the New Republic and the New York Review of Books . It wasn't until late 1995 that the most damaging criticism of The Bell Curve began to appear, in tiny academic journals. What follows is a brief summary of that last body of work. The Bell Curve , it turns out, is full of mistakes ranging from sloppy reasoning to mis-citations of sources to outright mathematical errors. Unsurprisingly, all the mistakes are in the direction of supporting the authors' thesis.
First, a quick précis of The Bell Curve . IQ tests, according to Murray and Herrnstein, measure an essential human quality, general intelligence. During the second half of the 20 th century, this quality has risen to supreme importance, because society has become increasingly complex. The intelligent have therefore gone through an "invisible migration," from points of origin all over the class system to a concentration at the top of business, government, and the professions. They are likely to become ever more dominant and prosperous. The unintelligent are falling further and further behind. Because intelligence is substantially inherited, nothing is likely to reverse this process. Blacks are overrepresented among the unintelligent. Any efforts government might make to improve the economic opportunities of poor people, especially poor black people, are likely to fail, because their poverty is so much the result of inherited low intelligence. About the best that can be done for these people is an effort to create a world of simple, decent, honorable toil for them.
Herrnstein and Murray begin by telling us that the liberal position on IQ--namely, "Intelligence is a bankrupt concept"--has been discredited, and that "a scholarly consensus has been reached" around their position. This consensus is "beyond significant technical dispute." Thus, by the end of their introduction, they have arranged matters so that if intelligence has any meaning at all, the idiotic liberals stand discredited; and meanwhile, extremely broad claims for intelligence have the cover of "consensus."
The notion that IQ tests are completely useless never prevailed in liberal academia to nearly the extent that Herrnstein and Murray say. A more accurate rendering of the liberal position would be that rather than a single "general intelligence," there are a handful of crucial--and separate--mental abilities; that none of these abilities is important enough to obviate the role of family background and education; and that native ability (and economic success independent of native ability) can be enhanced by improving education, training, and public health. The Bell Curve refers in passing to some of these points, but on the whole it sets up a cartoon-left position as its (easy) target. Meanwhile, the psychometricians who dominate the footnotes of The Bell Curve are John Hunter, Arthur Jensen, Malcolm Ree, and Frank Schmidt. These men are well known within the field as representing its right wing, not a mainstream consensus.
The next problem with The Bell Curve 's thesis is in the idea of the rise to dominance of the cognitive elite. To the book's initial audience of Ivy Leaguers, this idea seemed valid on its face. Everybody knows that the best universities, law firms, hospitals, investment banks, and the State Department used to be run by preppies whose main virtue was fortunate birth, and are now open to one and all on the basis of merit.
But the larger premise--that intelligent people used to be scattered throughout the class structure, and are now concentrated at the top--is almost impossible to prove, simply because the mass administration of mental tests is such a recent phenomenon. High scorers on mental tests do "bunch up" (as Herrnstein and Murray put it) in elite-university student bodies. But this is tautological: Any group selected on the basis of scores on mental tests will be composed disproportionately of people who score high on mental tests. Proving The Bell Curve 's thesis would require proving that success increasingly correlates with IQ in areas of life where mental tests are not the explicit gatekeepers. To see how The Bell Curve tries and fails to get around these inherent problems, see and .
Having conditioned its audience to view IQ as all-important, The Bell Curve then manipulates statistics in a way that makes IQ look bigger, and everything else smaller, in determining Americans' life-chances.
The basic tool of statistical social science in general, and of The Bell Curve in particular, is regression analysis, a technique used to assign weights to various factors (called "independent variables") in determining a final outcome (called the "dependent variable"). The original statistical work in The Bell Curve consists of regression analyses on a database called the National Longitudinal Study of Youth. The authors claim to demonstrate that high IQ is more predictive of economic success than any other factor, and that low IQ is more predictive of poverty and social breakdown. Virtually all the early commentators on The Bell Curve were unable to assess the merits of the regression analysis. "I am not a scientist. I know nothing about psychometrics," wrote Leon Wieseltier (who was otherwise quite critical) in a typical disclaimer.
But by now the statistics have been gone over by professionals, who have come up with different results. The key points of their critique of The Bell Curve are as follows:
What Herrnstein and Murray used to measure IQ is actually a measure of education as well as intelligence. All the people tracked in the National Longitudinal Study of Youth took the Armed Forces Qualifying Test, which Herrnstein and Murray treat as a good measure of intelligence. Because the material covered in the test includes subjects like trigonometry, many academic critics of The Bell Curve have objected to its use as a measure only of IQ and not at all of academic achievement. Herrnstein and Murray concede in the footnotes that scores tend to rise with the subjects' education--but they seriously underestimate the magnitude of this rise, as shows. And they resist the obvious inference that the test scores are measuring something other than intelligence.
Most of The Bell Curve 's analysis is devoted to proving that IQ has more predictive power than parental "socio-economic status." But Herrnstein and Murray's method of figuring socioeconomic status seems designed to low-ball its influence, as explains.
Herrnstein and Murray begin their discussion of the National Longitudinal Study of Youth data by announcing that they aren't going to analyze the effect of education, because education is too much a result of IQ. It's not an independent variable. (Of course, according to their theory, socioeconomic status is also a result of IQ, but somehow, that doesn't stop them.) Therefore, what you'd most want to know from a policy standpoint--how much education can increase opportunity--isn't dealt with in the book, except in two obscure footnotes. Both would seem to support the liberal, pro-education position that Herrnstein and Murray say is futile. One footnote shows education increasing IQ year by year. The other shows a higher correlation between college degree and family income than between IQ and family income.
One of The Bell Curve 's theoretical linchpins is the high heritability of IQ. Herrnstein and Murray, sounding like the souls of caution, write that "half a century of work, now amounting to hundreds of empirical and theoretical studies, permits a broad conclusion that the genetic component of IQ is unlikely to be smaller than 40 per cent or higher than 80 per cent. ... For purposes of this discussion, we will adopt a middling estimate of 60 per cent heritability." This now looks seriously overstated. Michael Daniels, Bernie Devlin, and Kathryn Roeder of Carnegie Mellon University took the same studies on which Herrnstein and Murray based their estimate, and subjected them to a computer meta-analysis ("a powerful method of statistical analysis"-- The Bell Curve ). Their paper, which has not yet been published, says: "In brief, studies of IQ, and our reanalyses of them, suggest a narrow-sense heritability of 34 per cent and a broad-sense heritability of 46 per cent. [The difference between broad and narrow is too technical to explain in this limited space.] This is a far cry from Herrnstein and Murray's maximum value of 80 per cent or their middling value of 60 per cent. Consequently, Herrnstein and Murray give the impression that IQ is highly 'heritable,' but it is not."
If the purpose of the whole exercise is to figure out what our social policies should be, then, "Which is more predictive, IQ or socioeconomic status?" isn't the essential question anyway. Making it the essential question avoids the issue of whether IQ is really so massively predictive that it drowns out everything else. (Herrnstein and Murray mostly leave the evidence for this, their central contention, to footnotes. The figures they offer are far from dispositive.)
The chapter of The Bell Curve on policies that might be able to overcome the fate of a low IQ focuses mainly on whether early-childhood programs like Head Start (most of which aren't run with raising IQ as their primary goal) can raise IQ significantly over the long term, and sorrowfully concludes that they can't. What the book doesn't discuss is whether public schools--by far the biggest government social program--can raise IQ, or earnings after you control for IQ. As James Heckman of the University of Chicago wrote in the Journal of Political Economy , " Evidence of a genetic component to skills has no bearing on the efficacy of any social policy. ... The relevant issue is the cost effectiveness of the intervention." (As an example of where the kind of analysis Herrnstein and Murray didn't do can lead, a new study by Jay Girotto and Paul Peterson of Harvard shows that students who raise their grades and take harder courses can increase their IQ scores by an average of eight points during the first three years of high school.)
At the beginning of The Bell Curve , Herrnstein and Murray declare that "the concept of intelligence has taken on a much higher place in the pantheon of human virtues than it deserves." And they claim that their view of IQ tests is "squarely in the middle of the scientific road." They end by expressing the hope that we can "be a society that makes good on the fundamental promise of the American tradition: the opportunity for everyone, not just the lucky ones, to live a satisfying life." Throughout, Herrnstein and Murray consistently present themselves as fair- (or even liberal-) minded technicians who have, with great caution, followed the evidence where it leads--which, unfortunately, is to a few unassailable if unpleasant scientific truths that it is their reluctant duty to report.
In fact, The Bell Curve is a relentless brief for the conservative position in psychometrics and social policy. For all its talk of reflecting a consensus, the sources it draws upon are heavily skewed to the right. Herrnstein and Murray used quasi-nutty studies that support their position (as Charles Lane demonstrated in the New York Review of Books ), and ignore mainstream studies that contradict it (as Richard Nisbett showed in the New Republic ). The data in The Bell Curve are consistently massaged to produce conservative conclusions; not once is a finding that contradicts the main thesis reported in the text. ( shows how Herrnstein and Murray have made the convergence in black-white IQ scores, which they claim to find "encouraging," look smaller than it actually is.) The Bell Curve 's air of strict scientism doesn't preclude the use of lightly sourced or unsourced assertions, such as the statement that the median IQ of all black Africans is 75, or that "intermarriage among people in the top few percentiles of intelligence may be increasing far more rapidly than suspected" (no footnote). Though they piously claim not to be doing so, Herrnstein and Murray leave readers with the distinct impression that IQ is the cause of economic success and failure, and that genetic difference explains the black-white IQ gap.
In the most famous passage in The Republic , Plato describes an underground cave where people are held prisoner in chains, unable to see anything but the shadows cast by figures passing outside; they mistake the shadows for reality. The Republic is probably the first place in history where an idea like that of Murray and Herrnstein's cognitive elite appears. Plato believed that through education, people could leave the cave and be able to see the truth instead of the shadows, thus fitting themselves to become the wise rulers of society. But he was quick to insert a cautionary note: Those who have left the cave might be tempted to think they can see perfectly clearly, while actually they would be "dazzled by excess of light." The image applies to The Bell Curve : Presented as an exact representation of reality, in opposition to the shadows of political correctness, it actually reflects the blinkered vision of one part of the American elite. It constantly tells these people that they are naturally superior, and offers lurid descriptions of aspects of national life that they know about only by rumor. Readers who accept The Bell Curve as tough-minded and realistic, and who assume that all criticism of it is ignorant and ideologically motivated, are not as far removed from Plato's cave as they might think.
: Dumb College Students
: Smart Rich People
: Education and IQ
: Socioeconomic Status
: Black-White Convergence
| https://www.anc.org/OANC/license.txt | Which is the least likely reason for not circulating The Bell Curve in galleys? | 20010_SGZEVK7E_1 | [
"by the time people could intelligently criticize it, it was nearly too late",
"it made people more excited to read it when it did come out",
"it gave little time for people to check the facts",
"there wasn't enough time between the galley publication and the official publication"
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20,010 | 20010_SGZEVK7E | 12 | 1,009 | Slate | The Bell Curve Flattened | 1997.0 | Nicholas Lemann | Periodicals; Specialized Magazine; Media Coverage | The Bell Curve Flattened
Charles Murray is a publicity genius, and the publication of his and Richard Herrnstein's book, The Bell Curve: Intelligence and Class Structure in American Life , in the fall of 1994 was his masterpiece.
Virtually all ambitious trade hardcover books are preceded by an edition of 100 to 200 flimsy "galley proofs." These are sent out to people who might generate buzz for the book: blurbists, bookers for television talk shows, editors, and--most important--book critics. There is an ethos of letting the chips fall where they may about the sending out of galleys: Now the book will begin to receive uncontrolled reaction. (For example, back in 1991, Murray somehow got hold of the galleys of my own last book, and wrote me heatedly denying that he was working on a book about black genetic intellectual inferiority, as I had asserted. I left the passage in, but softened it.)
The Bell Curve was not circulated in galleys before publication. The effect was, first, to increase the allure of the book (There must be something really hot in there!), and second, to ensure that no one inclined to be skeptical would be able to weigh in at the moment of publication. The people who had galley proofs were handpicked by Murray and his publisher. The ordinary routine of neutral reviewers having a month or two to go over the book with care did not occur. Another handpicked group was flown to Washington at the expense of the American Enterprise Institute and given a weekend-long personal briefing on the book's contents by Murray himself (Herrnstein had died very recently), just before publication. The result was what you'd expect: The first wave of publicity was either credulous or angry, but short on evidence, because nobody had had time to digest and evaluate the book carefully.
The Bell Curve isn't a typical work of trade nonfiction. It is gotten up as a work of original scholarly research. Most works containing fresh regression analysis and historical argument from primary sources would be published in academic quarterlies that send manuscripts out for elaborate, lengthy evaluation before deciding whether to publish them. Herrnstein and Murray didn't do this, so it wasn't until a full year or more after The Bell Curve was published that the leading experts on its subject had a chance to go through the underlying data with care. Therefore, as time went on, the knowledgeability of the Bell Curve discussion grew, but the attention paid to that discussion inevitably shrank.
The debate on publication day was conducted in the mass media by people with no independent ability to assess the book. Over the next few months, intellectuals took some pretty good shots at it in smaller publications like the New Republic and the New York Review of Books . It wasn't until late 1995 that the most damaging criticism of The Bell Curve began to appear, in tiny academic journals. What follows is a brief summary of that last body of work. The Bell Curve , it turns out, is full of mistakes ranging from sloppy reasoning to mis-citations of sources to outright mathematical errors. Unsurprisingly, all the mistakes are in the direction of supporting the authors' thesis.
First, a quick précis of The Bell Curve . IQ tests, according to Murray and Herrnstein, measure an essential human quality, general intelligence. During the second half of the 20 th century, this quality has risen to supreme importance, because society has become increasingly complex. The intelligent have therefore gone through an "invisible migration," from points of origin all over the class system to a concentration at the top of business, government, and the professions. They are likely to become ever more dominant and prosperous. The unintelligent are falling further and further behind. Because intelligence is substantially inherited, nothing is likely to reverse this process. Blacks are overrepresented among the unintelligent. Any efforts government might make to improve the economic opportunities of poor people, especially poor black people, are likely to fail, because their poverty is so much the result of inherited low intelligence. About the best that can be done for these people is an effort to create a world of simple, decent, honorable toil for them.
Herrnstein and Murray begin by telling us that the liberal position on IQ--namely, "Intelligence is a bankrupt concept"--has been discredited, and that "a scholarly consensus has been reached" around their position. This consensus is "beyond significant technical dispute." Thus, by the end of their introduction, they have arranged matters so that if intelligence has any meaning at all, the idiotic liberals stand discredited; and meanwhile, extremely broad claims for intelligence have the cover of "consensus."
The notion that IQ tests are completely useless never prevailed in liberal academia to nearly the extent that Herrnstein and Murray say. A more accurate rendering of the liberal position would be that rather than a single "general intelligence," there are a handful of crucial--and separate--mental abilities; that none of these abilities is important enough to obviate the role of family background and education; and that native ability (and economic success independent of native ability) can be enhanced by improving education, training, and public health. The Bell Curve refers in passing to some of these points, but on the whole it sets up a cartoon-left position as its (easy) target. Meanwhile, the psychometricians who dominate the footnotes of The Bell Curve are John Hunter, Arthur Jensen, Malcolm Ree, and Frank Schmidt. These men are well known within the field as representing its right wing, not a mainstream consensus.
The next problem with The Bell Curve 's thesis is in the idea of the rise to dominance of the cognitive elite. To the book's initial audience of Ivy Leaguers, this idea seemed valid on its face. Everybody knows that the best universities, law firms, hospitals, investment banks, and the State Department used to be run by preppies whose main virtue was fortunate birth, and are now open to one and all on the basis of merit.
But the larger premise--that intelligent people used to be scattered throughout the class structure, and are now concentrated at the top--is almost impossible to prove, simply because the mass administration of mental tests is such a recent phenomenon. High scorers on mental tests do "bunch up" (as Herrnstein and Murray put it) in elite-university student bodies. But this is tautological: Any group selected on the basis of scores on mental tests will be composed disproportionately of people who score high on mental tests. Proving The Bell Curve 's thesis would require proving that success increasingly correlates with IQ in areas of life where mental tests are not the explicit gatekeepers. To see how The Bell Curve tries and fails to get around these inherent problems, see and .
Having conditioned its audience to view IQ as all-important, The Bell Curve then manipulates statistics in a way that makes IQ look bigger, and everything else smaller, in determining Americans' life-chances.
The basic tool of statistical social science in general, and of The Bell Curve in particular, is regression analysis, a technique used to assign weights to various factors (called "independent variables") in determining a final outcome (called the "dependent variable"). The original statistical work in The Bell Curve consists of regression analyses on a database called the National Longitudinal Study of Youth. The authors claim to demonstrate that high IQ is more predictive of economic success than any other factor, and that low IQ is more predictive of poverty and social breakdown. Virtually all the early commentators on The Bell Curve were unable to assess the merits of the regression analysis. "I am not a scientist. I know nothing about psychometrics," wrote Leon Wieseltier (who was otherwise quite critical) in a typical disclaimer.
But by now the statistics have been gone over by professionals, who have come up with different results. The key points of their critique of The Bell Curve are as follows:
What Herrnstein and Murray used to measure IQ is actually a measure of education as well as intelligence. All the people tracked in the National Longitudinal Study of Youth took the Armed Forces Qualifying Test, which Herrnstein and Murray treat as a good measure of intelligence. Because the material covered in the test includes subjects like trigonometry, many academic critics of The Bell Curve have objected to its use as a measure only of IQ and not at all of academic achievement. Herrnstein and Murray concede in the footnotes that scores tend to rise with the subjects' education--but they seriously underestimate the magnitude of this rise, as shows. And they resist the obvious inference that the test scores are measuring something other than intelligence.
Most of The Bell Curve 's analysis is devoted to proving that IQ has more predictive power than parental "socio-economic status." But Herrnstein and Murray's method of figuring socioeconomic status seems designed to low-ball its influence, as explains.
Herrnstein and Murray begin their discussion of the National Longitudinal Study of Youth data by announcing that they aren't going to analyze the effect of education, because education is too much a result of IQ. It's not an independent variable. (Of course, according to their theory, socioeconomic status is also a result of IQ, but somehow, that doesn't stop them.) Therefore, what you'd most want to know from a policy standpoint--how much education can increase opportunity--isn't dealt with in the book, except in two obscure footnotes. Both would seem to support the liberal, pro-education position that Herrnstein and Murray say is futile. One footnote shows education increasing IQ year by year. The other shows a higher correlation between college degree and family income than between IQ and family income.
One of The Bell Curve 's theoretical linchpins is the high heritability of IQ. Herrnstein and Murray, sounding like the souls of caution, write that "half a century of work, now amounting to hundreds of empirical and theoretical studies, permits a broad conclusion that the genetic component of IQ is unlikely to be smaller than 40 per cent or higher than 80 per cent. ... For purposes of this discussion, we will adopt a middling estimate of 60 per cent heritability." This now looks seriously overstated. Michael Daniels, Bernie Devlin, and Kathryn Roeder of Carnegie Mellon University took the same studies on which Herrnstein and Murray based their estimate, and subjected them to a computer meta-analysis ("a powerful method of statistical analysis"-- The Bell Curve ). Their paper, which has not yet been published, says: "In brief, studies of IQ, and our reanalyses of them, suggest a narrow-sense heritability of 34 per cent and a broad-sense heritability of 46 per cent. [The difference between broad and narrow is too technical to explain in this limited space.] This is a far cry from Herrnstein and Murray's maximum value of 80 per cent or their middling value of 60 per cent. Consequently, Herrnstein and Murray give the impression that IQ is highly 'heritable,' but it is not."
If the purpose of the whole exercise is to figure out what our social policies should be, then, "Which is more predictive, IQ or socioeconomic status?" isn't the essential question anyway. Making it the essential question avoids the issue of whether IQ is really so massively predictive that it drowns out everything else. (Herrnstein and Murray mostly leave the evidence for this, their central contention, to footnotes. The figures they offer are far from dispositive.)
The chapter of The Bell Curve on policies that might be able to overcome the fate of a low IQ focuses mainly on whether early-childhood programs like Head Start (most of which aren't run with raising IQ as their primary goal) can raise IQ significantly over the long term, and sorrowfully concludes that they can't. What the book doesn't discuss is whether public schools--by far the biggest government social program--can raise IQ, or earnings after you control for IQ. As James Heckman of the University of Chicago wrote in the Journal of Political Economy , " Evidence of a genetic component to skills has no bearing on the efficacy of any social policy. ... The relevant issue is the cost effectiveness of the intervention." (As an example of where the kind of analysis Herrnstein and Murray didn't do can lead, a new study by Jay Girotto and Paul Peterson of Harvard shows that students who raise their grades and take harder courses can increase their IQ scores by an average of eight points during the first three years of high school.)
At the beginning of The Bell Curve , Herrnstein and Murray declare that "the concept of intelligence has taken on a much higher place in the pantheon of human virtues than it deserves." And they claim that their view of IQ tests is "squarely in the middle of the scientific road." They end by expressing the hope that we can "be a society that makes good on the fundamental promise of the American tradition: the opportunity for everyone, not just the lucky ones, to live a satisfying life." Throughout, Herrnstein and Murray consistently present themselves as fair- (or even liberal-) minded technicians who have, with great caution, followed the evidence where it leads--which, unfortunately, is to a few unassailable if unpleasant scientific truths that it is their reluctant duty to report.
In fact, The Bell Curve is a relentless brief for the conservative position in psychometrics and social policy. For all its talk of reflecting a consensus, the sources it draws upon are heavily skewed to the right. Herrnstein and Murray used quasi-nutty studies that support their position (as Charles Lane demonstrated in the New York Review of Books ), and ignore mainstream studies that contradict it (as Richard Nisbett showed in the New Republic ). The data in The Bell Curve are consistently massaged to produce conservative conclusions; not once is a finding that contradicts the main thesis reported in the text. ( shows how Herrnstein and Murray have made the convergence in black-white IQ scores, which they claim to find "encouraging," look smaller than it actually is.) The Bell Curve 's air of strict scientism doesn't preclude the use of lightly sourced or unsourced assertions, such as the statement that the median IQ of all black Africans is 75, or that "intermarriage among people in the top few percentiles of intelligence may be increasing far more rapidly than suspected" (no footnote). Though they piously claim not to be doing so, Herrnstein and Murray leave readers with the distinct impression that IQ is the cause of economic success and failure, and that genetic difference explains the black-white IQ gap.
In the most famous passage in The Republic , Plato describes an underground cave where people are held prisoner in chains, unable to see anything but the shadows cast by figures passing outside; they mistake the shadows for reality. The Republic is probably the first place in history where an idea like that of Murray and Herrnstein's cognitive elite appears. Plato believed that through education, people could leave the cave and be able to see the truth instead of the shadows, thus fitting themselves to become the wise rulers of society. But he was quick to insert a cautionary note: Those who have left the cave might be tempted to think they can see perfectly clearly, while actually they would be "dazzled by excess of light." The image applies to The Bell Curve : Presented as an exact representation of reality, in opposition to the shadows of political correctness, it actually reflects the blinkered vision of one part of the American elite. It constantly tells these people that they are naturally superior, and offers lurid descriptions of aspects of national life that they know about only by rumor. Readers who accept The Bell Curve as tough-minded and realistic, and who assume that all criticism of it is ignorant and ideologically motivated, are not as far removed from Plato's cave as they might think.
: Dumb College Students
: Smart Rich People
: Education and IQ
: Socioeconomic Status
: Black-White Convergence
| https://www.anc.org/OANC/license.txt | What was the basic purpose of The Bell Curve? | 20010_SGZEVK7E_2 | [
"to show that our government really can't help poor people become more successful",
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20,010 | 20010_SGZEVK7E | 12 | 1,009 | Slate | The Bell Curve Flattened | 1997.0 | Nicholas Lemann | Periodicals; Specialized Magazine; Media Coverage | The Bell Curve Flattened
Charles Murray is a publicity genius, and the publication of his and Richard Herrnstein's book, The Bell Curve: Intelligence and Class Structure in American Life , in the fall of 1994 was his masterpiece.
Virtually all ambitious trade hardcover books are preceded by an edition of 100 to 200 flimsy "galley proofs." These are sent out to people who might generate buzz for the book: blurbists, bookers for television talk shows, editors, and--most important--book critics. There is an ethos of letting the chips fall where they may about the sending out of galleys: Now the book will begin to receive uncontrolled reaction. (For example, back in 1991, Murray somehow got hold of the galleys of my own last book, and wrote me heatedly denying that he was working on a book about black genetic intellectual inferiority, as I had asserted. I left the passage in, but softened it.)
The Bell Curve was not circulated in galleys before publication. The effect was, first, to increase the allure of the book (There must be something really hot in there!), and second, to ensure that no one inclined to be skeptical would be able to weigh in at the moment of publication. The people who had galley proofs were handpicked by Murray and his publisher. The ordinary routine of neutral reviewers having a month or two to go over the book with care did not occur. Another handpicked group was flown to Washington at the expense of the American Enterprise Institute and given a weekend-long personal briefing on the book's contents by Murray himself (Herrnstein had died very recently), just before publication. The result was what you'd expect: The first wave of publicity was either credulous or angry, but short on evidence, because nobody had had time to digest and evaluate the book carefully.
The Bell Curve isn't a typical work of trade nonfiction. It is gotten up as a work of original scholarly research. Most works containing fresh regression analysis and historical argument from primary sources would be published in academic quarterlies that send manuscripts out for elaborate, lengthy evaluation before deciding whether to publish them. Herrnstein and Murray didn't do this, so it wasn't until a full year or more after The Bell Curve was published that the leading experts on its subject had a chance to go through the underlying data with care. Therefore, as time went on, the knowledgeability of the Bell Curve discussion grew, but the attention paid to that discussion inevitably shrank.
The debate on publication day was conducted in the mass media by people with no independent ability to assess the book. Over the next few months, intellectuals took some pretty good shots at it in smaller publications like the New Republic and the New York Review of Books . It wasn't until late 1995 that the most damaging criticism of The Bell Curve began to appear, in tiny academic journals. What follows is a brief summary of that last body of work. The Bell Curve , it turns out, is full of mistakes ranging from sloppy reasoning to mis-citations of sources to outright mathematical errors. Unsurprisingly, all the mistakes are in the direction of supporting the authors' thesis.
First, a quick précis of The Bell Curve . IQ tests, according to Murray and Herrnstein, measure an essential human quality, general intelligence. During the second half of the 20 th century, this quality has risen to supreme importance, because society has become increasingly complex. The intelligent have therefore gone through an "invisible migration," from points of origin all over the class system to a concentration at the top of business, government, and the professions. They are likely to become ever more dominant and prosperous. The unintelligent are falling further and further behind. Because intelligence is substantially inherited, nothing is likely to reverse this process. Blacks are overrepresented among the unintelligent. Any efforts government might make to improve the economic opportunities of poor people, especially poor black people, are likely to fail, because their poverty is so much the result of inherited low intelligence. About the best that can be done for these people is an effort to create a world of simple, decent, honorable toil for them.
Herrnstein and Murray begin by telling us that the liberal position on IQ--namely, "Intelligence is a bankrupt concept"--has been discredited, and that "a scholarly consensus has been reached" around their position. This consensus is "beyond significant technical dispute." Thus, by the end of their introduction, they have arranged matters so that if intelligence has any meaning at all, the idiotic liberals stand discredited; and meanwhile, extremely broad claims for intelligence have the cover of "consensus."
The notion that IQ tests are completely useless never prevailed in liberal academia to nearly the extent that Herrnstein and Murray say. A more accurate rendering of the liberal position would be that rather than a single "general intelligence," there are a handful of crucial--and separate--mental abilities; that none of these abilities is important enough to obviate the role of family background and education; and that native ability (and economic success independent of native ability) can be enhanced by improving education, training, and public health. The Bell Curve refers in passing to some of these points, but on the whole it sets up a cartoon-left position as its (easy) target. Meanwhile, the psychometricians who dominate the footnotes of The Bell Curve are John Hunter, Arthur Jensen, Malcolm Ree, and Frank Schmidt. These men are well known within the field as representing its right wing, not a mainstream consensus.
The next problem with The Bell Curve 's thesis is in the idea of the rise to dominance of the cognitive elite. To the book's initial audience of Ivy Leaguers, this idea seemed valid on its face. Everybody knows that the best universities, law firms, hospitals, investment banks, and the State Department used to be run by preppies whose main virtue was fortunate birth, and are now open to one and all on the basis of merit.
But the larger premise--that intelligent people used to be scattered throughout the class structure, and are now concentrated at the top--is almost impossible to prove, simply because the mass administration of mental tests is such a recent phenomenon. High scorers on mental tests do "bunch up" (as Herrnstein and Murray put it) in elite-university student bodies. But this is tautological: Any group selected on the basis of scores on mental tests will be composed disproportionately of people who score high on mental tests. Proving The Bell Curve 's thesis would require proving that success increasingly correlates with IQ in areas of life where mental tests are not the explicit gatekeepers. To see how The Bell Curve tries and fails to get around these inherent problems, see and .
Having conditioned its audience to view IQ as all-important, The Bell Curve then manipulates statistics in a way that makes IQ look bigger, and everything else smaller, in determining Americans' life-chances.
The basic tool of statistical social science in general, and of The Bell Curve in particular, is regression analysis, a technique used to assign weights to various factors (called "independent variables") in determining a final outcome (called the "dependent variable"). The original statistical work in The Bell Curve consists of regression analyses on a database called the National Longitudinal Study of Youth. The authors claim to demonstrate that high IQ is more predictive of economic success than any other factor, and that low IQ is more predictive of poverty and social breakdown. Virtually all the early commentators on The Bell Curve were unable to assess the merits of the regression analysis. "I am not a scientist. I know nothing about psychometrics," wrote Leon Wieseltier (who was otherwise quite critical) in a typical disclaimer.
But by now the statistics have been gone over by professionals, who have come up with different results. The key points of their critique of The Bell Curve are as follows:
What Herrnstein and Murray used to measure IQ is actually a measure of education as well as intelligence. All the people tracked in the National Longitudinal Study of Youth took the Armed Forces Qualifying Test, which Herrnstein and Murray treat as a good measure of intelligence. Because the material covered in the test includes subjects like trigonometry, many academic critics of The Bell Curve have objected to its use as a measure only of IQ and not at all of academic achievement. Herrnstein and Murray concede in the footnotes that scores tend to rise with the subjects' education--but they seriously underestimate the magnitude of this rise, as shows. And they resist the obvious inference that the test scores are measuring something other than intelligence.
Most of The Bell Curve 's analysis is devoted to proving that IQ has more predictive power than parental "socio-economic status." But Herrnstein and Murray's method of figuring socioeconomic status seems designed to low-ball its influence, as explains.
Herrnstein and Murray begin their discussion of the National Longitudinal Study of Youth data by announcing that they aren't going to analyze the effect of education, because education is too much a result of IQ. It's not an independent variable. (Of course, according to their theory, socioeconomic status is also a result of IQ, but somehow, that doesn't stop them.) Therefore, what you'd most want to know from a policy standpoint--how much education can increase opportunity--isn't dealt with in the book, except in two obscure footnotes. Both would seem to support the liberal, pro-education position that Herrnstein and Murray say is futile. One footnote shows education increasing IQ year by year. The other shows a higher correlation between college degree and family income than between IQ and family income.
One of The Bell Curve 's theoretical linchpins is the high heritability of IQ. Herrnstein and Murray, sounding like the souls of caution, write that "half a century of work, now amounting to hundreds of empirical and theoretical studies, permits a broad conclusion that the genetic component of IQ is unlikely to be smaller than 40 per cent or higher than 80 per cent. ... For purposes of this discussion, we will adopt a middling estimate of 60 per cent heritability." This now looks seriously overstated. Michael Daniels, Bernie Devlin, and Kathryn Roeder of Carnegie Mellon University took the same studies on which Herrnstein and Murray based their estimate, and subjected them to a computer meta-analysis ("a powerful method of statistical analysis"-- The Bell Curve ). Their paper, which has not yet been published, says: "In brief, studies of IQ, and our reanalyses of them, suggest a narrow-sense heritability of 34 per cent and a broad-sense heritability of 46 per cent. [The difference between broad and narrow is too technical to explain in this limited space.] This is a far cry from Herrnstein and Murray's maximum value of 80 per cent or their middling value of 60 per cent. Consequently, Herrnstein and Murray give the impression that IQ is highly 'heritable,' but it is not."
If the purpose of the whole exercise is to figure out what our social policies should be, then, "Which is more predictive, IQ or socioeconomic status?" isn't the essential question anyway. Making it the essential question avoids the issue of whether IQ is really so massively predictive that it drowns out everything else. (Herrnstein and Murray mostly leave the evidence for this, their central contention, to footnotes. The figures they offer are far from dispositive.)
The chapter of The Bell Curve on policies that might be able to overcome the fate of a low IQ focuses mainly on whether early-childhood programs like Head Start (most of which aren't run with raising IQ as their primary goal) can raise IQ significantly over the long term, and sorrowfully concludes that they can't. What the book doesn't discuss is whether public schools--by far the biggest government social program--can raise IQ, or earnings after you control for IQ. As James Heckman of the University of Chicago wrote in the Journal of Political Economy , " Evidence of a genetic component to skills has no bearing on the efficacy of any social policy. ... The relevant issue is the cost effectiveness of the intervention." (As an example of where the kind of analysis Herrnstein and Murray didn't do can lead, a new study by Jay Girotto and Paul Peterson of Harvard shows that students who raise their grades and take harder courses can increase their IQ scores by an average of eight points during the first three years of high school.)
At the beginning of The Bell Curve , Herrnstein and Murray declare that "the concept of intelligence has taken on a much higher place in the pantheon of human virtues than it deserves." And they claim that their view of IQ tests is "squarely in the middle of the scientific road." They end by expressing the hope that we can "be a society that makes good on the fundamental promise of the American tradition: the opportunity for everyone, not just the lucky ones, to live a satisfying life." Throughout, Herrnstein and Murray consistently present themselves as fair- (or even liberal-) minded technicians who have, with great caution, followed the evidence where it leads--which, unfortunately, is to a few unassailable if unpleasant scientific truths that it is their reluctant duty to report.
In fact, The Bell Curve is a relentless brief for the conservative position in psychometrics and social policy. For all its talk of reflecting a consensus, the sources it draws upon are heavily skewed to the right. Herrnstein and Murray used quasi-nutty studies that support their position (as Charles Lane demonstrated in the New York Review of Books ), and ignore mainstream studies that contradict it (as Richard Nisbett showed in the New Republic ). The data in The Bell Curve are consistently massaged to produce conservative conclusions; not once is a finding that contradicts the main thesis reported in the text. ( shows how Herrnstein and Murray have made the convergence in black-white IQ scores, which they claim to find "encouraging," look smaller than it actually is.) The Bell Curve 's air of strict scientism doesn't preclude the use of lightly sourced or unsourced assertions, such as the statement that the median IQ of all black Africans is 75, or that "intermarriage among people in the top few percentiles of intelligence may be increasing far more rapidly than suspected" (no footnote). Though they piously claim not to be doing so, Herrnstein and Murray leave readers with the distinct impression that IQ is the cause of economic success and failure, and that genetic difference explains the black-white IQ gap.
In the most famous passage in The Republic , Plato describes an underground cave where people are held prisoner in chains, unable to see anything but the shadows cast by figures passing outside; they mistake the shadows for reality. The Republic is probably the first place in history where an idea like that of Murray and Herrnstein's cognitive elite appears. Plato believed that through education, people could leave the cave and be able to see the truth instead of the shadows, thus fitting themselves to become the wise rulers of society. But he was quick to insert a cautionary note: Those who have left the cave might be tempted to think they can see perfectly clearly, while actually they would be "dazzled by excess of light." The image applies to The Bell Curve : Presented as an exact representation of reality, in opposition to the shadows of political correctness, it actually reflects the blinkered vision of one part of the American elite. It constantly tells these people that they are naturally superior, and offers lurid descriptions of aspects of national life that they know about only by rumor. Readers who accept The Bell Curve as tough-minded and realistic, and who assume that all criticism of it is ignorant and ideologically motivated, are not as far removed from Plato's cave as they might think.
: Dumb College Students
: Smart Rich People
: Education and IQ
: Socioeconomic Status
: Black-White Convergence
| https://www.anc.org/OANC/license.txt | Which wouldn't the author use to describe Herrnstein and Murray? | 20010_SGZEVK7E_3 | [
"overgeneralizing",
"strategic",
"manipulative",
"unbiased"
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20,010 | 20010_SGZEVK7E | 12 | 1,009 | Slate | The Bell Curve Flattened | 1997.0 | Nicholas Lemann | Periodicals; Specialized Magazine; Media Coverage | The Bell Curve Flattened
Charles Murray is a publicity genius, and the publication of his and Richard Herrnstein's book, The Bell Curve: Intelligence and Class Structure in American Life , in the fall of 1994 was his masterpiece.
Virtually all ambitious trade hardcover books are preceded by an edition of 100 to 200 flimsy "galley proofs." These are sent out to people who might generate buzz for the book: blurbists, bookers for television talk shows, editors, and--most important--book critics. There is an ethos of letting the chips fall where they may about the sending out of galleys: Now the book will begin to receive uncontrolled reaction. (For example, back in 1991, Murray somehow got hold of the galleys of my own last book, and wrote me heatedly denying that he was working on a book about black genetic intellectual inferiority, as I had asserted. I left the passage in, but softened it.)
The Bell Curve was not circulated in galleys before publication. The effect was, first, to increase the allure of the book (There must be something really hot in there!), and second, to ensure that no one inclined to be skeptical would be able to weigh in at the moment of publication. The people who had galley proofs were handpicked by Murray and his publisher. The ordinary routine of neutral reviewers having a month or two to go over the book with care did not occur. Another handpicked group was flown to Washington at the expense of the American Enterprise Institute and given a weekend-long personal briefing on the book's contents by Murray himself (Herrnstein had died very recently), just before publication. The result was what you'd expect: The first wave of publicity was either credulous or angry, but short on evidence, because nobody had had time to digest and evaluate the book carefully.
The Bell Curve isn't a typical work of trade nonfiction. It is gotten up as a work of original scholarly research. Most works containing fresh regression analysis and historical argument from primary sources would be published in academic quarterlies that send manuscripts out for elaborate, lengthy evaluation before deciding whether to publish them. Herrnstein and Murray didn't do this, so it wasn't until a full year or more after The Bell Curve was published that the leading experts on its subject had a chance to go through the underlying data with care. Therefore, as time went on, the knowledgeability of the Bell Curve discussion grew, but the attention paid to that discussion inevitably shrank.
The debate on publication day was conducted in the mass media by people with no independent ability to assess the book. Over the next few months, intellectuals took some pretty good shots at it in smaller publications like the New Republic and the New York Review of Books . It wasn't until late 1995 that the most damaging criticism of The Bell Curve began to appear, in tiny academic journals. What follows is a brief summary of that last body of work. The Bell Curve , it turns out, is full of mistakes ranging from sloppy reasoning to mis-citations of sources to outright mathematical errors. Unsurprisingly, all the mistakes are in the direction of supporting the authors' thesis.
First, a quick précis of The Bell Curve . IQ tests, according to Murray and Herrnstein, measure an essential human quality, general intelligence. During the second half of the 20 th century, this quality has risen to supreme importance, because society has become increasingly complex. The intelligent have therefore gone through an "invisible migration," from points of origin all over the class system to a concentration at the top of business, government, and the professions. They are likely to become ever more dominant and prosperous. The unintelligent are falling further and further behind. Because intelligence is substantially inherited, nothing is likely to reverse this process. Blacks are overrepresented among the unintelligent. Any efforts government might make to improve the economic opportunities of poor people, especially poor black people, are likely to fail, because their poverty is so much the result of inherited low intelligence. About the best that can be done for these people is an effort to create a world of simple, decent, honorable toil for them.
Herrnstein and Murray begin by telling us that the liberal position on IQ--namely, "Intelligence is a bankrupt concept"--has been discredited, and that "a scholarly consensus has been reached" around their position. This consensus is "beyond significant technical dispute." Thus, by the end of their introduction, they have arranged matters so that if intelligence has any meaning at all, the idiotic liberals stand discredited; and meanwhile, extremely broad claims for intelligence have the cover of "consensus."
The notion that IQ tests are completely useless never prevailed in liberal academia to nearly the extent that Herrnstein and Murray say. A more accurate rendering of the liberal position would be that rather than a single "general intelligence," there are a handful of crucial--and separate--mental abilities; that none of these abilities is important enough to obviate the role of family background and education; and that native ability (and economic success independent of native ability) can be enhanced by improving education, training, and public health. The Bell Curve refers in passing to some of these points, but on the whole it sets up a cartoon-left position as its (easy) target. Meanwhile, the psychometricians who dominate the footnotes of The Bell Curve are John Hunter, Arthur Jensen, Malcolm Ree, and Frank Schmidt. These men are well known within the field as representing its right wing, not a mainstream consensus.
The next problem with The Bell Curve 's thesis is in the idea of the rise to dominance of the cognitive elite. To the book's initial audience of Ivy Leaguers, this idea seemed valid on its face. Everybody knows that the best universities, law firms, hospitals, investment banks, and the State Department used to be run by preppies whose main virtue was fortunate birth, and are now open to one and all on the basis of merit.
But the larger premise--that intelligent people used to be scattered throughout the class structure, and are now concentrated at the top--is almost impossible to prove, simply because the mass administration of mental tests is such a recent phenomenon. High scorers on mental tests do "bunch up" (as Herrnstein and Murray put it) in elite-university student bodies. But this is tautological: Any group selected on the basis of scores on mental tests will be composed disproportionately of people who score high on mental tests. Proving The Bell Curve 's thesis would require proving that success increasingly correlates with IQ in areas of life where mental tests are not the explicit gatekeepers. To see how The Bell Curve tries and fails to get around these inherent problems, see and .
Having conditioned its audience to view IQ as all-important, The Bell Curve then manipulates statistics in a way that makes IQ look bigger, and everything else smaller, in determining Americans' life-chances.
The basic tool of statistical social science in general, and of The Bell Curve in particular, is regression analysis, a technique used to assign weights to various factors (called "independent variables") in determining a final outcome (called the "dependent variable"). The original statistical work in The Bell Curve consists of regression analyses on a database called the National Longitudinal Study of Youth. The authors claim to demonstrate that high IQ is more predictive of economic success than any other factor, and that low IQ is more predictive of poverty and social breakdown. Virtually all the early commentators on The Bell Curve were unable to assess the merits of the regression analysis. "I am not a scientist. I know nothing about psychometrics," wrote Leon Wieseltier (who was otherwise quite critical) in a typical disclaimer.
But by now the statistics have been gone over by professionals, who have come up with different results. The key points of their critique of The Bell Curve are as follows:
What Herrnstein and Murray used to measure IQ is actually a measure of education as well as intelligence. All the people tracked in the National Longitudinal Study of Youth took the Armed Forces Qualifying Test, which Herrnstein and Murray treat as a good measure of intelligence. Because the material covered in the test includes subjects like trigonometry, many academic critics of The Bell Curve have objected to its use as a measure only of IQ and not at all of academic achievement. Herrnstein and Murray concede in the footnotes that scores tend to rise with the subjects' education--but they seriously underestimate the magnitude of this rise, as shows. And they resist the obvious inference that the test scores are measuring something other than intelligence.
Most of The Bell Curve 's analysis is devoted to proving that IQ has more predictive power than parental "socio-economic status." But Herrnstein and Murray's method of figuring socioeconomic status seems designed to low-ball its influence, as explains.
Herrnstein and Murray begin their discussion of the National Longitudinal Study of Youth data by announcing that they aren't going to analyze the effect of education, because education is too much a result of IQ. It's not an independent variable. (Of course, according to their theory, socioeconomic status is also a result of IQ, but somehow, that doesn't stop them.) Therefore, what you'd most want to know from a policy standpoint--how much education can increase opportunity--isn't dealt with in the book, except in two obscure footnotes. Both would seem to support the liberal, pro-education position that Herrnstein and Murray say is futile. One footnote shows education increasing IQ year by year. The other shows a higher correlation between college degree and family income than between IQ and family income.
One of The Bell Curve 's theoretical linchpins is the high heritability of IQ. Herrnstein and Murray, sounding like the souls of caution, write that "half a century of work, now amounting to hundreds of empirical and theoretical studies, permits a broad conclusion that the genetic component of IQ is unlikely to be smaller than 40 per cent or higher than 80 per cent. ... For purposes of this discussion, we will adopt a middling estimate of 60 per cent heritability." This now looks seriously overstated. Michael Daniels, Bernie Devlin, and Kathryn Roeder of Carnegie Mellon University took the same studies on which Herrnstein and Murray based their estimate, and subjected them to a computer meta-analysis ("a powerful method of statistical analysis"-- The Bell Curve ). Their paper, which has not yet been published, says: "In brief, studies of IQ, and our reanalyses of them, suggest a narrow-sense heritability of 34 per cent and a broad-sense heritability of 46 per cent. [The difference between broad and narrow is too technical to explain in this limited space.] This is a far cry from Herrnstein and Murray's maximum value of 80 per cent or their middling value of 60 per cent. Consequently, Herrnstein and Murray give the impression that IQ is highly 'heritable,' but it is not."
If the purpose of the whole exercise is to figure out what our social policies should be, then, "Which is more predictive, IQ or socioeconomic status?" isn't the essential question anyway. Making it the essential question avoids the issue of whether IQ is really so massively predictive that it drowns out everything else. (Herrnstein and Murray mostly leave the evidence for this, their central contention, to footnotes. The figures they offer are far from dispositive.)
The chapter of The Bell Curve on policies that might be able to overcome the fate of a low IQ focuses mainly on whether early-childhood programs like Head Start (most of which aren't run with raising IQ as their primary goal) can raise IQ significantly over the long term, and sorrowfully concludes that they can't. What the book doesn't discuss is whether public schools--by far the biggest government social program--can raise IQ, or earnings after you control for IQ. As James Heckman of the University of Chicago wrote in the Journal of Political Economy , " Evidence of a genetic component to skills has no bearing on the efficacy of any social policy. ... The relevant issue is the cost effectiveness of the intervention." (As an example of where the kind of analysis Herrnstein and Murray didn't do can lead, a new study by Jay Girotto and Paul Peterson of Harvard shows that students who raise their grades and take harder courses can increase their IQ scores by an average of eight points during the first three years of high school.)
At the beginning of The Bell Curve , Herrnstein and Murray declare that "the concept of intelligence has taken on a much higher place in the pantheon of human virtues than it deserves." And they claim that their view of IQ tests is "squarely in the middle of the scientific road." They end by expressing the hope that we can "be a society that makes good on the fundamental promise of the American tradition: the opportunity for everyone, not just the lucky ones, to live a satisfying life." Throughout, Herrnstein and Murray consistently present themselves as fair- (or even liberal-) minded technicians who have, with great caution, followed the evidence where it leads--which, unfortunately, is to a few unassailable if unpleasant scientific truths that it is their reluctant duty to report.
In fact, The Bell Curve is a relentless brief for the conservative position in psychometrics and social policy. For all its talk of reflecting a consensus, the sources it draws upon are heavily skewed to the right. Herrnstein and Murray used quasi-nutty studies that support their position (as Charles Lane demonstrated in the New York Review of Books ), and ignore mainstream studies that contradict it (as Richard Nisbett showed in the New Republic ). The data in The Bell Curve are consistently massaged to produce conservative conclusions; not once is a finding that contradicts the main thesis reported in the text. ( shows how Herrnstein and Murray have made the convergence in black-white IQ scores, which they claim to find "encouraging," look smaller than it actually is.) The Bell Curve 's air of strict scientism doesn't preclude the use of lightly sourced or unsourced assertions, such as the statement that the median IQ of all black Africans is 75, or that "intermarriage among people in the top few percentiles of intelligence may be increasing far more rapidly than suspected" (no footnote). Though they piously claim not to be doing so, Herrnstein and Murray leave readers with the distinct impression that IQ is the cause of economic success and failure, and that genetic difference explains the black-white IQ gap.
In the most famous passage in The Republic , Plato describes an underground cave where people are held prisoner in chains, unable to see anything but the shadows cast by figures passing outside; they mistake the shadows for reality. The Republic is probably the first place in history where an idea like that of Murray and Herrnstein's cognitive elite appears. Plato believed that through education, people could leave the cave and be able to see the truth instead of the shadows, thus fitting themselves to become the wise rulers of society. But he was quick to insert a cautionary note: Those who have left the cave might be tempted to think they can see perfectly clearly, while actually they would be "dazzled by excess of light." The image applies to The Bell Curve : Presented as an exact representation of reality, in opposition to the shadows of political correctness, it actually reflects the blinkered vision of one part of the American elite. It constantly tells these people that they are naturally superior, and offers lurid descriptions of aspects of national life that they know about only by rumor. Readers who accept The Bell Curve as tough-minded and realistic, and who assume that all criticism of it is ignorant and ideologically motivated, are not as far removed from Plato's cave as they might think.
: Dumb College Students
: Smart Rich People
: Education and IQ
: Socioeconomic Status
: Black-White Convergence
| https://www.anc.org/OANC/license.txt | What is the problem with using IQ to predict economic success? | 20010_SGZEVK7E_4 | [
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20,010 | 20010_SGZEVK7E | 12 | 1,009 | Slate | The Bell Curve Flattened | 1997.0 | Nicholas Lemann | Periodicals; Specialized Magazine; Media Coverage | The Bell Curve Flattened
Charles Murray is a publicity genius, and the publication of his and Richard Herrnstein's book, The Bell Curve: Intelligence and Class Structure in American Life , in the fall of 1994 was his masterpiece.
Virtually all ambitious trade hardcover books are preceded by an edition of 100 to 200 flimsy "galley proofs." These are sent out to people who might generate buzz for the book: blurbists, bookers for television talk shows, editors, and--most important--book critics. There is an ethos of letting the chips fall where they may about the sending out of galleys: Now the book will begin to receive uncontrolled reaction. (For example, back in 1991, Murray somehow got hold of the galleys of my own last book, and wrote me heatedly denying that he was working on a book about black genetic intellectual inferiority, as I had asserted. I left the passage in, but softened it.)
The Bell Curve was not circulated in galleys before publication. The effect was, first, to increase the allure of the book (There must be something really hot in there!), and second, to ensure that no one inclined to be skeptical would be able to weigh in at the moment of publication. The people who had galley proofs were handpicked by Murray and his publisher. The ordinary routine of neutral reviewers having a month or two to go over the book with care did not occur. Another handpicked group was flown to Washington at the expense of the American Enterprise Institute and given a weekend-long personal briefing on the book's contents by Murray himself (Herrnstein had died very recently), just before publication. The result was what you'd expect: The first wave of publicity was either credulous or angry, but short on evidence, because nobody had had time to digest and evaluate the book carefully.
The Bell Curve isn't a typical work of trade nonfiction. It is gotten up as a work of original scholarly research. Most works containing fresh regression analysis and historical argument from primary sources would be published in academic quarterlies that send manuscripts out for elaborate, lengthy evaluation before deciding whether to publish them. Herrnstein and Murray didn't do this, so it wasn't until a full year or more after The Bell Curve was published that the leading experts on its subject had a chance to go through the underlying data with care. Therefore, as time went on, the knowledgeability of the Bell Curve discussion grew, but the attention paid to that discussion inevitably shrank.
The debate on publication day was conducted in the mass media by people with no independent ability to assess the book. Over the next few months, intellectuals took some pretty good shots at it in smaller publications like the New Republic and the New York Review of Books . It wasn't until late 1995 that the most damaging criticism of The Bell Curve began to appear, in tiny academic journals. What follows is a brief summary of that last body of work. The Bell Curve , it turns out, is full of mistakes ranging from sloppy reasoning to mis-citations of sources to outright mathematical errors. Unsurprisingly, all the mistakes are in the direction of supporting the authors' thesis.
First, a quick précis of The Bell Curve . IQ tests, according to Murray and Herrnstein, measure an essential human quality, general intelligence. During the second half of the 20 th century, this quality has risen to supreme importance, because society has become increasingly complex. The intelligent have therefore gone through an "invisible migration," from points of origin all over the class system to a concentration at the top of business, government, and the professions. They are likely to become ever more dominant and prosperous. The unintelligent are falling further and further behind. Because intelligence is substantially inherited, nothing is likely to reverse this process. Blacks are overrepresented among the unintelligent. Any efforts government might make to improve the economic opportunities of poor people, especially poor black people, are likely to fail, because their poverty is so much the result of inherited low intelligence. About the best that can be done for these people is an effort to create a world of simple, decent, honorable toil for them.
Herrnstein and Murray begin by telling us that the liberal position on IQ--namely, "Intelligence is a bankrupt concept"--has been discredited, and that "a scholarly consensus has been reached" around their position. This consensus is "beyond significant technical dispute." Thus, by the end of their introduction, they have arranged matters so that if intelligence has any meaning at all, the idiotic liberals stand discredited; and meanwhile, extremely broad claims for intelligence have the cover of "consensus."
The notion that IQ tests are completely useless never prevailed in liberal academia to nearly the extent that Herrnstein and Murray say. A more accurate rendering of the liberal position would be that rather than a single "general intelligence," there are a handful of crucial--and separate--mental abilities; that none of these abilities is important enough to obviate the role of family background and education; and that native ability (and economic success independent of native ability) can be enhanced by improving education, training, and public health. The Bell Curve refers in passing to some of these points, but on the whole it sets up a cartoon-left position as its (easy) target. Meanwhile, the psychometricians who dominate the footnotes of The Bell Curve are John Hunter, Arthur Jensen, Malcolm Ree, and Frank Schmidt. These men are well known within the field as representing its right wing, not a mainstream consensus.
The next problem with The Bell Curve 's thesis is in the idea of the rise to dominance of the cognitive elite. To the book's initial audience of Ivy Leaguers, this idea seemed valid on its face. Everybody knows that the best universities, law firms, hospitals, investment banks, and the State Department used to be run by preppies whose main virtue was fortunate birth, and are now open to one and all on the basis of merit.
But the larger premise--that intelligent people used to be scattered throughout the class structure, and are now concentrated at the top--is almost impossible to prove, simply because the mass administration of mental tests is such a recent phenomenon. High scorers on mental tests do "bunch up" (as Herrnstein and Murray put it) in elite-university student bodies. But this is tautological: Any group selected on the basis of scores on mental tests will be composed disproportionately of people who score high on mental tests. Proving The Bell Curve 's thesis would require proving that success increasingly correlates with IQ in areas of life where mental tests are not the explicit gatekeepers. To see how The Bell Curve tries and fails to get around these inherent problems, see and .
Having conditioned its audience to view IQ as all-important, The Bell Curve then manipulates statistics in a way that makes IQ look bigger, and everything else smaller, in determining Americans' life-chances.
The basic tool of statistical social science in general, and of The Bell Curve in particular, is regression analysis, a technique used to assign weights to various factors (called "independent variables") in determining a final outcome (called the "dependent variable"). The original statistical work in The Bell Curve consists of regression analyses on a database called the National Longitudinal Study of Youth. The authors claim to demonstrate that high IQ is more predictive of economic success than any other factor, and that low IQ is more predictive of poverty and social breakdown. Virtually all the early commentators on The Bell Curve were unable to assess the merits of the regression analysis. "I am not a scientist. I know nothing about psychometrics," wrote Leon Wieseltier (who was otherwise quite critical) in a typical disclaimer.
But by now the statistics have been gone over by professionals, who have come up with different results. The key points of their critique of The Bell Curve are as follows:
What Herrnstein and Murray used to measure IQ is actually a measure of education as well as intelligence. All the people tracked in the National Longitudinal Study of Youth took the Armed Forces Qualifying Test, which Herrnstein and Murray treat as a good measure of intelligence. Because the material covered in the test includes subjects like trigonometry, many academic critics of The Bell Curve have objected to its use as a measure only of IQ and not at all of academic achievement. Herrnstein and Murray concede in the footnotes that scores tend to rise with the subjects' education--but they seriously underestimate the magnitude of this rise, as shows. And they resist the obvious inference that the test scores are measuring something other than intelligence.
Most of The Bell Curve 's analysis is devoted to proving that IQ has more predictive power than parental "socio-economic status." But Herrnstein and Murray's method of figuring socioeconomic status seems designed to low-ball its influence, as explains.
Herrnstein and Murray begin their discussion of the National Longitudinal Study of Youth data by announcing that they aren't going to analyze the effect of education, because education is too much a result of IQ. It's not an independent variable. (Of course, according to their theory, socioeconomic status is also a result of IQ, but somehow, that doesn't stop them.) Therefore, what you'd most want to know from a policy standpoint--how much education can increase opportunity--isn't dealt with in the book, except in two obscure footnotes. Both would seem to support the liberal, pro-education position that Herrnstein and Murray say is futile. One footnote shows education increasing IQ year by year. The other shows a higher correlation between college degree and family income than between IQ and family income.
One of The Bell Curve 's theoretical linchpins is the high heritability of IQ. Herrnstein and Murray, sounding like the souls of caution, write that "half a century of work, now amounting to hundreds of empirical and theoretical studies, permits a broad conclusion that the genetic component of IQ is unlikely to be smaller than 40 per cent or higher than 80 per cent. ... For purposes of this discussion, we will adopt a middling estimate of 60 per cent heritability." This now looks seriously overstated. Michael Daniels, Bernie Devlin, and Kathryn Roeder of Carnegie Mellon University took the same studies on which Herrnstein and Murray based their estimate, and subjected them to a computer meta-analysis ("a powerful method of statistical analysis"-- The Bell Curve ). Their paper, which has not yet been published, says: "In brief, studies of IQ, and our reanalyses of them, suggest a narrow-sense heritability of 34 per cent and a broad-sense heritability of 46 per cent. [The difference between broad and narrow is too technical to explain in this limited space.] This is a far cry from Herrnstein and Murray's maximum value of 80 per cent or their middling value of 60 per cent. Consequently, Herrnstein and Murray give the impression that IQ is highly 'heritable,' but it is not."
If the purpose of the whole exercise is to figure out what our social policies should be, then, "Which is more predictive, IQ or socioeconomic status?" isn't the essential question anyway. Making it the essential question avoids the issue of whether IQ is really so massively predictive that it drowns out everything else. (Herrnstein and Murray mostly leave the evidence for this, their central contention, to footnotes. The figures they offer are far from dispositive.)
The chapter of The Bell Curve on policies that might be able to overcome the fate of a low IQ focuses mainly on whether early-childhood programs like Head Start (most of which aren't run with raising IQ as their primary goal) can raise IQ significantly over the long term, and sorrowfully concludes that they can't. What the book doesn't discuss is whether public schools--by far the biggest government social program--can raise IQ, or earnings after you control for IQ. As James Heckman of the University of Chicago wrote in the Journal of Political Economy , " Evidence of a genetic component to skills has no bearing on the efficacy of any social policy. ... The relevant issue is the cost effectiveness of the intervention." (As an example of where the kind of analysis Herrnstein and Murray didn't do can lead, a new study by Jay Girotto and Paul Peterson of Harvard shows that students who raise their grades and take harder courses can increase their IQ scores by an average of eight points during the first three years of high school.)
At the beginning of The Bell Curve , Herrnstein and Murray declare that "the concept of intelligence has taken on a much higher place in the pantheon of human virtues than it deserves." And they claim that their view of IQ tests is "squarely in the middle of the scientific road." They end by expressing the hope that we can "be a society that makes good on the fundamental promise of the American tradition: the opportunity for everyone, not just the lucky ones, to live a satisfying life." Throughout, Herrnstein and Murray consistently present themselves as fair- (or even liberal-) minded technicians who have, with great caution, followed the evidence where it leads--which, unfortunately, is to a few unassailable if unpleasant scientific truths that it is their reluctant duty to report.
In fact, The Bell Curve is a relentless brief for the conservative position in psychometrics and social policy. For all its talk of reflecting a consensus, the sources it draws upon are heavily skewed to the right. Herrnstein and Murray used quasi-nutty studies that support their position (as Charles Lane demonstrated in the New York Review of Books ), and ignore mainstream studies that contradict it (as Richard Nisbett showed in the New Republic ). The data in The Bell Curve are consistently massaged to produce conservative conclusions; not once is a finding that contradicts the main thesis reported in the text. ( shows how Herrnstein and Murray have made the convergence in black-white IQ scores, which they claim to find "encouraging," look smaller than it actually is.) The Bell Curve 's air of strict scientism doesn't preclude the use of lightly sourced or unsourced assertions, such as the statement that the median IQ of all black Africans is 75, or that "intermarriage among people in the top few percentiles of intelligence may be increasing far more rapidly than suspected" (no footnote). Though they piously claim not to be doing so, Herrnstein and Murray leave readers with the distinct impression that IQ is the cause of economic success and failure, and that genetic difference explains the black-white IQ gap.
In the most famous passage in The Republic , Plato describes an underground cave where people are held prisoner in chains, unable to see anything but the shadows cast by figures passing outside; they mistake the shadows for reality. The Republic is probably the first place in history where an idea like that of Murray and Herrnstein's cognitive elite appears. Plato believed that through education, people could leave the cave and be able to see the truth instead of the shadows, thus fitting themselves to become the wise rulers of society. But he was quick to insert a cautionary note: Those who have left the cave might be tempted to think they can see perfectly clearly, while actually they would be "dazzled by excess of light." The image applies to The Bell Curve : Presented as an exact representation of reality, in opposition to the shadows of political correctness, it actually reflects the blinkered vision of one part of the American elite. It constantly tells these people that they are naturally superior, and offers lurid descriptions of aspects of national life that they know about only by rumor. Readers who accept The Bell Curve as tough-minded and realistic, and who assume that all criticism of it is ignorant and ideologically motivated, are not as far removed from Plato's cave as they might think.
: Dumb College Students
: Smart Rich People
: Education and IQ
: Socioeconomic Status
: Black-White Convergence
| https://www.anc.org/OANC/license.txt | What do Herrnstein and Murray want you to believe? | 20010_SGZEVK7E_5 | [
"be happy with your current status - it's where you're going to stay",
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"people of all races should be treated equally",
"if you work hard enough, you can do anything"
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53,016 | 53016_NCS325SD | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Cakewalk to Gloryanna | 1953.0 | Stecher, L. J., Jr. | Interstellar travel -- Fiction; PS; Science fiction; Hannah, Bart (Fictitious character) -- Fiction; Space ships -- Fiction; Short stories | CAKEWALK TO GLORYANNA
BY L. J. STECHER, JR.
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of Tomorrow June 1963
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
The job was easy. The profit was enormous. The
only trouble was—the cargo had a will of its own!
Captain Hannah climbed painfully down from the
Delta Crucis
, hobbled
across the spaceport to where Beulah and I were waiting to greet him
and hit me in the eye. Beulah—that's his elephant, but I have to take
care of her for him because Beulah's baby belongs to me and Beulah has
to take care of it—kept us apart until we both cooled down a little.
Then, although still somewhat dubious about it, she let us go together
across the field to the spaceport bar.
I didn't ask Captain Hannah why he had socked me.
Although he has never been a handsome man, he usually has the
weathered and austere dignity that comes from plying the remote reaches
among the stars. Call it the Look of Eagles. Captain Hannah had lost
the Look of Eagles. His eyes were swollen almost shut; every inch of
him that showed was a red mass of welts piled on more welts, as though
he had tangled with a hive of misanthropic bees. The gold-braided hat
of his trade was not clamped in its usual belligerent position slightly
over one eye. It was riding high on his head, apparently held up by
more of the ubiquitous swellings.
I figured that he figured that I had something to do with the way he
looked.
"Shipping marocca to Gloryanna III didn't turn out to be a cakewalk
after all?" I suggested.
He glared at me in silence.
"Perhaps you would like a drink first, and then you would be willing to
tell me about it?"
I decided that his wince was intended for a nod, and ordered rhial.
I only drink rhial when I've been exposed to Captain Hannah. It was
almost a pleasure to think that
I
was responsible, for a change, for
having
him
take the therapy.
"A
Delta
Class freighter can carry almost anything," he said at last,
in a travesty of his usual forceful voice. "But some things it should
never try."
He lapsed back into silence after this uncharacteristic admission. I
almost felt sorry for him, but just then Beulah came racking across
the field with her two-ton infant in tow, to show her off to Hannah. I
walled off my pity. He had foisted those two maudlin mastodons off onto
me in one of our earlier deals, and if I had somehow been responsible
for his present troubles, it was no more than he deserved. I rated
winning for once.
"You
did
succeed in getting the marocca to Gloryanna III?" I asked
anxiously, after the elephants had been admired and sent back home.
The success of that venture—even if the job had turned out to be more
difficult than we had expected—meant an enormous profit to both of
us. The fruit of the marocca is delicious and fabulously expensive.
The plant grew only on the single planet Mypore II. Transshipped seeds
invariably failed to germinate, which explained its rarity.
The Myporians were usually, and understandably, bitterly, opposed to
letting any of the living plants get shipped off their planet. But when
I offered them a sizable piece of cash plus a perpetual share of the
profits for letting us take a load of marocca plants to Gloryanna III,
they relented and, for the first time in history, gave their assent. In
fact, they had seemed delighted.
"I got them there safely," said Captain Hannah.
"And they are growing all right?" I persisted.
"When I left, marocca was growing like mad," said Captain Hannah.
I relaxed and leaned back in my chair. I no longer felt the need of
rhial for myself. "Tell me about it," I suggested.
"It was you who said that we should carry those damn plants to
Gloryanna III," he said balefully. "I ought to black your other eye."
"Simmer down and have some more rhial," I told him. "Sure I get the
credit for that. Gloryanna III is almost a twin to Mypore II. You know
that marocca takes a very special kind of environment. Bright sun most
of the time—that means an almost cloudless environment. A very equable
climate. Days and nights the same length and no seasons—that means no
ecliptical and no axial tilt. But our tests showed that the plants had
enough tolerance to cause no trouble in the trip in
Delta Crucis
." A
light dawned. "Our tests were no good?"
"Your tests were no good," agreed the captain with feeling. "I'll tell
you about it first, and
then
I'll black your other eye," he decided.
"You'll remember that I warned you that we should take some marocca
out into space and solve any problems we might find before committing
ourselves to hauling a full load of it?" asked Captain Hannah.
"We couldn't," I protested. "The Myporians gave us a deadline. If
we had gone through all of that rigamarole, we would have lost the
franchise. Besides, they gave you full written instructions about what
to do under all possible circumstances."
"Sure. Written in Myporian. A very difficult language to translate.
Especially when you're barricaded in the head."
I almost asked him why he had been barricaded in the bathroom of the
Delta Crucis
, but I figured it was safer to let him tell me in his
own way, in his own time.
"Well," he said, "I got into parking orbit around Mypore without any
trouble. The plastic film kept the water in the hydroponic tanks
without any trouble, even in a no-gravity condition. And by the time I
had lined up for Gloryanna and Jumped, I figured, like you said, that
the trip would be a cakewalk.
"Do you remember how the plants always keep their leaves facing the
sun? They twist on their stems all day, and then they go on twisting
them all night, still pointing at the underground sun, so that they're
aimed right at sunrise. So the stem looks like a corkscrew?"
I nodded. "Sure. That's why they can't stand an axial tilt. They
'remember' the rate and direction of movement, and keep it up during
the night time. So what? We had that problem all figured out."
"You think so? That solution was one of yours, too, wasn't it?" He
gazed moodily at his beaker of rhial. "I must admit it sounded good
to me, too. In Limbo, moving at multiple light-speeds, the whole
Universe, of course, turns into a bright glowing spot in our direction
of motion, with everything else dark. So I lined up the
Delta Crucis
perpendicular to her direction of motion, put a once-every-twenty-one
hour spin on her to match the rotation rates of Mypore II and Gloryanna
III, and uncovered the view ports to let in the light. It gradually
brightened until 'noon time', with the ports pointing straight at the
light source, and then dimmed until we had ten and one-half hours of
darkness.
"Of course, it didn't work."
"For Heaven's sake, why not?"
"For Heaven's sake why should it? With no gravity for reference, how
were the plants supposed to know that the 'sun' was supposed to be
moving?"
"So what did you do?" I asked, when that had sunk in. "If the stem
doesn't keep winding, the plants die; and they can only take a few
extra hours of night time before they run down."
"Oh," said Captain Hannah in quiet tones of controlled desperation, "it
was very simple. I just put enough spin on the ship to make artificial
gravity, and then I strung a light and moved it every fifteen minutes
for ten and one-half hours, until I had gone halfway around the room.
Then I could turn the light off and rest for ten and one-half hours.
The plants liked it fine.
"Of course, first I had to move all the hydroponic tanks from their
original positions perpendicular to the axial thrust line of the ship
to a radial position. And because somehow we had picked up half of
the plants in the northern hemisphere of Mypore and the other half in
the southern hemisphere, it turned out that half of the plants had a
sinistral corkscrew and the other half had a dextral. So I had to set
the plants up in two different rooms, and run an artificial sun for
each, going clockwise with one, widdershins with the other.
"I won't even talk about what I went through while I was shifting the
hydroponic tanks, when all the plastic membranes that were supposed to
keep the water in place started to break."
"I'd like to know," I said sincerely.
He stared at me in silence for a moment. "Well, it filled the cabin
with great solid bubbles of water. Water bubbles will oscillate and
wobble like soap bubbles," he went on dreamily, "but of course,
they're not empty, like soap bubbles. The surface acts a little like
a membrane, so that sometimes two of the things will touch and gently
bounce apart without joining. But just try
touching
one of them. You
could drown—I almost did. Several times.
"I got a fire pump—an empty one. You know the kind; a wide cylinder
with a piston with a handle, and a hose that you squirt the water out
of, or can suck water in with. The way you use it is, you float up on
a big ball of water, with the pump piston down—closed. You carefully
poke the end of the hose into the ball of water, letting only the metal
tip touch.
Never
the hose. If you let the hose touch, the water runs
up it and tries to drown you. Then you pull up on the piston, and draw
all the water into the cylinder. Of course, you have to hold the pump
with your feet while you pull the handle with your free hand."
"Did it work?" I asked eagerly.
"Eventually. Then I stopped to think of what to do with the water.
It was full of minerals and manure and such, and I didn't want to
introduce it into the ship's tanks."
"But you solved the problem?"
"In a sense," said the captain. "I just emptied the pump back into the
air, ignored the bubbles, repositioned the tanks, put spin on the ship
and then ladled the liquid back into the tanks with a bucket."
"Didn't you bump into a lot of the bubbles and get yourself dunked a
good deal while you were working with the tanks?"
He shrugged. "I couldn't say. By that time I was ignoring them. It was
that or suicide. I had begun to get the feeling that they were stalking
me. So I drew a blank."
"Then after that you were all right, except for the tedium of moving
the lights around?" I asked him. I answered myself at once. "No. There
must be more. You haven't told me why you hid out in the bathroom, yet."
"Not yet," said Captain Hannah. "Like you, I figured I had the
situation fairly well under control, but like you, I hadn't thought
things through. The plastic membranes hadn't torn when we brought the
tanks in board the
Delta Crucis
. It never occurred to me to hunt
around for the reasons for the change. But I wouldn't have had long to
hunt anyway, because in a few hours the reasons came looking for me.
"They were a tiny skeeter-like thing. A sort of midge or junior grade
mosquito. They had apparently been swimming in the water during their
larval stage. Instead of making cocoons for themselves, they snipped
tiny little pieces of plastic to use as protective covers in the pupal
stage. I guess they were more like butterflies than mosquitoes in their
habits. And now they were mature.
"There were thousands and thousands of them, and each one of them made
a tiny, maddening whine as it flew."
"And they bit? That explains your bumps?" I asked sympathetically.
"Oh, no. These things didn't bite, they itched. And they got down
inside of everything they could get down inside, and clung. That
included my ears and my eyes and my nose.
"I broke out a hand sprayer full of a DDT solution, and sprayed it
around me to try to clear the nearby air a little, so that I could
have room to think. The midges loved it. But the plants that were in
reach died so fast that you could watch their leaves curl up and drop
off.
"I couldn't figure whether to turn up the fans and dissipate the
cloud—by spreading it all through the ship—or whether to try to block
off the other plant room, and save it at least. So I ended up by not
doing anything, which was the right thing to do. No more plants died
from the DDT.
"So then I did a few experiments, and found that the regular poison
spray in the ship's fumigation system worked just fine. It killed
the bugs without doing the plants any harm at all. Of course, the
fumigation system is designed to work with the fumigator off the ship,
because it's poisonous to humans too.
"I finally blocked the vents and the door edges in the head, after
running some remote controls into there, and then started the
fumigation system going. While I was sitting there with nothing much
to do, I tried to translate what I could of the Myporian instructions.
It was on page eleven that it mentioned casually that the midges—the
correct word is carolla—are a necessary part of the life cycle of the
marocca. The larvae provide an enzyme without which the plants die.
"Of course. I immediately stopped slapping at the relatively few midges
that had made their way into the head with me, and started to change
the air in the ship to get rid of the poison. I knew it was too late
before I started, and for once I was right.
"The only live midges left in the ship were the ones that had been
with me during the fumigation process. I immediately tried to start
a breeding ground for midges, but the midges didn't seem to want to
cooperate. Whatever I tried to do, they came back to me. I was the only
thing they seemed to love. I didn't dare bathe, or scratch, or even
wriggle, for fear of killing more of them. And they kept on itching. It
was just about unbearable, but I bore it for three interminable days
while the midges died one by one. It was heartbreaking—at least, it
was to me.
"And it was unnecessary, too. Because apparently the carolla had
already laid their eggs, or whatever it is that they do, before I
had fumigated them. After my useless days of agony, a new batch
came swarming out. And this time there were a few of a much larger
thing with them—something like an enormous moth. The new thing just
blundered around aimlessly.
"I lit out for the head again, to keep away from that intolerable
whining. This time I took a luxurious shower and got rid of most of the
midges that came through the door with me. I felt almost comfortable,
in fact, until I resumed my efforts to catch up on my reading.
"The mothlike things—they are called dingleburys—also turn out to
provide a necessary enzyme. They are supposed to have the same timing
of their life cycle as the carolla. Apparently the shaking up I had
given their larvae in moving the tanks and dipping the water up in
buckets and all that had inhibited them in completing their cycle the
first time around.
"And the reason they had the same life cycle as the carolla was that
the adult dinglebury will eat only the adult carolla, and it has to
fill itself full to bursting before it will reproduce. If I had the
translation done correctly, they were supposed to dart gracefully
around, catching carolla on the wing and stuffing themselves happily.
"I had to find out what was wrong with my awkward dingleburys. And
that, of course, meant going out into the ship again. But I had to do
that anyway, because it was almost 'daylight', and time for me to start
shifting the lights again.
"The reason for the dingleburys' problem is fairly obvious. When you
set up artificial gravity by spinning a ship, the gravity is fine down
near the skin where the plants are. But the gravity potential is very
high, and it gets very light up where things fly around, going to zero
on the middle line of the ship. And the unfamiliar gravity gradient,
together with the Coriolis effect and all, makes the poor dingleburys
dizzy, so they can't catch carolla.
"And if you think I figured all that out about dingleburys getting
dizzy at the time, in that madhouse of a ship, then you're crazy. What
happened was that I saw that there was one of the creatures that didn't
seem to be having any trouble, but was acting like the book said it
should. I caught it and examined it. The poor thing was blind, and was
capturing her prey by sound alone.
"So I spent the whole day—along with my usual chore of shifting the
lights—blindfolding dingleburys. Which is a hell of a sport for a man
who is captain of his own ship."
I must say that I agreed with him, but it seemed to be a good time for
me to keep my mouth shut.
"Well, after the dingleburys had eaten and propagated, they became
inquisitive. They explored the whole ship, going into places I wouldn't
have believed it to be possible for them to reach, including the inside
of the main computer, which promptly shorted out. I finally figured
that one of the things had managed to crawl up the cooling air exhaust
duct, against the flow of air, to see what was going on inside.
"I didn't dare to get rid of the things without checking my book, of
course, so it was back to the head for me. 'Night' had come again—and
it was the only place I could get any privacy. There were plenty of the
carolla left to join me outside.
"I showered and swatted and started to read. I got as far as where it
said that the dingleburys continued to be of importance, and then I'm
afraid I fell asleep.
"I got up with the sun the next morning. Hell, I had to, considering
that it was I who turned the sun on! I found that the dingleburys
immediately got busy opening small buds on the stems of the marocca
plants. Apparently they were pollinating them. I felt sure that these
buds weren't the marocca blossoms from which the fruit formed—I'd
seen a lot of those while we were on Mypore II and they were much
bigger and showier than these little acorn-sized buds.
"Of course, I should have translated some more of my instruction book,
but I was busy.
"Anyway, the action of the dingleburys triggered the violent growth
phase of the marocca plants. Did you know that they plant marocca
seedlings, back on Mypore II,
at least
a hundred feet apart? If
you'll recall, a mature field, which was the only kind we ever saw, is
one solid mass of green growth.
"The book says that it takes just six hours for a marocca field to
shift from the seedling stage to the mature stage. It didn't seem that
long. You could
watch
the stuff grow—groping and crawling along; one
plant twining with another as they climbed toward the light.
"It was then that I began to get worried. If they twined around the
light, they would keep me from moving it, and they would shadow it so
it wouldn't do its job right. In effect, their growth would put out the
sun.
"I thought of putting up an electrically charged fence around the
light, but the bugs had put most of my loose equipment out of action,
so I got a machete. When I took a swing at one of the vines, something
bit me on the back of the neck so hard it almost knocked me down. It
was one of the dingleburys, and it was as mad as blazes. It seems that
one of the things they do is to defend the marocca against marauders.
That was the first of my welts, and it put me back in the head in
about two seconds.
"And what's more, I found that I couldn't kill the damn things. Not if
I wanted to save the plants. The growth only stops at the end of six
hours, after the blossoms appear and are visited by the dingleburys. No
dingleburys, no growth stoppage.
"So for the next several hours I had to keep moving those lights, and
keep them clear of the vines, and keep the vines from shadowing each
other to the point where they curled up and died, and I had to do it
gently
, surrounded by a bunch of worried dingleburys.
"Every time they got a little too worried, or I slipped and bumped into
a plant too hard, or looked crosseyed at them, they bit me. If you
think I look bad now, you should have seen me just about the time the
blossoms started to burst.
"I was worried about those blossoms. I felt sure that they would smell
terrible, or make me sick, or hypnotize me, or something. But they just
turned out to be big, white, odorless flowers. They did nothing for me
or to me. They drove the dingleburys wild, though, I'm happy to say.
Made them forget all about me.
"While they were having their orgy, I caught up on my reading. It
was necessary for me to cut back the marocca vines. For one thing,
I couldn't get up to the area of the bridge. For another, the main
computer was completely clogged. I could use the auxiliary, on the
bridge, if I could get to it, but it's a poor substitute. For another
thing, I would have to cut the stuff way back if I was ever going to
get the plants out of the ship. And I was a little anxious to get my
Delta Crucis
back to normal as soon as possible. But before cutting,
I had to translate the gouge.
"It turns out that it's all right to cut marocca as soon as it stops
growing. To keep the plants from dying, though, you have to mulch the
cuttings and then feed them back to the plants, where the roots store
whatever they need against the time of the next explosive period of
growth. Of course, if you prefer you can wait for the vines to die back
naturally, which takes several months.
"There was one little catch, of course. The cuttings from the vines
will poison the plants if they are fed back to them without having been
mixed with a certain amount of processed mulch. Enzymes again. And
there was only one special processor on board.
"I was the special processor. That's what the instructions said—I
translated very carefully—it required an 'organic processor'.
"So I had to eat pounds of that horrible tasting stuff every day, and
process it the hard way.
"I didn't even have time to scratch my bites. I must have lost weight
everywhere but in the swollen places, and they looked worse than they
do now. The doctor says it may take a year before the bumps all go
away—if they ever do—but I have improved a lot already.
"For a while I must have been out of my head. I got so caught up in
the rhythm of the thing that I didn't even notice when we slipped out
of Limbo into real space near Gloryanna III. It was three days, the
Control Tower on Gloryanna III told me, that they tried continuously
to raise me on the communications gear before I heard the alarm bell
and answered them, so I had to do a good deal of backtracking before
I could get into parking orbit around the planet, and then set
Delta
Crucis
down safely. Even as shaky as I was,
Delta Crucis
behaved
like a lady.
"I hadn't chopped off all of the new growth, although I had the plants
down to manageable size. Some of the blossoms left on the plants had
formed fruit, and the fruit had ripened and dried, and the seeds had
developed fully. They were popping and spreading fine dust-like spores
all over the ship, those last few hours before I landed.
"By that time, though, an occasional sneezing fit and watering eyes
didn't bother me any. I was far beyond the point where hay fever could
add to my troubles.
"When I opened the airlock door, though, the spores drifting outside
set the customs inspectors to sneezing and swearing more than seemed
reasonable at the time." Captain Hannah inhaled a sip of rhial, and
seemed to be enjoying the powerful stuff. He acted as if he thought he
had finished.
"Well, go on," I urged him. "The marocca plants were still in good
shape, weren't they?"
Hannah nodded. "They were growing luxuriously." He nodded his head a
couple of more times, in spite of the discomfort it must have given
him.
He said, "They made me burn the entire crop right away, of course. They
didn't get all of the carolla or dingleburys, though. Or spores."
"Gloryanna III is the original home planet of marocca. They hated the
stuff, of course, but they liked the profit. Then, when a plague almost
wiped out the dingleburys, they introduced khorram furs as a cash
crop. It wasn't as lucrative, but it was so much more pleasant that
they outlawed marocca. Took them almost fifty years to stamp it out
completely. Meanwhile, some clever native shipped a load of the stuff
to Mypore II. He took his time, did it without any trouble and made his
fortune. And got out again quickly.
"The Gloryannans were going to hold my
Delta Crucis
as security to
pay for the cost of stamping out marocca all over again—those spores
sprout fast—and for a time I was worried.
"Of course, when I showed them our contract—that you alone were
responsible for everything once I landed the plants safely on Gloryanna
III, they let me go.
"They'll send you the bill. They don't figure it will take them more
than a few months to complete the job."
Captain Hannah stopped talking and stood up, painfully and a little
unsteadily.
I'm afraid I didn't even notice when he blacked my other eye. I was too
busy reaching for the rhial.
END
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/5/3/0/1/53016//53016-h//53016-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | Who is Beula and what is her connection to the narrator? | 53016_NCS325SD_1 | [
"Beula is the narrator’s pet elephant. Her baby belongs to Captain Hannah, linking the two men even though they don’t like each other. \n\n",
"Beula is Captain Hannah’s pet elephant. The narrator sold her Captain Hannah years ago, leading to a business relationship between the two men. \n\n",
"Beula is Captain Hannah’s pet elephant. Her baby belongs to the narrator, linking the captain and the narrator. \n\n",
"Beula is the narrator’s pet elephant. Her baby was sold to Captain Hannah, which led to a business relationship between the two men. \n\n"
] | 3 | 3 | [
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53,016 | 53016_NCS325SD | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Cakewalk to Gloryanna | 1953.0 | Stecher, L. J., Jr. | Interstellar travel -- Fiction; PS; Science fiction; Hannah, Bart (Fictitious character) -- Fiction; Space ships -- Fiction; Short stories | CAKEWALK TO GLORYANNA
BY L. J. STECHER, JR.
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of Tomorrow June 1963
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
The job was easy. The profit was enormous. The
only trouble was—the cargo had a will of its own!
Captain Hannah climbed painfully down from the
Delta Crucis
, hobbled
across the spaceport to where Beulah and I were waiting to greet him
and hit me in the eye. Beulah—that's his elephant, but I have to take
care of her for him because Beulah's baby belongs to me and Beulah has
to take care of it—kept us apart until we both cooled down a little.
Then, although still somewhat dubious about it, she let us go together
across the field to the spaceport bar.
I didn't ask Captain Hannah why he had socked me.
Although he has never been a handsome man, he usually has the
weathered and austere dignity that comes from plying the remote reaches
among the stars. Call it the Look of Eagles. Captain Hannah had lost
the Look of Eagles. His eyes were swollen almost shut; every inch of
him that showed was a red mass of welts piled on more welts, as though
he had tangled with a hive of misanthropic bees. The gold-braided hat
of his trade was not clamped in its usual belligerent position slightly
over one eye. It was riding high on his head, apparently held up by
more of the ubiquitous swellings.
I figured that he figured that I had something to do with the way he
looked.
"Shipping marocca to Gloryanna III didn't turn out to be a cakewalk
after all?" I suggested.
He glared at me in silence.
"Perhaps you would like a drink first, and then you would be willing to
tell me about it?"
I decided that his wince was intended for a nod, and ordered rhial.
I only drink rhial when I've been exposed to Captain Hannah. It was
almost a pleasure to think that
I
was responsible, for a change, for
having
him
take the therapy.
"A
Delta
Class freighter can carry almost anything," he said at last,
in a travesty of his usual forceful voice. "But some things it should
never try."
He lapsed back into silence after this uncharacteristic admission. I
almost felt sorry for him, but just then Beulah came racking across
the field with her two-ton infant in tow, to show her off to Hannah. I
walled off my pity. He had foisted those two maudlin mastodons off onto
me in one of our earlier deals, and if I had somehow been responsible
for his present troubles, it was no more than he deserved. I rated
winning for once.
"You
did
succeed in getting the marocca to Gloryanna III?" I asked
anxiously, after the elephants had been admired and sent back home.
The success of that venture—even if the job had turned out to be more
difficult than we had expected—meant an enormous profit to both of
us. The fruit of the marocca is delicious and fabulously expensive.
The plant grew only on the single planet Mypore II. Transshipped seeds
invariably failed to germinate, which explained its rarity.
The Myporians were usually, and understandably, bitterly, opposed to
letting any of the living plants get shipped off their planet. But when
I offered them a sizable piece of cash plus a perpetual share of the
profits for letting us take a load of marocca plants to Gloryanna III,
they relented and, for the first time in history, gave their assent. In
fact, they had seemed delighted.
"I got them there safely," said Captain Hannah.
"And they are growing all right?" I persisted.
"When I left, marocca was growing like mad," said Captain Hannah.
I relaxed and leaned back in my chair. I no longer felt the need of
rhial for myself. "Tell me about it," I suggested.
"It was you who said that we should carry those damn plants to
Gloryanna III," he said balefully. "I ought to black your other eye."
"Simmer down and have some more rhial," I told him. "Sure I get the
credit for that. Gloryanna III is almost a twin to Mypore II. You know
that marocca takes a very special kind of environment. Bright sun most
of the time—that means an almost cloudless environment. A very equable
climate. Days and nights the same length and no seasons—that means no
ecliptical and no axial tilt. But our tests showed that the plants had
enough tolerance to cause no trouble in the trip in
Delta Crucis
." A
light dawned. "Our tests were no good?"
"Your tests were no good," agreed the captain with feeling. "I'll tell
you about it first, and
then
I'll black your other eye," he decided.
"You'll remember that I warned you that we should take some marocca
out into space and solve any problems we might find before committing
ourselves to hauling a full load of it?" asked Captain Hannah.
"We couldn't," I protested. "The Myporians gave us a deadline. If
we had gone through all of that rigamarole, we would have lost the
franchise. Besides, they gave you full written instructions about what
to do under all possible circumstances."
"Sure. Written in Myporian. A very difficult language to translate.
Especially when you're barricaded in the head."
I almost asked him why he had been barricaded in the bathroom of the
Delta Crucis
, but I figured it was safer to let him tell me in his
own way, in his own time.
"Well," he said, "I got into parking orbit around Mypore without any
trouble. The plastic film kept the water in the hydroponic tanks
without any trouble, even in a no-gravity condition. And by the time I
had lined up for Gloryanna and Jumped, I figured, like you said, that
the trip would be a cakewalk.
"Do you remember how the plants always keep their leaves facing the
sun? They twist on their stems all day, and then they go on twisting
them all night, still pointing at the underground sun, so that they're
aimed right at sunrise. So the stem looks like a corkscrew?"
I nodded. "Sure. That's why they can't stand an axial tilt. They
'remember' the rate and direction of movement, and keep it up during
the night time. So what? We had that problem all figured out."
"You think so? That solution was one of yours, too, wasn't it?" He
gazed moodily at his beaker of rhial. "I must admit it sounded good
to me, too. In Limbo, moving at multiple light-speeds, the whole
Universe, of course, turns into a bright glowing spot in our direction
of motion, with everything else dark. So I lined up the
Delta Crucis
perpendicular to her direction of motion, put a once-every-twenty-one
hour spin on her to match the rotation rates of Mypore II and Gloryanna
III, and uncovered the view ports to let in the light. It gradually
brightened until 'noon time', with the ports pointing straight at the
light source, and then dimmed until we had ten and one-half hours of
darkness.
"Of course, it didn't work."
"For Heaven's sake, why not?"
"For Heaven's sake why should it? With no gravity for reference, how
were the plants supposed to know that the 'sun' was supposed to be
moving?"
"So what did you do?" I asked, when that had sunk in. "If the stem
doesn't keep winding, the plants die; and they can only take a few
extra hours of night time before they run down."
"Oh," said Captain Hannah in quiet tones of controlled desperation, "it
was very simple. I just put enough spin on the ship to make artificial
gravity, and then I strung a light and moved it every fifteen minutes
for ten and one-half hours, until I had gone halfway around the room.
Then I could turn the light off and rest for ten and one-half hours.
The plants liked it fine.
"Of course, first I had to move all the hydroponic tanks from their
original positions perpendicular to the axial thrust line of the ship
to a radial position. And because somehow we had picked up half of
the plants in the northern hemisphere of Mypore and the other half in
the southern hemisphere, it turned out that half of the plants had a
sinistral corkscrew and the other half had a dextral. So I had to set
the plants up in two different rooms, and run an artificial sun for
each, going clockwise with one, widdershins with the other.
"I won't even talk about what I went through while I was shifting the
hydroponic tanks, when all the plastic membranes that were supposed to
keep the water in place started to break."
"I'd like to know," I said sincerely.
He stared at me in silence for a moment. "Well, it filled the cabin
with great solid bubbles of water. Water bubbles will oscillate and
wobble like soap bubbles," he went on dreamily, "but of course,
they're not empty, like soap bubbles. The surface acts a little like
a membrane, so that sometimes two of the things will touch and gently
bounce apart without joining. But just try
touching
one of them. You
could drown—I almost did. Several times.
"I got a fire pump—an empty one. You know the kind; a wide cylinder
with a piston with a handle, and a hose that you squirt the water out
of, or can suck water in with. The way you use it is, you float up on
a big ball of water, with the pump piston down—closed. You carefully
poke the end of the hose into the ball of water, letting only the metal
tip touch.
Never
the hose. If you let the hose touch, the water runs
up it and tries to drown you. Then you pull up on the piston, and draw
all the water into the cylinder. Of course, you have to hold the pump
with your feet while you pull the handle with your free hand."
"Did it work?" I asked eagerly.
"Eventually. Then I stopped to think of what to do with the water.
It was full of minerals and manure and such, and I didn't want to
introduce it into the ship's tanks."
"But you solved the problem?"
"In a sense," said the captain. "I just emptied the pump back into the
air, ignored the bubbles, repositioned the tanks, put spin on the ship
and then ladled the liquid back into the tanks with a bucket."
"Didn't you bump into a lot of the bubbles and get yourself dunked a
good deal while you were working with the tanks?"
He shrugged. "I couldn't say. By that time I was ignoring them. It was
that or suicide. I had begun to get the feeling that they were stalking
me. So I drew a blank."
"Then after that you were all right, except for the tedium of moving
the lights around?" I asked him. I answered myself at once. "No. There
must be more. You haven't told me why you hid out in the bathroom, yet."
"Not yet," said Captain Hannah. "Like you, I figured I had the
situation fairly well under control, but like you, I hadn't thought
things through. The plastic membranes hadn't torn when we brought the
tanks in board the
Delta Crucis
. It never occurred to me to hunt
around for the reasons for the change. But I wouldn't have had long to
hunt anyway, because in a few hours the reasons came looking for me.
"They were a tiny skeeter-like thing. A sort of midge or junior grade
mosquito. They had apparently been swimming in the water during their
larval stage. Instead of making cocoons for themselves, they snipped
tiny little pieces of plastic to use as protective covers in the pupal
stage. I guess they were more like butterflies than mosquitoes in their
habits. And now they were mature.
"There were thousands and thousands of them, and each one of them made
a tiny, maddening whine as it flew."
"And they bit? That explains your bumps?" I asked sympathetically.
"Oh, no. These things didn't bite, they itched. And they got down
inside of everything they could get down inside, and clung. That
included my ears and my eyes and my nose.
"I broke out a hand sprayer full of a DDT solution, and sprayed it
around me to try to clear the nearby air a little, so that I could
have room to think. The midges loved it. But the plants that were in
reach died so fast that you could watch their leaves curl up and drop
off.
"I couldn't figure whether to turn up the fans and dissipate the
cloud—by spreading it all through the ship—or whether to try to block
off the other plant room, and save it at least. So I ended up by not
doing anything, which was the right thing to do. No more plants died
from the DDT.
"So then I did a few experiments, and found that the regular poison
spray in the ship's fumigation system worked just fine. It killed
the bugs without doing the plants any harm at all. Of course, the
fumigation system is designed to work with the fumigator off the ship,
because it's poisonous to humans too.
"I finally blocked the vents and the door edges in the head, after
running some remote controls into there, and then started the
fumigation system going. While I was sitting there with nothing much
to do, I tried to translate what I could of the Myporian instructions.
It was on page eleven that it mentioned casually that the midges—the
correct word is carolla—are a necessary part of the life cycle of the
marocca. The larvae provide an enzyme without which the plants die.
"Of course. I immediately stopped slapping at the relatively few midges
that had made their way into the head with me, and started to change
the air in the ship to get rid of the poison. I knew it was too late
before I started, and for once I was right.
"The only live midges left in the ship were the ones that had been
with me during the fumigation process. I immediately tried to start
a breeding ground for midges, but the midges didn't seem to want to
cooperate. Whatever I tried to do, they came back to me. I was the only
thing they seemed to love. I didn't dare bathe, or scratch, or even
wriggle, for fear of killing more of them. And they kept on itching. It
was just about unbearable, but I bore it for three interminable days
while the midges died one by one. It was heartbreaking—at least, it
was to me.
"And it was unnecessary, too. Because apparently the carolla had
already laid their eggs, or whatever it is that they do, before I
had fumigated them. After my useless days of agony, a new batch
came swarming out. And this time there were a few of a much larger
thing with them—something like an enormous moth. The new thing just
blundered around aimlessly.
"I lit out for the head again, to keep away from that intolerable
whining. This time I took a luxurious shower and got rid of most of the
midges that came through the door with me. I felt almost comfortable,
in fact, until I resumed my efforts to catch up on my reading.
"The mothlike things—they are called dingleburys—also turn out to
provide a necessary enzyme. They are supposed to have the same timing
of their life cycle as the carolla. Apparently the shaking up I had
given their larvae in moving the tanks and dipping the water up in
buckets and all that had inhibited them in completing their cycle the
first time around.
"And the reason they had the same life cycle as the carolla was that
the adult dinglebury will eat only the adult carolla, and it has to
fill itself full to bursting before it will reproduce. If I had the
translation done correctly, they were supposed to dart gracefully
around, catching carolla on the wing and stuffing themselves happily.
"I had to find out what was wrong with my awkward dingleburys. And
that, of course, meant going out into the ship again. But I had to do
that anyway, because it was almost 'daylight', and time for me to start
shifting the lights again.
"The reason for the dingleburys' problem is fairly obvious. When you
set up artificial gravity by spinning a ship, the gravity is fine down
near the skin where the plants are. But the gravity potential is very
high, and it gets very light up where things fly around, going to zero
on the middle line of the ship. And the unfamiliar gravity gradient,
together with the Coriolis effect and all, makes the poor dingleburys
dizzy, so they can't catch carolla.
"And if you think I figured all that out about dingleburys getting
dizzy at the time, in that madhouse of a ship, then you're crazy. What
happened was that I saw that there was one of the creatures that didn't
seem to be having any trouble, but was acting like the book said it
should. I caught it and examined it. The poor thing was blind, and was
capturing her prey by sound alone.
"So I spent the whole day—along with my usual chore of shifting the
lights—blindfolding dingleburys. Which is a hell of a sport for a man
who is captain of his own ship."
I must say that I agreed with him, but it seemed to be a good time for
me to keep my mouth shut.
"Well, after the dingleburys had eaten and propagated, they became
inquisitive. They explored the whole ship, going into places I wouldn't
have believed it to be possible for them to reach, including the inside
of the main computer, which promptly shorted out. I finally figured
that one of the things had managed to crawl up the cooling air exhaust
duct, against the flow of air, to see what was going on inside.
"I didn't dare to get rid of the things without checking my book, of
course, so it was back to the head for me. 'Night' had come again—and
it was the only place I could get any privacy. There were plenty of the
carolla left to join me outside.
"I showered and swatted and started to read. I got as far as where it
said that the dingleburys continued to be of importance, and then I'm
afraid I fell asleep.
"I got up with the sun the next morning. Hell, I had to, considering
that it was I who turned the sun on! I found that the dingleburys
immediately got busy opening small buds on the stems of the marocca
plants. Apparently they were pollinating them. I felt sure that these
buds weren't the marocca blossoms from which the fruit formed—I'd
seen a lot of those while we were on Mypore II and they were much
bigger and showier than these little acorn-sized buds.
"Of course, I should have translated some more of my instruction book,
but I was busy.
"Anyway, the action of the dingleburys triggered the violent growth
phase of the marocca plants. Did you know that they plant marocca
seedlings, back on Mypore II,
at least
a hundred feet apart? If
you'll recall, a mature field, which was the only kind we ever saw, is
one solid mass of green growth.
"The book says that it takes just six hours for a marocca field to
shift from the seedling stage to the mature stage. It didn't seem that
long. You could
watch
the stuff grow—groping and crawling along; one
plant twining with another as they climbed toward the light.
"It was then that I began to get worried. If they twined around the
light, they would keep me from moving it, and they would shadow it so
it wouldn't do its job right. In effect, their growth would put out the
sun.
"I thought of putting up an electrically charged fence around the
light, but the bugs had put most of my loose equipment out of action,
so I got a machete. When I took a swing at one of the vines, something
bit me on the back of the neck so hard it almost knocked me down. It
was one of the dingleburys, and it was as mad as blazes. It seems that
one of the things they do is to defend the marocca against marauders.
That was the first of my welts, and it put me back in the head in
about two seconds.
"And what's more, I found that I couldn't kill the damn things. Not if
I wanted to save the plants. The growth only stops at the end of six
hours, after the blossoms appear and are visited by the dingleburys. No
dingleburys, no growth stoppage.
"So for the next several hours I had to keep moving those lights, and
keep them clear of the vines, and keep the vines from shadowing each
other to the point where they curled up and died, and I had to do it
gently
, surrounded by a bunch of worried dingleburys.
"Every time they got a little too worried, or I slipped and bumped into
a plant too hard, or looked crosseyed at them, they bit me. If you
think I look bad now, you should have seen me just about the time the
blossoms started to burst.
"I was worried about those blossoms. I felt sure that they would smell
terrible, or make me sick, or hypnotize me, or something. But they just
turned out to be big, white, odorless flowers. They did nothing for me
or to me. They drove the dingleburys wild, though, I'm happy to say.
Made them forget all about me.
"While they were having their orgy, I caught up on my reading. It
was necessary for me to cut back the marocca vines. For one thing,
I couldn't get up to the area of the bridge. For another, the main
computer was completely clogged. I could use the auxiliary, on the
bridge, if I could get to it, but it's a poor substitute. For another
thing, I would have to cut the stuff way back if I was ever going to
get the plants out of the ship. And I was a little anxious to get my
Delta Crucis
back to normal as soon as possible. But before cutting,
I had to translate the gouge.
"It turns out that it's all right to cut marocca as soon as it stops
growing. To keep the plants from dying, though, you have to mulch the
cuttings and then feed them back to the plants, where the roots store
whatever they need against the time of the next explosive period of
growth. Of course, if you prefer you can wait for the vines to die back
naturally, which takes several months.
"There was one little catch, of course. The cuttings from the vines
will poison the plants if they are fed back to them without having been
mixed with a certain amount of processed mulch. Enzymes again. And
there was only one special processor on board.
"I was the special processor. That's what the instructions said—I
translated very carefully—it required an 'organic processor'.
"So I had to eat pounds of that horrible tasting stuff every day, and
process it the hard way.
"I didn't even have time to scratch my bites. I must have lost weight
everywhere but in the swollen places, and they looked worse than they
do now. The doctor says it may take a year before the bumps all go
away—if they ever do—but I have improved a lot already.
"For a while I must have been out of my head. I got so caught up in
the rhythm of the thing that I didn't even notice when we slipped out
of Limbo into real space near Gloryanna III. It was three days, the
Control Tower on Gloryanna III told me, that they tried continuously
to raise me on the communications gear before I heard the alarm bell
and answered them, so I had to do a good deal of backtracking before
I could get into parking orbit around the planet, and then set
Delta
Crucis
down safely. Even as shaky as I was,
Delta Crucis
behaved
like a lady.
"I hadn't chopped off all of the new growth, although I had the plants
down to manageable size. Some of the blossoms left on the plants had
formed fruit, and the fruit had ripened and dried, and the seeds had
developed fully. They were popping and spreading fine dust-like spores
all over the ship, those last few hours before I landed.
"By that time, though, an occasional sneezing fit and watering eyes
didn't bother me any. I was far beyond the point where hay fever could
add to my troubles.
"When I opened the airlock door, though, the spores drifting outside
set the customs inspectors to sneezing and swearing more than seemed
reasonable at the time." Captain Hannah inhaled a sip of rhial, and
seemed to be enjoying the powerful stuff. He acted as if he thought he
had finished.
"Well, go on," I urged him. "The marocca plants were still in good
shape, weren't they?"
Hannah nodded. "They were growing luxuriously." He nodded his head a
couple of more times, in spite of the discomfort it must have given
him.
He said, "They made me burn the entire crop right away, of course. They
didn't get all of the carolla or dingleburys, though. Or spores."
"Gloryanna III is the original home planet of marocca. They hated the
stuff, of course, but they liked the profit. Then, when a plague almost
wiped out the dingleburys, they introduced khorram furs as a cash
crop. It wasn't as lucrative, but it was so much more pleasant that
they outlawed marocca. Took them almost fifty years to stamp it out
completely. Meanwhile, some clever native shipped a load of the stuff
to Mypore II. He took his time, did it without any trouble and made his
fortune. And got out again quickly.
"The Gloryannans were going to hold my
Delta Crucis
as security to
pay for the cost of stamping out marocca all over again—those spores
sprout fast—and for a time I was worried.
"Of course, when I showed them our contract—that you alone were
responsible for everything once I landed the plants safely on Gloryanna
III, they let me go.
"They'll send you the bill. They don't figure it will take them more
than a few months to complete the job."
Captain Hannah stopped talking and stood up, painfully and a little
unsteadily.
I'm afraid I didn't even notice when he blacked my other eye. I was too
busy reaching for the rhial.
END
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/5/3/0/1/53016//53016-h//53016-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | In what room does Captain Hannah barricade himself? | 53016_NCS325SD_2 | [
"The bathroom of the space bar\n",
"The cockpit of the Delta Crucis",
"The lobby of the Delta Crucis",
"The bathroom of the Delta Crucis \n"
] | 4 | 4 | [
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53,016 | 53016_NCS325SD | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Cakewalk to Gloryanna | 1953.0 | Stecher, L. J., Jr. | Interstellar travel -- Fiction; PS; Science fiction; Hannah, Bart (Fictitious character) -- Fiction; Space ships -- Fiction; Short stories | CAKEWALK TO GLORYANNA
BY L. J. STECHER, JR.
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of Tomorrow June 1963
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
The job was easy. The profit was enormous. The
only trouble was—the cargo had a will of its own!
Captain Hannah climbed painfully down from the
Delta Crucis
, hobbled
across the spaceport to where Beulah and I were waiting to greet him
and hit me in the eye. Beulah—that's his elephant, but I have to take
care of her for him because Beulah's baby belongs to me and Beulah has
to take care of it—kept us apart until we both cooled down a little.
Then, although still somewhat dubious about it, she let us go together
across the field to the spaceport bar.
I didn't ask Captain Hannah why he had socked me.
Although he has never been a handsome man, he usually has the
weathered and austere dignity that comes from plying the remote reaches
among the stars. Call it the Look of Eagles. Captain Hannah had lost
the Look of Eagles. His eyes were swollen almost shut; every inch of
him that showed was a red mass of welts piled on more welts, as though
he had tangled with a hive of misanthropic bees. The gold-braided hat
of his trade was not clamped in its usual belligerent position slightly
over one eye. It was riding high on his head, apparently held up by
more of the ubiquitous swellings.
I figured that he figured that I had something to do with the way he
looked.
"Shipping marocca to Gloryanna III didn't turn out to be a cakewalk
after all?" I suggested.
He glared at me in silence.
"Perhaps you would like a drink first, and then you would be willing to
tell me about it?"
I decided that his wince was intended for a nod, and ordered rhial.
I only drink rhial when I've been exposed to Captain Hannah. It was
almost a pleasure to think that
I
was responsible, for a change, for
having
him
take the therapy.
"A
Delta
Class freighter can carry almost anything," he said at last,
in a travesty of his usual forceful voice. "But some things it should
never try."
He lapsed back into silence after this uncharacteristic admission. I
almost felt sorry for him, but just then Beulah came racking across
the field with her two-ton infant in tow, to show her off to Hannah. I
walled off my pity. He had foisted those two maudlin mastodons off onto
me in one of our earlier deals, and if I had somehow been responsible
for his present troubles, it was no more than he deserved. I rated
winning for once.
"You
did
succeed in getting the marocca to Gloryanna III?" I asked
anxiously, after the elephants had been admired and sent back home.
The success of that venture—even if the job had turned out to be more
difficult than we had expected—meant an enormous profit to both of
us. The fruit of the marocca is delicious and fabulously expensive.
The plant grew only on the single planet Mypore II. Transshipped seeds
invariably failed to germinate, which explained its rarity.
The Myporians were usually, and understandably, bitterly, opposed to
letting any of the living plants get shipped off their planet. But when
I offered them a sizable piece of cash plus a perpetual share of the
profits for letting us take a load of marocca plants to Gloryanna III,
they relented and, for the first time in history, gave their assent. In
fact, they had seemed delighted.
"I got them there safely," said Captain Hannah.
"And they are growing all right?" I persisted.
"When I left, marocca was growing like mad," said Captain Hannah.
I relaxed and leaned back in my chair. I no longer felt the need of
rhial for myself. "Tell me about it," I suggested.
"It was you who said that we should carry those damn plants to
Gloryanna III," he said balefully. "I ought to black your other eye."
"Simmer down and have some more rhial," I told him. "Sure I get the
credit for that. Gloryanna III is almost a twin to Mypore II. You know
that marocca takes a very special kind of environment. Bright sun most
of the time—that means an almost cloudless environment. A very equable
climate. Days and nights the same length and no seasons—that means no
ecliptical and no axial tilt. But our tests showed that the plants had
enough tolerance to cause no trouble in the trip in
Delta Crucis
." A
light dawned. "Our tests were no good?"
"Your tests were no good," agreed the captain with feeling. "I'll tell
you about it first, and
then
I'll black your other eye," he decided.
"You'll remember that I warned you that we should take some marocca
out into space and solve any problems we might find before committing
ourselves to hauling a full load of it?" asked Captain Hannah.
"We couldn't," I protested. "The Myporians gave us a deadline. If
we had gone through all of that rigamarole, we would have lost the
franchise. Besides, they gave you full written instructions about what
to do under all possible circumstances."
"Sure. Written in Myporian. A very difficult language to translate.
Especially when you're barricaded in the head."
I almost asked him why he had been barricaded in the bathroom of the
Delta Crucis
, but I figured it was safer to let him tell me in his
own way, in his own time.
"Well," he said, "I got into parking orbit around Mypore without any
trouble. The plastic film kept the water in the hydroponic tanks
without any trouble, even in a no-gravity condition. And by the time I
had lined up for Gloryanna and Jumped, I figured, like you said, that
the trip would be a cakewalk.
"Do you remember how the plants always keep their leaves facing the
sun? They twist on their stems all day, and then they go on twisting
them all night, still pointing at the underground sun, so that they're
aimed right at sunrise. So the stem looks like a corkscrew?"
I nodded. "Sure. That's why they can't stand an axial tilt. They
'remember' the rate and direction of movement, and keep it up during
the night time. So what? We had that problem all figured out."
"You think so? That solution was one of yours, too, wasn't it?" He
gazed moodily at his beaker of rhial. "I must admit it sounded good
to me, too. In Limbo, moving at multiple light-speeds, the whole
Universe, of course, turns into a bright glowing spot in our direction
of motion, with everything else dark. So I lined up the
Delta Crucis
perpendicular to her direction of motion, put a once-every-twenty-one
hour spin on her to match the rotation rates of Mypore II and Gloryanna
III, and uncovered the view ports to let in the light. It gradually
brightened until 'noon time', with the ports pointing straight at the
light source, and then dimmed until we had ten and one-half hours of
darkness.
"Of course, it didn't work."
"For Heaven's sake, why not?"
"For Heaven's sake why should it? With no gravity for reference, how
were the plants supposed to know that the 'sun' was supposed to be
moving?"
"So what did you do?" I asked, when that had sunk in. "If the stem
doesn't keep winding, the plants die; and they can only take a few
extra hours of night time before they run down."
"Oh," said Captain Hannah in quiet tones of controlled desperation, "it
was very simple. I just put enough spin on the ship to make artificial
gravity, and then I strung a light and moved it every fifteen minutes
for ten and one-half hours, until I had gone halfway around the room.
Then I could turn the light off and rest for ten and one-half hours.
The plants liked it fine.
"Of course, first I had to move all the hydroponic tanks from their
original positions perpendicular to the axial thrust line of the ship
to a radial position. And because somehow we had picked up half of
the plants in the northern hemisphere of Mypore and the other half in
the southern hemisphere, it turned out that half of the plants had a
sinistral corkscrew and the other half had a dextral. So I had to set
the plants up in two different rooms, and run an artificial sun for
each, going clockwise with one, widdershins with the other.
"I won't even talk about what I went through while I was shifting the
hydroponic tanks, when all the plastic membranes that were supposed to
keep the water in place started to break."
"I'd like to know," I said sincerely.
He stared at me in silence for a moment. "Well, it filled the cabin
with great solid bubbles of water. Water bubbles will oscillate and
wobble like soap bubbles," he went on dreamily, "but of course,
they're not empty, like soap bubbles. The surface acts a little like
a membrane, so that sometimes two of the things will touch and gently
bounce apart without joining. But just try
touching
one of them. You
could drown—I almost did. Several times.
"I got a fire pump—an empty one. You know the kind; a wide cylinder
with a piston with a handle, and a hose that you squirt the water out
of, or can suck water in with. The way you use it is, you float up on
a big ball of water, with the pump piston down—closed. You carefully
poke the end of the hose into the ball of water, letting only the metal
tip touch.
Never
the hose. If you let the hose touch, the water runs
up it and tries to drown you. Then you pull up on the piston, and draw
all the water into the cylinder. Of course, you have to hold the pump
with your feet while you pull the handle with your free hand."
"Did it work?" I asked eagerly.
"Eventually. Then I stopped to think of what to do with the water.
It was full of minerals and manure and such, and I didn't want to
introduce it into the ship's tanks."
"But you solved the problem?"
"In a sense," said the captain. "I just emptied the pump back into the
air, ignored the bubbles, repositioned the tanks, put spin on the ship
and then ladled the liquid back into the tanks with a bucket."
"Didn't you bump into a lot of the bubbles and get yourself dunked a
good deal while you were working with the tanks?"
He shrugged. "I couldn't say. By that time I was ignoring them. It was
that or suicide. I had begun to get the feeling that they were stalking
me. So I drew a blank."
"Then after that you were all right, except for the tedium of moving
the lights around?" I asked him. I answered myself at once. "No. There
must be more. You haven't told me why you hid out in the bathroom, yet."
"Not yet," said Captain Hannah. "Like you, I figured I had the
situation fairly well under control, but like you, I hadn't thought
things through. The plastic membranes hadn't torn when we brought the
tanks in board the
Delta Crucis
. It never occurred to me to hunt
around for the reasons for the change. But I wouldn't have had long to
hunt anyway, because in a few hours the reasons came looking for me.
"They were a tiny skeeter-like thing. A sort of midge or junior grade
mosquito. They had apparently been swimming in the water during their
larval stage. Instead of making cocoons for themselves, they snipped
tiny little pieces of plastic to use as protective covers in the pupal
stage. I guess they were more like butterflies than mosquitoes in their
habits. And now they were mature.
"There were thousands and thousands of them, and each one of them made
a tiny, maddening whine as it flew."
"And they bit? That explains your bumps?" I asked sympathetically.
"Oh, no. These things didn't bite, they itched. And they got down
inside of everything they could get down inside, and clung. That
included my ears and my eyes and my nose.
"I broke out a hand sprayer full of a DDT solution, and sprayed it
around me to try to clear the nearby air a little, so that I could
have room to think. The midges loved it. But the plants that were in
reach died so fast that you could watch their leaves curl up and drop
off.
"I couldn't figure whether to turn up the fans and dissipate the
cloud—by spreading it all through the ship—or whether to try to block
off the other plant room, and save it at least. So I ended up by not
doing anything, which was the right thing to do. No more plants died
from the DDT.
"So then I did a few experiments, and found that the regular poison
spray in the ship's fumigation system worked just fine. It killed
the bugs without doing the plants any harm at all. Of course, the
fumigation system is designed to work with the fumigator off the ship,
because it's poisonous to humans too.
"I finally blocked the vents and the door edges in the head, after
running some remote controls into there, and then started the
fumigation system going. While I was sitting there with nothing much
to do, I tried to translate what I could of the Myporian instructions.
It was on page eleven that it mentioned casually that the midges—the
correct word is carolla—are a necessary part of the life cycle of the
marocca. The larvae provide an enzyme without which the plants die.
"Of course. I immediately stopped slapping at the relatively few midges
that had made their way into the head with me, and started to change
the air in the ship to get rid of the poison. I knew it was too late
before I started, and for once I was right.
"The only live midges left in the ship were the ones that had been
with me during the fumigation process. I immediately tried to start
a breeding ground for midges, but the midges didn't seem to want to
cooperate. Whatever I tried to do, they came back to me. I was the only
thing they seemed to love. I didn't dare bathe, or scratch, or even
wriggle, for fear of killing more of them. And they kept on itching. It
was just about unbearable, but I bore it for three interminable days
while the midges died one by one. It was heartbreaking—at least, it
was to me.
"And it was unnecessary, too. Because apparently the carolla had
already laid their eggs, or whatever it is that they do, before I
had fumigated them. After my useless days of agony, a new batch
came swarming out. And this time there were a few of a much larger
thing with them—something like an enormous moth. The new thing just
blundered around aimlessly.
"I lit out for the head again, to keep away from that intolerable
whining. This time I took a luxurious shower and got rid of most of the
midges that came through the door with me. I felt almost comfortable,
in fact, until I resumed my efforts to catch up on my reading.
"The mothlike things—they are called dingleburys—also turn out to
provide a necessary enzyme. They are supposed to have the same timing
of their life cycle as the carolla. Apparently the shaking up I had
given their larvae in moving the tanks and dipping the water up in
buckets and all that had inhibited them in completing their cycle the
first time around.
"And the reason they had the same life cycle as the carolla was that
the adult dinglebury will eat only the adult carolla, and it has to
fill itself full to bursting before it will reproduce. If I had the
translation done correctly, they were supposed to dart gracefully
around, catching carolla on the wing and stuffing themselves happily.
"I had to find out what was wrong with my awkward dingleburys. And
that, of course, meant going out into the ship again. But I had to do
that anyway, because it was almost 'daylight', and time for me to start
shifting the lights again.
"The reason for the dingleburys' problem is fairly obvious. When you
set up artificial gravity by spinning a ship, the gravity is fine down
near the skin where the plants are. But the gravity potential is very
high, and it gets very light up where things fly around, going to zero
on the middle line of the ship. And the unfamiliar gravity gradient,
together with the Coriolis effect and all, makes the poor dingleburys
dizzy, so they can't catch carolla.
"And if you think I figured all that out about dingleburys getting
dizzy at the time, in that madhouse of a ship, then you're crazy. What
happened was that I saw that there was one of the creatures that didn't
seem to be having any trouble, but was acting like the book said it
should. I caught it and examined it. The poor thing was blind, and was
capturing her prey by sound alone.
"So I spent the whole day—along with my usual chore of shifting the
lights—blindfolding dingleburys. Which is a hell of a sport for a man
who is captain of his own ship."
I must say that I agreed with him, but it seemed to be a good time for
me to keep my mouth shut.
"Well, after the dingleburys had eaten and propagated, they became
inquisitive. They explored the whole ship, going into places I wouldn't
have believed it to be possible for them to reach, including the inside
of the main computer, which promptly shorted out. I finally figured
that one of the things had managed to crawl up the cooling air exhaust
duct, against the flow of air, to see what was going on inside.
"I didn't dare to get rid of the things without checking my book, of
course, so it was back to the head for me. 'Night' had come again—and
it was the only place I could get any privacy. There were plenty of the
carolla left to join me outside.
"I showered and swatted and started to read. I got as far as where it
said that the dingleburys continued to be of importance, and then I'm
afraid I fell asleep.
"I got up with the sun the next morning. Hell, I had to, considering
that it was I who turned the sun on! I found that the dingleburys
immediately got busy opening small buds on the stems of the marocca
plants. Apparently they were pollinating them. I felt sure that these
buds weren't the marocca blossoms from which the fruit formed—I'd
seen a lot of those while we were on Mypore II and they were much
bigger and showier than these little acorn-sized buds.
"Of course, I should have translated some more of my instruction book,
but I was busy.
"Anyway, the action of the dingleburys triggered the violent growth
phase of the marocca plants. Did you know that they plant marocca
seedlings, back on Mypore II,
at least
a hundred feet apart? If
you'll recall, a mature field, which was the only kind we ever saw, is
one solid mass of green growth.
"The book says that it takes just six hours for a marocca field to
shift from the seedling stage to the mature stage. It didn't seem that
long. You could
watch
the stuff grow—groping and crawling along; one
plant twining with another as they climbed toward the light.
"It was then that I began to get worried. If they twined around the
light, they would keep me from moving it, and they would shadow it so
it wouldn't do its job right. In effect, their growth would put out the
sun.
"I thought of putting up an electrically charged fence around the
light, but the bugs had put most of my loose equipment out of action,
so I got a machete. When I took a swing at one of the vines, something
bit me on the back of the neck so hard it almost knocked me down. It
was one of the dingleburys, and it was as mad as blazes. It seems that
one of the things they do is to defend the marocca against marauders.
That was the first of my welts, and it put me back in the head in
about two seconds.
"And what's more, I found that I couldn't kill the damn things. Not if
I wanted to save the plants. The growth only stops at the end of six
hours, after the blossoms appear and are visited by the dingleburys. No
dingleburys, no growth stoppage.
"So for the next several hours I had to keep moving those lights, and
keep them clear of the vines, and keep the vines from shadowing each
other to the point where they curled up and died, and I had to do it
gently
, surrounded by a bunch of worried dingleburys.
"Every time they got a little too worried, or I slipped and bumped into
a plant too hard, or looked crosseyed at them, they bit me. If you
think I look bad now, you should have seen me just about the time the
blossoms started to burst.
"I was worried about those blossoms. I felt sure that they would smell
terrible, or make me sick, or hypnotize me, or something. But they just
turned out to be big, white, odorless flowers. They did nothing for me
or to me. They drove the dingleburys wild, though, I'm happy to say.
Made them forget all about me.
"While they were having their orgy, I caught up on my reading. It
was necessary for me to cut back the marocca vines. For one thing,
I couldn't get up to the area of the bridge. For another, the main
computer was completely clogged. I could use the auxiliary, on the
bridge, if I could get to it, but it's a poor substitute. For another
thing, I would have to cut the stuff way back if I was ever going to
get the plants out of the ship. And I was a little anxious to get my
Delta Crucis
back to normal as soon as possible. But before cutting,
I had to translate the gouge.
"It turns out that it's all right to cut marocca as soon as it stops
growing. To keep the plants from dying, though, you have to mulch the
cuttings and then feed them back to the plants, where the roots store
whatever they need against the time of the next explosive period of
growth. Of course, if you prefer you can wait for the vines to die back
naturally, which takes several months.
"There was one little catch, of course. The cuttings from the vines
will poison the plants if they are fed back to them without having been
mixed with a certain amount of processed mulch. Enzymes again. And
there was only one special processor on board.
"I was the special processor. That's what the instructions said—I
translated very carefully—it required an 'organic processor'.
"So I had to eat pounds of that horrible tasting stuff every day, and
process it the hard way.
"I didn't even have time to scratch my bites. I must have lost weight
everywhere but in the swollen places, and they looked worse than they
do now. The doctor says it may take a year before the bumps all go
away—if they ever do—but I have improved a lot already.
"For a while I must have been out of my head. I got so caught up in
the rhythm of the thing that I didn't even notice when we slipped out
of Limbo into real space near Gloryanna III. It was three days, the
Control Tower on Gloryanna III told me, that they tried continuously
to raise me on the communications gear before I heard the alarm bell
and answered them, so I had to do a good deal of backtracking before
I could get into parking orbit around the planet, and then set
Delta
Crucis
down safely. Even as shaky as I was,
Delta Crucis
behaved
like a lady.
"I hadn't chopped off all of the new growth, although I had the plants
down to manageable size. Some of the blossoms left on the plants had
formed fruit, and the fruit had ripened and dried, and the seeds had
developed fully. They were popping and spreading fine dust-like spores
all over the ship, those last few hours before I landed.
"By that time, though, an occasional sneezing fit and watering eyes
didn't bother me any. I was far beyond the point where hay fever could
add to my troubles.
"When I opened the airlock door, though, the spores drifting outside
set the customs inspectors to sneezing and swearing more than seemed
reasonable at the time." Captain Hannah inhaled a sip of rhial, and
seemed to be enjoying the powerful stuff. He acted as if he thought he
had finished.
"Well, go on," I urged him. "The marocca plants were still in good
shape, weren't they?"
Hannah nodded. "They were growing luxuriously." He nodded his head a
couple of more times, in spite of the discomfort it must have given
him.
He said, "They made me burn the entire crop right away, of course. They
didn't get all of the carolla or dingleburys, though. Or spores."
"Gloryanna III is the original home planet of marocca. They hated the
stuff, of course, but they liked the profit. Then, when a plague almost
wiped out the dingleburys, they introduced khorram furs as a cash
crop. It wasn't as lucrative, but it was so much more pleasant that
they outlawed marocca. Took them almost fifty years to stamp it out
completely. Meanwhile, some clever native shipped a load of the stuff
to Mypore II. He took his time, did it without any trouble and made his
fortune. And got out again quickly.
"The Gloryannans were going to hold my
Delta Crucis
as security to
pay for the cost of stamping out marocca all over again—those spores
sprout fast—and for a time I was worried.
"Of course, when I showed them our contract—that you alone were
responsible for everything once I landed the plants safely on Gloryanna
III, they let me go.
"They'll send you the bill. They don't figure it will take them more
than a few months to complete the job."
Captain Hannah stopped talking and stood up, painfully and a little
unsteadily.
I'm afraid I didn't even notice when he blacked my other eye. I was too
busy reaching for the rhial.
END
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/5/3/0/1/53016//53016-h//53016-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | What central difference between the planets Gloryanna and Mypore is most important to the story? Why is this significant to Hannah and the narrator? | 53016_NCS325SD_3 | [
"Mypore has outlawed and eradicated the marocca plants, while Gloryanna continues to cultivate them. Hannah and the narrator think they will be able to make an enormous profit by transporting and selling the plants to Mypore. ",
"Gloryanna has outlawed and eradicated the marocca plants, while Mypore continues to to cultivate the plants. Gloryanna’s population is sick of making treks to Mypore just to purchase marocca, so the narrator and Hannah hope to capitalize on their desire by creating a shipping line between Gloryanna and Mypore.",
"Gloryanna has outlawed and eradicated the marocca plants, while Mypore continues to to cultivate them. Gloryanna’s population is sick of Myporians trying to sell marocca on their planet, so the narrator and Hannah hope to capitalize on the issue by bringing them to Gloryanna’s black market.",
"Gloryanna has outlawed and eradicated the marocca plants, while Mypore continues to cultivate the plants. Hannah and the narrator think they will be able to make an enormous profit by transporting and selling the plants to Gloryanna."
] | 4 | 4 | [
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53,016 | 53016_NCS325SD | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Cakewalk to Gloryanna | 1953.0 | Stecher, L. J., Jr. | Interstellar travel -- Fiction; PS; Science fiction; Hannah, Bart (Fictitious character) -- Fiction; Space ships -- Fiction; Short stories | CAKEWALK TO GLORYANNA
BY L. J. STECHER, JR.
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of Tomorrow June 1963
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
The job was easy. The profit was enormous. The
only trouble was—the cargo had a will of its own!
Captain Hannah climbed painfully down from the
Delta Crucis
, hobbled
across the spaceport to where Beulah and I were waiting to greet him
and hit me in the eye. Beulah—that's his elephant, but I have to take
care of her for him because Beulah's baby belongs to me and Beulah has
to take care of it—kept us apart until we both cooled down a little.
Then, although still somewhat dubious about it, she let us go together
across the field to the spaceport bar.
I didn't ask Captain Hannah why he had socked me.
Although he has never been a handsome man, he usually has the
weathered and austere dignity that comes from plying the remote reaches
among the stars. Call it the Look of Eagles. Captain Hannah had lost
the Look of Eagles. His eyes were swollen almost shut; every inch of
him that showed was a red mass of welts piled on more welts, as though
he had tangled with a hive of misanthropic bees. The gold-braided hat
of his trade was not clamped in its usual belligerent position slightly
over one eye. It was riding high on his head, apparently held up by
more of the ubiquitous swellings.
I figured that he figured that I had something to do with the way he
looked.
"Shipping marocca to Gloryanna III didn't turn out to be a cakewalk
after all?" I suggested.
He glared at me in silence.
"Perhaps you would like a drink first, and then you would be willing to
tell me about it?"
I decided that his wince was intended for a nod, and ordered rhial.
I only drink rhial when I've been exposed to Captain Hannah. It was
almost a pleasure to think that
I
was responsible, for a change, for
having
him
take the therapy.
"A
Delta
Class freighter can carry almost anything," he said at last,
in a travesty of his usual forceful voice. "But some things it should
never try."
He lapsed back into silence after this uncharacteristic admission. I
almost felt sorry for him, but just then Beulah came racking across
the field with her two-ton infant in tow, to show her off to Hannah. I
walled off my pity. He had foisted those two maudlin mastodons off onto
me in one of our earlier deals, and if I had somehow been responsible
for his present troubles, it was no more than he deserved. I rated
winning for once.
"You
did
succeed in getting the marocca to Gloryanna III?" I asked
anxiously, after the elephants had been admired and sent back home.
The success of that venture—even if the job had turned out to be more
difficult than we had expected—meant an enormous profit to both of
us. The fruit of the marocca is delicious and fabulously expensive.
The plant grew only on the single planet Mypore II. Transshipped seeds
invariably failed to germinate, which explained its rarity.
The Myporians were usually, and understandably, bitterly, opposed to
letting any of the living plants get shipped off their planet. But when
I offered them a sizable piece of cash plus a perpetual share of the
profits for letting us take a load of marocca plants to Gloryanna III,
they relented and, for the first time in history, gave their assent. In
fact, they had seemed delighted.
"I got them there safely," said Captain Hannah.
"And they are growing all right?" I persisted.
"When I left, marocca was growing like mad," said Captain Hannah.
I relaxed and leaned back in my chair. I no longer felt the need of
rhial for myself. "Tell me about it," I suggested.
"It was you who said that we should carry those damn plants to
Gloryanna III," he said balefully. "I ought to black your other eye."
"Simmer down and have some more rhial," I told him. "Sure I get the
credit for that. Gloryanna III is almost a twin to Mypore II. You know
that marocca takes a very special kind of environment. Bright sun most
of the time—that means an almost cloudless environment. A very equable
climate. Days and nights the same length and no seasons—that means no
ecliptical and no axial tilt. But our tests showed that the plants had
enough tolerance to cause no trouble in the trip in
Delta Crucis
." A
light dawned. "Our tests were no good?"
"Your tests were no good," agreed the captain with feeling. "I'll tell
you about it first, and
then
I'll black your other eye," he decided.
"You'll remember that I warned you that we should take some marocca
out into space and solve any problems we might find before committing
ourselves to hauling a full load of it?" asked Captain Hannah.
"We couldn't," I protested. "The Myporians gave us a deadline. If
we had gone through all of that rigamarole, we would have lost the
franchise. Besides, they gave you full written instructions about what
to do under all possible circumstances."
"Sure. Written in Myporian. A very difficult language to translate.
Especially when you're barricaded in the head."
I almost asked him why he had been barricaded in the bathroom of the
Delta Crucis
, but I figured it was safer to let him tell me in his
own way, in his own time.
"Well," he said, "I got into parking orbit around Mypore without any
trouble. The plastic film kept the water in the hydroponic tanks
without any trouble, even in a no-gravity condition. And by the time I
had lined up for Gloryanna and Jumped, I figured, like you said, that
the trip would be a cakewalk.
"Do you remember how the plants always keep their leaves facing the
sun? They twist on their stems all day, and then they go on twisting
them all night, still pointing at the underground sun, so that they're
aimed right at sunrise. So the stem looks like a corkscrew?"
I nodded. "Sure. That's why they can't stand an axial tilt. They
'remember' the rate and direction of movement, and keep it up during
the night time. So what? We had that problem all figured out."
"You think so? That solution was one of yours, too, wasn't it?" He
gazed moodily at his beaker of rhial. "I must admit it sounded good
to me, too. In Limbo, moving at multiple light-speeds, the whole
Universe, of course, turns into a bright glowing spot in our direction
of motion, with everything else dark. So I lined up the
Delta Crucis
perpendicular to her direction of motion, put a once-every-twenty-one
hour spin on her to match the rotation rates of Mypore II and Gloryanna
III, and uncovered the view ports to let in the light. It gradually
brightened until 'noon time', with the ports pointing straight at the
light source, and then dimmed until we had ten and one-half hours of
darkness.
"Of course, it didn't work."
"For Heaven's sake, why not?"
"For Heaven's sake why should it? With no gravity for reference, how
were the plants supposed to know that the 'sun' was supposed to be
moving?"
"So what did you do?" I asked, when that had sunk in. "If the stem
doesn't keep winding, the plants die; and they can only take a few
extra hours of night time before they run down."
"Oh," said Captain Hannah in quiet tones of controlled desperation, "it
was very simple. I just put enough spin on the ship to make artificial
gravity, and then I strung a light and moved it every fifteen minutes
for ten and one-half hours, until I had gone halfway around the room.
Then I could turn the light off and rest for ten and one-half hours.
The plants liked it fine.
"Of course, first I had to move all the hydroponic tanks from their
original positions perpendicular to the axial thrust line of the ship
to a radial position. And because somehow we had picked up half of
the plants in the northern hemisphere of Mypore and the other half in
the southern hemisphere, it turned out that half of the plants had a
sinistral corkscrew and the other half had a dextral. So I had to set
the plants up in two different rooms, and run an artificial sun for
each, going clockwise with one, widdershins with the other.
"I won't even talk about what I went through while I was shifting the
hydroponic tanks, when all the plastic membranes that were supposed to
keep the water in place started to break."
"I'd like to know," I said sincerely.
He stared at me in silence for a moment. "Well, it filled the cabin
with great solid bubbles of water. Water bubbles will oscillate and
wobble like soap bubbles," he went on dreamily, "but of course,
they're not empty, like soap bubbles. The surface acts a little like
a membrane, so that sometimes two of the things will touch and gently
bounce apart without joining. But just try
touching
one of them. You
could drown—I almost did. Several times.
"I got a fire pump—an empty one. You know the kind; a wide cylinder
with a piston with a handle, and a hose that you squirt the water out
of, or can suck water in with. The way you use it is, you float up on
a big ball of water, with the pump piston down—closed. You carefully
poke the end of the hose into the ball of water, letting only the metal
tip touch.
Never
the hose. If you let the hose touch, the water runs
up it and tries to drown you. Then you pull up on the piston, and draw
all the water into the cylinder. Of course, you have to hold the pump
with your feet while you pull the handle with your free hand."
"Did it work?" I asked eagerly.
"Eventually. Then I stopped to think of what to do with the water.
It was full of minerals and manure and such, and I didn't want to
introduce it into the ship's tanks."
"But you solved the problem?"
"In a sense," said the captain. "I just emptied the pump back into the
air, ignored the bubbles, repositioned the tanks, put spin on the ship
and then ladled the liquid back into the tanks with a bucket."
"Didn't you bump into a lot of the bubbles and get yourself dunked a
good deal while you were working with the tanks?"
He shrugged. "I couldn't say. By that time I was ignoring them. It was
that or suicide. I had begun to get the feeling that they were stalking
me. So I drew a blank."
"Then after that you were all right, except for the tedium of moving
the lights around?" I asked him. I answered myself at once. "No. There
must be more. You haven't told me why you hid out in the bathroom, yet."
"Not yet," said Captain Hannah. "Like you, I figured I had the
situation fairly well under control, but like you, I hadn't thought
things through. The plastic membranes hadn't torn when we brought the
tanks in board the
Delta Crucis
. It never occurred to me to hunt
around for the reasons for the change. But I wouldn't have had long to
hunt anyway, because in a few hours the reasons came looking for me.
"They were a tiny skeeter-like thing. A sort of midge or junior grade
mosquito. They had apparently been swimming in the water during their
larval stage. Instead of making cocoons for themselves, they snipped
tiny little pieces of plastic to use as protective covers in the pupal
stage. I guess they were more like butterflies than mosquitoes in their
habits. And now they were mature.
"There were thousands and thousands of them, and each one of them made
a tiny, maddening whine as it flew."
"And they bit? That explains your bumps?" I asked sympathetically.
"Oh, no. These things didn't bite, they itched. And they got down
inside of everything they could get down inside, and clung. That
included my ears and my eyes and my nose.
"I broke out a hand sprayer full of a DDT solution, and sprayed it
around me to try to clear the nearby air a little, so that I could
have room to think. The midges loved it. But the plants that were in
reach died so fast that you could watch their leaves curl up and drop
off.
"I couldn't figure whether to turn up the fans and dissipate the
cloud—by spreading it all through the ship—or whether to try to block
off the other plant room, and save it at least. So I ended up by not
doing anything, which was the right thing to do. No more plants died
from the DDT.
"So then I did a few experiments, and found that the regular poison
spray in the ship's fumigation system worked just fine. It killed
the bugs without doing the plants any harm at all. Of course, the
fumigation system is designed to work with the fumigator off the ship,
because it's poisonous to humans too.
"I finally blocked the vents and the door edges in the head, after
running some remote controls into there, and then started the
fumigation system going. While I was sitting there with nothing much
to do, I tried to translate what I could of the Myporian instructions.
It was on page eleven that it mentioned casually that the midges—the
correct word is carolla—are a necessary part of the life cycle of the
marocca. The larvae provide an enzyme without which the plants die.
"Of course. I immediately stopped slapping at the relatively few midges
that had made their way into the head with me, and started to change
the air in the ship to get rid of the poison. I knew it was too late
before I started, and for once I was right.
"The only live midges left in the ship were the ones that had been
with me during the fumigation process. I immediately tried to start
a breeding ground for midges, but the midges didn't seem to want to
cooperate. Whatever I tried to do, they came back to me. I was the only
thing they seemed to love. I didn't dare bathe, or scratch, or even
wriggle, for fear of killing more of them. And they kept on itching. It
was just about unbearable, but I bore it for three interminable days
while the midges died one by one. It was heartbreaking—at least, it
was to me.
"And it was unnecessary, too. Because apparently the carolla had
already laid their eggs, or whatever it is that they do, before I
had fumigated them. After my useless days of agony, a new batch
came swarming out. And this time there were a few of a much larger
thing with them—something like an enormous moth. The new thing just
blundered around aimlessly.
"I lit out for the head again, to keep away from that intolerable
whining. This time I took a luxurious shower and got rid of most of the
midges that came through the door with me. I felt almost comfortable,
in fact, until I resumed my efforts to catch up on my reading.
"The mothlike things—they are called dingleburys—also turn out to
provide a necessary enzyme. They are supposed to have the same timing
of their life cycle as the carolla. Apparently the shaking up I had
given their larvae in moving the tanks and dipping the water up in
buckets and all that had inhibited them in completing their cycle the
first time around.
"And the reason they had the same life cycle as the carolla was that
the adult dinglebury will eat only the adult carolla, and it has to
fill itself full to bursting before it will reproduce. If I had the
translation done correctly, they were supposed to dart gracefully
around, catching carolla on the wing and stuffing themselves happily.
"I had to find out what was wrong with my awkward dingleburys. And
that, of course, meant going out into the ship again. But I had to do
that anyway, because it was almost 'daylight', and time for me to start
shifting the lights again.
"The reason for the dingleburys' problem is fairly obvious. When you
set up artificial gravity by spinning a ship, the gravity is fine down
near the skin where the plants are. But the gravity potential is very
high, and it gets very light up where things fly around, going to zero
on the middle line of the ship. And the unfamiliar gravity gradient,
together with the Coriolis effect and all, makes the poor dingleburys
dizzy, so they can't catch carolla.
"And if you think I figured all that out about dingleburys getting
dizzy at the time, in that madhouse of a ship, then you're crazy. What
happened was that I saw that there was one of the creatures that didn't
seem to be having any trouble, but was acting like the book said it
should. I caught it and examined it. The poor thing was blind, and was
capturing her prey by sound alone.
"So I spent the whole day—along with my usual chore of shifting the
lights—blindfolding dingleburys. Which is a hell of a sport for a man
who is captain of his own ship."
I must say that I agreed with him, but it seemed to be a good time for
me to keep my mouth shut.
"Well, after the dingleburys had eaten and propagated, they became
inquisitive. They explored the whole ship, going into places I wouldn't
have believed it to be possible for them to reach, including the inside
of the main computer, which promptly shorted out. I finally figured
that one of the things had managed to crawl up the cooling air exhaust
duct, against the flow of air, to see what was going on inside.
"I didn't dare to get rid of the things without checking my book, of
course, so it was back to the head for me. 'Night' had come again—and
it was the only place I could get any privacy. There were plenty of the
carolla left to join me outside.
"I showered and swatted and started to read. I got as far as where it
said that the dingleburys continued to be of importance, and then I'm
afraid I fell asleep.
"I got up with the sun the next morning. Hell, I had to, considering
that it was I who turned the sun on! I found that the dingleburys
immediately got busy opening small buds on the stems of the marocca
plants. Apparently they were pollinating them. I felt sure that these
buds weren't the marocca blossoms from which the fruit formed—I'd
seen a lot of those while we were on Mypore II and they were much
bigger and showier than these little acorn-sized buds.
"Of course, I should have translated some more of my instruction book,
but I was busy.
"Anyway, the action of the dingleburys triggered the violent growth
phase of the marocca plants. Did you know that they plant marocca
seedlings, back on Mypore II,
at least
a hundred feet apart? If
you'll recall, a mature field, which was the only kind we ever saw, is
one solid mass of green growth.
"The book says that it takes just six hours for a marocca field to
shift from the seedling stage to the mature stage. It didn't seem that
long. You could
watch
the stuff grow—groping and crawling along; one
plant twining with another as they climbed toward the light.
"It was then that I began to get worried. If they twined around the
light, they would keep me from moving it, and they would shadow it so
it wouldn't do its job right. In effect, their growth would put out the
sun.
"I thought of putting up an electrically charged fence around the
light, but the bugs had put most of my loose equipment out of action,
so I got a machete. When I took a swing at one of the vines, something
bit me on the back of the neck so hard it almost knocked me down. It
was one of the dingleburys, and it was as mad as blazes. It seems that
one of the things they do is to defend the marocca against marauders.
That was the first of my welts, and it put me back in the head in
about two seconds.
"And what's more, I found that I couldn't kill the damn things. Not if
I wanted to save the plants. The growth only stops at the end of six
hours, after the blossoms appear and are visited by the dingleburys. No
dingleburys, no growth stoppage.
"So for the next several hours I had to keep moving those lights, and
keep them clear of the vines, and keep the vines from shadowing each
other to the point where they curled up and died, and I had to do it
gently
, surrounded by a bunch of worried dingleburys.
"Every time they got a little too worried, or I slipped and bumped into
a plant too hard, or looked crosseyed at them, they bit me. If you
think I look bad now, you should have seen me just about the time the
blossoms started to burst.
"I was worried about those blossoms. I felt sure that they would smell
terrible, or make me sick, or hypnotize me, or something. But they just
turned out to be big, white, odorless flowers. They did nothing for me
or to me. They drove the dingleburys wild, though, I'm happy to say.
Made them forget all about me.
"While they were having their orgy, I caught up on my reading. It
was necessary for me to cut back the marocca vines. For one thing,
I couldn't get up to the area of the bridge. For another, the main
computer was completely clogged. I could use the auxiliary, on the
bridge, if I could get to it, but it's a poor substitute. For another
thing, I would have to cut the stuff way back if I was ever going to
get the plants out of the ship. And I was a little anxious to get my
Delta Crucis
back to normal as soon as possible. But before cutting,
I had to translate the gouge.
"It turns out that it's all right to cut marocca as soon as it stops
growing. To keep the plants from dying, though, you have to mulch the
cuttings and then feed them back to the plants, where the roots store
whatever they need against the time of the next explosive period of
growth. Of course, if you prefer you can wait for the vines to die back
naturally, which takes several months.
"There was one little catch, of course. The cuttings from the vines
will poison the plants if they are fed back to them without having been
mixed with a certain amount of processed mulch. Enzymes again. And
there was only one special processor on board.
"I was the special processor. That's what the instructions said—I
translated very carefully—it required an 'organic processor'.
"So I had to eat pounds of that horrible tasting stuff every day, and
process it the hard way.
"I didn't even have time to scratch my bites. I must have lost weight
everywhere but in the swollen places, and they looked worse than they
do now. The doctor says it may take a year before the bumps all go
away—if they ever do—but I have improved a lot already.
"For a while I must have been out of my head. I got so caught up in
the rhythm of the thing that I didn't even notice when we slipped out
of Limbo into real space near Gloryanna III. It was three days, the
Control Tower on Gloryanna III told me, that they tried continuously
to raise me on the communications gear before I heard the alarm bell
and answered them, so I had to do a good deal of backtracking before
I could get into parking orbit around the planet, and then set
Delta
Crucis
down safely. Even as shaky as I was,
Delta Crucis
behaved
like a lady.
"I hadn't chopped off all of the new growth, although I had the plants
down to manageable size. Some of the blossoms left on the plants had
formed fruit, and the fruit had ripened and dried, and the seeds had
developed fully. They were popping and spreading fine dust-like spores
all over the ship, those last few hours before I landed.
"By that time, though, an occasional sneezing fit and watering eyes
didn't bother me any. I was far beyond the point where hay fever could
add to my troubles.
"When I opened the airlock door, though, the spores drifting outside
set the customs inspectors to sneezing and swearing more than seemed
reasonable at the time." Captain Hannah inhaled a sip of rhial, and
seemed to be enjoying the powerful stuff. He acted as if he thought he
had finished.
"Well, go on," I urged him. "The marocca plants were still in good
shape, weren't they?"
Hannah nodded. "They were growing luxuriously." He nodded his head a
couple of more times, in spite of the discomfort it must have given
him.
He said, "They made me burn the entire crop right away, of course. They
didn't get all of the carolla or dingleburys, though. Or spores."
"Gloryanna III is the original home planet of marocca. They hated the
stuff, of course, but they liked the profit. Then, when a plague almost
wiped out the dingleburys, they introduced khorram furs as a cash
crop. It wasn't as lucrative, but it was so much more pleasant that
they outlawed marocca. Took them almost fifty years to stamp it out
completely. Meanwhile, some clever native shipped a load of the stuff
to Mypore II. He took his time, did it without any trouble and made his
fortune. And got out again quickly.
"The Gloryannans were going to hold my
Delta Crucis
as security to
pay for the cost of stamping out marocca all over again—those spores
sprout fast—and for a time I was worried.
"Of course, when I showed them our contract—that you alone were
responsible for everything once I landed the plants safely on Gloryanna
III, they let me go.
"They'll send you the bill. They don't figure it will take them more
than a few months to complete the job."
Captain Hannah stopped talking and stood up, painfully and a little
unsteadily.
I'm afraid I didn't even notice when he blacked my other eye. I was too
busy reaching for the rhial.
END
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/5/3/0/1/53016//53016-h//53016-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | What kind of literary device is being used in the story’s title?
| 53016_NCS325SD_4 | [
"Metonymy: “Cake Walk” is a literal attribute/adjunct for the part of the ship Captain Hannah grows the marocca in. \n",
"Irony: Captain Hannah faces so many trials and tribulations during his time with the plants that his voyage is very much NOT a cakewalk to Gloryanna. \n
",
"Metaphor: Cake walk is a metaphor the narrator uses to describe Captain Hannah’s journey once complete. They were both surprised at the venture’s absurd ease. \n",
"Euphemism: “Cake walk” is used by the narrator to politely suggest that the plants had their way with Captain Hannah.\n"
] | 2 | 2 | [
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53,016 | 53016_NCS325SD | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Cakewalk to Gloryanna | 1953.0 | Stecher, L. J., Jr. | Interstellar travel -- Fiction; PS; Science fiction; Hannah, Bart (Fictitious character) -- Fiction; Space ships -- Fiction; Short stories | CAKEWALK TO GLORYANNA
BY L. J. STECHER, JR.
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of Tomorrow June 1963
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
The job was easy. The profit was enormous. The
only trouble was—the cargo had a will of its own!
Captain Hannah climbed painfully down from the
Delta Crucis
, hobbled
across the spaceport to where Beulah and I were waiting to greet him
and hit me in the eye. Beulah—that's his elephant, but I have to take
care of her for him because Beulah's baby belongs to me and Beulah has
to take care of it—kept us apart until we both cooled down a little.
Then, although still somewhat dubious about it, she let us go together
across the field to the spaceport bar.
I didn't ask Captain Hannah why he had socked me.
Although he has never been a handsome man, he usually has the
weathered and austere dignity that comes from plying the remote reaches
among the stars. Call it the Look of Eagles. Captain Hannah had lost
the Look of Eagles. His eyes were swollen almost shut; every inch of
him that showed was a red mass of welts piled on more welts, as though
he had tangled with a hive of misanthropic bees. The gold-braided hat
of his trade was not clamped in its usual belligerent position slightly
over one eye. It was riding high on his head, apparently held up by
more of the ubiquitous swellings.
I figured that he figured that I had something to do with the way he
looked.
"Shipping marocca to Gloryanna III didn't turn out to be a cakewalk
after all?" I suggested.
He glared at me in silence.
"Perhaps you would like a drink first, and then you would be willing to
tell me about it?"
I decided that his wince was intended for a nod, and ordered rhial.
I only drink rhial when I've been exposed to Captain Hannah. It was
almost a pleasure to think that
I
was responsible, for a change, for
having
him
take the therapy.
"A
Delta
Class freighter can carry almost anything," he said at last,
in a travesty of his usual forceful voice. "But some things it should
never try."
He lapsed back into silence after this uncharacteristic admission. I
almost felt sorry for him, but just then Beulah came racking across
the field with her two-ton infant in tow, to show her off to Hannah. I
walled off my pity. He had foisted those two maudlin mastodons off onto
me in one of our earlier deals, and if I had somehow been responsible
for his present troubles, it was no more than he deserved. I rated
winning for once.
"You
did
succeed in getting the marocca to Gloryanna III?" I asked
anxiously, after the elephants had been admired and sent back home.
The success of that venture—even if the job had turned out to be more
difficult than we had expected—meant an enormous profit to both of
us. The fruit of the marocca is delicious and fabulously expensive.
The plant grew only on the single planet Mypore II. Transshipped seeds
invariably failed to germinate, which explained its rarity.
The Myporians were usually, and understandably, bitterly, opposed to
letting any of the living plants get shipped off their planet. But when
I offered them a sizable piece of cash plus a perpetual share of the
profits for letting us take a load of marocca plants to Gloryanna III,
they relented and, for the first time in history, gave their assent. In
fact, they had seemed delighted.
"I got them there safely," said Captain Hannah.
"And they are growing all right?" I persisted.
"When I left, marocca was growing like mad," said Captain Hannah.
I relaxed and leaned back in my chair. I no longer felt the need of
rhial for myself. "Tell me about it," I suggested.
"It was you who said that we should carry those damn plants to
Gloryanna III," he said balefully. "I ought to black your other eye."
"Simmer down and have some more rhial," I told him. "Sure I get the
credit for that. Gloryanna III is almost a twin to Mypore II. You know
that marocca takes a very special kind of environment. Bright sun most
of the time—that means an almost cloudless environment. A very equable
climate. Days and nights the same length and no seasons—that means no
ecliptical and no axial tilt. But our tests showed that the plants had
enough tolerance to cause no trouble in the trip in
Delta Crucis
." A
light dawned. "Our tests were no good?"
"Your tests were no good," agreed the captain with feeling. "I'll tell
you about it first, and
then
I'll black your other eye," he decided.
"You'll remember that I warned you that we should take some marocca
out into space and solve any problems we might find before committing
ourselves to hauling a full load of it?" asked Captain Hannah.
"We couldn't," I protested. "The Myporians gave us a deadline. If
we had gone through all of that rigamarole, we would have lost the
franchise. Besides, they gave you full written instructions about what
to do under all possible circumstances."
"Sure. Written in Myporian. A very difficult language to translate.
Especially when you're barricaded in the head."
I almost asked him why he had been barricaded in the bathroom of the
Delta Crucis
, but I figured it was safer to let him tell me in his
own way, in his own time.
"Well," he said, "I got into parking orbit around Mypore without any
trouble. The plastic film kept the water in the hydroponic tanks
without any trouble, even in a no-gravity condition. And by the time I
had lined up for Gloryanna and Jumped, I figured, like you said, that
the trip would be a cakewalk.
"Do you remember how the plants always keep their leaves facing the
sun? They twist on their stems all day, and then they go on twisting
them all night, still pointing at the underground sun, so that they're
aimed right at sunrise. So the stem looks like a corkscrew?"
I nodded. "Sure. That's why they can't stand an axial tilt. They
'remember' the rate and direction of movement, and keep it up during
the night time. So what? We had that problem all figured out."
"You think so? That solution was one of yours, too, wasn't it?" He
gazed moodily at his beaker of rhial. "I must admit it sounded good
to me, too. In Limbo, moving at multiple light-speeds, the whole
Universe, of course, turns into a bright glowing spot in our direction
of motion, with everything else dark. So I lined up the
Delta Crucis
perpendicular to her direction of motion, put a once-every-twenty-one
hour spin on her to match the rotation rates of Mypore II and Gloryanna
III, and uncovered the view ports to let in the light. It gradually
brightened until 'noon time', with the ports pointing straight at the
light source, and then dimmed until we had ten and one-half hours of
darkness.
"Of course, it didn't work."
"For Heaven's sake, why not?"
"For Heaven's sake why should it? With no gravity for reference, how
were the plants supposed to know that the 'sun' was supposed to be
moving?"
"So what did you do?" I asked, when that had sunk in. "If the stem
doesn't keep winding, the plants die; and they can only take a few
extra hours of night time before they run down."
"Oh," said Captain Hannah in quiet tones of controlled desperation, "it
was very simple. I just put enough spin on the ship to make artificial
gravity, and then I strung a light and moved it every fifteen minutes
for ten and one-half hours, until I had gone halfway around the room.
Then I could turn the light off and rest for ten and one-half hours.
The plants liked it fine.
"Of course, first I had to move all the hydroponic tanks from their
original positions perpendicular to the axial thrust line of the ship
to a radial position. And because somehow we had picked up half of
the plants in the northern hemisphere of Mypore and the other half in
the southern hemisphere, it turned out that half of the plants had a
sinistral corkscrew and the other half had a dextral. So I had to set
the plants up in two different rooms, and run an artificial sun for
each, going clockwise with one, widdershins with the other.
"I won't even talk about what I went through while I was shifting the
hydroponic tanks, when all the plastic membranes that were supposed to
keep the water in place started to break."
"I'd like to know," I said sincerely.
He stared at me in silence for a moment. "Well, it filled the cabin
with great solid bubbles of water. Water bubbles will oscillate and
wobble like soap bubbles," he went on dreamily, "but of course,
they're not empty, like soap bubbles. The surface acts a little like
a membrane, so that sometimes two of the things will touch and gently
bounce apart without joining. But just try
touching
one of them. You
could drown—I almost did. Several times.
"I got a fire pump—an empty one. You know the kind; a wide cylinder
with a piston with a handle, and a hose that you squirt the water out
of, or can suck water in with. The way you use it is, you float up on
a big ball of water, with the pump piston down—closed. You carefully
poke the end of the hose into the ball of water, letting only the metal
tip touch.
Never
the hose. If you let the hose touch, the water runs
up it and tries to drown you. Then you pull up on the piston, and draw
all the water into the cylinder. Of course, you have to hold the pump
with your feet while you pull the handle with your free hand."
"Did it work?" I asked eagerly.
"Eventually. Then I stopped to think of what to do with the water.
It was full of minerals and manure and such, and I didn't want to
introduce it into the ship's tanks."
"But you solved the problem?"
"In a sense," said the captain. "I just emptied the pump back into the
air, ignored the bubbles, repositioned the tanks, put spin on the ship
and then ladled the liquid back into the tanks with a bucket."
"Didn't you bump into a lot of the bubbles and get yourself dunked a
good deal while you were working with the tanks?"
He shrugged. "I couldn't say. By that time I was ignoring them. It was
that or suicide. I had begun to get the feeling that they were stalking
me. So I drew a blank."
"Then after that you were all right, except for the tedium of moving
the lights around?" I asked him. I answered myself at once. "No. There
must be more. You haven't told me why you hid out in the bathroom, yet."
"Not yet," said Captain Hannah. "Like you, I figured I had the
situation fairly well under control, but like you, I hadn't thought
things through. The plastic membranes hadn't torn when we brought the
tanks in board the
Delta Crucis
. It never occurred to me to hunt
around for the reasons for the change. But I wouldn't have had long to
hunt anyway, because in a few hours the reasons came looking for me.
"They were a tiny skeeter-like thing. A sort of midge or junior grade
mosquito. They had apparently been swimming in the water during their
larval stage. Instead of making cocoons for themselves, they snipped
tiny little pieces of plastic to use as protective covers in the pupal
stage. I guess they were more like butterflies than mosquitoes in their
habits. And now they were mature.
"There were thousands and thousands of them, and each one of them made
a tiny, maddening whine as it flew."
"And they bit? That explains your bumps?" I asked sympathetically.
"Oh, no. These things didn't bite, they itched. And they got down
inside of everything they could get down inside, and clung. That
included my ears and my eyes and my nose.
"I broke out a hand sprayer full of a DDT solution, and sprayed it
around me to try to clear the nearby air a little, so that I could
have room to think. The midges loved it. But the plants that were in
reach died so fast that you could watch their leaves curl up and drop
off.
"I couldn't figure whether to turn up the fans and dissipate the
cloud—by spreading it all through the ship—or whether to try to block
off the other plant room, and save it at least. So I ended up by not
doing anything, which was the right thing to do. No more plants died
from the DDT.
"So then I did a few experiments, and found that the regular poison
spray in the ship's fumigation system worked just fine. It killed
the bugs without doing the plants any harm at all. Of course, the
fumigation system is designed to work with the fumigator off the ship,
because it's poisonous to humans too.
"I finally blocked the vents and the door edges in the head, after
running some remote controls into there, and then started the
fumigation system going. While I was sitting there with nothing much
to do, I tried to translate what I could of the Myporian instructions.
It was on page eleven that it mentioned casually that the midges—the
correct word is carolla—are a necessary part of the life cycle of the
marocca. The larvae provide an enzyme without which the plants die.
"Of course. I immediately stopped slapping at the relatively few midges
that had made their way into the head with me, and started to change
the air in the ship to get rid of the poison. I knew it was too late
before I started, and for once I was right.
"The only live midges left in the ship were the ones that had been
with me during the fumigation process. I immediately tried to start
a breeding ground for midges, but the midges didn't seem to want to
cooperate. Whatever I tried to do, they came back to me. I was the only
thing they seemed to love. I didn't dare bathe, or scratch, or even
wriggle, for fear of killing more of them. And they kept on itching. It
was just about unbearable, but I bore it for three interminable days
while the midges died one by one. It was heartbreaking—at least, it
was to me.
"And it was unnecessary, too. Because apparently the carolla had
already laid their eggs, or whatever it is that they do, before I
had fumigated them. After my useless days of agony, a new batch
came swarming out. And this time there were a few of a much larger
thing with them—something like an enormous moth. The new thing just
blundered around aimlessly.
"I lit out for the head again, to keep away from that intolerable
whining. This time I took a luxurious shower and got rid of most of the
midges that came through the door with me. I felt almost comfortable,
in fact, until I resumed my efforts to catch up on my reading.
"The mothlike things—they are called dingleburys—also turn out to
provide a necessary enzyme. They are supposed to have the same timing
of their life cycle as the carolla. Apparently the shaking up I had
given their larvae in moving the tanks and dipping the water up in
buckets and all that had inhibited them in completing their cycle the
first time around.
"And the reason they had the same life cycle as the carolla was that
the adult dinglebury will eat only the adult carolla, and it has to
fill itself full to bursting before it will reproduce. If I had the
translation done correctly, they were supposed to dart gracefully
around, catching carolla on the wing and stuffing themselves happily.
"I had to find out what was wrong with my awkward dingleburys. And
that, of course, meant going out into the ship again. But I had to do
that anyway, because it was almost 'daylight', and time for me to start
shifting the lights again.
"The reason for the dingleburys' problem is fairly obvious. When you
set up artificial gravity by spinning a ship, the gravity is fine down
near the skin where the plants are. But the gravity potential is very
high, and it gets very light up where things fly around, going to zero
on the middle line of the ship. And the unfamiliar gravity gradient,
together with the Coriolis effect and all, makes the poor dingleburys
dizzy, so they can't catch carolla.
"And if you think I figured all that out about dingleburys getting
dizzy at the time, in that madhouse of a ship, then you're crazy. What
happened was that I saw that there was one of the creatures that didn't
seem to be having any trouble, but was acting like the book said it
should. I caught it and examined it. The poor thing was blind, and was
capturing her prey by sound alone.
"So I spent the whole day—along with my usual chore of shifting the
lights—blindfolding dingleburys. Which is a hell of a sport for a man
who is captain of his own ship."
I must say that I agreed with him, but it seemed to be a good time for
me to keep my mouth shut.
"Well, after the dingleburys had eaten and propagated, they became
inquisitive. They explored the whole ship, going into places I wouldn't
have believed it to be possible for them to reach, including the inside
of the main computer, which promptly shorted out. I finally figured
that one of the things had managed to crawl up the cooling air exhaust
duct, against the flow of air, to see what was going on inside.
"I didn't dare to get rid of the things without checking my book, of
course, so it was back to the head for me. 'Night' had come again—and
it was the only place I could get any privacy. There were plenty of the
carolla left to join me outside.
"I showered and swatted and started to read. I got as far as where it
said that the dingleburys continued to be of importance, and then I'm
afraid I fell asleep.
"I got up with the sun the next morning. Hell, I had to, considering
that it was I who turned the sun on! I found that the dingleburys
immediately got busy opening small buds on the stems of the marocca
plants. Apparently they were pollinating them. I felt sure that these
buds weren't the marocca blossoms from which the fruit formed—I'd
seen a lot of those while we were on Mypore II and they were much
bigger and showier than these little acorn-sized buds.
"Of course, I should have translated some more of my instruction book,
but I was busy.
"Anyway, the action of the dingleburys triggered the violent growth
phase of the marocca plants. Did you know that they plant marocca
seedlings, back on Mypore II,
at least
a hundred feet apart? If
you'll recall, a mature field, which was the only kind we ever saw, is
one solid mass of green growth.
"The book says that it takes just six hours for a marocca field to
shift from the seedling stage to the mature stage. It didn't seem that
long. You could
watch
the stuff grow—groping and crawling along; one
plant twining with another as they climbed toward the light.
"It was then that I began to get worried. If they twined around the
light, they would keep me from moving it, and they would shadow it so
it wouldn't do its job right. In effect, their growth would put out the
sun.
"I thought of putting up an electrically charged fence around the
light, but the bugs had put most of my loose equipment out of action,
so I got a machete. When I took a swing at one of the vines, something
bit me on the back of the neck so hard it almost knocked me down. It
was one of the dingleburys, and it was as mad as blazes. It seems that
one of the things they do is to defend the marocca against marauders.
That was the first of my welts, and it put me back in the head in
about two seconds.
"And what's more, I found that I couldn't kill the damn things. Not if
I wanted to save the plants. The growth only stops at the end of six
hours, after the blossoms appear and are visited by the dingleburys. No
dingleburys, no growth stoppage.
"So for the next several hours I had to keep moving those lights, and
keep them clear of the vines, and keep the vines from shadowing each
other to the point where they curled up and died, and I had to do it
gently
, surrounded by a bunch of worried dingleburys.
"Every time they got a little too worried, or I slipped and bumped into
a plant too hard, or looked crosseyed at them, they bit me. If you
think I look bad now, you should have seen me just about the time the
blossoms started to burst.
"I was worried about those blossoms. I felt sure that they would smell
terrible, or make me sick, or hypnotize me, or something. But they just
turned out to be big, white, odorless flowers. They did nothing for me
or to me. They drove the dingleburys wild, though, I'm happy to say.
Made them forget all about me.
"While they were having their orgy, I caught up on my reading. It
was necessary for me to cut back the marocca vines. For one thing,
I couldn't get up to the area of the bridge. For another, the main
computer was completely clogged. I could use the auxiliary, on the
bridge, if I could get to it, but it's a poor substitute. For another
thing, I would have to cut the stuff way back if I was ever going to
get the plants out of the ship. And I was a little anxious to get my
Delta Crucis
back to normal as soon as possible. But before cutting,
I had to translate the gouge.
"It turns out that it's all right to cut marocca as soon as it stops
growing. To keep the plants from dying, though, you have to mulch the
cuttings and then feed them back to the plants, where the roots store
whatever they need against the time of the next explosive period of
growth. Of course, if you prefer you can wait for the vines to die back
naturally, which takes several months.
"There was one little catch, of course. The cuttings from the vines
will poison the plants if they are fed back to them without having been
mixed with a certain amount of processed mulch. Enzymes again. And
there was only one special processor on board.
"I was the special processor. That's what the instructions said—I
translated very carefully—it required an 'organic processor'.
"So I had to eat pounds of that horrible tasting stuff every day, and
process it the hard way.
"I didn't even have time to scratch my bites. I must have lost weight
everywhere but in the swollen places, and they looked worse than they
do now. The doctor says it may take a year before the bumps all go
away—if they ever do—but I have improved a lot already.
"For a while I must have been out of my head. I got so caught up in
the rhythm of the thing that I didn't even notice when we slipped out
of Limbo into real space near Gloryanna III. It was three days, the
Control Tower on Gloryanna III told me, that they tried continuously
to raise me on the communications gear before I heard the alarm bell
and answered them, so I had to do a good deal of backtracking before
I could get into parking orbit around the planet, and then set
Delta
Crucis
down safely. Even as shaky as I was,
Delta Crucis
behaved
like a lady.
"I hadn't chopped off all of the new growth, although I had the plants
down to manageable size. Some of the blossoms left on the plants had
formed fruit, and the fruit had ripened and dried, and the seeds had
developed fully. They were popping and spreading fine dust-like spores
all over the ship, those last few hours before I landed.
"By that time, though, an occasional sneezing fit and watering eyes
didn't bother me any. I was far beyond the point where hay fever could
add to my troubles.
"When I opened the airlock door, though, the spores drifting outside
set the customs inspectors to sneezing and swearing more than seemed
reasonable at the time." Captain Hannah inhaled a sip of rhial, and
seemed to be enjoying the powerful stuff. He acted as if he thought he
had finished.
"Well, go on," I urged him. "The marocca plants were still in good
shape, weren't they?"
Hannah nodded. "They were growing luxuriously." He nodded his head a
couple of more times, in spite of the discomfort it must have given
him.
He said, "They made me burn the entire crop right away, of course. They
didn't get all of the carolla or dingleburys, though. Or spores."
"Gloryanna III is the original home planet of marocca. They hated the
stuff, of course, but they liked the profit. Then, when a plague almost
wiped out the dingleburys, they introduced khorram furs as a cash
crop. It wasn't as lucrative, but it was so much more pleasant that
they outlawed marocca. Took them almost fifty years to stamp it out
completely. Meanwhile, some clever native shipped a load of the stuff
to Mypore II. He took his time, did it without any trouble and made his
fortune. And got out again quickly.
"The Gloryannans were going to hold my
Delta Crucis
as security to
pay for the cost of stamping out marocca all over again—those spores
sprout fast—and for a time I was worried.
"Of course, when I showed them our contract—that you alone were
responsible for everything once I landed the plants safely on Gloryanna
III, they let me go.
"They'll send you the bill. They don't figure it will take them more
than a few months to complete the job."
Captain Hannah stopped talking and stood up, painfully and a little
unsteadily.
I'm afraid I didn't even notice when he blacked my other eye. I was too
busy reaching for the rhial.
END
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/5/3/0/1/53016//53016-h//53016-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | What is Ironic about Captain Hannah’s time with the marocca plants?
| 53016_NCS325SD_5 | [
"After all Captain Hannah suffers through in order to get to the plants to Gloryanna, it turns out that the Gloryannans have stopped all trade lines. He is asked to leave Gloryannan customs and never return. Hannah suffered for nothing. \n",
"After all Captain Hannah suffers through in order to get to the plants to Gloryanna, it turns out that the Gloryannans absolutely detest the plant, and that it is illegal for good reason. The narrator’s plan to earn a profit by selling marocca where they don’t grow was completely wrong. Hannah suffered for nothing.",
"After all Captain Hannah suffers through in order to get to the plants to Gloryanna, it turns out that the Myporians are the only people in the solar system who eat its fruit, and that virtually everybody else in the universe is pathologically allergic. ",
"After all Captain Hannah suffers through in order to get to the plants to Gloryanna, it turns out that the Gloryannans won’t buy any from him because they are scared of their government. Hannah suffered for nothing. \n"
] | 2 | 2 | [
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53,016 | 53016_NCS325SD | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Cakewalk to Gloryanna | 1953.0 | Stecher, L. J., Jr. | Interstellar travel -- Fiction; PS; Science fiction; Hannah, Bart (Fictitious character) -- Fiction; Space ships -- Fiction; Short stories | CAKEWALK TO GLORYANNA
BY L. J. STECHER, JR.
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of Tomorrow June 1963
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
The job was easy. The profit was enormous. The
only trouble was—the cargo had a will of its own!
Captain Hannah climbed painfully down from the
Delta Crucis
, hobbled
across the spaceport to where Beulah and I were waiting to greet him
and hit me in the eye. Beulah—that's his elephant, but I have to take
care of her for him because Beulah's baby belongs to me and Beulah has
to take care of it—kept us apart until we both cooled down a little.
Then, although still somewhat dubious about it, she let us go together
across the field to the spaceport bar.
I didn't ask Captain Hannah why he had socked me.
Although he has never been a handsome man, he usually has the
weathered and austere dignity that comes from plying the remote reaches
among the stars. Call it the Look of Eagles. Captain Hannah had lost
the Look of Eagles. His eyes were swollen almost shut; every inch of
him that showed was a red mass of welts piled on more welts, as though
he had tangled with a hive of misanthropic bees. The gold-braided hat
of his trade was not clamped in its usual belligerent position slightly
over one eye. It was riding high on his head, apparently held up by
more of the ubiquitous swellings.
I figured that he figured that I had something to do with the way he
looked.
"Shipping marocca to Gloryanna III didn't turn out to be a cakewalk
after all?" I suggested.
He glared at me in silence.
"Perhaps you would like a drink first, and then you would be willing to
tell me about it?"
I decided that his wince was intended for a nod, and ordered rhial.
I only drink rhial when I've been exposed to Captain Hannah. It was
almost a pleasure to think that
I
was responsible, for a change, for
having
him
take the therapy.
"A
Delta
Class freighter can carry almost anything," he said at last,
in a travesty of his usual forceful voice. "But some things it should
never try."
He lapsed back into silence after this uncharacteristic admission. I
almost felt sorry for him, but just then Beulah came racking across
the field with her two-ton infant in tow, to show her off to Hannah. I
walled off my pity. He had foisted those two maudlin mastodons off onto
me in one of our earlier deals, and if I had somehow been responsible
for his present troubles, it was no more than he deserved. I rated
winning for once.
"You
did
succeed in getting the marocca to Gloryanna III?" I asked
anxiously, after the elephants had been admired and sent back home.
The success of that venture—even if the job had turned out to be more
difficult than we had expected—meant an enormous profit to both of
us. The fruit of the marocca is delicious and fabulously expensive.
The plant grew only on the single planet Mypore II. Transshipped seeds
invariably failed to germinate, which explained its rarity.
The Myporians were usually, and understandably, bitterly, opposed to
letting any of the living plants get shipped off their planet. But when
I offered them a sizable piece of cash plus a perpetual share of the
profits for letting us take a load of marocca plants to Gloryanna III,
they relented and, for the first time in history, gave their assent. In
fact, they had seemed delighted.
"I got them there safely," said Captain Hannah.
"And they are growing all right?" I persisted.
"When I left, marocca was growing like mad," said Captain Hannah.
I relaxed and leaned back in my chair. I no longer felt the need of
rhial for myself. "Tell me about it," I suggested.
"It was you who said that we should carry those damn plants to
Gloryanna III," he said balefully. "I ought to black your other eye."
"Simmer down and have some more rhial," I told him. "Sure I get the
credit for that. Gloryanna III is almost a twin to Mypore II. You know
that marocca takes a very special kind of environment. Bright sun most
of the time—that means an almost cloudless environment. A very equable
climate. Days and nights the same length and no seasons—that means no
ecliptical and no axial tilt. But our tests showed that the plants had
enough tolerance to cause no trouble in the trip in
Delta Crucis
." A
light dawned. "Our tests were no good?"
"Your tests were no good," agreed the captain with feeling. "I'll tell
you about it first, and
then
I'll black your other eye," he decided.
"You'll remember that I warned you that we should take some marocca
out into space and solve any problems we might find before committing
ourselves to hauling a full load of it?" asked Captain Hannah.
"We couldn't," I protested. "The Myporians gave us a deadline. If
we had gone through all of that rigamarole, we would have lost the
franchise. Besides, they gave you full written instructions about what
to do under all possible circumstances."
"Sure. Written in Myporian. A very difficult language to translate.
Especially when you're barricaded in the head."
I almost asked him why he had been barricaded in the bathroom of the
Delta Crucis
, but I figured it was safer to let him tell me in his
own way, in his own time.
"Well," he said, "I got into parking orbit around Mypore without any
trouble. The plastic film kept the water in the hydroponic tanks
without any trouble, even in a no-gravity condition. And by the time I
had lined up for Gloryanna and Jumped, I figured, like you said, that
the trip would be a cakewalk.
"Do you remember how the plants always keep their leaves facing the
sun? They twist on their stems all day, and then they go on twisting
them all night, still pointing at the underground sun, so that they're
aimed right at sunrise. So the stem looks like a corkscrew?"
I nodded. "Sure. That's why they can't stand an axial tilt. They
'remember' the rate and direction of movement, and keep it up during
the night time. So what? We had that problem all figured out."
"You think so? That solution was one of yours, too, wasn't it?" He
gazed moodily at his beaker of rhial. "I must admit it sounded good
to me, too. In Limbo, moving at multiple light-speeds, the whole
Universe, of course, turns into a bright glowing spot in our direction
of motion, with everything else dark. So I lined up the
Delta Crucis
perpendicular to her direction of motion, put a once-every-twenty-one
hour spin on her to match the rotation rates of Mypore II and Gloryanna
III, and uncovered the view ports to let in the light. It gradually
brightened until 'noon time', with the ports pointing straight at the
light source, and then dimmed until we had ten and one-half hours of
darkness.
"Of course, it didn't work."
"For Heaven's sake, why not?"
"For Heaven's sake why should it? With no gravity for reference, how
were the plants supposed to know that the 'sun' was supposed to be
moving?"
"So what did you do?" I asked, when that had sunk in. "If the stem
doesn't keep winding, the plants die; and they can only take a few
extra hours of night time before they run down."
"Oh," said Captain Hannah in quiet tones of controlled desperation, "it
was very simple. I just put enough spin on the ship to make artificial
gravity, and then I strung a light and moved it every fifteen minutes
for ten and one-half hours, until I had gone halfway around the room.
Then I could turn the light off and rest for ten and one-half hours.
The plants liked it fine.
"Of course, first I had to move all the hydroponic tanks from their
original positions perpendicular to the axial thrust line of the ship
to a radial position. And because somehow we had picked up half of
the plants in the northern hemisphere of Mypore and the other half in
the southern hemisphere, it turned out that half of the plants had a
sinistral corkscrew and the other half had a dextral. So I had to set
the plants up in two different rooms, and run an artificial sun for
each, going clockwise with one, widdershins with the other.
"I won't even talk about what I went through while I was shifting the
hydroponic tanks, when all the plastic membranes that were supposed to
keep the water in place started to break."
"I'd like to know," I said sincerely.
He stared at me in silence for a moment. "Well, it filled the cabin
with great solid bubbles of water. Water bubbles will oscillate and
wobble like soap bubbles," he went on dreamily, "but of course,
they're not empty, like soap bubbles. The surface acts a little like
a membrane, so that sometimes two of the things will touch and gently
bounce apart without joining. But just try
touching
one of them. You
could drown—I almost did. Several times.
"I got a fire pump—an empty one. You know the kind; a wide cylinder
with a piston with a handle, and a hose that you squirt the water out
of, or can suck water in with. The way you use it is, you float up on
a big ball of water, with the pump piston down—closed. You carefully
poke the end of the hose into the ball of water, letting only the metal
tip touch.
Never
the hose. If you let the hose touch, the water runs
up it and tries to drown you. Then you pull up on the piston, and draw
all the water into the cylinder. Of course, you have to hold the pump
with your feet while you pull the handle with your free hand."
"Did it work?" I asked eagerly.
"Eventually. Then I stopped to think of what to do with the water.
It was full of minerals and manure and such, and I didn't want to
introduce it into the ship's tanks."
"But you solved the problem?"
"In a sense," said the captain. "I just emptied the pump back into the
air, ignored the bubbles, repositioned the tanks, put spin on the ship
and then ladled the liquid back into the tanks with a bucket."
"Didn't you bump into a lot of the bubbles and get yourself dunked a
good deal while you were working with the tanks?"
He shrugged. "I couldn't say. By that time I was ignoring them. It was
that or suicide. I had begun to get the feeling that they were stalking
me. So I drew a blank."
"Then after that you were all right, except for the tedium of moving
the lights around?" I asked him. I answered myself at once. "No. There
must be more. You haven't told me why you hid out in the bathroom, yet."
"Not yet," said Captain Hannah. "Like you, I figured I had the
situation fairly well under control, but like you, I hadn't thought
things through. The plastic membranes hadn't torn when we brought the
tanks in board the
Delta Crucis
. It never occurred to me to hunt
around for the reasons for the change. But I wouldn't have had long to
hunt anyway, because in a few hours the reasons came looking for me.
"They were a tiny skeeter-like thing. A sort of midge or junior grade
mosquito. They had apparently been swimming in the water during their
larval stage. Instead of making cocoons for themselves, they snipped
tiny little pieces of plastic to use as protective covers in the pupal
stage. I guess they were more like butterflies than mosquitoes in their
habits. And now they were mature.
"There were thousands and thousands of them, and each one of them made
a tiny, maddening whine as it flew."
"And they bit? That explains your bumps?" I asked sympathetically.
"Oh, no. These things didn't bite, they itched. And they got down
inside of everything they could get down inside, and clung. That
included my ears and my eyes and my nose.
"I broke out a hand sprayer full of a DDT solution, and sprayed it
around me to try to clear the nearby air a little, so that I could
have room to think. The midges loved it. But the plants that were in
reach died so fast that you could watch their leaves curl up and drop
off.
"I couldn't figure whether to turn up the fans and dissipate the
cloud—by spreading it all through the ship—or whether to try to block
off the other plant room, and save it at least. So I ended up by not
doing anything, which was the right thing to do. No more plants died
from the DDT.
"So then I did a few experiments, and found that the regular poison
spray in the ship's fumigation system worked just fine. It killed
the bugs without doing the plants any harm at all. Of course, the
fumigation system is designed to work with the fumigator off the ship,
because it's poisonous to humans too.
"I finally blocked the vents and the door edges in the head, after
running some remote controls into there, and then started the
fumigation system going. While I was sitting there with nothing much
to do, I tried to translate what I could of the Myporian instructions.
It was on page eleven that it mentioned casually that the midges—the
correct word is carolla—are a necessary part of the life cycle of the
marocca. The larvae provide an enzyme without which the plants die.
"Of course. I immediately stopped slapping at the relatively few midges
that had made their way into the head with me, and started to change
the air in the ship to get rid of the poison. I knew it was too late
before I started, and for once I was right.
"The only live midges left in the ship were the ones that had been
with me during the fumigation process. I immediately tried to start
a breeding ground for midges, but the midges didn't seem to want to
cooperate. Whatever I tried to do, they came back to me. I was the only
thing they seemed to love. I didn't dare bathe, or scratch, or even
wriggle, for fear of killing more of them. And they kept on itching. It
was just about unbearable, but I bore it for three interminable days
while the midges died one by one. It was heartbreaking—at least, it
was to me.
"And it was unnecessary, too. Because apparently the carolla had
already laid their eggs, or whatever it is that they do, before I
had fumigated them. After my useless days of agony, a new batch
came swarming out. And this time there were a few of a much larger
thing with them—something like an enormous moth. The new thing just
blundered around aimlessly.
"I lit out for the head again, to keep away from that intolerable
whining. This time I took a luxurious shower and got rid of most of the
midges that came through the door with me. I felt almost comfortable,
in fact, until I resumed my efforts to catch up on my reading.
"The mothlike things—they are called dingleburys—also turn out to
provide a necessary enzyme. They are supposed to have the same timing
of their life cycle as the carolla. Apparently the shaking up I had
given their larvae in moving the tanks and dipping the water up in
buckets and all that had inhibited them in completing their cycle the
first time around.
"And the reason they had the same life cycle as the carolla was that
the adult dinglebury will eat only the adult carolla, and it has to
fill itself full to bursting before it will reproduce. If I had the
translation done correctly, they were supposed to dart gracefully
around, catching carolla on the wing and stuffing themselves happily.
"I had to find out what was wrong with my awkward dingleburys. And
that, of course, meant going out into the ship again. But I had to do
that anyway, because it was almost 'daylight', and time for me to start
shifting the lights again.
"The reason for the dingleburys' problem is fairly obvious. When you
set up artificial gravity by spinning a ship, the gravity is fine down
near the skin where the plants are. But the gravity potential is very
high, and it gets very light up where things fly around, going to zero
on the middle line of the ship. And the unfamiliar gravity gradient,
together with the Coriolis effect and all, makes the poor dingleburys
dizzy, so they can't catch carolla.
"And if you think I figured all that out about dingleburys getting
dizzy at the time, in that madhouse of a ship, then you're crazy. What
happened was that I saw that there was one of the creatures that didn't
seem to be having any trouble, but was acting like the book said it
should. I caught it and examined it. The poor thing was blind, and was
capturing her prey by sound alone.
"So I spent the whole day—along with my usual chore of shifting the
lights—blindfolding dingleburys. Which is a hell of a sport for a man
who is captain of his own ship."
I must say that I agreed with him, but it seemed to be a good time for
me to keep my mouth shut.
"Well, after the dingleburys had eaten and propagated, they became
inquisitive. They explored the whole ship, going into places I wouldn't
have believed it to be possible for them to reach, including the inside
of the main computer, which promptly shorted out. I finally figured
that one of the things had managed to crawl up the cooling air exhaust
duct, against the flow of air, to see what was going on inside.
"I didn't dare to get rid of the things without checking my book, of
course, so it was back to the head for me. 'Night' had come again—and
it was the only place I could get any privacy. There were plenty of the
carolla left to join me outside.
"I showered and swatted and started to read. I got as far as where it
said that the dingleburys continued to be of importance, and then I'm
afraid I fell asleep.
"I got up with the sun the next morning. Hell, I had to, considering
that it was I who turned the sun on! I found that the dingleburys
immediately got busy opening small buds on the stems of the marocca
plants. Apparently they were pollinating them. I felt sure that these
buds weren't the marocca blossoms from which the fruit formed—I'd
seen a lot of those while we were on Mypore II and they were much
bigger and showier than these little acorn-sized buds.
"Of course, I should have translated some more of my instruction book,
but I was busy.
"Anyway, the action of the dingleburys triggered the violent growth
phase of the marocca plants. Did you know that they plant marocca
seedlings, back on Mypore II,
at least
a hundred feet apart? If
you'll recall, a mature field, which was the only kind we ever saw, is
one solid mass of green growth.
"The book says that it takes just six hours for a marocca field to
shift from the seedling stage to the mature stage. It didn't seem that
long. You could
watch
the stuff grow—groping and crawling along; one
plant twining with another as they climbed toward the light.
"It was then that I began to get worried. If they twined around the
light, they would keep me from moving it, and they would shadow it so
it wouldn't do its job right. In effect, their growth would put out the
sun.
"I thought of putting up an electrically charged fence around the
light, but the bugs had put most of my loose equipment out of action,
so I got a machete. When I took a swing at one of the vines, something
bit me on the back of the neck so hard it almost knocked me down. It
was one of the dingleburys, and it was as mad as blazes. It seems that
one of the things they do is to defend the marocca against marauders.
That was the first of my welts, and it put me back in the head in
about two seconds.
"And what's more, I found that I couldn't kill the damn things. Not if
I wanted to save the plants. The growth only stops at the end of six
hours, after the blossoms appear and are visited by the dingleburys. No
dingleburys, no growth stoppage.
"So for the next several hours I had to keep moving those lights, and
keep them clear of the vines, and keep the vines from shadowing each
other to the point where they curled up and died, and I had to do it
gently
, surrounded by a bunch of worried dingleburys.
"Every time they got a little too worried, or I slipped and bumped into
a plant too hard, or looked crosseyed at them, they bit me. If you
think I look bad now, you should have seen me just about the time the
blossoms started to burst.
"I was worried about those blossoms. I felt sure that they would smell
terrible, or make me sick, or hypnotize me, or something. But they just
turned out to be big, white, odorless flowers. They did nothing for me
or to me. They drove the dingleburys wild, though, I'm happy to say.
Made them forget all about me.
"While they were having their orgy, I caught up on my reading. It
was necessary for me to cut back the marocca vines. For one thing,
I couldn't get up to the area of the bridge. For another, the main
computer was completely clogged. I could use the auxiliary, on the
bridge, if I could get to it, but it's a poor substitute. For another
thing, I would have to cut the stuff way back if I was ever going to
get the plants out of the ship. And I was a little anxious to get my
Delta Crucis
back to normal as soon as possible. But before cutting,
I had to translate the gouge.
"It turns out that it's all right to cut marocca as soon as it stops
growing. To keep the plants from dying, though, you have to mulch the
cuttings and then feed them back to the plants, where the roots store
whatever they need against the time of the next explosive period of
growth. Of course, if you prefer you can wait for the vines to die back
naturally, which takes several months.
"There was one little catch, of course. The cuttings from the vines
will poison the plants if they are fed back to them without having been
mixed with a certain amount of processed mulch. Enzymes again. And
there was only one special processor on board.
"I was the special processor. That's what the instructions said—I
translated very carefully—it required an 'organic processor'.
"So I had to eat pounds of that horrible tasting stuff every day, and
process it the hard way.
"I didn't even have time to scratch my bites. I must have lost weight
everywhere but in the swollen places, and they looked worse than they
do now. The doctor says it may take a year before the bumps all go
away—if they ever do—but I have improved a lot already.
"For a while I must have been out of my head. I got so caught up in
the rhythm of the thing that I didn't even notice when we slipped out
of Limbo into real space near Gloryanna III. It was three days, the
Control Tower on Gloryanna III told me, that they tried continuously
to raise me on the communications gear before I heard the alarm bell
and answered them, so I had to do a good deal of backtracking before
I could get into parking orbit around the planet, and then set
Delta
Crucis
down safely. Even as shaky as I was,
Delta Crucis
behaved
like a lady.
"I hadn't chopped off all of the new growth, although I had the plants
down to manageable size. Some of the blossoms left on the plants had
formed fruit, and the fruit had ripened and dried, and the seeds had
developed fully. They were popping and spreading fine dust-like spores
all over the ship, those last few hours before I landed.
"By that time, though, an occasional sneezing fit and watering eyes
didn't bother me any. I was far beyond the point where hay fever could
add to my troubles.
"When I opened the airlock door, though, the spores drifting outside
set the customs inspectors to sneezing and swearing more than seemed
reasonable at the time." Captain Hannah inhaled a sip of rhial, and
seemed to be enjoying the powerful stuff. He acted as if he thought he
had finished.
"Well, go on," I urged him. "The marocca plants were still in good
shape, weren't they?"
Hannah nodded. "They were growing luxuriously." He nodded his head a
couple of more times, in spite of the discomfort it must have given
him.
He said, "They made me burn the entire crop right away, of course. They
didn't get all of the carolla or dingleburys, though. Or spores."
"Gloryanna III is the original home planet of marocca. They hated the
stuff, of course, but they liked the profit. Then, when a plague almost
wiped out the dingleburys, they introduced khorram furs as a cash
crop. It wasn't as lucrative, but it was so much more pleasant that
they outlawed marocca. Took them almost fifty years to stamp it out
completely. Meanwhile, some clever native shipped a load of the stuff
to Mypore II. He took his time, did it without any trouble and made his
fortune. And got out again quickly.
"The Gloryannans were going to hold my
Delta Crucis
as security to
pay for the cost of stamping out marocca all over again—those spores
sprout fast—and for a time I was worried.
"Of course, when I showed them our contract—that you alone were
responsible for everything once I landed the plants safely on Gloryanna
III, they let me go.
"They'll send you the bill. They don't figure it will take them more
than a few months to complete the job."
Captain Hannah stopped talking and stood up, painfully and a little
unsteadily.
I'm afraid I didn't even notice when he blacked my other eye. I was too
busy reaching for the rhial.
END
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/5/3/0/1/53016//53016-h//53016-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | What is the last step Captain Hannah must conduct in order to deliver successfully fruited plants to Gloryanna. What is the symbolic significance of this?
| 53016_NCS325SD_6 | [
"Captain Hannah must simulate proper sun exposure in order to ensure the plants’ vines don’t die. Their death would mean no fruit, symbolizing the way in which Hannah’s failure to keep the vines alive is the last possible way in which the narrator’s plan could fail. \n",
"Captain Hannah must exterminate all of the spores and bugs before reaching Gloryanna, seeing as the Gloryannans will only accept marocca fruit alone for fear of reinfecting their planet with its spores. It is symbolic that Hannah cannot sell the objects which make the fruit, but only the fruit alone. \n",
"Captain Hannah must feed the marocca cuttings from their vines, but only after mulching them through an organic processor. His body turns out to be the only processor on board, meaning Captain Hannah must eat and process the vine clippings with his own body. This symbolizes the kind of will the plants’ have over Hannah—they have inconvenienced him to the extent of his own insides. \n",
"Captain Hannah must feed the carollas to the dingleburys, but only after mulching them through an organic processor. His body turns out to be the only processor on board, meaning Captain Hannah must eat and process the bugs with his own body. This symbolizes the kind of will the carollas have over Hannah—they have inconvenienced him to the extent of his own insides. \n"
] | 3 | 3 | [
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53,016 | 53016_NCS325SD | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Cakewalk to Gloryanna | 1953.0 | Stecher, L. J., Jr. | Interstellar travel -- Fiction; PS; Science fiction; Hannah, Bart (Fictitious character) -- Fiction; Space ships -- Fiction; Short stories | CAKEWALK TO GLORYANNA
BY L. J. STECHER, JR.
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of Tomorrow June 1963
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
The job was easy. The profit was enormous. The
only trouble was—the cargo had a will of its own!
Captain Hannah climbed painfully down from the
Delta Crucis
, hobbled
across the spaceport to where Beulah and I were waiting to greet him
and hit me in the eye. Beulah—that's his elephant, but I have to take
care of her for him because Beulah's baby belongs to me and Beulah has
to take care of it—kept us apart until we both cooled down a little.
Then, although still somewhat dubious about it, she let us go together
across the field to the spaceport bar.
I didn't ask Captain Hannah why he had socked me.
Although he has never been a handsome man, he usually has the
weathered and austere dignity that comes from plying the remote reaches
among the stars. Call it the Look of Eagles. Captain Hannah had lost
the Look of Eagles. His eyes were swollen almost shut; every inch of
him that showed was a red mass of welts piled on more welts, as though
he had tangled with a hive of misanthropic bees. The gold-braided hat
of his trade was not clamped in its usual belligerent position slightly
over one eye. It was riding high on his head, apparently held up by
more of the ubiquitous swellings.
I figured that he figured that I had something to do with the way he
looked.
"Shipping marocca to Gloryanna III didn't turn out to be a cakewalk
after all?" I suggested.
He glared at me in silence.
"Perhaps you would like a drink first, and then you would be willing to
tell me about it?"
I decided that his wince was intended for a nod, and ordered rhial.
I only drink rhial when I've been exposed to Captain Hannah. It was
almost a pleasure to think that
I
was responsible, for a change, for
having
him
take the therapy.
"A
Delta
Class freighter can carry almost anything," he said at last,
in a travesty of his usual forceful voice. "But some things it should
never try."
He lapsed back into silence after this uncharacteristic admission. I
almost felt sorry for him, but just then Beulah came racking across
the field with her two-ton infant in tow, to show her off to Hannah. I
walled off my pity. He had foisted those two maudlin mastodons off onto
me in one of our earlier deals, and if I had somehow been responsible
for his present troubles, it was no more than he deserved. I rated
winning for once.
"You
did
succeed in getting the marocca to Gloryanna III?" I asked
anxiously, after the elephants had been admired and sent back home.
The success of that venture—even if the job had turned out to be more
difficult than we had expected—meant an enormous profit to both of
us. The fruit of the marocca is delicious and fabulously expensive.
The plant grew only on the single planet Mypore II. Transshipped seeds
invariably failed to germinate, which explained its rarity.
The Myporians were usually, and understandably, bitterly, opposed to
letting any of the living plants get shipped off their planet. But when
I offered them a sizable piece of cash plus a perpetual share of the
profits for letting us take a load of marocca plants to Gloryanna III,
they relented and, for the first time in history, gave their assent. In
fact, they had seemed delighted.
"I got them there safely," said Captain Hannah.
"And they are growing all right?" I persisted.
"When I left, marocca was growing like mad," said Captain Hannah.
I relaxed and leaned back in my chair. I no longer felt the need of
rhial for myself. "Tell me about it," I suggested.
"It was you who said that we should carry those damn plants to
Gloryanna III," he said balefully. "I ought to black your other eye."
"Simmer down and have some more rhial," I told him. "Sure I get the
credit for that. Gloryanna III is almost a twin to Mypore II. You know
that marocca takes a very special kind of environment. Bright sun most
of the time—that means an almost cloudless environment. A very equable
climate. Days and nights the same length and no seasons—that means no
ecliptical and no axial tilt. But our tests showed that the plants had
enough tolerance to cause no trouble in the trip in
Delta Crucis
." A
light dawned. "Our tests were no good?"
"Your tests were no good," agreed the captain with feeling. "I'll tell
you about it first, and
then
I'll black your other eye," he decided.
"You'll remember that I warned you that we should take some marocca
out into space and solve any problems we might find before committing
ourselves to hauling a full load of it?" asked Captain Hannah.
"We couldn't," I protested. "The Myporians gave us a deadline. If
we had gone through all of that rigamarole, we would have lost the
franchise. Besides, they gave you full written instructions about what
to do under all possible circumstances."
"Sure. Written in Myporian. A very difficult language to translate.
Especially when you're barricaded in the head."
I almost asked him why he had been barricaded in the bathroom of the
Delta Crucis
, but I figured it was safer to let him tell me in his
own way, in his own time.
"Well," he said, "I got into parking orbit around Mypore without any
trouble. The plastic film kept the water in the hydroponic tanks
without any trouble, even in a no-gravity condition. And by the time I
had lined up for Gloryanna and Jumped, I figured, like you said, that
the trip would be a cakewalk.
"Do you remember how the plants always keep their leaves facing the
sun? They twist on their stems all day, and then they go on twisting
them all night, still pointing at the underground sun, so that they're
aimed right at sunrise. So the stem looks like a corkscrew?"
I nodded. "Sure. That's why they can't stand an axial tilt. They
'remember' the rate and direction of movement, and keep it up during
the night time. So what? We had that problem all figured out."
"You think so? That solution was one of yours, too, wasn't it?" He
gazed moodily at his beaker of rhial. "I must admit it sounded good
to me, too. In Limbo, moving at multiple light-speeds, the whole
Universe, of course, turns into a bright glowing spot in our direction
of motion, with everything else dark. So I lined up the
Delta Crucis
perpendicular to her direction of motion, put a once-every-twenty-one
hour spin on her to match the rotation rates of Mypore II and Gloryanna
III, and uncovered the view ports to let in the light. It gradually
brightened until 'noon time', with the ports pointing straight at the
light source, and then dimmed until we had ten and one-half hours of
darkness.
"Of course, it didn't work."
"For Heaven's sake, why not?"
"For Heaven's sake why should it? With no gravity for reference, how
were the plants supposed to know that the 'sun' was supposed to be
moving?"
"So what did you do?" I asked, when that had sunk in. "If the stem
doesn't keep winding, the plants die; and they can only take a few
extra hours of night time before they run down."
"Oh," said Captain Hannah in quiet tones of controlled desperation, "it
was very simple. I just put enough spin on the ship to make artificial
gravity, and then I strung a light and moved it every fifteen minutes
for ten and one-half hours, until I had gone halfway around the room.
Then I could turn the light off and rest for ten and one-half hours.
The plants liked it fine.
"Of course, first I had to move all the hydroponic tanks from their
original positions perpendicular to the axial thrust line of the ship
to a radial position. And because somehow we had picked up half of
the plants in the northern hemisphere of Mypore and the other half in
the southern hemisphere, it turned out that half of the plants had a
sinistral corkscrew and the other half had a dextral. So I had to set
the plants up in two different rooms, and run an artificial sun for
each, going clockwise with one, widdershins with the other.
"I won't even talk about what I went through while I was shifting the
hydroponic tanks, when all the plastic membranes that were supposed to
keep the water in place started to break."
"I'd like to know," I said sincerely.
He stared at me in silence for a moment. "Well, it filled the cabin
with great solid bubbles of water. Water bubbles will oscillate and
wobble like soap bubbles," he went on dreamily, "but of course,
they're not empty, like soap bubbles. The surface acts a little like
a membrane, so that sometimes two of the things will touch and gently
bounce apart without joining. But just try
touching
one of them. You
could drown—I almost did. Several times.
"I got a fire pump—an empty one. You know the kind; a wide cylinder
with a piston with a handle, and a hose that you squirt the water out
of, or can suck water in with. The way you use it is, you float up on
a big ball of water, with the pump piston down—closed. You carefully
poke the end of the hose into the ball of water, letting only the metal
tip touch.
Never
the hose. If you let the hose touch, the water runs
up it and tries to drown you. Then you pull up on the piston, and draw
all the water into the cylinder. Of course, you have to hold the pump
with your feet while you pull the handle with your free hand."
"Did it work?" I asked eagerly.
"Eventually. Then I stopped to think of what to do with the water.
It was full of minerals and manure and such, and I didn't want to
introduce it into the ship's tanks."
"But you solved the problem?"
"In a sense," said the captain. "I just emptied the pump back into the
air, ignored the bubbles, repositioned the tanks, put spin on the ship
and then ladled the liquid back into the tanks with a bucket."
"Didn't you bump into a lot of the bubbles and get yourself dunked a
good deal while you were working with the tanks?"
He shrugged. "I couldn't say. By that time I was ignoring them. It was
that or suicide. I had begun to get the feeling that they were stalking
me. So I drew a blank."
"Then after that you were all right, except for the tedium of moving
the lights around?" I asked him. I answered myself at once. "No. There
must be more. You haven't told me why you hid out in the bathroom, yet."
"Not yet," said Captain Hannah. "Like you, I figured I had the
situation fairly well under control, but like you, I hadn't thought
things through. The plastic membranes hadn't torn when we brought the
tanks in board the
Delta Crucis
. It never occurred to me to hunt
around for the reasons for the change. But I wouldn't have had long to
hunt anyway, because in a few hours the reasons came looking for me.
"They were a tiny skeeter-like thing. A sort of midge or junior grade
mosquito. They had apparently been swimming in the water during their
larval stage. Instead of making cocoons for themselves, they snipped
tiny little pieces of plastic to use as protective covers in the pupal
stage. I guess they were more like butterflies than mosquitoes in their
habits. And now they were mature.
"There were thousands and thousands of them, and each one of them made
a tiny, maddening whine as it flew."
"And they bit? That explains your bumps?" I asked sympathetically.
"Oh, no. These things didn't bite, they itched. And they got down
inside of everything they could get down inside, and clung. That
included my ears and my eyes and my nose.
"I broke out a hand sprayer full of a DDT solution, and sprayed it
around me to try to clear the nearby air a little, so that I could
have room to think. The midges loved it. But the plants that were in
reach died so fast that you could watch their leaves curl up and drop
off.
"I couldn't figure whether to turn up the fans and dissipate the
cloud—by spreading it all through the ship—or whether to try to block
off the other plant room, and save it at least. So I ended up by not
doing anything, which was the right thing to do. No more plants died
from the DDT.
"So then I did a few experiments, and found that the regular poison
spray in the ship's fumigation system worked just fine. It killed
the bugs without doing the plants any harm at all. Of course, the
fumigation system is designed to work with the fumigator off the ship,
because it's poisonous to humans too.
"I finally blocked the vents and the door edges in the head, after
running some remote controls into there, and then started the
fumigation system going. While I was sitting there with nothing much
to do, I tried to translate what I could of the Myporian instructions.
It was on page eleven that it mentioned casually that the midges—the
correct word is carolla—are a necessary part of the life cycle of the
marocca. The larvae provide an enzyme without which the plants die.
"Of course. I immediately stopped slapping at the relatively few midges
that had made their way into the head with me, and started to change
the air in the ship to get rid of the poison. I knew it was too late
before I started, and for once I was right.
"The only live midges left in the ship were the ones that had been
with me during the fumigation process. I immediately tried to start
a breeding ground for midges, but the midges didn't seem to want to
cooperate. Whatever I tried to do, they came back to me. I was the only
thing they seemed to love. I didn't dare bathe, or scratch, or even
wriggle, for fear of killing more of them. And they kept on itching. It
was just about unbearable, but I bore it for three interminable days
while the midges died one by one. It was heartbreaking—at least, it
was to me.
"And it was unnecessary, too. Because apparently the carolla had
already laid their eggs, or whatever it is that they do, before I
had fumigated them. After my useless days of agony, a new batch
came swarming out. And this time there were a few of a much larger
thing with them—something like an enormous moth. The new thing just
blundered around aimlessly.
"I lit out for the head again, to keep away from that intolerable
whining. This time I took a luxurious shower and got rid of most of the
midges that came through the door with me. I felt almost comfortable,
in fact, until I resumed my efforts to catch up on my reading.
"The mothlike things—they are called dingleburys—also turn out to
provide a necessary enzyme. They are supposed to have the same timing
of their life cycle as the carolla. Apparently the shaking up I had
given their larvae in moving the tanks and dipping the water up in
buckets and all that had inhibited them in completing their cycle the
first time around.
"And the reason they had the same life cycle as the carolla was that
the adult dinglebury will eat only the adult carolla, and it has to
fill itself full to bursting before it will reproduce. If I had the
translation done correctly, they were supposed to dart gracefully
around, catching carolla on the wing and stuffing themselves happily.
"I had to find out what was wrong with my awkward dingleburys. And
that, of course, meant going out into the ship again. But I had to do
that anyway, because it was almost 'daylight', and time for me to start
shifting the lights again.
"The reason for the dingleburys' problem is fairly obvious. When you
set up artificial gravity by spinning a ship, the gravity is fine down
near the skin where the plants are. But the gravity potential is very
high, and it gets very light up where things fly around, going to zero
on the middle line of the ship. And the unfamiliar gravity gradient,
together with the Coriolis effect and all, makes the poor dingleburys
dizzy, so they can't catch carolla.
"And if you think I figured all that out about dingleburys getting
dizzy at the time, in that madhouse of a ship, then you're crazy. What
happened was that I saw that there was one of the creatures that didn't
seem to be having any trouble, but was acting like the book said it
should. I caught it and examined it. The poor thing was blind, and was
capturing her prey by sound alone.
"So I spent the whole day—along with my usual chore of shifting the
lights—blindfolding dingleburys. Which is a hell of a sport for a man
who is captain of his own ship."
I must say that I agreed with him, but it seemed to be a good time for
me to keep my mouth shut.
"Well, after the dingleburys had eaten and propagated, they became
inquisitive. They explored the whole ship, going into places I wouldn't
have believed it to be possible for them to reach, including the inside
of the main computer, which promptly shorted out. I finally figured
that one of the things had managed to crawl up the cooling air exhaust
duct, against the flow of air, to see what was going on inside.
"I didn't dare to get rid of the things without checking my book, of
course, so it was back to the head for me. 'Night' had come again—and
it was the only place I could get any privacy. There were plenty of the
carolla left to join me outside.
"I showered and swatted and started to read. I got as far as where it
said that the dingleburys continued to be of importance, and then I'm
afraid I fell asleep.
"I got up with the sun the next morning. Hell, I had to, considering
that it was I who turned the sun on! I found that the dingleburys
immediately got busy opening small buds on the stems of the marocca
plants. Apparently they were pollinating them. I felt sure that these
buds weren't the marocca blossoms from which the fruit formed—I'd
seen a lot of those while we were on Mypore II and they were much
bigger and showier than these little acorn-sized buds.
"Of course, I should have translated some more of my instruction book,
but I was busy.
"Anyway, the action of the dingleburys triggered the violent growth
phase of the marocca plants. Did you know that they plant marocca
seedlings, back on Mypore II,
at least
a hundred feet apart? If
you'll recall, a mature field, which was the only kind we ever saw, is
one solid mass of green growth.
"The book says that it takes just six hours for a marocca field to
shift from the seedling stage to the mature stage. It didn't seem that
long. You could
watch
the stuff grow—groping and crawling along; one
plant twining with another as they climbed toward the light.
"It was then that I began to get worried. If they twined around the
light, they would keep me from moving it, and they would shadow it so
it wouldn't do its job right. In effect, their growth would put out the
sun.
"I thought of putting up an electrically charged fence around the
light, but the bugs had put most of my loose equipment out of action,
so I got a machete. When I took a swing at one of the vines, something
bit me on the back of the neck so hard it almost knocked me down. It
was one of the dingleburys, and it was as mad as blazes. It seems that
one of the things they do is to defend the marocca against marauders.
That was the first of my welts, and it put me back in the head in
about two seconds.
"And what's more, I found that I couldn't kill the damn things. Not if
I wanted to save the plants. The growth only stops at the end of six
hours, after the blossoms appear and are visited by the dingleburys. No
dingleburys, no growth stoppage.
"So for the next several hours I had to keep moving those lights, and
keep them clear of the vines, and keep the vines from shadowing each
other to the point where they curled up and died, and I had to do it
gently
, surrounded by a bunch of worried dingleburys.
"Every time they got a little too worried, or I slipped and bumped into
a plant too hard, or looked crosseyed at them, they bit me. If you
think I look bad now, you should have seen me just about the time the
blossoms started to burst.
"I was worried about those blossoms. I felt sure that they would smell
terrible, or make me sick, or hypnotize me, or something. But they just
turned out to be big, white, odorless flowers. They did nothing for me
or to me. They drove the dingleburys wild, though, I'm happy to say.
Made them forget all about me.
"While they were having their orgy, I caught up on my reading. It
was necessary for me to cut back the marocca vines. For one thing,
I couldn't get up to the area of the bridge. For another, the main
computer was completely clogged. I could use the auxiliary, on the
bridge, if I could get to it, but it's a poor substitute. For another
thing, I would have to cut the stuff way back if I was ever going to
get the plants out of the ship. And I was a little anxious to get my
Delta Crucis
back to normal as soon as possible. But before cutting,
I had to translate the gouge.
"It turns out that it's all right to cut marocca as soon as it stops
growing. To keep the plants from dying, though, you have to mulch the
cuttings and then feed them back to the plants, where the roots store
whatever they need against the time of the next explosive period of
growth. Of course, if you prefer you can wait for the vines to die back
naturally, which takes several months.
"There was one little catch, of course. The cuttings from the vines
will poison the plants if they are fed back to them without having been
mixed with a certain amount of processed mulch. Enzymes again. And
there was only one special processor on board.
"I was the special processor. That's what the instructions said—I
translated very carefully—it required an 'organic processor'.
"So I had to eat pounds of that horrible tasting stuff every day, and
process it the hard way.
"I didn't even have time to scratch my bites. I must have lost weight
everywhere but in the swollen places, and they looked worse than they
do now. The doctor says it may take a year before the bumps all go
away—if they ever do—but I have improved a lot already.
"For a while I must have been out of my head. I got so caught up in
the rhythm of the thing that I didn't even notice when we slipped out
of Limbo into real space near Gloryanna III. It was three days, the
Control Tower on Gloryanna III told me, that they tried continuously
to raise me on the communications gear before I heard the alarm bell
and answered them, so I had to do a good deal of backtracking before
I could get into parking orbit around the planet, and then set
Delta
Crucis
down safely. Even as shaky as I was,
Delta Crucis
behaved
like a lady.
"I hadn't chopped off all of the new growth, although I had the plants
down to manageable size. Some of the blossoms left on the plants had
formed fruit, and the fruit had ripened and dried, and the seeds had
developed fully. They were popping and spreading fine dust-like spores
all over the ship, those last few hours before I landed.
"By that time, though, an occasional sneezing fit and watering eyes
didn't bother me any. I was far beyond the point where hay fever could
add to my troubles.
"When I opened the airlock door, though, the spores drifting outside
set the customs inspectors to sneezing and swearing more than seemed
reasonable at the time." Captain Hannah inhaled a sip of rhial, and
seemed to be enjoying the powerful stuff. He acted as if he thought he
had finished.
"Well, go on," I urged him. "The marocca plants were still in good
shape, weren't they?"
Hannah nodded. "They were growing luxuriously." He nodded his head a
couple of more times, in spite of the discomfort it must have given
him.
He said, "They made me burn the entire crop right away, of course. They
didn't get all of the carolla or dingleburys, though. Or spores."
"Gloryanna III is the original home planet of marocca. They hated the
stuff, of course, but they liked the profit. Then, when a plague almost
wiped out the dingleburys, they introduced khorram furs as a cash
crop. It wasn't as lucrative, but it was so much more pleasant that
they outlawed marocca. Took them almost fifty years to stamp it out
completely. Meanwhile, some clever native shipped a load of the stuff
to Mypore II. He took his time, did it without any trouble and made his
fortune. And got out again quickly.
"The Gloryannans were going to hold my
Delta Crucis
as security to
pay for the cost of stamping out marocca all over again—those spores
sprout fast—and for a time I was worried.
"Of course, when I showed them our contract—that you alone were
responsible for everything once I landed the plants safely on Gloryanna
III, they let me go.
"They'll send you the bill. They don't figure it will take them more
than a few months to complete the job."
Captain Hannah stopped talking and stood up, painfully and a little
unsteadily.
I'm afraid I didn't even notice when he blacked my other eye. I was too
busy reaching for the rhial.
END
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/5/3/0/1/53016//53016-h//53016-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | What does Captain Hannah use as an organic processor?
| 53016_NCS325SD_7 | [
"A fire pump\n",
"The bodies of dead dinglebury bugs\n",
"He uses a lamp to simulate the sun’s orbit on the planet Mypore \n",
"His own body"
] | 4 | 4 | [
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53,016 | 53016_NCS325SD | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Cakewalk to Gloryanna | 1953.0 | Stecher, L. J., Jr. | Interstellar travel -- Fiction; PS; Science fiction; Hannah, Bart (Fictitious character) -- Fiction; Space ships -- Fiction; Short stories | CAKEWALK TO GLORYANNA
BY L. J. STECHER, JR.
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of Tomorrow June 1963
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
The job was easy. The profit was enormous. The
only trouble was—the cargo had a will of its own!
Captain Hannah climbed painfully down from the
Delta Crucis
, hobbled
across the spaceport to where Beulah and I were waiting to greet him
and hit me in the eye. Beulah—that's his elephant, but I have to take
care of her for him because Beulah's baby belongs to me and Beulah has
to take care of it—kept us apart until we both cooled down a little.
Then, although still somewhat dubious about it, she let us go together
across the field to the spaceport bar.
I didn't ask Captain Hannah why he had socked me.
Although he has never been a handsome man, he usually has the
weathered and austere dignity that comes from plying the remote reaches
among the stars. Call it the Look of Eagles. Captain Hannah had lost
the Look of Eagles. His eyes were swollen almost shut; every inch of
him that showed was a red mass of welts piled on more welts, as though
he had tangled with a hive of misanthropic bees. The gold-braided hat
of his trade was not clamped in its usual belligerent position slightly
over one eye. It was riding high on his head, apparently held up by
more of the ubiquitous swellings.
I figured that he figured that I had something to do with the way he
looked.
"Shipping marocca to Gloryanna III didn't turn out to be a cakewalk
after all?" I suggested.
He glared at me in silence.
"Perhaps you would like a drink first, and then you would be willing to
tell me about it?"
I decided that his wince was intended for a nod, and ordered rhial.
I only drink rhial when I've been exposed to Captain Hannah. It was
almost a pleasure to think that
I
was responsible, for a change, for
having
him
take the therapy.
"A
Delta
Class freighter can carry almost anything," he said at last,
in a travesty of his usual forceful voice. "But some things it should
never try."
He lapsed back into silence after this uncharacteristic admission. I
almost felt sorry for him, but just then Beulah came racking across
the field with her two-ton infant in tow, to show her off to Hannah. I
walled off my pity. He had foisted those two maudlin mastodons off onto
me in one of our earlier deals, and if I had somehow been responsible
for his present troubles, it was no more than he deserved. I rated
winning for once.
"You
did
succeed in getting the marocca to Gloryanna III?" I asked
anxiously, after the elephants had been admired and sent back home.
The success of that venture—even if the job had turned out to be more
difficult than we had expected—meant an enormous profit to both of
us. The fruit of the marocca is delicious and fabulously expensive.
The plant grew only on the single planet Mypore II. Transshipped seeds
invariably failed to germinate, which explained its rarity.
The Myporians were usually, and understandably, bitterly, opposed to
letting any of the living plants get shipped off their planet. But when
I offered them a sizable piece of cash plus a perpetual share of the
profits for letting us take a load of marocca plants to Gloryanna III,
they relented and, for the first time in history, gave their assent. In
fact, they had seemed delighted.
"I got them there safely," said Captain Hannah.
"And they are growing all right?" I persisted.
"When I left, marocca was growing like mad," said Captain Hannah.
I relaxed and leaned back in my chair. I no longer felt the need of
rhial for myself. "Tell me about it," I suggested.
"It was you who said that we should carry those damn plants to
Gloryanna III," he said balefully. "I ought to black your other eye."
"Simmer down and have some more rhial," I told him. "Sure I get the
credit for that. Gloryanna III is almost a twin to Mypore II. You know
that marocca takes a very special kind of environment. Bright sun most
of the time—that means an almost cloudless environment. A very equable
climate. Days and nights the same length and no seasons—that means no
ecliptical and no axial tilt. But our tests showed that the plants had
enough tolerance to cause no trouble in the trip in
Delta Crucis
." A
light dawned. "Our tests were no good?"
"Your tests were no good," agreed the captain with feeling. "I'll tell
you about it first, and
then
I'll black your other eye," he decided.
"You'll remember that I warned you that we should take some marocca
out into space and solve any problems we might find before committing
ourselves to hauling a full load of it?" asked Captain Hannah.
"We couldn't," I protested. "The Myporians gave us a deadline. If
we had gone through all of that rigamarole, we would have lost the
franchise. Besides, they gave you full written instructions about what
to do under all possible circumstances."
"Sure. Written in Myporian. A very difficult language to translate.
Especially when you're barricaded in the head."
I almost asked him why he had been barricaded in the bathroom of the
Delta Crucis
, but I figured it was safer to let him tell me in his
own way, in his own time.
"Well," he said, "I got into parking orbit around Mypore without any
trouble. The plastic film kept the water in the hydroponic tanks
without any trouble, even in a no-gravity condition. And by the time I
had lined up for Gloryanna and Jumped, I figured, like you said, that
the trip would be a cakewalk.
"Do you remember how the plants always keep their leaves facing the
sun? They twist on their stems all day, and then they go on twisting
them all night, still pointing at the underground sun, so that they're
aimed right at sunrise. So the stem looks like a corkscrew?"
I nodded. "Sure. That's why they can't stand an axial tilt. They
'remember' the rate and direction of movement, and keep it up during
the night time. So what? We had that problem all figured out."
"You think so? That solution was one of yours, too, wasn't it?" He
gazed moodily at his beaker of rhial. "I must admit it sounded good
to me, too. In Limbo, moving at multiple light-speeds, the whole
Universe, of course, turns into a bright glowing spot in our direction
of motion, with everything else dark. So I lined up the
Delta Crucis
perpendicular to her direction of motion, put a once-every-twenty-one
hour spin on her to match the rotation rates of Mypore II and Gloryanna
III, and uncovered the view ports to let in the light. It gradually
brightened until 'noon time', with the ports pointing straight at the
light source, and then dimmed until we had ten and one-half hours of
darkness.
"Of course, it didn't work."
"For Heaven's sake, why not?"
"For Heaven's sake why should it? With no gravity for reference, how
were the plants supposed to know that the 'sun' was supposed to be
moving?"
"So what did you do?" I asked, when that had sunk in. "If the stem
doesn't keep winding, the plants die; and they can only take a few
extra hours of night time before they run down."
"Oh," said Captain Hannah in quiet tones of controlled desperation, "it
was very simple. I just put enough spin on the ship to make artificial
gravity, and then I strung a light and moved it every fifteen minutes
for ten and one-half hours, until I had gone halfway around the room.
Then I could turn the light off and rest for ten and one-half hours.
The plants liked it fine.
"Of course, first I had to move all the hydroponic tanks from their
original positions perpendicular to the axial thrust line of the ship
to a radial position. And because somehow we had picked up half of
the plants in the northern hemisphere of Mypore and the other half in
the southern hemisphere, it turned out that half of the plants had a
sinistral corkscrew and the other half had a dextral. So I had to set
the plants up in two different rooms, and run an artificial sun for
each, going clockwise with one, widdershins with the other.
"I won't even talk about what I went through while I was shifting the
hydroponic tanks, when all the plastic membranes that were supposed to
keep the water in place started to break."
"I'd like to know," I said sincerely.
He stared at me in silence for a moment. "Well, it filled the cabin
with great solid bubbles of water. Water bubbles will oscillate and
wobble like soap bubbles," he went on dreamily, "but of course,
they're not empty, like soap bubbles. The surface acts a little like
a membrane, so that sometimes two of the things will touch and gently
bounce apart without joining. But just try
touching
one of them. You
could drown—I almost did. Several times.
"I got a fire pump—an empty one. You know the kind; a wide cylinder
with a piston with a handle, and a hose that you squirt the water out
of, or can suck water in with. The way you use it is, you float up on
a big ball of water, with the pump piston down—closed. You carefully
poke the end of the hose into the ball of water, letting only the metal
tip touch.
Never
the hose. If you let the hose touch, the water runs
up it and tries to drown you. Then you pull up on the piston, and draw
all the water into the cylinder. Of course, you have to hold the pump
with your feet while you pull the handle with your free hand."
"Did it work?" I asked eagerly.
"Eventually. Then I stopped to think of what to do with the water.
It was full of minerals and manure and such, and I didn't want to
introduce it into the ship's tanks."
"But you solved the problem?"
"In a sense," said the captain. "I just emptied the pump back into the
air, ignored the bubbles, repositioned the tanks, put spin on the ship
and then ladled the liquid back into the tanks with a bucket."
"Didn't you bump into a lot of the bubbles and get yourself dunked a
good deal while you were working with the tanks?"
He shrugged. "I couldn't say. By that time I was ignoring them. It was
that or suicide. I had begun to get the feeling that they were stalking
me. So I drew a blank."
"Then after that you were all right, except for the tedium of moving
the lights around?" I asked him. I answered myself at once. "No. There
must be more. You haven't told me why you hid out in the bathroom, yet."
"Not yet," said Captain Hannah. "Like you, I figured I had the
situation fairly well under control, but like you, I hadn't thought
things through. The plastic membranes hadn't torn when we brought the
tanks in board the
Delta Crucis
. It never occurred to me to hunt
around for the reasons for the change. But I wouldn't have had long to
hunt anyway, because in a few hours the reasons came looking for me.
"They were a tiny skeeter-like thing. A sort of midge or junior grade
mosquito. They had apparently been swimming in the water during their
larval stage. Instead of making cocoons for themselves, they snipped
tiny little pieces of plastic to use as protective covers in the pupal
stage. I guess they were more like butterflies than mosquitoes in their
habits. And now they were mature.
"There were thousands and thousands of them, and each one of them made
a tiny, maddening whine as it flew."
"And they bit? That explains your bumps?" I asked sympathetically.
"Oh, no. These things didn't bite, they itched. And they got down
inside of everything they could get down inside, and clung. That
included my ears and my eyes and my nose.
"I broke out a hand sprayer full of a DDT solution, and sprayed it
around me to try to clear the nearby air a little, so that I could
have room to think. The midges loved it. But the plants that were in
reach died so fast that you could watch their leaves curl up and drop
off.
"I couldn't figure whether to turn up the fans and dissipate the
cloud—by spreading it all through the ship—or whether to try to block
off the other plant room, and save it at least. So I ended up by not
doing anything, which was the right thing to do. No more plants died
from the DDT.
"So then I did a few experiments, and found that the regular poison
spray in the ship's fumigation system worked just fine. It killed
the bugs without doing the plants any harm at all. Of course, the
fumigation system is designed to work with the fumigator off the ship,
because it's poisonous to humans too.
"I finally blocked the vents and the door edges in the head, after
running some remote controls into there, and then started the
fumigation system going. While I was sitting there with nothing much
to do, I tried to translate what I could of the Myporian instructions.
It was on page eleven that it mentioned casually that the midges—the
correct word is carolla—are a necessary part of the life cycle of the
marocca. The larvae provide an enzyme without which the plants die.
"Of course. I immediately stopped slapping at the relatively few midges
that had made their way into the head with me, and started to change
the air in the ship to get rid of the poison. I knew it was too late
before I started, and for once I was right.
"The only live midges left in the ship were the ones that had been
with me during the fumigation process. I immediately tried to start
a breeding ground for midges, but the midges didn't seem to want to
cooperate. Whatever I tried to do, they came back to me. I was the only
thing they seemed to love. I didn't dare bathe, or scratch, or even
wriggle, for fear of killing more of them. And they kept on itching. It
was just about unbearable, but I bore it for three interminable days
while the midges died one by one. It was heartbreaking—at least, it
was to me.
"And it was unnecessary, too. Because apparently the carolla had
already laid their eggs, or whatever it is that they do, before I
had fumigated them. After my useless days of agony, a new batch
came swarming out. And this time there were a few of a much larger
thing with them—something like an enormous moth. The new thing just
blundered around aimlessly.
"I lit out for the head again, to keep away from that intolerable
whining. This time I took a luxurious shower and got rid of most of the
midges that came through the door with me. I felt almost comfortable,
in fact, until I resumed my efforts to catch up on my reading.
"The mothlike things—they are called dingleburys—also turn out to
provide a necessary enzyme. They are supposed to have the same timing
of their life cycle as the carolla. Apparently the shaking up I had
given their larvae in moving the tanks and dipping the water up in
buckets and all that had inhibited them in completing their cycle the
first time around.
"And the reason they had the same life cycle as the carolla was that
the adult dinglebury will eat only the adult carolla, and it has to
fill itself full to bursting before it will reproduce. If I had the
translation done correctly, they were supposed to dart gracefully
around, catching carolla on the wing and stuffing themselves happily.
"I had to find out what was wrong with my awkward dingleburys. And
that, of course, meant going out into the ship again. But I had to do
that anyway, because it was almost 'daylight', and time for me to start
shifting the lights again.
"The reason for the dingleburys' problem is fairly obvious. When you
set up artificial gravity by spinning a ship, the gravity is fine down
near the skin where the plants are. But the gravity potential is very
high, and it gets very light up where things fly around, going to zero
on the middle line of the ship. And the unfamiliar gravity gradient,
together with the Coriolis effect and all, makes the poor dingleburys
dizzy, so they can't catch carolla.
"And if you think I figured all that out about dingleburys getting
dizzy at the time, in that madhouse of a ship, then you're crazy. What
happened was that I saw that there was one of the creatures that didn't
seem to be having any trouble, but was acting like the book said it
should. I caught it and examined it. The poor thing was blind, and was
capturing her prey by sound alone.
"So I spent the whole day—along with my usual chore of shifting the
lights—blindfolding dingleburys. Which is a hell of a sport for a man
who is captain of his own ship."
I must say that I agreed with him, but it seemed to be a good time for
me to keep my mouth shut.
"Well, after the dingleburys had eaten and propagated, they became
inquisitive. They explored the whole ship, going into places I wouldn't
have believed it to be possible for them to reach, including the inside
of the main computer, which promptly shorted out. I finally figured
that one of the things had managed to crawl up the cooling air exhaust
duct, against the flow of air, to see what was going on inside.
"I didn't dare to get rid of the things without checking my book, of
course, so it was back to the head for me. 'Night' had come again—and
it was the only place I could get any privacy. There were plenty of the
carolla left to join me outside.
"I showered and swatted and started to read. I got as far as where it
said that the dingleburys continued to be of importance, and then I'm
afraid I fell asleep.
"I got up with the sun the next morning. Hell, I had to, considering
that it was I who turned the sun on! I found that the dingleburys
immediately got busy opening small buds on the stems of the marocca
plants. Apparently they were pollinating them. I felt sure that these
buds weren't the marocca blossoms from which the fruit formed—I'd
seen a lot of those while we were on Mypore II and they were much
bigger and showier than these little acorn-sized buds.
"Of course, I should have translated some more of my instruction book,
but I was busy.
"Anyway, the action of the dingleburys triggered the violent growth
phase of the marocca plants. Did you know that they plant marocca
seedlings, back on Mypore II,
at least
a hundred feet apart? If
you'll recall, a mature field, which was the only kind we ever saw, is
one solid mass of green growth.
"The book says that it takes just six hours for a marocca field to
shift from the seedling stage to the mature stage. It didn't seem that
long. You could
watch
the stuff grow—groping and crawling along; one
plant twining with another as they climbed toward the light.
"It was then that I began to get worried. If they twined around the
light, they would keep me from moving it, and they would shadow it so
it wouldn't do its job right. In effect, their growth would put out the
sun.
"I thought of putting up an electrically charged fence around the
light, but the bugs had put most of my loose equipment out of action,
so I got a machete. When I took a swing at one of the vines, something
bit me on the back of the neck so hard it almost knocked me down. It
was one of the dingleburys, and it was as mad as blazes. It seems that
one of the things they do is to defend the marocca against marauders.
That was the first of my welts, and it put me back in the head in
about two seconds.
"And what's more, I found that I couldn't kill the damn things. Not if
I wanted to save the plants. The growth only stops at the end of six
hours, after the blossoms appear and are visited by the dingleburys. No
dingleburys, no growth stoppage.
"So for the next several hours I had to keep moving those lights, and
keep them clear of the vines, and keep the vines from shadowing each
other to the point where they curled up and died, and I had to do it
gently
, surrounded by a bunch of worried dingleburys.
"Every time they got a little too worried, or I slipped and bumped into
a plant too hard, or looked crosseyed at them, they bit me. If you
think I look bad now, you should have seen me just about the time the
blossoms started to burst.
"I was worried about those blossoms. I felt sure that they would smell
terrible, or make me sick, or hypnotize me, or something. But they just
turned out to be big, white, odorless flowers. They did nothing for me
or to me. They drove the dingleburys wild, though, I'm happy to say.
Made them forget all about me.
"While they were having their orgy, I caught up on my reading. It
was necessary for me to cut back the marocca vines. For one thing,
I couldn't get up to the area of the bridge. For another, the main
computer was completely clogged. I could use the auxiliary, on the
bridge, if I could get to it, but it's a poor substitute. For another
thing, I would have to cut the stuff way back if I was ever going to
get the plants out of the ship. And I was a little anxious to get my
Delta Crucis
back to normal as soon as possible. But before cutting,
I had to translate the gouge.
"It turns out that it's all right to cut marocca as soon as it stops
growing. To keep the plants from dying, though, you have to mulch the
cuttings and then feed them back to the plants, where the roots store
whatever they need against the time of the next explosive period of
growth. Of course, if you prefer you can wait for the vines to die back
naturally, which takes several months.
"There was one little catch, of course. The cuttings from the vines
will poison the plants if they are fed back to them without having been
mixed with a certain amount of processed mulch. Enzymes again. And
there was only one special processor on board.
"I was the special processor. That's what the instructions said—I
translated very carefully—it required an 'organic processor'.
"So I had to eat pounds of that horrible tasting stuff every day, and
process it the hard way.
"I didn't even have time to scratch my bites. I must have lost weight
everywhere but in the swollen places, and they looked worse than they
do now. The doctor says it may take a year before the bumps all go
away—if they ever do—but I have improved a lot already.
"For a while I must have been out of my head. I got so caught up in
the rhythm of the thing that I didn't even notice when we slipped out
of Limbo into real space near Gloryanna III. It was three days, the
Control Tower on Gloryanna III told me, that they tried continuously
to raise me on the communications gear before I heard the alarm bell
and answered them, so I had to do a good deal of backtracking before
I could get into parking orbit around the planet, and then set
Delta
Crucis
down safely. Even as shaky as I was,
Delta Crucis
behaved
like a lady.
"I hadn't chopped off all of the new growth, although I had the plants
down to manageable size. Some of the blossoms left on the plants had
formed fruit, and the fruit had ripened and dried, and the seeds had
developed fully. They were popping and spreading fine dust-like spores
all over the ship, those last few hours before I landed.
"By that time, though, an occasional sneezing fit and watering eyes
didn't bother me any. I was far beyond the point where hay fever could
add to my troubles.
"When I opened the airlock door, though, the spores drifting outside
set the customs inspectors to sneezing and swearing more than seemed
reasonable at the time." Captain Hannah inhaled a sip of rhial, and
seemed to be enjoying the powerful stuff. He acted as if he thought he
had finished.
"Well, go on," I urged him. "The marocca plants were still in good
shape, weren't they?"
Hannah nodded. "They were growing luxuriously." He nodded his head a
couple of more times, in spite of the discomfort it must have given
him.
He said, "They made me burn the entire crop right away, of course. They
didn't get all of the carolla or dingleburys, though. Or spores."
"Gloryanna III is the original home planet of marocca. They hated the
stuff, of course, but they liked the profit. Then, when a plague almost
wiped out the dingleburys, they introduced khorram furs as a cash
crop. It wasn't as lucrative, but it was so much more pleasant that
they outlawed marocca. Took them almost fifty years to stamp it out
completely. Meanwhile, some clever native shipped a load of the stuff
to Mypore II. He took his time, did it without any trouble and made his
fortune. And got out again quickly.
"The Gloryannans were going to hold my
Delta Crucis
as security to
pay for the cost of stamping out marocca all over again—those spores
sprout fast—and for a time I was worried.
"Of course, when I showed them our contract—that you alone were
responsible for everything once I landed the plants safely on Gloryanna
III, they let me go.
"They'll send you the bill. They don't figure it will take them more
than a few months to complete the job."
Captain Hannah stopped talking and stood up, painfully and a little
unsteadily.
I'm afraid I didn't even notice when he blacked my other eye. I was too
busy reaching for the rhial.
END
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/5/3/0/1/53016//53016-h//53016-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | What does the narrator say Captain Hannah has never been?
| 53016_NCS325SD_8 | [
"A gardener \n",
"A good pilot \n",
"An adequate elephant owner \n",
"A handsome man\n"
] | 4 | 4 | [
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61,204 | 61204_7K3R71T6 | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | The Recruit | 1953.0 | Walton, Bryce | Executions and executioners -- Fiction; Teenage boys -- Fiction; Science fiction; PS; Psychological fiction; Short stories | THE RECRUIT
BY BRYCE WALTON
It was dirty work, but it would
make him a man. And kids had a
right to grow up—some of them!
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of If Science Fiction, July 1962.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
Wayne, unseen, sneered down from the head of the stairs.
The old man with his thick neck, thick cigar, evening highball, potgut
and bald head without a brain in it. His slim mother with nervously
polite smiles and voice fluttering, assuring the old man by her frailty
that he was big in the world. They were squareheads one and all,
marking moron time in a gray dream. Man, was he glad to break out.
The old man said, "He'll be okay. Let him alone."
"But he won't eat. Just lies there all the time."
"Hell," the old man said. "Sixteen's a bad time. School over, waiting
for the draft and all. He's in between. It's rough."
Mother clasped her forearms and shook her head once slowly.
"We got to let him go, Eva. It's a dangerous time. You got to remember
about all these dangerous repressed impulses piling up with nowhere to
go, like they say. You read the books."
"But he's unhappy."
"Are we specialists? That's the Youth Board's headache, ain't it? What
do we know about adolescent trauma and like that? Now get dressed or
we'll be late."
Wayne watched the ritual, grinning. He listened to their purposeless
noises, their blabbing and yakking as if they had something to say.
Blab-blab about the same old bones, and end up chewing them in the
same old ways. Then they begin all over again. A freak sideshow all the
way to nowhere. Squareheads going around either unconscious or with
eyes looking dead from the millennium in the office waiting to retire
into limbo.
How come he'd been stuck with parental images like that? One
thing—when he was jockeying a rocket to Mars or maybe firing the pants
off Asiatic reds in some steamy gone jungle paradise, he'd forget his
punkie origins in teeveeland.
But the old man was right on for once about the dangerous repressed
impulses. Wayne had heard about it often enough. Anyway there was no
doubt about it when every move he made was a restrained explosion.
So he'd waited in his room, and it wasn't easy sweating it out alone
waiting for the breakout call from HQ.
"Well, dear, if you say so," Mother said, with the old resigned sigh
that must make the old man feel like Superman with a beerbelly.
They heard Wayne slouching loosely down the stairs and looked up.
"Relax," Wayne said. "You're not going anywhere tonight."
"What, son?" his old man said uneasily. "Sure we are. We're going to
the movies."
He could feel them watching him, waiting; and yet still he didn't
answer. Somewhere out in suburban grayness a dog barked, then was
silent.
"Okay, go," Wayne said. "If you wanta walk. I'm taking the family
boltbucket."
"But we promised the Clemons, dear," his mother said.
"Hell," Wayne said, grinning straight into the old man. "I just got my
draft call."
He saw the old man's Adam's apple move. "Oh, my dear boy," Mother cried
out.
"So gimme the keys," Wayne said. The old man handed the keys over. His
understanding smile was strained, and fear flicked in his sagging eyes.
"Do be careful, dear," his mother said. She ran toward him as he
laughed and shut the door on her. He was still laughing as he whoomed
the Olds between the pale dead glow of houses and roared up the ramp
onto the Freeway. Ahead was the promising glitter of adventure-calling
neon, and he looked up at the high skies of night and his eyes sailed
the glaring wonders of escape.
He burned off some rubber finding a slot in the park-lot. He strode
under a sign reading
Public Youth Center No. 947
and walked casually
to the reception desk, where a thin man with sergeant's stripes and a
pansy haircut looked out of a pile of paperwork.
"Where you think you're going, my pretty lad?"
Wayne grinned down. "Higher I hope than a typewriter jockey."
"Well," the sergeant said. "How tough we are this evening. You have a
pass, killer?"
"Wayne Seton. Draft call."
"Oh." The sergeant checked his name off a roster and nodded. He wrote
on a slip of paper, handed the pass to Wayne. "Go to the Armory and
check out whatever your lusting little heart desires. Then report to
Captain Jack, room 307."
"Thanks, sarge dear," Wayne said and took the elevator up to the Armory.
A tired fat corporal with a naked head blinked up at tall Wayne.
Finally he said, "So make up your mind, bud. Think you're the only kid
breaking out tonight?"
"Hold your teeth, pop," Wayne said, coolly and slowly lighting a
cigarette. "I've decided."
The corporal's little eyes studied Wayne with malicious amusement.
"Take it from a vet, bud. Sooner you go the better. It's a big city and
you're starting late. You can get a cat, not a mouse, and some babes
are clever hellcats in a dark alley."
"You must be a genius," Wayne said. "A corporal with no hair and still
a counterboy. I'm impressed. I'm all ears, Dad."
The corporal sighed wearily. "You can get that balloon head
ventilated, bud, and good."
Wayne's mouth twitched. He leaned across the counter toward the
shelves and racks of weapons. "I'll remember that crack when I get
my commission." He blew smoke in the corporal's face. "Bring me a
Smith and Wesson .38, shoulder holster with spring-clip. And throw in
a Skelly switchblade for kicks—the six-inch disguised job with the
double springs."
The corporal waddled back with the revolver and the switchblade
disguised in a leather comb case. He checked them on a receipt ledger,
while Wayne examined the weapons, broke open the revolver, twirled the
cylinder and pushed cartridges into the waiting chamber. He slipped
the knife from the comb case, flicked open the blade and stared at its
gleam in the buttery light as his mouth went dry and the refracted
incandescence of it trickled on his brain like melted ice, exciting and
scary.
He removed his leather jacket. He slung the holster under his left
armpit and tested the spring clip release several times, feeling the
way the serrated butt dropped into his wet palm. He put his jacket
back on and the switchblade case in his pocket. He walked toward the
elevator and didn't look back as the corporal said, "Good luck, tiger."
Captain Jack moved massively. The big stone-walled office, alive with
stuffed lion and tiger and gunracks, seemed to grow smaller. Captain
Jack crossed black-booted legs and whacked a cane at the floor. It had
a head shaped like a grinning bear.
Wayne felt the assured smile die on his face. Something seemed to
shrink him. If he didn't watch himself he'd begin feeling like a pea
among bowling balls.
Contemptuously amused little eyes glittered at Wayne from a shaggy
head. Shoulders hunched like stuffed sea-bags.
"Wayne Seton," said Captain Jack as if he were discussing something
in a bug collection. "Well, well, you're really fired up aren't you?
Really going out to eat 'em. Right, punk?"
"Yes, sir," Wayne said. He ran wet hands down the sides of his chinos.
His legs seemed sheathed in lead as he bit inwardly at shrinking fear
the way a dog snaps at a wound. You big overblown son, he thought, I'll
show you but good who is a punk. They made a guy wait and sweat until
he screamed. They kept a guy on the fire until desire leaped in him,
ran and billowed and roared until his brain was filled with it. But
that wasn't enough. If this muscle-bound creep was such a big boy,
what was he doing holding down a desk?
"Well, this is it, punk. You go the distance or start a butterfly
collection."
The cane darted up. A blade snicked from the end and stopped an inch
from Wayne's nose. He jerked up a shaky hand involuntarily and clamped
a knuckle-ridged gag to his gasping mouth.
Captain Jack chuckled. "All right, superboy." He handed Wayne his
passcard. "Curfew's off, punk, for 6 hours. You got 6 hours to make
out."
"Yes, sir."
"Your beast is primed and waiting at the Four Aces Club on the West
Side. Know where that is, punk?"
"No, sir, but I'll find it fast."
"Sure you will, punk," smiled Captain Jack. "She'll be wearing yellow
slacks and a red shirt. Black hair, a cute trick. She's with a hefty
psycho who eats punks for breakfast. He's butchered five people.
They're both on top of the Undesirable list, Seton. They got to go and
they're your key to the stars."
"Yes, sir," Wayne said.
"So run along and make out, punk," grinned Captain Jack.
A copcar stopped Wayne as he started over the bridge, out of bright
respectable neon into the murky westside slum over the river.
Wayne waved the pass card, signed by Captain Jack, under the cop's
quivering nose. The cop shivered and stepped back and waved him on. The
Olds roared over the bridge as the night's rain blew away.
The air through the open window was chill and damp coming from
Slumville, but Wayne felt a cold that wasn't of the night or the wind.
He turned off into a rat's warren of the inferiors. Lights turned pale,
secretive and sparse, the uncared-for streets became rough with pitted
potholes, narrow and winding and humid with wet unpleasant smells.
Wayne's fearful exhilaration increased as he cruised with bated breath
through the dark mazes of streets and rickety tenements crawling with
the shadows of mysterious promise.
He found the alley, dark, a gloom-dripping tunnel. He drove cautiously
into it and rolled along, watching. His belly ached with expectancy as
he spotted the sick-looking dab of neon wanly sparkling.
FOUR ACES CLUB
He parked across the alley. He got out and stood in shadows, digging
the sultry beat of a combo, the wild pulse of drums and spinning brass
filtering through windows painted black.
He breathed deep, started over, ducked back. A stewbum weaved out of
a bank of garbage cans, humming to himself, pulling at a rainsoaked
shirt clinging to a pale stick body. He reminded Wayne of a slim grub
balanced on one end.
The stewbum stumbled. His bearded face in dim breaking moonlight had
a dirty, greenish tinge as he sensed Wayne there. He turned in a
grotesque uncoordinated jiggling and his eyes were wide with terror and
doom.
"I gotta hide, kid. They're on me."
Wayne's chest rose and his hands curled.
The bum's fingers drew at the air like white talons.
"Help me, kid."
He turned with a scratchy cry and retreated before the sudden blast
of headlights from a Cad bulleting into the alley. The Cad rushed
past Wayne and he felt the engine-hot fumes against his legs. Tires
squealed. The Cad stopped and a teener in black jacket jumped out and
crouched as he began stalking the old rummy.
"This is him! This is him all right," the teener yelled, and one hand
came up swinging a baseball bat.
A head bobbed out of the Cad window and giggled.
The fumble-footed rummy tried to run and plopped on wet pavement. The
teener moved in, while a faint odor of burnt rubber hovered in the air
as the Cad cruised in a slow follow-up.
Wayne's breath quickened as he watched, feeling somehow blank wonder
at finding himself there, free and breaking out at last with no curfew
and no law but his own. He felt as though he couldn't stop anything.
Living seemed directionless, but he still would go with it regardless,
until something dropped off or blew to hell like a hot light-bulb. He
held his breath, waiting. His body was tensed and rigid as he moved in
spirit with the hunting teener, an omniscient shadow with a hunting
license and a ghetto jungle twenty miles deep.
The crawling stewbum screamed as the baseball bat whacked. The teener
laughed. Wayne wanted to shout. He opened his mouth, but the yell
clogged up somewhere, so that he remained soundless yet with his mouth
still open as he heard the payoff thuds where the useless wino curled
up with stick arms over his rheumy face.
The teener laughed, tossed the bat away and began jumping up and down
with his hobnailed, mail-order air force boots. Then he ran into the
Cad. A hootch bottle soared out, made a brittle tink-tink of falling
glass.
"Go, man!"
The Cad wooshed by. It made a sort of hollow sucking noise as it
bounced over the old man twice. Then the finlights diminished like
bright wind-blown sparks.
Wayne walked over and sneered down at the human garbage lying in
scummed rain pools. The smell of raw violence, the scent of blood, made
his heart thump like a trapped rubber ball in a cage.
He hurried into the Four Aces, drawn by an exhilarating vision ... and
pursued by the hollow haunting fears of his own desires.
He walked through the wavering haze of smoke and liquored dizziness and
stood until his eyes learned the dark. He spotted her red shirt and
yellow legs over in the corner above a murky lighted table.
He walked toward her, watching her little subhuman pixie face lift.
The eyes widened with exciting terror, turned even paler behind a red
slash of sensuous mouth. Briefed and waiting, primed and eager for
running, she recognized her pursuer at once. He sat at a table near
her, watching and grinning and seeing her squirm.
She sat in that slightly baffled, fearful and uncomprehending attitude
of being motionless, as though they were all actors performing in a
weirdo drama being staged in that smoky thick-aired dive.
Wayne smiled with wry superiority at the redheaded psycho in a dirty
T-shirt, a big bruiser with a gorilla face. He was tussling his mouse
heavy.
"What's yours, teener?" the slug-faced waiter asked.
"Bring me a Crusher, buddyroo," Wayne said, and flashed his pass card.
"Sure, teener."
Red nuzzled the mouse's neck and made drooly noises. Wayne watched and
fed on the promising terror and helplessness of her hunted face. She
sat rigid, eyes fixed on Wayne like balls of frozen glass.
Red looked up and stared straight at Wayne with eyes like black buttons
imbedded in the waxlike skin of his face. Then he grinned all on one
side. One huge hand scratched across the wet table top like a furious
cat's.
Wayne returned the challenging move but felt a nervous twitch jerk at
his lips. A numbness covered his brain like a film as he concentrated
on staring down Red the psycho. But Red kept looking, his eyes bright
but dead. Then he began struggling it up again with the scared little
mouse.
The waiter sat the Crusher down. Wayne signed a chit; tonight he was in
the pay of the state.
"What else, teener?"
"One thing. Fade."
"Sure, teener," the waiter said, his breathy words dripping like syrup.
Wayne drank. Liquored heat dripped into his stomach. Fire tickled his
veins, became hot wire twisting in his head.
He drank again and forced out a shaky breath. The jazz beat thumped
fast and muted brass moaned. Drumpulse, stabbing trumpet raped the
air. Tension mounted as Wayne watched her pale throat convulsing, the
white eyelids fluttering. Red fingered at her legs and salivated at her
throat, glancing now and then at Wayne, baiting him good.
"Okay, you creep," Wayne said.
He stood up and started through the haze. The psycho leaped and a table
crashed. Wayne's .38 dropped from its spring-clip holster and the blast
filled the room. The psycho screamed and stumbled toward the door
holding something in. The mouse darted by, eluded Wayne's grasp and was
out the door.
Wayne went out after her in a laughing frenzy of release. He felt the
cold strange breath of moist air on his sweating skin as he sprinted
down the alley into a wind full of blowing wet.
He ran laughing under the crazy starlight and glimpsed her now and
then, fading in and out of shadows, jumping, crawling, running with the
life-or-death animation of a wild deer.
Up and down alleys, a rat's maze. A rabbit run. Across vacant lots.
Through shattered tenement ruins. Over a fence. There she was, falling,
sliding down a brick shute.
He gained. He moved up. His labored breath pumped more fire. And her
scream was a rejuvenation hypo in his blood.
She quivered above him on the stoop, panting, her eyes afire with
terror.
"You, baby," Wayne gasped. "I gotcha."
She backed into darkness, up there against the sagging tenement wall,
her arms out and poised like crippled wings. Wayne crept up. She gave
a squeaking sob, turned, ran. Wayne leaped into gloom. Wood cracked.
He clambered over rotten lumber. The doorway sagged and he hesitated
in the musty dark. A few feet away was the sound of loose trickling
plaster, a whimpering whine.
"No use running," Wayne said. "Go loose. Give, baby. Give now."
She scurried up sagging stairs. Wayne laughed and dug up after her,
feeling his way through debris. Dim moonlight filtered through a
sagging stairway from a shattered skylight three floors up. The mouse's
shadow floated ahead.
He started up. The entire stair structure canted sickeningly. A railing
ripped and he nearly went with it back down to the first floor. He
heard a scream as rotten boards crumbled and dust exploded from
cracks. A rat ran past Wayne and fell into space. He burst into the
third-floor hallway and saw her half-falling through a door under the
jagged skylight.
Wayne took his time. He knew how she felt waiting in there, listening
to his creeping, implacable footfalls.
Then he yelled and slammed open the door.
Dust and stench, filth so awful it made nothing of the dust. In
the corner he saw something hardly to be called a bed. More like
a nest. A dirty, lumpy pile of torn mattress, felt, excelsior,
shredded newspapers and rags. It seemed to crawl a little under the
moon-streaming skylight.
She crouched in the corner panting. He took his time moving in. He
snickered as he flashed the switchblade and circled it like a serpent's
tongue. He watched what was left of her nerves go to pieces like rotten
cloth.
"Do it quick, hunter," she whispered. "Please do it quick."
"What's that, baby?"
"I'm tired running. Kill me first. Beat me after. They won't know the
difference."
"I'm gonna bruise and beat you," he said.
"Kill me first," she begged. "I don't want—" She began to cry. She
cried right up in his face, her wide eyes unblinking, and her mouth
open.
"You got bad blood, baby," he snarled. He laughed but it didn't sound
like him and something was wrong with his belly. It was knotting up.
"Bad, I know! So get it over with, please. Hurry, hurry."
She was small and white and quivering. She moaned but kept staring up
at him.
He ripped off his rivet-studded belt and swung once, then groaned and
shuffled away from her.
He kept backing toward the door. She crawled after him, begging and
clutching with both arms as she wriggled forward on her knees.
"Don't run. Please. Kill me! It'll be someone else if you don't. Oh,
God, I'm so tired waiting and running!"
"I can't," he said, and sickness soured in his throat.
"Please."
"I can't, I can't!"
He turned and ran blindly, half-fell down the cracking stairs.
Doctor Burns, head of the readjustment staff at the Youth Center,
studied Wayne with abstract interest.
"You enjoyed the hunt, Seton? You got your kicks?"
"Yes, sir."
"But you couldn't execute them?"
"No, sir."
"They're undesirables. Incurables. You know that, Seton?"
"Yes, sir."
"The psycho you only wounded. He's a five-times murderer. And that girl
killed her father when she was twelve. You realize there's nothing can
be done for them? That they have to be executed?"
"I know."
"Too bad," the doctor said. "We all have aggressive impulses, primitive
needs that must be expressed early, purged. There's murder in all
of us, Seton. The impulse shouldn't be denied or suppressed, but
educated
. The state used to kill them. Isn't it better all around,
Seton, for us to do it, as part of growing up? What was the matter,
Seton?"
"I—felt sorry for her."
"Is that all you can say about it?"
"Yes, sir."
The doctor pressed a buzzer. Two men in white coats entered.
"You should have got it out of your system, Seton, but now it's still
in there. I can't turn you out and have it erupt later—and maybe shed
clean innocent blood, can I?"
"No, sir," Wayne mumbled. He didn't look up. "I'm sorry I punked out."
"Give him the treatment," the doctor said wearily. "And send him back
to his mother."
Wayne nodded and they led him away. His mind screamed still to split
open some prison of bone and lay bare and breathing wide. But there
was no way out for the trapped. Now he knew about the old man and his
poker-playing pals.
They had all punked out.
Like him.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/1/2/0/61204//61204-h//61204-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | Why doesn’t Wayne like his parents?
| 61204_7K3R71T6_1 | [
"His parents broke out when they were much younger than the age he is now, and he is embarrassed by this. \n",
"His parents want to keep him from breaking out, knowing that the horrors Wayne will face are too much for him. \n",
"No reason. Wayne is a bad egg and enjoys tormenting them. \n",
"He feels that they are soft and stupid, that they’ve given up on what life has to offer.\n"
] | 4 | 4 | [
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61,204 | 61204_7K3R71T6 | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | The Recruit | 1953.0 | Walton, Bryce | Executions and executioners -- Fiction; Teenage boys -- Fiction; Science fiction; PS; Psychological fiction; Short stories | THE RECRUIT
BY BRYCE WALTON
It was dirty work, but it would
make him a man. And kids had a
right to grow up—some of them!
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of If Science Fiction, July 1962.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
Wayne, unseen, sneered down from the head of the stairs.
The old man with his thick neck, thick cigar, evening highball, potgut
and bald head without a brain in it. His slim mother with nervously
polite smiles and voice fluttering, assuring the old man by her frailty
that he was big in the world. They were squareheads one and all,
marking moron time in a gray dream. Man, was he glad to break out.
The old man said, "He'll be okay. Let him alone."
"But he won't eat. Just lies there all the time."
"Hell," the old man said. "Sixteen's a bad time. School over, waiting
for the draft and all. He's in between. It's rough."
Mother clasped her forearms and shook her head once slowly.
"We got to let him go, Eva. It's a dangerous time. You got to remember
about all these dangerous repressed impulses piling up with nowhere to
go, like they say. You read the books."
"But he's unhappy."
"Are we specialists? That's the Youth Board's headache, ain't it? What
do we know about adolescent trauma and like that? Now get dressed or
we'll be late."
Wayne watched the ritual, grinning. He listened to their purposeless
noises, their blabbing and yakking as if they had something to say.
Blab-blab about the same old bones, and end up chewing them in the
same old ways. Then they begin all over again. A freak sideshow all the
way to nowhere. Squareheads going around either unconscious or with
eyes looking dead from the millennium in the office waiting to retire
into limbo.
How come he'd been stuck with parental images like that? One
thing—when he was jockeying a rocket to Mars or maybe firing the pants
off Asiatic reds in some steamy gone jungle paradise, he'd forget his
punkie origins in teeveeland.
But the old man was right on for once about the dangerous repressed
impulses. Wayne had heard about it often enough. Anyway there was no
doubt about it when every move he made was a restrained explosion.
So he'd waited in his room, and it wasn't easy sweating it out alone
waiting for the breakout call from HQ.
"Well, dear, if you say so," Mother said, with the old resigned sigh
that must make the old man feel like Superman with a beerbelly.
They heard Wayne slouching loosely down the stairs and looked up.
"Relax," Wayne said. "You're not going anywhere tonight."
"What, son?" his old man said uneasily. "Sure we are. We're going to
the movies."
He could feel them watching him, waiting; and yet still he didn't
answer. Somewhere out in suburban grayness a dog barked, then was
silent.
"Okay, go," Wayne said. "If you wanta walk. I'm taking the family
boltbucket."
"But we promised the Clemons, dear," his mother said.
"Hell," Wayne said, grinning straight into the old man. "I just got my
draft call."
He saw the old man's Adam's apple move. "Oh, my dear boy," Mother cried
out.
"So gimme the keys," Wayne said. The old man handed the keys over. His
understanding smile was strained, and fear flicked in his sagging eyes.
"Do be careful, dear," his mother said. She ran toward him as he
laughed and shut the door on her. He was still laughing as he whoomed
the Olds between the pale dead glow of houses and roared up the ramp
onto the Freeway. Ahead was the promising glitter of adventure-calling
neon, and he looked up at the high skies of night and his eyes sailed
the glaring wonders of escape.
He burned off some rubber finding a slot in the park-lot. He strode
under a sign reading
Public Youth Center No. 947
and walked casually
to the reception desk, where a thin man with sergeant's stripes and a
pansy haircut looked out of a pile of paperwork.
"Where you think you're going, my pretty lad?"
Wayne grinned down. "Higher I hope than a typewriter jockey."
"Well," the sergeant said. "How tough we are this evening. You have a
pass, killer?"
"Wayne Seton. Draft call."
"Oh." The sergeant checked his name off a roster and nodded. He wrote
on a slip of paper, handed the pass to Wayne. "Go to the Armory and
check out whatever your lusting little heart desires. Then report to
Captain Jack, room 307."
"Thanks, sarge dear," Wayne said and took the elevator up to the Armory.
A tired fat corporal with a naked head blinked up at tall Wayne.
Finally he said, "So make up your mind, bud. Think you're the only kid
breaking out tonight?"
"Hold your teeth, pop," Wayne said, coolly and slowly lighting a
cigarette. "I've decided."
The corporal's little eyes studied Wayne with malicious amusement.
"Take it from a vet, bud. Sooner you go the better. It's a big city and
you're starting late. You can get a cat, not a mouse, and some babes
are clever hellcats in a dark alley."
"You must be a genius," Wayne said. "A corporal with no hair and still
a counterboy. I'm impressed. I'm all ears, Dad."
The corporal sighed wearily. "You can get that balloon head
ventilated, bud, and good."
Wayne's mouth twitched. He leaned across the counter toward the
shelves and racks of weapons. "I'll remember that crack when I get
my commission." He blew smoke in the corporal's face. "Bring me a
Smith and Wesson .38, shoulder holster with spring-clip. And throw in
a Skelly switchblade for kicks—the six-inch disguised job with the
double springs."
The corporal waddled back with the revolver and the switchblade
disguised in a leather comb case. He checked them on a receipt ledger,
while Wayne examined the weapons, broke open the revolver, twirled the
cylinder and pushed cartridges into the waiting chamber. He slipped
the knife from the comb case, flicked open the blade and stared at its
gleam in the buttery light as his mouth went dry and the refracted
incandescence of it trickled on his brain like melted ice, exciting and
scary.
He removed his leather jacket. He slung the holster under his left
armpit and tested the spring clip release several times, feeling the
way the serrated butt dropped into his wet palm. He put his jacket
back on and the switchblade case in his pocket. He walked toward the
elevator and didn't look back as the corporal said, "Good luck, tiger."
Captain Jack moved massively. The big stone-walled office, alive with
stuffed lion and tiger and gunracks, seemed to grow smaller. Captain
Jack crossed black-booted legs and whacked a cane at the floor. It had
a head shaped like a grinning bear.
Wayne felt the assured smile die on his face. Something seemed to
shrink him. If he didn't watch himself he'd begin feeling like a pea
among bowling balls.
Contemptuously amused little eyes glittered at Wayne from a shaggy
head. Shoulders hunched like stuffed sea-bags.
"Wayne Seton," said Captain Jack as if he were discussing something
in a bug collection. "Well, well, you're really fired up aren't you?
Really going out to eat 'em. Right, punk?"
"Yes, sir," Wayne said. He ran wet hands down the sides of his chinos.
His legs seemed sheathed in lead as he bit inwardly at shrinking fear
the way a dog snaps at a wound. You big overblown son, he thought, I'll
show you but good who is a punk. They made a guy wait and sweat until
he screamed. They kept a guy on the fire until desire leaped in him,
ran and billowed and roared until his brain was filled with it. But
that wasn't enough. If this muscle-bound creep was such a big boy,
what was he doing holding down a desk?
"Well, this is it, punk. You go the distance or start a butterfly
collection."
The cane darted up. A blade snicked from the end and stopped an inch
from Wayne's nose. He jerked up a shaky hand involuntarily and clamped
a knuckle-ridged gag to his gasping mouth.
Captain Jack chuckled. "All right, superboy." He handed Wayne his
passcard. "Curfew's off, punk, for 6 hours. You got 6 hours to make
out."
"Yes, sir."
"Your beast is primed and waiting at the Four Aces Club on the West
Side. Know where that is, punk?"
"No, sir, but I'll find it fast."
"Sure you will, punk," smiled Captain Jack. "She'll be wearing yellow
slacks and a red shirt. Black hair, a cute trick. She's with a hefty
psycho who eats punks for breakfast. He's butchered five people.
They're both on top of the Undesirable list, Seton. They got to go and
they're your key to the stars."
"Yes, sir," Wayne said.
"So run along and make out, punk," grinned Captain Jack.
A copcar stopped Wayne as he started over the bridge, out of bright
respectable neon into the murky westside slum over the river.
Wayne waved the pass card, signed by Captain Jack, under the cop's
quivering nose. The cop shivered and stepped back and waved him on. The
Olds roared over the bridge as the night's rain blew away.
The air through the open window was chill and damp coming from
Slumville, but Wayne felt a cold that wasn't of the night or the wind.
He turned off into a rat's warren of the inferiors. Lights turned pale,
secretive and sparse, the uncared-for streets became rough with pitted
potholes, narrow and winding and humid with wet unpleasant smells.
Wayne's fearful exhilaration increased as he cruised with bated breath
through the dark mazes of streets and rickety tenements crawling with
the shadows of mysterious promise.
He found the alley, dark, a gloom-dripping tunnel. He drove cautiously
into it and rolled along, watching. His belly ached with expectancy as
he spotted the sick-looking dab of neon wanly sparkling.
FOUR ACES CLUB
He parked across the alley. He got out and stood in shadows, digging
the sultry beat of a combo, the wild pulse of drums and spinning brass
filtering through windows painted black.
He breathed deep, started over, ducked back. A stewbum weaved out of
a bank of garbage cans, humming to himself, pulling at a rainsoaked
shirt clinging to a pale stick body. He reminded Wayne of a slim grub
balanced on one end.
The stewbum stumbled. His bearded face in dim breaking moonlight had
a dirty, greenish tinge as he sensed Wayne there. He turned in a
grotesque uncoordinated jiggling and his eyes were wide with terror and
doom.
"I gotta hide, kid. They're on me."
Wayne's chest rose and his hands curled.
The bum's fingers drew at the air like white talons.
"Help me, kid."
He turned with a scratchy cry and retreated before the sudden blast
of headlights from a Cad bulleting into the alley. The Cad rushed
past Wayne and he felt the engine-hot fumes against his legs. Tires
squealed. The Cad stopped and a teener in black jacket jumped out and
crouched as he began stalking the old rummy.
"This is him! This is him all right," the teener yelled, and one hand
came up swinging a baseball bat.
A head bobbed out of the Cad window and giggled.
The fumble-footed rummy tried to run and plopped on wet pavement. The
teener moved in, while a faint odor of burnt rubber hovered in the air
as the Cad cruised in a slow follow-up.
Wayne's breath quickened as he watched, feeling somehow blank wonder
at finding himself there, free and breaking out at last with no curfew
and no law but his own. He felt as though he couldn't stop anything.
Living seemed directionless, but he still would go with it regardless,
until something dropped off or blew to hell like a hot light-bulb. He
held his breath, waiting. His body was tensed and rigid as he moved in
spirit with the hunting teener, an omniscient shadow with a hunting
license and a ghetto jungle twenty miles deep.
The crawling stewbum screamed as the baseball bat whacked. The teener
laughed. Wayne wanted to shout. He opened his mouth, but the yell
clogged up somewhere, so that he remained soundless yet with his mouth
still open as he heard the payoff thuds where the useless wino curled
up with stick arms over his rheumy face.
The teener laughed, tossed the bat away and began jumping up and down
with his hobnailed, mail-order air force boots. Then he ran into the
Cad. A hootch bottle soared out, made a brittle tink-tink of falling
glass.
"Go, man!"
The Cad wooshed by. It made a sort of hollow sucking noise as it
bounced over the old man twice. Then the finlights diminished like
bright wind-blown sparks.
Wayne walked over and sneered down at the human garbage lying in
scummed rain pools. The smell of raw violence, the scent of blood, made
his heart thump like a trapped rubber ball in a cage.
He hurried into the Four Aces, drawn by an exhilarating vision ... and
pursued by the hollow haunting fears of his own desires.
He walked through the wavering haze of smoke and liquored dizziness and
stood until his eyes learned the dark. He spotted her red shirt and
yellow legs over in the corner above a murky lighted table.
He walked toward her, watching her little subhuman pixie face lift.
The eyes widened with exciting terror, turned even paler behind a red
slash of sensuous mouth. Briefed and waiting, primed and eager for
running, she recognized her pursuer at once. He sat at a table near
her, watching and grinning and seeing her squirm.
She sat in that slightly baffled, fearful and uncomprehending attitude
of being motionless, as though they were all actors performing in a
weirdo drama being staged in that smoky thick-aired dive.
Wayne smiled with wry superiority at the redheaded psycho in a dirty
T-shirt, a big bruiser with a gorilla face. He was tussling his mouse
heavy.
"What's yours, teener?" the slug-faced waiter asked.
"Bring me a Crusher, buddyroo," Wayne said, and flashed his pass card.
"Sure, teener."
Red nuzzled the mouse's neck and made drooly noises. Wayne watched and
fed on the promising terror and helplessness of her hunted face. She
sat rigid, eyes fixed on Wayne like balls of frozen glass.
Red looked up and stared straight at Wayne with eyes like black buttons
imbedded in the waxlike skin of his face. Then he grinned all on one
side. One huge hand scratched across the wet table top like a furious
cat's.
Wayne returned the challenging move but felt a nervous twitch jerk at
his lips. A numbness covered his brain like a film as he concentrated
on staring down Red the psycho. But Red kept looking, his eyes bright
but dead. Then he began struggling it up again with the scared little
mouse.
The waiter sat the Crusher down. Wayne signed a chit; tonight he was in
the pay of the state.
"What else, teener?"
"One thing. Fade."
"Sure, teener," the waiter said, his breathy words dripping like syrup.
Wayne drank. Liquored heat dripped into his stomach. Fire tickled his
veins, became hot wire twisting in his head.
He drank again and forced out a shaky breath. The jazz beat thumped
fast and muted brass moaned. Drumpulse, stabbing trumpet raped the
air. Tension mounted as Wayne watched her pale throat convulsing, the
white eyelids fluttering. Red fingered at her legs and salivated at her
throat, glancing now and then at Wayne, baiting him good.
"Okay, you creep," Wayne said.
He stood up and started through the haze. The psycho leaped and a table
crashed. Wayne's .38 dropped from its spring-clip holster and the blast
filled the room. The psycho screamed and stumbled toward the door
holding something in. The mouse darted by, eluded Wayne's grasp and was
out the door.
Wayne went out after her in a laughing frenzy of release. He felt the
cold strange breath of moist air on his sweating skin as he sprinted
down the alley into a wind full of blowing wet.
He ran laughing under the crazy starlight and glimpsed her now and
then, fading in and out of shadows, jumping, crawling, running with the
life-or-death animation of a wild deer.
Up and down alleys, a rat's maze. A rabbit run. Across vacant lots.
Through shattered tenement ruins. Over a fence. There she was, falling,
sliding down a brick shute.
He gained. He moved up. His labored breath pumped more fire. And her
scream was a rejuvenation hypo in his blood.
She quivered above him on the stoop, panting, her eyes afire with
terror.
"You, baby," Wayne gasped. "I gotcha."
She backed into darkness, up there against the sagging tenement wall,
her arms out and poised like crippled wings. Wayne crept up. She gave
a squeaking sob, turned, ran. Wayne leaped into gloom. Wood cracked.
He clambered over rotten lumber. The doorway sagged and he hesitated
in the musty dark. A few feet away was the sound of loose trickling
plaster, a whimpering whine.
"No use running," Wayne said. "Go loose. Give, baby. Give now."
She scurried up sagging stairs. Wayne laughed and dug up after her,
feeling his way through debris. Dim moonlight filtered through a
sagging stairway from a shattered skylight three floors up. The mouse's
shadow floated ahead.
He started up. The entire stair structure canted sickeningly. A railing
ripped and he nearly went with it back down to the first floor. He
heard a scream as rotten boards crumbled and dust exploded from
cracks. A rat ran past Wayne and fell into space. He burst into the
third-floor hallway and saw her half-falling through a door under the
jagged skylight.
Wayne took his time. He knew how she felt waiting in there, listening
to his creeping, implacable footfalls.
Then he yelled and slammed open the door.
Dust and stench, filth so awful it made nothing of the dust. In
the corner he saw something hardly to be called a bed. More like
a nest. A dirty, lumpy pile of torn mattress, felt, excelsior,
shredded newspapers and rags. It seemed to crawl a little under the
moon-streaming skylight.
She crouched in the corner panting. He took his time moving in. He
snickered as he flashed the switchblade and circled it like a serpent's
tongue. He watched what was left of her nerves go to pieces like rotten
cloth.
"Do it quick, hunter," she whispered. "Please do it quick."
"What's that, baby?"
"I'm tired running. Kill me first. Beat me after. They won't know the
difference."
"I'm gonna bruise and beat you," he said.
"Kill me first," she begged. "I don't want—" She began to cry. She
cried right up in his face, her wide eyes unblinking, and her mouth
open.
"You got bad blood, baby," he snarled. He laughed but it didn't sound
like him and something was wrong with his belly. It was knotting up.
"Bad, I know! So get it over with, please. Hurry, hurry."
She was small and white and quivering. She moaned but kept staring up
at him.
He ripped off his rivet-studded belt and swung once, then groaned and
shuffled away from her.
He kept backing toward the door. She crawled after him, begging and
clutching with both arms as she wriggled forward on her knees.
"Don't run. Please. Kill me! It'll be someone else if you don't. Oh,
God, I'm so tired waiting and running!"
"I can't," he said, and sickness soured in his throat.
"Please."
"I can't, I can't!"
He turned and ran blindly, half-fell down the cracking stairs.
Doctor Burns, head of the readjustment staff at the Youth Center,
studied Wayne with abstract interest.
"You enjoyed the hunt, Seton? You got your kicks?"
"Yes, sir."
"But you couldn't execute them?"
"No, sir."
"They're undesirables. Incurables. You know that, Seton?"
"Yes, sir."
"The psycho you only wounded. He's a five-times murderer. And that girl
killed her father when she was twelve. You realize there's nothing can
be done for them? That they have to be executed?"
"I know."
"Too bad," the doctor said. "We all have aggressive impulses, primitive
needs that must be expressed early, purged. There's murder in all
of us, Seton. The impulse shouldn't be denied or suppressed, but
educated
. The state used to kill them. Isn't it better all around,
Seton, for us to do it, as part of growing up? What was the matter,
Seton?"
"I—felt sorry for her."
"Is that all you can say about it?"
"Yes, sir."
The doctor pressed a buzzer. Two men in white coats entered.
"You should have got it out of your system, Seton, but now it's still
in there. I can't turn you out and have it erupt later—and maybe shed
clean innocent blood, can I?"
"No, sir," Wayne mumbled. He didn't look up. "I'm sorry I punked out."
"Give him the treatment," the doctor said wearily. "And send him back
to his mother."
Wayne nodded and they led him away. His mind screamed still to split
open some prison of bone and lay bare and breathing wide. But there
was no way out for the trapped. Now he knew about the old man and his
poker-playing pals.
They had all punked out.
Like him.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/1/2/0/61204//61204-h//61204-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | Which category and description best describes the type of story “The Recruit” is using as its base?
| 61204_7K3R71T6_2 | [
"Coming of age: Wayne must kill one person during the break out test in order to become a functioning member of society. Breaking out is a rite of passage. ",
"Boy Meets Girl: When Wayne chases Red and attempts to kill her, he realizes that killing isn’t for him and that the rest of his life should\n",
"Animal Rights: The story is an exploration of Wayne’s realization that cats and mice should not be subject to violence. \n",
"Man vs. Nature: The entire story is dedicated to exploring how a society can kill the animalistic natures within a human body and soul. \n"
] | 1 | 1 | [
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61,204 | 61204_7K3R71T6 | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | The Recruit | 1953.0 | Walton, Bryce | Executions and executioners -- Fiction; Teenage boys -- Fiction; Science fiction; PS; Psychological fiction; Short stories | THE RECRUIT
BY BRYCE WALTON
It was dirty work, but it would
make him a man. And kids had a
right to grow up—some of them!
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of If Science Fiction, July 1962.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
Wayne, unseen, sneered down from the head of the stairs.
The old man with his thick neck, thick cigar, evening highball, potgut
and bald head without a brain in it. His slim mother with nervously
polite smiles and voice fluttering, assuring the old man by her frailty
that he was big in the world. They were squareheads one and all,
marking moron time in a gray dream. Man, was he glad to break out.
The old man said, "He'll be okay. Let him alone."
"But he won't eat. Just lies there all the time."
"Hell," the old man said. "Sixteen's a bad time. School over, waiting
for the draft and all. He's in between. It's rough."
Mother clasped her forearms and shook her head once slowly.
"We got to let him go, Eva. It's a dangerous time. You got to remember
about all these dangerous repressed impulses piling up with nowhere to
go, like they say. You read the books."
"But he's unhappy."
"Are we specialists? That's the Youth Board's headache, ain't it? What
do we know about adolescent trauma and like that? Now get dressed or
we'll be late."
Wayne watched the ritual, grinning. He listened to their purposeless
noises, their blabbing and yakking as if they had something to say.
Blab-blab about the same old bones, and end up chewing them in the
same old ways. Then they begin all over again. A freak sideshow all the
way to nowhere. Squareheads going around either unconscious or with
eyes looking dead from the millennium in the office waiting to retire
into limbo.
How come he'd been stuck with parental images like that? One
thing—when he was jockeying a rocket to Mars or maybe firing the pants
off Asiatic reds in some steamy gone jungle paradise, he'd forget his
punkie origins in teeveeland.
But the old man was right on for once about the dangerous repressed
impulses. Wayne had heard about it often enough. Anyway there was no
doubt about it when every move he made was a restrained explosion.
So he'd waited in his room, and it wasn't easy sweating it out alone
waiting for the breakout call from HQ.
"Well, dear, if you say so," Mother said, with the old resigned sigh
that must make the old man feel like Superman with a beerbelly.
They heard Wayne slouching loosely down the stairs and looked up.
"Relax," Wayne said. "You're not going anywhere tonight."
"What, son?" his old man said uneasily. "Sure we are. We're going to
the movies."
He could feel them watching him, waiting; and yet still he didn't
answer. Somewhere out in suburban grayness a dog barked, then was
silent.
"Okay, go," Wayne said. "If you wanta walk. I'm taking the family
boltbucket."
"But we promised the Clemons, dear," his mother said.
"Hell," Wayne said, grinning straight into the old man. "I just got my
draft call."
He saw the old man's Adam's apple move. "Oh, my dear boy," Mother cried
out.
"So gimme the keys," Wayne said. The old man handed the keys over. His
understanding smile was strained, and fear flicked in his sagging eyes.
"Do be careful, dear," his mother said. She ran toward him as he
laughed and shut the door on her. He was still laughing as he whoomed
the Olds between the pale dead glow of houses and roared up the ramp
onto the Freeway. Ahead was the promising glitter of adventure-calling
neon, and he looked up at the high skies of night and his eyes sailed
the glaring wonders of escape.
He burned off some rubber finding a slot in the park-lot. He strode
under a sign reading
Public Youth Center No. 947
and walked casually
to the reception desk, where a thin man with sergeant's stripes and a
pansy haircut looked out of a pile of paperwork.
"Where you think you're going, my pretty lad?"
Wayne grinned down. "Higher I hope than a typewriter jockey."
"Well," the sergeant said. "How tough we are this evening. You have a
pass, killer?"
"Wayne Seton. Draft call."
"Oh." The sergeant checked his name off a roster and nodded. He wrote
on a slip of paper, handed the pass to Wayne. "Go to the Armory and
check out whatever your lusting little heart desires. Then report to
Captain Jack, room 307."
"Thanks, sarge dear," Wayne said and took the elevator up to the Armory.
A tired fat corporal with a naked head blinked up at tall Wayne.
Finally he said, "So make up your mind, bud. Think you're the only kid
breaking out tonight?"
"Hold your teeth, pop," Wayne said, coolly and slowly lighting a
cigarette. "I've decided."
The corporal's little eyes studied Wayne with malicious amusement.
"Take it from a vet, bud. Sooner you go the better. It's a big city and
you're starting late. You can get a cat, not a mouse, and some babes
are clever hellcats in a dark alley."
"You must be a genius," Wayne said. "A corporal with no hair and still
a counterboy. I'm impressed. I'm all ears, Dad."
The corporal sighed wearily. "You can get that balloon head
ventilated, bud, and good."
Wayne's mouth twitched. He leaned across the counter toward the
shelves and racks of weapons. "I'll remember that crack when I get
my commission." He blew smoke in the corporal's face. "Bring me a
Smith and Wesson .38, shoulder holster with spring-clip. And throw in
a Skelly switchblade for kicks—the six-inch disguised job with the
double springs."
The corporal waddled back with the revolver and the switchblade
disguised in a leather comb case. He checked them on a receipt ledger,
while Wayne examined the weapons, broke open the revolver, twirled the
cylinder and pushed cartridges into the waiting chamber. He slipped
the knife from the comb case, flicked open the blade and stared at its
gleam in the buttery light as his mouth went dry and the refracted
incandescence of it trickled on his brain like melted ice, exciting and
scary.
He removed his leather jacket. He slung the holster under his left
armpit and tested the spring clip release several times, feeling the
way the serrated butt dropped into his wet palm. He put his jacket
back on and the switchblade case in his pocket. He walked toward the
elevator and didn't look back as the corporal said, "Good luck, tiger."
Captain Jack moved massively. The big stone-walled office, alive with
stuffed lion and tiger and gunracks, seemed to grow smaller. Captain
Jack crossed black-booted legs and whacked a cane at the floor. It had
a head shaped like a grinning bear.
Wayne felt the assured smile die on his face. Something seemed to
shrink him. If he didn't watch himself he'd begin feeling like a pea
among bowling balls.
Contemptuously amused little eyes glittered at Wayne from a shaggy
head. Shoulders hunched like stuffed sea-bags.
"Wayne Seton," said Captain Jack as if he were discussing something
in a bug collection. "Well, well, you're really fired up aren't you?
Really going out to eat 'em. Right, punk?"
"Yes, sir," Wayne said. He ran wet hands down the sides of his chinos.
His legs seemed sheathed in lead as he bit inwardly at shrinking fear
the way a dog snaps at a wound. You big overblown son, he thought, I'll
show you but good who is a punk. They made a guy wait and sweat until
he screamed. They kept a guy on the fire until desire leaped in him,
ran and billowed and roared until his brain was filled with it. But
that wasn't enough. If this muscle-bound creep was such a big boy,
what was he doing holding down a desk?
"Well, this is it, punk. You go the distance or start a butterfly
collection."
The cane darted up. A blade snicked from the end and stopped an inch
from Wayne's nose. He jerked up a shaky hand involuntarily and clamped
a knuckle-ridged gag to his gasping mouth.
Captain Jack chuckled. "All right, superboy." He handed Wayne his
passcard. "Curfew's off, punk, for 6 hours. You got 6 hours to make
out."
"Yes, sir."
"Your beast is primed and waiting at the Four Aces Club on the West
Side. Know where that is, punk?"
"No, sir, but I'll find it fast."
"Sure you will, punk," smiled Captain Jack. "She'll be wearing yellow
slacks and a red shirt. Black hair, a cute trick. She's with a hefty
psycho who eats punks for breakfast. He's butchered five people.
They're both on top of the Undesirable list, Seton. They got to go and
they're your key to the stars."
"Yes, sir," Wayne said.
"So run along and make out, punk," grinned Captain Jack.
A copcar stopped Wayne as he started over the bridge, out of bright
respectable neon into the murky westside slum over the river.
Wayne waved the pass card, signed by Captain Jack, under the cop's
quivering nose. The cop shivered and stepped back and waved him on. The
Olds roared over the bridge as the night's rain blew away.
The air through the open window was chill and damp coming from
Slumville, but Wayne felt a cold that wasn't of the night or the wind.
He turned off into a rat's warren of the inferiors. Lights turned pale,
secretive and sparse, the uncared-for streets became rough with pitted
potholes, narrow and winding and humid with wet unpleasant smells.
Wayne's fearful exhilaration increased as he cruised with bated breath
through the dark mazes of streets and rickety tenements crawling with
the shadows of mysterious promise.
He found the alley, dark, a gloom-dripping tunnel. He drove cautiously
into it and rolled along, watching. His belly ached with expectancy as
he spotted the sick-looking dab of neon wanly sparkling.
FOUR ACES CLUB
He parked across the alley. He got out and stood in shadows, digging
the sultry beat of a combo, the wild pulse of drums and spinning brass
filtering through windows painted black.
He breathed deep, started over, ducked back. A stewbum weaved out of
a bank of garbage cans, humming to himself, pulling at a rainsoaked
shirt clinging to a pale stick body. He reminded Wayne of a slim grub
balanced on one end.
The stewbum stumbled. His bearded face in dim breaking moonlight had
a dirty, greenish tinge as he sensed Wayne there. He turned in a
grotesque uncoordinated jiggling and his eyes were wide with terror and
doom.
"I gotta hide, kid. They're on me."
Wayne's chest rose and his hands curled.
The bum's fingers drew at the air like white talons.
"Help me, kid."
He turned with a scratchy cry and retreated before the sudden blast
of headlights from a Cad bulleting into the alley. The Cad rushed
past Wayne and he felt the engine-hot fumes against his legs. Tires
squealed. The Cad stopped and a teener in black jacket jumped out and
crouched as he began stalking the old rummy.
"This is him! This is him all right," the teener yelled, and one hand
came up swinging a baseball bat.
A head bobbed out of the Cad window and giggled.
The fumble-footed rummy tried to run and plopped on wet pavement. The
teener moved in, while a faint odor of burnt rubber hovered in the air
as the Cad cruised in a slow follow-up.
Wayne's breath quickened as he watched, feeling somehow blank wonder
at finding himself there, free and breaking out at last with no curfew
and no law but his own. He felt as though he couldn't stop anything.
Living seemed directionless, but he still would go with it regardless,
until something dropped off or blew to hell like a hot light-bulb. He
held his breath, waiting. His body was tensed and rigid as he moved in
spirit with the hunting teener, an omniscient shadow with a hunting
license and a ghetto jungle twenty miles deep.
The crawling stewbum screamed as the baseball bat whacked. The teener
laughed. Wayne wanted to shout. He opened his mouth, but the yell
clogged up somewhere, so that he remained soundless yet with his mouth
still open as he heard the payoff thuds where the useless wino curled
up with stick arms over his rheumy face.
The teener laughed, tossed the bat away and began jumping up and down
with his hobnailed, mail-order air force boots. Then he ran into the
Cad. A hootch bottle soared out, made a brittle tink-tink of falling
glass.
"Go, man!"
The Cad wooshed by. It made a sort of hollow sucking noise as it
bounced over the old man twice. Then the finlights diminished like
bright wind-blown sparks.
Wayne walked over and sneered down at the human garbage lying in
scummed rain pools. The smell of raw violence, the scent of blood, made
his heart thump like a trapped rubber ball in a cage.
He hurried into the Four Aces, drawn by an exhilarating vision ... and
pursued by the hollow haunting fears of his own desires.
He walked through the wavering haze of smoke and liquored dizziness and
stood until his eyes learned the dark. He spotted her red shirt and
yellow legs over in the corner above a murky lighted table.
He walked toward her, watching her little subhuman pixie face lift.
The eyes widened with exciting terror, turned even paler behind a red
slash of sensuous mouth. Briefed and waiting, primed and eager for
running, she recognized her pursuer at once. He sat at a table near
her, watching and grinning and seeing her squirm.
She sat in that slightly baffled, fearful and uncomprehending attitude
of being motionless, as though they were all actors performing in a
weirdo drama being staged in that smoky thick-aired dive.
Wayne smiled with wry superiority at the redheaded psycho in a dirty
T-shirt, a big bruiser with a gorilla face. He was tussling his mouse
heavy.
"What's yours, teener?" the slug-faced waiter asked.
"Bring me a Crusher, buddyroo," Wayne said, and flashed his pass card.
"Sure, teener."
Red nuzzled the mouse's neck and made drooly noises. Wayne watched and
fed on the promising terror and helplessness of her hunted face. She
sat rigid, eyes fixed on Wayne like balls of frozen glass.
Red looked up and stared straight at Wayne with eyes like black buttons
imbedded in the waxlike skin of his face. Then he grinned all on one
side. One huge hand scratched across the wet table top like a furious
cat's.
Wayne returned the challenging move but felt a nervous twitch jerk at
his lips. A numbness covered his brain like a film as he concentrated
on staring down Red the psycho. But Red kept looking, his eyes bright
but dead. Then he began struggling it up again with the scared little
mouse.
The waiter sat the Crusher down. Wayne signed a chit; tonight he was in
the pay of the state.
"What else, teener?"
"One thing. Fade."
"Sure, teener," the waiter said, his breathy words dripping like syrup.
Wayne drank. Liquored heat dripped into his stomach. Fire tickled his
veins, became hot wire twisting in his head.
He drank again and forced out a shaky breath. The jazz beat thumped
fast and muted brass moaned. Drumpulse, stabbing trumpet raped the
air. Tension mounted as Wayne watched her pale throat convulsing, the
white eyelids fluttering. Red fingered at her legs and salivated at her
throat, glancing now and then at Wayne, baiting him good.
"Okay, you creep," Wayne said.
He stood up and started through the haze. The psycho leaped and a table
crashed. Wayne's .38 dropped from its spring-clip holster and the blast
filled the room. The psycho screamed and stumbled toward the door
holding something in. The mouse darted by, eluded Wayne's grasp and was
out the door.
Wayne went out after her in a laughing frenzy of release. He felt the
cold strange breath of moist air on his sweating skin as he sprinted
down the alley into a wind full of blowing wet.
He ran laughing under the crazy starlight and glimpsed her now and
then, fading in and out of shadows, jumping, crawling, running with the
life-or-death animation of a wild deer.
Up and down alleys, a rat's maze. A rabbit run. Across vacant lots.
Through shattered tenement ruins. Over a fence. There she was, falling,
sliding down a brick shute.
He gained. He moved up. His labored breath pumped more fire. And her
scream was a rejuvenation hypo in his blood.
She quivered above him on the stoop, panting, her eyes afire with
terror.
"You, baby," Wayne gasped. "I gotcha."
She backed into darkness, up there against the sagging tenement wall,
her arms out and poised like crippled wings. Wayne crept up. She gave
a squeaking sob, turned, ran. Wayne leaped into gloom. Wood cracked.
He clambered over rotten lumber. The doorway sagged and he hesitated
in the musty dark. A few feet away was the sound of loose trickling
plaster, a whimpering whine.
"No use running," Wayne said. "Go loose. Give, baby. Give now."
She scurried up sagging stairs. Wayne laughed and dug up after her,
feeling his way through debris. Dim moonlight filtered through a
sagging stairway from a shattered skylight three floors up. The mouse's
shadow floated ahead.
He started up. The entire stair structure canted sickeningly. A railing
ripped and he nearly went with it back down to the first floor. He
heard a scream as rotten boards crumbled and dust exploded from
cracks. A rat ran past Wayne and fell into space. He burst into the
third-floor hallway and saw her half-falling through a door under the
jagged skylight.
Wayne took his time. He knew how she felt waiting in there, listening
to his creeping, implacable footfalls.
Then he yelled and slammed open the door.
Dust and stench, filth so awful it made nothing of the dust. In
the corner he saw something hardly to be called a bed. More like
a nest. A dirty, lumpy pile of torn mattress, felt, excelsior,
shredded newspapers and rags. It seemed to crawl a little under the
moon-streaming skylight.
She crouched in the corner panting. He took his time moving in. He
snickered as he flashed the switchblade and circled it like a serpent's
tongue. He watched what was left of her nerves go to pieces like rotten
cloth.
"Do it quick, hunter," she whispered. "Please do it quick."
"What's that, baby?"
"I'm tired running. Kill me first. Beat me after. They won't know the
difference."
"I'm gonna bruise and beat you," he said.
"Kill me first," she begged. "I don't want—" She began to cry. She
cried right up in his face, her wide eyes unblinking, and her mouth
open.
"You got bad blood, baby," he snarled. He laughed but it didn't sound
like him and something was wrong with his belly. It was knotting up.
"Bad, I know! So get it over with, please. Hurry, hurry."
She was small and white and quivering. She moaned but kept staring up
at him.
He ripped off his rivet-studded belt and swung once, then groaned and
shuffled away from her.
He kept backing toward the door. She crawled after him, begging and
clutching with both arms as she wriggled forward on her knees.
"Don't run. Please. Kill me! It'll be someone else if you don't. Oh,
God, I'm so tired waiting and running!"
"I can't," he said, and sickness soured in his throat.
"Please."
"I can't, I can't!"
He turned and ran blindly, half-fell down the cracking stairs.
Doctor Burns, head of the readjustment staff at the Youth Center,
studied Wayne with abstract interest.
"You enjoyed the hunt, Seton? You got your kicks?"
"Yes, sir."
"But you couldn't execute them?"
"No, sir."
"They're undesirables. Incurables. You know that, Seton?"
"Yes, sir."
"The psycho you only wounded. He's a five-times murderer. And that girl
killed her father when she was twelve. You realize there's nothing can
be done for them? That they have to be executed?"
"I know."
"Too bad," the doctor said. "We all have aggressive impulses, primitive
needs that must be expressed early, purged. There's murder in all
of us, Seton. The impulse shouldn't be denied or suppressed, but
educated
. The state used to kill them. Isn't it better all around,
Seton, for us to do it, as part of growing up? What was the matter,
Seton?"
"I—felt sorry for her."
"Is that all you can say about it?"
"Yes, sir."
The doctor pressed a buzzer. Two men in white coats entered.
"You should have got it out of your system, Seton, but now it's still
in there. I can't turn you out and have it erupt later—and maybe shed
clean innocent blood, can I?"
"No, sir," Wayne mumbled. He didn't look up. "I'm sorry I punked out."
"Give him the treatment," the doctor said wearily. "And send him back
to his mother."
Wayne nodded and they led him away. His mind screamed still to split
open some prison of bone and lay bare and breathing wide. But there
was no way out for the trapped. Now he knew about the old man and his
poker-playing pals.
They had all punked out.
Like him.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/1/2/0/61204//61204-h//61204-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | What idea is introduced during the armory scene that becomes a motif throughout the rest of the story?
| 61204_7K3R71T6_3 | [
"The idea that Wayne's end of curfew will mean more trips to the armory. More weapons always. ",
"The idea of cat and mouse games. From this point on Wayne thinks of his duty in terms of hunting. \nThe end of curfew. From this point on Wayne wants to live the rest of his life without curfew.",
"The fear of ending up a counter boy like the corporal. From this point on Wayne does everything he can not to end up like the corporal.\n",
"The exciting and scary power of the .38 and the switch blade. From this point on Wayne feels more powerful than ever\n"
] | 2 | 2 | [
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61,204 | 61204_7K3R71T6 | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | The Recruit | 1953.0 | Walton, Bryce | Executions and executioners -- Fiction; Teenage boys -- Fiction; Science fiction; PS; Psychological fiction; Short stories | THE RECRUIT
BY BRYCE WALTON
It was dirty work, but it would
make him a man. And kids had a
right to grow up—some of them!
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of If Science Fiction, July 1962.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
Wayne, unseen, sneered down from the head of the stairs.
The old man with his thick neck, thick cigar, evening highball, potgut
and bald head without a brain in it. His slim mother with nervously
polite smiles and voice fluttering, assuring the old man by her frailty
that he was big in the world. They were squareheads one and all,
marking moron time in a gray dream. Man, was he glad to break out.
The old man said, "He'll be okay. Let him alone."
"But he won't eat. Just lies there all the time."
"Hell," the old man said. "Sixteen's a bad time. School over, waiting
for the draft and all. He's in between. It's rough."
Mother clasped her forearms and shook her head once slowly.
"We got to let him go, Eva. It's a dangerous time. You got to remember
about all these dangerous repressed impulses piling up with nowhere to
go, like they say. You read the books."
"But he's unhappy."
"Are we specialists? That's the Youth Board's headache, ain't it? What
do we know about adolescent trauma and like that? Now get dressed or
we'll be late."
Wayne watched the ritual, grinning. He listened to their purposeless
noises, their blabbing and yakking as if they had something to say.
Blab-blab about the same old bones, and end up chewing them in the
same old ways. Then they begin all over again. A freak sideshow all the
way to nowhere. Squareheads going around either unconscious or with
eyes looking dead from the millennium in the office waiting to retire
into limbo.
How come he'd been stuck with parental images like that? One
thing—when he was jockeying a rocket to Mars or maybe firing the pants
off Asiatic reds in some steamy gone jungle paradise, he'd forget his
punkie origins in teeveeland.
But the old man was right on for once about the dangerous repressed
impulses. Wayne had heard about it often enough. Anyway there was no
doubt about it when every move he made was a restrained explosion.
So he'd waited in his room, and it wasn't easy sweating it out alone
waiting for the breakout call from HQ.
"Well, dear, if you say so," Mother said, with the old resigned sigh
that must make the old man feel like Superman with a beerbelly.
They heard Wayne slouching loosely down the stairs and looked up.
"Relax," Wayne said. "You're not going anywhere tonight."
"What, son?" his old man said uneasily. "Sure we are. We're going to
the movies."
He could feel them watching him, waiting; and yet still he didn't
answer. Somewhere out in suburban grayness a dog barked, then was
silent.
"Okay, go," Wayne said. "If you wanta walk. I'm taking the family
boltbucket."
"But we promised the Clemons, dear," his mother said.
"Hell," Wayne said, grinning straight into the old man. "I just got my
draft call."
He saw the old man's Adam's apple move. "Oh, my dear boy," Mother cried
out.
"So gimme the keys," Wayne said. The old man handed the keys over. His
understanding smile was strained, and fear flicked in his sagging eyes.
"Do be careful, dear," his mother said. She ran toward him as he
laughed and shut the door on her. He was still laughing as he whoomed
the Olds between the pale dead glow of houses and roared up the ramp
onto the Freeway. Ahead was the promising glitter of adventure-calling
neon, and he looked up at the high skies of night and his eyes sailed
the glaring wonders of escape.
He burned off some rubber finding a slot in the park-lot. He strode
under a sign reading
Public Youth Center No. 947
and walked casually
to the reception desk, where a thin man with sergeant's stripes and a
pansy haircut looked out of a pile of paperwork.
"Where you think you're going, my pretty lad?"
Wayne grinned down. "Higher I hope than a typewriter jockey."
"Well," the sergeant said. "How tough we are this evening. You have a
pass, killer?"
"Wayne Seton. Draft call."
"Oh." The sergeant checked his name off a roster and nodded. He wrote
on a slip of paper, handed the pass to Wayne. "Go to the Armory and
check out whatever your lusting little heart desires. Then report to
Captain Jack, room 307."
"Thanks, sarge dear," Wayne said and took the elevator up to the Armory.
A tired fat corporal with a naked head blinked up at tall Wayne.
Finally he said, "So make up your mind, bud. Think you're the only kid
breaking out tonight?"
"Hold your teeth, pop," Wayne said, coolly and slowly lighting a
cigarette. "I've decided."
The corporal's little eyes studied Wayne with malicious amusement.
"Take it from a vet, bud. Sooner you go the better. It's a big city and
you're starting late. You can get a cat, not a mouse, and some babes
are clever hellcats in a dark alley."
"You must be a genius," Wayne said. "A corporal with no hair and still
a counterboy. I'm impressed. I'm all ears, Dad."
The corporal sighed wearily. "You can get that balloon head
ventilated, bud, and good."
Wayne's mouth twitched. He leaned across the counter toward the
shelves and racks of weapons. "I'll remember that crack when I get
my commission." He blew smoke in the corporal's face. "Bring me a
Smith and Wesson .38, shoulder holster with spring-clip. And throw in
a Skelly switchblade for kicks—the six-inch disguised job with the
double springs."
The corporal waddled back with the revolver and the switchblade
disguised in a leather comb case. He checked them on a receipt ledger,
while Wayne examined the weapons, broke open the revolver, twirled the
cylinder and pushed cartridges into the waiting chamber. He slipped
the knife from the comb case, flicked open the blade and stared at its
gleam in the buttery light as his mouth went dry and the refracted
incandescence of it trickled on his brain like melted ice, exciting and
scary.
He removed his leather jacket. He slung the holster under his left
armpit and tested the spring clip release several times, feeling the
way the serrated butt dropped into his wet palm. He put his jacket
back on and the switchblade case in his pocket. He walked toward the
elevator and didn't look back as the corporal said, "Good luck, tiger."
Captain Jack moved massively. The big stone-walled office, alive with
stuffed lion and tiger and gunracks, seemed to grow smaller. Captain
Jack crossed black-booted legs and whacked a cane at the floor. It had
a head shaped like a grinning bear.
Wayne felt the assured smile die on his face. Something seemed to
shrink him. If he didn't watch himself he'd begin feeling like a pea
among bowling balls.
Contemptuously amused little eyes glittered at Wayne from a shaggy
head. Shoulders hunched like stuffed sea-bags.
"Wayne Seton," said Captain Jack as if he were discussing something
in a bug collection. "Well, well, you're really fired up aren't you?
Really going out to eat 'em. Right, punk?"
"Yes, sir," Wayne said. He ran wet hands down the sides of his chinos.
His legs seemed sheathed in lead as he bit inwardly at shrinking fear
the way a dog snaps at a wound. You big overblown son, he thought, I'll
show you but good who is a punk. They made a guy wait and sweat until
he screamed. They kept a guy on the fire until desire leaped in him,
ran and billowed and roared until his brain was filled with it. But
that wasn't enough. If this muscle-bound creep was such a big boy,
what was he doing holding down a desk?
"Well, this is it, punk. You go the distance or start a butterfly
collection."
The cane darted up. A blade snicked from the end and stopped an inch
from Wayne's nose. He jerked up a shaky hand involuntarily and clamped
a knuckle-ridged gag to his gasping mouth.
Captain Jack chuckled. "All right, superboy." He handed Wayne his
passcard. "Curfew's off, punk, for 6 hours. You got 6 hours to make
out."
"Yes, sir."
"Your beast is primed and waiting at the Four Aces Club on the West
Side. Know where that is, punk?"
"No, sir, but I'll find it fast."
"Sure you will, punk," smiled Captain Jack. "She'll be wearing yellow
slacks and a red shirt. Black hair, a cute trick. She's with a hefty
psycho who eats punks for breakfast. He's butchered five people.
They're both on top of the Undesirable list, Seton. They got to go and
they're your key to the stars."
"Yes, sir," Wayne said.
"So run along and make out, punk," grinned Captain Jack.
A copcar stopped Wayne as he started over the bridge, out of bright
respectable neon into the murky westside slum over the river.
Wayne waved the pass card, signed by Captain Jack, under the cop's
quivering nose. The cop shivered and stepped back and waved him on. The
Olds roared over the bridge as the night's rain blew away.
The air through the open window was chill and damp coming from
Slumville, but Wayne felt a cold that wasn't of the night or the wind.
He turned off into a rat's warren of the inferiors. Lights turned pale,
secretive and sparse, the uncared-for streets became rough with pitted
potholes, narrow and winding and humid with wet unpleasant smells.
Wayne's fearful exhilaration increased as he cruised with bated breath
through the dark mazes of streets and rickety tenements crawling with
the shadows of mysterious promise.
He found the alley, dark, a gloom-dripping tunnel. He drove cautiously
into it and rolled along, watching. His belly ached with expectancy as
he spotted the sick-looking dab of neon wanly sparkling.
FOUR ACES CLUB
He parked across the alley. He got out and stood in shadows, digging
the sultry beat of a combo, the wild pulse of drums and spinning brass
filtering through windows painted black.
He breathed deep, started over, ducked back. A stewbum weaved out of
a bank of garbage cans, humming to himself, pulling at a rainsoaked
shirt clinging to a pale stick body. He reminded Wayne of a slim grub
balanced on one end.
The stewbum stumbled. His bearded face in dim breaking moonlight had
a dirty, greenish tinge as he sensed Wayne there. He turned in a
grotesque uncoordinated jiggling and his eyes were wide with terror and
doom.
"I gotta hide, kid. They're on me."
Wayne's chest rose and his hands curled.
The bum's fingers drew at the air like white talons.
"Help me, kid."
He turned with a scratchy cry and retreated before the sudden blast
of headlights from a Cad bulleting into the alley. The Cad rushed
past Wayne and he felt the engine-hot fumes against his legs. Tires
squealed. The Cad stopped and a teener in black jacket jumped out and
crouched as he began stalking the old rummy.
"This is him! This is him all right," the teener yelled, and one hand
came up swinging a baseball bat.
A head bobbed out of the Cad window and giggled.
The fumble-footed rummy tried to run and plopped on wet pavement. The
teener moved in, while a faint odor of burnt rubber hovered in the air
as the Cad cruised in a slow follow-up.
Wayne's breath quickened as he watched, feeling somehow blank wonder
at finding himself there, free and breaking out at last with no curfew
and no law but his own. He felt as though he couldn't stop anything.
Living seemed directionless, but he still would go with it regardless,
until something dropped off or blew to hell like a hot light-bulb. He
held his breath, waiting. His body was tensed and rigid as he moved in
spirit with the hunting teener, an omniscient shadow with a hunting
license and a ghetto jungle twenty miles deep.
The crawling stewbum screamed as the baseball bat whacked. The teener
laughed. Wayne wanted to shout. He opened his mouth, but the yell
clogged up somewhere, so that he remained soundless yet with his mouth
still open as he heard the payoff thuds where the useless wino curled
up with stick arms over his rheumy face.
The teener laughed, tossed the bat away and began jumping up and down
with his hobnailed, mail-order air force boots. Then he ran into the
Cad. A hootch bottle soared out, made a brittle tink-tink of falling
glass.
"Go, man!"
The Cad wooshed by. It made a sort of hollow sucking noise as it
bounced over the old man twice. Then the finlights diminished like
bright wind-blown sparks.
Wayne walked over and sneered down at the human garbage lying in
scummed rain pools. The smell of raw violence, the scent of blood, made
his heart thump like a trapped rubber ball in a cage.
He hurried into the Four Aces, drawn by an exhilarating vision ... and
pursued by the hollow haunting fears of his own desires.
He walked through the wavering haze of smoke and liquored dizziness and
stood until his eyes learned the dark. He spotted her red shirt and
yellow legs over in the corner above a murky lighted table.
He walked toward her, watching her little subhuman pixie face lift.
The eyes widened with exciting terror, turned even paler behind a red
slash of sensuous mouth. Briefed and waiting, primed and eager for
running, she recognized her pursuer at once. He sat at a table near
her, watching and grinning and seeing her squirm.
She sat in that slightly baffled, fearful and uncomprehending attitude
of being motionless, as though they were all actors performing in a
weirdo drama being staged in that smoky thick-aired dive.
Wayne smiled with wry superiority at the redheaded psycho in a dirty
T-shirt, a big bruiser with a gorilla face. He was tussling his mouse
heavy.
"What's yours, teener?" the slug-faced waiter asked.
"Bring me a Crusher, buddyroo," Wayne said, and flashed his pass card.
"Sure, teener."
Red nuzzled the mouse's neck and made drooly noises. Wayne watched and
fed on the promising terror and helplessness of her hunted face. She
sat rigid, eyes fixed on Wayne like balls of frozen glass.
Red looked up and stared straight at Wayne with eyes like black buttons
imbedded in the waxlike skin of his face. Then he grinned all on one
side. One huge hand scratched across the wet table top like a furious
cat's.
Wayne returned the challenging move but felt a nervous twitch jerk at
his lips. A numbness covered his brain like a film as he concentrated
on staring down Red the psycho. But Red kept looking, his eyes bright
but dead. Then he began struggling it up again with the scared little
mouse.
The waiter sat the Crusher down. Wayne signed a chit; tonight he was in
the pay of the state.
"What else, teener?"
"One thing. Fade."
"Sure, teener," the waiter said, his breathy words dripping like syrup.
Wayne drank. Liquored heat dripped into his stomach. Fire tickled his
veins, became hot wire twisting in his head.
He drank again and forced out a shaky breath. The jazz beat thumped
fast and muted brass moaned. Drumpulse, stabbing trumpet raped the
air. Tension mounted as Wayne watched her pale throat convulsing, the
white eyelids fluttering. Red fingered at her legs and salivated at her
throat, glancing now and then at Wayne, baiting him good.
"Okay, you creep," Wayne said.
He stood up and started through the haze. The psycho leaped and a table
crashed. Wayne's .38 dropped from its spring-clip holster and the blast
filled the room. The psycho screamed and stumbled toward the door
holding something in. The mouse darted by, eluded Wayne's grasp and was
out the door.
Wayne went out after her in a laughing frenzy of release. He felt the
cold strange breath of moist air on his sweating skin as he sprinted
down the alley into a wind full of blowing wet.
He ran laughing under the crazy starlight and glimpsed her now and
then, fading in and out of shadows, jumping, crawling, running with the
life-or-death animation of a wild deer.
Up and down alleys, a rat's maze. A rabbit run. Across vacant lots.
Through shattered tenement ruins. Over a fence. There she was, falling,
sliding down a brick shute.
He gained. He moved up. His labored breath pumped more fire. And her
scream was a rejuvenation hypo in his blood.
She quivered above him on the stoop, panting, her eyes afire with
terror.
"You, baby," Wayne gasped. "I gotcha."
She backed into darkness, up there against the sagging tenement wall,
her arms out and poised like crippled wings. Wayne crept up. She gave
a squeaking sob, turned, ran. Wayne leaped into gloom. Wood cracked.
He clambered over rotten lumber. The doorway sagged and he hesitated
in the musty dark. A few feet away was the sound of loose trickling
plaster, a whimpering whine.
"No use running," Wayne said. "Go loose. Give, baby. Give now."
She scurried up sagging stairs. Wayne laughed and dug up after her,
feeling his way through debris. Dim moonlight filtered through a
sagging stairway from a shattered skylight three floors up. The mouse's
shadow floated ahead.
He started up. The entire stair structure canted sickeningly. A railing
ripped and he nearly went with it back down to the first floor. He
heard a scream as rotten boards crumbled and dust exploded from
cracks. A rat ran past Wayne and fell into space. He burst into the
third-floor hallway and saw her half-falling through a door under the
jagged skylight.
Wayne took his time. He knew how she felt waiting in there, listening
to his creeping, implacable footfalls.
Then he yelled and slammed open the door.
Dust and stench, filth so awful it made nothing of the dust. In
the corner he saw something hardly to be called a bed. More like
a nest. A dirty, lumpy pile of torn mattress, felt, excelsior,
shredded newspapers and rags. It seemed to crawl a little under the
moon-streaming skylight.
She crouched in the corner panting. He took his time moving in. He
snickered as he flashed the switchblade and circled it like a serpent's
tongue. He watched what was left of her nerves go to pieces like rotten
cloth.
"Do it quick, hunter," she whispered. "Please do it quick."
"What's that, baby?"
"I'm tired running. Kill me first. Beat me after. They won't know the
difference."
"I'm gonna bruise and beat you," he said.
"Kill me first," she begged. "I don't want—" She began to cry. She
cried right up in his face, her wide eyes unblinking, and her mouth
open.
"You got bad blood, baby," he snarled. He laughed but it didn't sound
like him and something was wrong with his belly. It was knotting up.
"Bad, I know! So get it over with, please. Hurry, hurry."
She was small and white and quivering. She moaned but kept staring up
at him.
He ripped off his rivet-studded belt and swung once, then groaned and
shuffled away from her.
He kept backing toward the door. She crawled after him, begging and
clutching with both arms as she wriggled forward on her knees.
"Don't run. Please. Kill me! It'll be someone else if you don't. Oh,
God, I'm so tired waiting and running!"
"I can't," he said, and sickness soured in his throat.
"Please."
"I can't, I can't!"
He turned and ran blindly, half-fell down the cracking stairs.
Doctor Burns, head of the readjustment staff at the Youth Center,
studied Wayne with abstract interest.
"You enjoyed the hunt, Seton? You got your kicks?"
"Yes, sir."
"But you couldn't execute them?"
"No, sir."
"They're undesirables. Incurables. You know that, Seton?"
"Yes, sir."
"The psycho you only wounded. He's a five-times murderer. And that girl
killed her father when she was twelve. You realize there's nothing can
be done for them? That they have to be executed?"
"I know."
"Too bad," the doctor said. "We all have aggressive impulses, primitive
needs that must be expressed early, purged. There's murder in all
of us, Seton. The impulse shouldn't be denied or suppressed, but
educated
. The state used to kill them. Isn't it better all around,
Seton, for us to do it, as part of growing up? What was the matter,
Seton?"
"I—felt sorry for her."
"Is that all you can say about it?"
"Yes, sir."
The doctor pressed a buzzer. Two men in white coats entered.
"You should have got it out of your system, Seton, but now it's still
in there. I can't turn you out and have it erupt later—and maybe shed
clean innocent blood, can I?"
"No, sir," Wayne mumbled. He didn't look up. "I'm sorry I punked out."
"Give him the treatment," the doctor said wearily. "And send him back
to his mother."
Wayne nodded and they led him away. His mind screamed still to split
open some prison of bone and lay bare and breathing wide. But there
was no way out for the trapped. Now he knew about the old man and his
poker-playing pals.
They had all punked out.
Like him.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/1/2/0/61204//61204-h//61204-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | What is the purpose of “the break out” instituted by the Youth Board?
| 61204_7K3R71T6_4 | [
"Requiring that all youths commit one violent act as a rite of passage to adulthood is the only way the city has found to best fight crime. \n",
"Requiring that all youths commit one violent act as a rite of passage to adulthood is thought to eradicate any violent urges that might occur later in life. \n",
"Requiring that all youths commit one violent act as a rite of passage to adulthood is thought to show what skillset each teen is most capable of. \n",
"Requiring that all youths commit one violent act as a rite of passage to adulthood is thought to be the best way to take care of the city’s mouse and cat infestation. \n"
] | 1 | 2 | [
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61,204 | 61204_7K3R71T6 | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | The Recruit | 1953.0 | Walton, Bryce | Executions and executioners -- Fiction; Teenage boys -- Fiction; Science fiction; PS; Psychological fiction; Short stories | THE RECRUIT
BY BRYCE WALTON
It was dirty work, but it would
make him a man. And kids had a
right to grow up—some of them!
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of If Science Fiction, July 1962.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
Wayne, unseen, sneered down from the head of the stairs.
The old man with his thick neck, thick cigar, evening highball, potgut
and bald head without a brain in it. His slim mother with nervously
polite smiles and voice fluttering, assuring the old man by her frailty
that he was big in the world. They were squareheads one and all,
marking moron time in a gray dream. Man, was he glad to break out.
The old man said, "He'll be okay. Let him alone."
"But he won't eat. Just lies there all the time."
"Hell," the old man said. "Sixteen's a bad time. School over, waiting
for the draft and all. He's in between. It's rough."
Mother clasped her forearms and shook her head once slowly.
"We got to let him go, Eva. It's a dangerous time. You got to remember
about all these dangerous repressed impulses piling up with nowhere to
go, like they say. You read the books."
"But he's unhappy."
"Are we specialists? That's the Youth Board's headache, ain't it? What
do we know about adolescent trauma and like that? Now get dressed or
we'll be late."
Wayne watched the ritual, grinning. He listened to their purposeless
noises, their blabbing and yakking as if they had something to say.
Blab-blab about the same old bones, and end up chewing them in the
same old ways. Then they begin all over again. A freak sideshow all the
way to nowhere. Squareheads going around either unconscious or with
eyes looking dead from the millennium in the office waiting to retire
into limbo.
How come he'd been stuck with parental images like that? One
thing—when he was jockeying a rocket to Mars or maybe firing the pants
off Asiatic reds in some steamy gone jungle paradise, he'd forget his
punkie origins in teeveeland.
But the old man was right on for once about the dangerous repressed
impulses. Wayne had heard about it often enough. Anyway there was no
doubt about it when every move he made was a restrained explosion.
So he'd waited in his room, and it wasn't easy sweating it out alone
waiting for the breakout call from HQ.
"Well, dear, if you say so," Mother said, with the old resigned sigh
that must make the old man feel like Superman with a beerbelly.
They heard Wayne slouching loosely down the stairs and looked up.
"Relax," Wayne said. "You're not going anywhere tonight."
"What, son?" his old man said uneasily. "Sure we are. We're going to
the movies."
He could feel them watching him, waiting; and yet still he didn't
answer. Somewhere out in suburban grayness a dog barked, then was
silent.
"Okay, go," Wayne said. "If you wanta walk. I'm taking the family
boltbucket."
"But we promised the Clemons, dear," his mother said.
"Hell," Wayne said, grinning straight into the old man. "I just got my
draft call."
He saw the old man's Adam's apple move. "Oh, my dear boy," Mother cried
out.
"So gimme the keys," Wayne said. The old man handed the keys over. His
understanding smile was strained, and fear flicked in his sagging eyes.
"Do be careful, dear," his mother said. She ran toward him as he
laughed and shut the door on her. He was still laughing as he whoomed
the Olds between the pale dead glow of houses and roared up the ramp
onto the Freeway. Ahead was the promising glitter of adventure-calling
neon, and he looked up at the high skies of night and his eyes sailed
the glaring wonders of escape.
He burned off some rubber finding a slot in the park-lot. He strode
under a sign reading
Public Youth Center No. 947
and walked casually
to the reception desk, where a thin man with sergeant's stripes and a
pansy haircut looked out of a pile of paperwork.
"Where you think you're going, my pretty lad?"
Wayne grinned down. "Higher I hope than a typewriter jockey."
"Well," the sergeant said. "How tough we are this evening. You have a
pass, killer?"
"Wayne Seton. Draft call."
"Oh." The sergeant checked his name off a roster and nodded. He wrote
on a slip of paper, handed the pass to Wayne. "Go to the Armory and
check out whatever your lusting little heart desires. Then report to
Captain Jack, room 307."
"Thanks, sarge dear," Wayne said and took the elevator up to the Armory.
A tired fat corporal with a naked head blinked up at tall Wayne.
Finally he said, "So make up your mind, bud. Think you're the only kid
breaking out tonight?"
"Hold your teeth, pop," Wayne said, coolly and slowly lighting a
cigarette. "I've decided."
The corporal's little eyes studied Wayne with malicious amusement.
"Take it from a vet, bud. Sooner you go the better. It's a big city and
you're starting late. You can get a cat, not a mouse, and some babes
are clever hellcats in a dark alley."
"You must be a genius," Wayne said. "A corporal with no hair and still
a counterboy. I'm impressed. I'm all ears, Dad."
The corporal sighed wearily. "You can get that balloon head
ventilated, bud, and good."
Wayne's mouth twitched. He leaned across the counter toward the
shelves and racks of weapons. "I'll remember that crack when I get
my commission." He blew smoke in the corporal's face. "Bring me a
Smith and Wesson .38, shoulder holster with spring-clip. And throw in
a Skelly switchblade for kicks—the six-inch disguised job with the
double springs."
The corporal waddled back with the revolver and the switchblade
disguised in a leather comb case. He checked them on a receipt ledger,
while Wayne examined the weapons, broke open the revolver, twirled the
cylinder and pushed cartridges into the waiting chamber. He slipped
the knife from the comb case, flicked open the blade and stared at its
gleam in the buttery light as his mouth went dry and the refracted
incandescence of it trickled on his brain like melted ice, exciting and
scary.
He removed his leather jacket. He slung the holster under his left
armpit and tested the spring clip release several times, feeling the
way the serrated butt dropped into his wet palm. He put his jacket
back on and the switchblade case in his pocket. He walked toward the
elevator and didn't look back as the corporal said, "Good luck, tiger."
Captain Jack moved massively. The big stone-walled office, alive with
stuffed lion and tiger and gunracks, seemed to grow smaller. Captain
Jack crossed black-booted legs and whacked a cane at the floor. It had
a head shaped like a grinning bear.
Wayne felt the assured smile die on his face. Something seemed to
shrink him. If he didn't watch himself he'd begin feeling like a pea
among bowling balls.
Contemptuously amused little eyes glittered at Wayne from a shaggy
head. Shoulders hunched like stuffed sea-bags.
"Wayne Seton," said Captain Jack as if he were discussing something
in a bug collection. "Well, well, you're really fired up aren't you?
Really going out to eat 'em. Right, punk?"
"Yes, sir," Wayne said. He ran wet hands down the sides of his chinos.
His legs seemed sheathed in lead as he bit inwardly at shrinking fear
the way a dog snaps at a wound. You big overblown son, he thought, I'll
show you but good who is a punk. They made a guy wait and sweat until
he screamed. They kept a guy on the fire until desire leaped in him,
ran and billowed and roared until his brain was filled with it. But
that wasn't enough. If this muscle-bound creep was such a big boy,
what was he doing holding down a desk?
"Well, this is it, punk. You go the distance or start a butterfly
collection."
The cane darted up. A blade snicked from the end and stopped an inch
from Wayne's nose. He jerked up a shaky hand involuntarily and clamped
a knuckle-ridged gag to his gasping mouth.
Captain Jack chuckled. "All right, superboy." He handed Wayne his
passcard. "Curfew's off, punk, for 6 hours. You got 6 hours to make
out."
"Yes, sir."
"Your beast is primed and waiting at the Four Aces Club on the West
Side. Know where that is, punk?"
"No, sir, but I'll find it fast."
"Sure you will, punk," smiled Captain Jack. "She'll be wearing yellow
slacks and a red shirt. Black hair, a cute trick. She's with a hefty
psycho who eats punks for breakfast. He's butchered five people.
They're both on top of the Undesirable list, Seton. They got to go and
they're your key to the stars."
"Yes, sir," Wayne said.
"So run along and make out, punk," grinned Captain Jack.
A copcar stopped Wayne as he started over the bridge, out of bright
respectable neon into the murky westside slum over the river.
Wayne waved the pass card, signed by Captain Jack, under the cop's
quivering nose. The cop shivered and stepped back and waved him on. The
Olds roared over the bridge as the night's rain blew away.
The air through the open window was chill and damp coming from
Slumville, but Wayne felt a cold that wasn't of the night or the wind.
He turned off into a rat's warren of the inferiors. Lights turned pale,
secretive and sparse, the uncared-for streets became rough with pitted
potholes, narrow and winding and humid with wet unpleasant smells.
Wayne's fearful exhilaration increased as he cruised with bated breath
through the dark mazes of streets and rickety tenements crawling with
the shadows of mysterious promise.
He found the alley, dark, a gloom-dripping tunnel. He drove cautiously
into it and rolled along, watching. His belly ached with expectancy as
he spotted the sick-looking dab of neon wanly sparkling.
FOUR ACES CLUB
He parked across the alley. He got out and stood in shadows, digging
the sultry beat of a combo, the wild pulse of drums and spinning brass
filtering through windows painted black.
He breathed deep, started over, ducked back. A stewbum weaved out of
a bank of garbage cans, humming to himself, pulling at a rainsoaked
shirt clinging to a pale stick body. He reminded Wayne of a slim grub
balanced on one end.
The stewbum stumbled. His bearded face in dim breaking moonlight had
a dirty, greenish tinge as he sensed Wayne there. He turned in a
grotesque uncoordinated jiggling and his eyes were wide with terror and
doom.
"I gotta hide, kid. They're on me."
Wayne's chest rose and his hands curled.
The bum's fingers drew at the air like white talons.
"Help me, kid."
He turned with a scratchy cry and retreated before the sudden blast
of headlights from a Cad bulleting into the alley. The Cad rushed
past Wayne and he felt the engine-hot fumes against his legs. Tires
squealed. The Cad stopped and a teener in black jacket jumped out and
crouched as he began stalking the old rummy.
"This is him! This is him all right," the teener yelled, and one hand
came up swinging a baseball bat.
A head bobbed out of the Cad window and giggled.
The fumble-footed rummy tried to run and plopped on wet pavement. The
teener moved in, while a faint odor of burnt rubber hovered in the air
as the Cad cruised in a slow follow-up.
Wayne's breath quickened as he watched, feeling somehow blank wonder
at finding himself there, free and breaking out at last with no curfew
and no law but his own. He felt as though he couldn't stop anything.
Living seemed directionless, but he still would go with it regardless,
until something dropped off or blew to hell like a hot light-bulb. He
held his breath, waiting. His body was tensed and rigid as he moved in
spirit with the hunting teener, an omniscient shadow with a hunting
license and a ghetto jungle twenty miles deep.
The crawling stewbum screamed as the baseball bat whacked. The teener
laughed. Wayne wanted to shout. He opened his mouth, but the yell
clogged up somewhere, so that he remained soundless yet with his mouth
still open as he heard the payoff thuds where the useless wino curled
up with stick arms over his rheumy face.
The teener laughed, tossed the bat away and began jumping up and down
with his hobnailed, mail-order air force boots. Then he ran into the
Cad. A hootch bottle soared out, made a brittle tink-tink of falling
glass.
"Go, man!"
The Cad wooshed by. It made a sort of hollow sucking noise as it
bounced over the old man twice. Then the finlights diminished like
bright wind-blown sparks.
Wayne walked over and sneered down at the human garbage lying in
scummed rain pools. The smell of raw violence, the scent of blood, made
his heart thump like a trapped rubber ball in a cage.
He hurried into the Four Aces, drawn by an exhilarating vision ... and
pursued by the hollow haunting fears of his own desires.
He walked through the wavering haze of smoke and liquored dizziness and
stood until his eyes learned the dark. He spotted her red shirt and
yellow legs over in the corner above a murky lighted table.
He walked toward her, watching her little subhuman pixie face lift.
The eyes widened with exciting terror, turned even paler behind a red
slash of sensuous mouth. Briefed and waiting, primed and eager for
running, she recognized her pursuer at once. He sat at a table near
her, watching and grinning and seeing her squirm.
She sat in that slightly baffled, fearful and uncomprehending attitude
of being motionless, as though they were all actors performing in a
weirdo drama being staged in that smoky thick-aired dive.
Wayne smiled with wry superiority at the redheaded psycho in a dirty
T-shirt, a big bruiser with a gorilla face. He was tussling his mouse
heavy.
"What's yours, teener?" the slug-faced waiter asked.
"Bring me a Crusher, buddyroo," Wayne said, and flashed his pass card.
"Sure, teener."
Red nuzzled the mouse's neck and made drooly noises. Wayne watched and
fed on the promising terror and helplessness of her hunted face. She
sat rigid, eyes fixed on Wayne like balls of frozen glass.
Red looked up and stared straight at Wayne with eyes like black buttons
imbedded in the waxlike skin of his face. Then he grinned all on one
side. One huge hand scratched across the wet table top like a furious
cat's.
Wayne returned the challenging move but felt a nervous twitch jerk at
his lips. A numbness covered his brain like a film as he concentrated
on staring down Red the psycho. But Red kept looking, his eyes bright
but dead. Then he began struggling it up again with the scared little
mouse.
The waiter sat the Crusher down. Wayne signed a chit; tonight he was in
the pay of the state.
"What else, teener?"
"One thing. Fade."
"Sure, teener," the waiter said, his breathy words dripping like syrup.
Wayne drank. Liquored heat dripped into his stomach. Fire tickled his
veins, became hot wire twisting in his head.
He drank again and forced out a shaky breath. The jazz beat thumped
fast and muted brass moaned. Drumpulse, stabbing trumpet raped the
air. Tension mounted as Wayne watched her pale throat convulsing, the
white eyelids fluttering. Red fingered at her legs and salivated at her
throat, glancing now and then at Wayne, baiting him good.
"Okay, you creep," Wayne said.
He stood up and started through the haze. The psycho leaped and a table
crashed. Wayne's .38 dropped from its spring-clip holster and the blast
filled the room. The psycho screamed and stumbled toward the door
holding something in. The mouse darted by, eluded Wayne's grasp and was
out the door.
Wayne went out after her in a laughing frenzy of release. He felt the
cold strange breath of moist air on his sweating skin as he sprinted
down the alley into a wind full of blowing wet.
He ran laughing under the crazy starlight and glimpsed her now and
then, fading in and out of shadows, jumping, crawling, running with the
life-or-death animation of a wild deer.
Up and down alleys, a rat's maze. A rabbit run. Across vacant lots.
Through shattered tenement ruins. Over a fence. There she was, falling,
sliding down a brick shute.
He gained. He moved up. His labored breath pumped more fire. And her
scream was a rejuvenation hypo in his blood.
She quivered above him on the stoop, panting, her eyes afire with
terror.
"You, baby," Wayne gasped. "I gotcha."
She backed into darkness, up there against the sagging tenement wall,
her arms out and poised like crippled wings. Wayne crept up. She gave
a squeaking sob, turned, ran. Wayne leaped into gloom. Wood cracked.
He clambered over rotten lumber. The doorway sagged and he hesitated
in the musty dark. A few feet away was the sound of loose trickling
plaster, a whimpering whine.
"No use running," Wayne said. "Go loose. Give, baby. Give now."
She scurried up sagging stairs. Wayne laughed and dug up after her,
feeling his way through debris. Dim moonlight filtered through a
sagging stairway from a shattered skylight three floors up. The mouse's
shadow floated ahead.
He started up. The entire stair structure canted sickeningly. A railing
ripped and he nearly went with it back down to the first floor. He
heard a scream as rotten boards crumbled and dust exploded from
cracks. A rat ran past Wayne and fell into space. He burst into the
third-floor hallway and saw her half-falling through a door under the
jagged skylight.
Wayne took his time. He knew how she felt waiting in there, listening
to his creeping, implacable footfalls.
Then he yelled and slammed open the door.
Dust and stench, filth so awful it made nothing of the dust. In
the corner he saw something hardly to be called a bed. More like
a nest. A dirty, lumpy pile of torn mattress, felt, excelsior,
shredded newspapers and rags. It seemed to crawl a little under the
moon-streaming skylight.
She crouched in the corner panting. He took his time moving in. He
snickered as he flashed the switchblade and circled it like a serpent's
tongue. He watched what was left of her nerves go to pieces like rotten
cloth.
"Do it quick, hunter," she whispered. "Please do it quick."
"What's that, baby?"
"I'm tired running. Kill me first. Beat me after. They won't know the
difference."
"I'm gonna bruise and beat you," he said.
"Kill me first," she begged. "I don't want—" She began to cry. She
cried right up in his face, her wide eyes unblinking, and her mouth
open.
"You got bad blood, baby," he snarled. He laughed but it didn't sound
like him and something was wrong with his belly. It was knotting up.
"Bad, I know! So get it over with, please. Hurry, hurry."
She was small and white and quivering. She moaned but kept staring up
at him.
He ripped off his rivet-studded belt and swung once, then groaned and
shuffled away from her.
He kept backing toward the door. She crawled after him, begging and
clutching with both arms as she wriggled forward on her knees.
"Don't run. Please. Kill me! It'll be someone else if you don't. Oh,
God, I'm so tired waiting and running!"
"I can't," he said, and sickness soured in his throat.
"Please."
"I can't, I can't!"
He turned and ran blindly, half-fell down the cracking stairs.
Doctor Burns, head of the readjustment staff at the Youth Center,
studied Wayne with abstract interest.
"You enjoyed the hunt, Seton? You got your kicks?"
"Yes, sir."
"But you couldn't execute them?"
"No, sir."
"They're undesirables. Incurables. You know that, Seton?"
"Yes, sir."
"The psycho you only wounded. He's a five-times murderer. And that girl
killed her father when she was twelve. You realize there's nothing can
be done for them? That they have to be executed?"
"I know."
"Too bad," the doctor said. "We all have aggressive impulses, primitive
needs that must be expressed early, purged. There's murder in all
of us, Seton. The impulse shouldn't be denied or suppressed, but
educated
. The state used to kill them. Isn't it better all around,
Seton, for us to do it, as part of growing up? What was the matter,
Seton?"
"I—felt sorry for her."
"Is that all you can say about it?"
"Yes, sir."
The doctor pressed a buzzer. Two men in white coats entered.
"You should have got it out of your system, Seton, but now it's still
in there. I can't turn you out and have it erupt later—and maybe shed
clean innocent blood, can I?"
"No, sir," Wayne mumbled. He didn't look up. "I'm sorry I punked out."
"Give him the treatment," the doctor said wearily. "And send him back
to his mother."
Wayne nodded and they led him away. His mind screamed still to split
open some prison of bone and lay bare and breathing wide. But there
was no way out for the trapped. Now he knew about the old man and his
poker-playing pals.
They had all punked out.
Like him.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/1/2/0/61204//61204-h//61204-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | Which word best describe Wayne’s worst fear?
| 61204_7K3R71T6_5 | [
"Gun",
"Cat",
"Punk",
"Red"
] | 3 | 3 | [
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61,204 | 61204_7K3R71T6 | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | The Recruit | 1953.0 | Walton, Bryce | Executions and executioners -- Fiction; Teenage boys -- Fiction; Science fiction; PS; Psychological fiction; Short stories | THE RECRUIT
BY BRYCE WALTON
It was dirty work, but it would
make him a man. And kids had a
right to grow up—some of them!
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of If Science Fiction, July 1962.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
Wayne, unseen, sneered down from the head of the stairs.
The old man with his thick neck, thick cigar, evening highball, potgut
and bald head without a brain in it. His slim mother with nervously
polite smiles and voice fluttering, assuring the old man by her frailty
that he was big in the world. They were squareheads one and all,
marking moron time in a gray dream. Man, was he glad to break out.
The old man said, "He'll be okay. Let him alone."
"But he won't eat. Just lies there all the time."
"Hell," the old man said. "Sixteen's a bad time. School over, waiting
for the draft and all. He's in between. It's rough."
Mother clasped her forearms and shook her head once slowly.
"We got to let him go, Eva. It's a dangerous time. You got to remember
about all these dangerous repressed impulses piling up with nowhere to
go, like they say. You read the books."
"But he's unhappy."
"Are we specialists? That's the Youth Board's headache, ain't it? What
do we know about adolescent trauma and like that? Now get dressed or
we'll be late."
Wayne watched the ritual, grinning. He listened to their purposeless
noises, their blabbing and yakking as if they had something to say.
Blab-blab about the same old bones, and end up chewing them in the
same old ways. Then they begin all over again. A freak sideshow all the
way to nowhere. Squareheads going around either unconscious or with
eyes looking dead from the millennium in the office waiting to retire
into limbo.
How come he'd been stuck with parental images like that? One
thing—when he was jockeying a rocket to Mars or maybe firing the pants
off Asiatic reds in some steamy gone jungle paradise, he'd forget his
punkie origins in teeveeland.
But the old man was right on for once about the dangerous repressed
impulses. Wayne had heard about it often enough. Anyway there was no
doubt about it when every move he made was a restrained explosion.
So he'd waited in his room, and it wasn't easy sweating it out alone
waiting for the breakout call from HQ.
"Well, dear, if you say so," Mother said, with the old resigned sigh
that must make the old man feel like Superman with a beerbelly.
They heard Wayne slouching loosely down the stairs and looked up.
"Relax," Wayne said. "You're not going anywhere tonight."
"What, son?" his old man said uneasily. "Sure we are. We're going to
the movies."
He could feel them watching him, waiting; and yet still he didn't
answer. Somewhere out in suburban grayness a dog barked, then was
silent.
"Okay, go," Wayne said. "If you wanta walk. I'm taking the family
boltbucket."
"But we promised the Clemons, dear," his mother said.
"Hell," Wayne said, grinning straight into the old man. "I just got my
draft call."
He saw the old man's Adam's apple move. "Oh, my dear boy," Mother cried
out.
"So gimme the keys," Wayne said. The old man handed the keys over. His
understanding smile was strained, and fear flicked in his sagging eyes.
"Do be careful, dear," his mother said. She ran toward him as he
laughed and shut the door on her. He was still laughing as he whoomed
the Olds between the pale dead glow of houses and roared up the ramp
onto the Freeway. Ahead was the promising glitter of adventure-calling
neon, and he looked up at the high skies of night and his eyes sailed
the glaring wonders of escape.
He burned off some rubber finding a slot in the park-lot. He strode
under a sign reading
Public Youth Center No. 947
and walked casually
to the reception desk, where a thin man with sergeant's stripes and a
pansy haircut looked out of a pile of paperwork.
"Where you think you're going, my pretty lad?"
Wayne grinned down. "Higher I hope than a typewriter jockey."
"Well," the sergeant said. "How tough we are this evening. You have a
pass, killer?"
"Wayne Seton. Draft call."
"Oh." The sergeant checked his name off a roster and nodded. He wrote
on a slip of paper, handed the pass to Wayne. "Go to the Armory and
check out whatever your lusting little heart desires. Then report to
Captain Jack, room 307."
"Thanks, sarge dear," Wayne said and took the elevator up to the Armory.
A tired fat corporal with a naked head blinked up at tall Wayne.
Finally he said, "So make up your mind, bud. Think you're the only kid
breaking out tonight?"
"Hold your teeth, pop," Wayne said, coolly and slowly lighting a
cigarette. "I've decided."
The corporal's little eyes studied Wayne with malicious amusement.
"Take it from a vet, bud. Sooner you go the better. It's a big city and
you're starting late. You can get a cat, not a mouse, and some babes
are clever hellcats in a dark alley."
"You must be a genius," Wayne said. "A corporal with no hair and still
a counterboy. I'm impressed. I'm all ears, Dad."
The corporal sighed wearily. "You can get that balloon head
ventilated, bud, and good."
Wayne's mouth twitched. He leaned across the counter toward the
shelves and racks of weapons. "I'll remember that crack when I get
my commission." He blew smoke in the corporal's face. "Bring me a
Smith and Wesson .38, shoulder holster with spring-clip. And throw in
a Skelly switchblade for kicks—the six-inch disguised job with the
double springs."
The corporal waddled back with the revolver and the switchblade
disguised in a leather comb case. He checked them on a receipt ledger,
while Wayne examined the weapons, broke open the revolver, twirled the
cylinder and pushed cartridges into the waiting chamber. He slipped
the knife from the comb case, flicked open the blade and stared at its
gleam in the buttery light as his mouth went dry and the refracted
incandescence of it trickled on his brain like melted ice, exciting and
scary.
He removed his leather jacket. He slung the holster under his left
armpit and tested the spring clip release several times, feeling the
way the serrated butt dropped into his wet palm. He put his jacket
back on and the switchblade case in his pocket. He walked toward the
elevator and didn't look back as the corporal said, "Good luck, tiger."
Captain Jack moved massively. The big stone-walled office, alive with
stuffed lion and tiger and gunracks, seemed to grow smaller. Captain
Jack crossed black-booted legs and whacked a cane at the floor. It had
a head shaped like a grinning bear.
Wayne felt the assured smile die on his face. Something seemed to
shrink him. If he didn't watch himself he'd begin feeling like a pea
among bowling balls.
Contemptuously amused little eyes glittered at Wayne from a shaggy
head. Shoulders hunched like stuffed sea-bags.
"Wayne Seton," said Captain Jack as if he were discussing something
in a bug collection. "Well, well, you're really fired up aren't you?
Really going out to eat 'em. Right, punk?"
"Yes, sir," Wayne said. He ran wet hands down the sides of his chinos.
His legs seemed sheathed in lead as he bit inwardly at shrinking fear
the way a dog snaps at a wound. You big overblown son, he thought, I'll
show you but good who is a punk. They made a guy wait and sweat until
he screamed. They kept a guy on the fire until desire leaped in him,
ran and billowed and roared until his brain was filled with it. But
that wasn't enough. If this muscle-bound creep was such a big boy,
what was he doing holding down a desk?
"Well, this is it, punk. You go the distance or start a butterfly
collection."
The cane darted up. A blade snicked from the end and stopped an inch
from Wayne's nose. He jerked up a shaky hand involuntarily and clamped
a knuckle-ridged gag to his gasping mouth.
Captain Jack chuckled. "All right, superboy." He handed Wayne his
passcard. "Curfew's off, punk, for 6 hours. You got 6 hours to make
out."
"Yes, sir."
"Your beast is primed and waiting at the Four Aces Club on the West
Side. Know where that is, punk?"
"No, sir, but I'll find it fast."
"Sure you will, punk," smiled Captain Jack. "She'll be wearing yellow
slacks and a red shirt. Black hair, a cute trick. She's with a hefty
psycho who eats punks for breakfast. He's butchered five people.
They're both on top of the Undesirable list, Seton. They got to go and
they're your key to the stars."
"Yes, sir," Wayne said.
"So run along and make out, punk," grinned Captain Jack.
A copcar stopped Wayne as he started over the bridge, out of bright
respectable neon into the murky westside slum over the river.
Wayne waved the pass card, signed by Captain Jack, under the cop's
quivering nose. The cop shivered and stepped back and waved him on. The
Olds roared over the bridge as the night's rain blew away.
The air through the open window was chill and damp coming from
Slumville, but Wayne felt a cold that wasn't of the night or the wind.
He turned off into a rat's warren of the inferiors. Lights turned pale,
secretive and sparse, the uncared-for streets became rough with pitted
potholes, narrow and winding and humid with wet unpleasant smells.
Wayne's fearful exhilaration increased as he cruised with bated breath
through the dark mazes of streets and rickety tenements crawling with
the shadows of mysterious promise.
He found the alley, dark, a gloom-dripping tunnel. He drove cautiously
into it and rolled along, watching. His belly ached with expectancy as
he spotted the sick-looking dab of neon wanly sparkling.
FOUR ACES CLUB
He parked across the alley. He got out and stood in shadows, digging
the sultry beat of a combo, the wild pulse of drums and spinning brass
filtering through windows painted black.
He breathed deep, started over, ducked back. A stewbum weaved out of
a bank of garbage cans, humming to himself, pulling at a rainsoaked
shirt clinging to a pale stick body. He reminded Wayne of a slim grub
balanced on one end.
The stewbum stumbled. His bearded face in dim breaking moonlight had
a dirty, greenish tinge as he sensed Wayne there. He turned in a
grotesque uncoordinated jiggling and his eyes were wide with terror and
doom.
"I gotta hide, kid. They're on me."
Wayne's chest rose and his hands curled.
The bum's fingers drew at the air like white talons.
"Help me, kid."
He turned with a scratchy cry and retreated before the sudden blast
of headlights from a Cad bulleting into the alley. The Cad rushed
past Wayne and he felt the engine-hot fumes against his legs. Tires
squealed. The Cad stopped and a teener in black jacket jumped out and
crouched as he began stalking the old rummy.
"This is him! This is him all right," the teener yelled, and one hand
came up swinging a baseball bat.
A head bobbed out of the Cad window and giggled.
The fumble-footed rummy tried to run and plopped on wet pavement. The
teener moved in, while a faint odor of burnt rubber hovered in the air
as the Cad cruised in a slow follow-up.
Wayne's breath quickened as he watched, feeling somehow blank wonder
at finding himself there, free and breaking out at last with no curfew
and no law but his own. He felt as though he couldn't stop anything.
Living seemed directionless, but he still would go with it regardless,
until something dropped off or blew to hell like a hot light-bulb. He
held his breath, waiting. His body was tensed and rigid as he moved in
spirit with the hunting teener, an omniscient shadow with a hunting
license and a ghetto jungle twenty miles deep.
The crawling stewbum screamed as the baseball bat whacked. The teener
laughed. Wayne wanted to shout. He opened his mouth, but the yell
clogged up somewhere, so that he remained soundless yet with his mouth
still open as he heard the payoff thuds where the useless wino curled
up with stick arms over his rheumy face.
The teener laughed, tossed the bat away and began jumping up and down
with his hobnailed, mail-order air force boots. Then he ran into the
Cad. A hootch bottle soared out, made a brittle tink-tink of falling
glass.
"Go, man!"
The Cad wooshed by. It made a sort of hollow sucking noise as it
bounced over the old man twice. Then the finlights diminished like
bright wind-blown sparks.
Wayne walked over and sneered down at the human garbage lying in
scummed rain pools. The smell of raw violence, the scent of blood, made
his heart thump like a trapped rubber ball in a cage.
He hurried into the Four Aces, drawn by an exhilarating vision ... and
pursued by the hollow haunting fears of his own desires.
He walked through the wavering haze of smoke and liquored dizziness and
stood until his eyes learned the dark. He spotted her red shirt and
yellow legs over in the corner above a murky lighted table.
He walked toward her, watching her little subhuman pixie face lift.
The eyes widened with exciting terror, turned even paler behind a red
slash of sensuous mouth. Briefed and waiting, primed and eager for
running, she recognized her pursuer at once. He sat at a table near
her, watching and grinning and seeing her squirm.
She sat in that slightly baffled, fearful and uncomprehending attitude
of being motionless, as though they were all actors performing in a
weirdo drama being staged in that smoky thick-aired dive.
Wayne smiled with wry superiority at the redheaded psycho in a dirty
T-shirt, a big bruiser with a gorilla face. He was tussling his mouse
heavy.
"What's yours, teener?" the slug-faced waiter asked.
"Bring me a Crusher, buddyroo," Wayne said, and flashed his pass card.
"Sure, teener."
Red nuzzled the mouse's neck and made drooly noises. Wayne watched and
fed on the promising terror and helplessness of her hunted face. She
sat rigid, eyes fixed on Wayne like balls of frozen glass.
Red looked up and stared straight at Wayne with eyes like black buttons
imbedded in the waxlike skin of his face. Then he grinned all on one
side. One huge hand scratched across the wet table top like a furious
cat's.
Wayne returned the challenging move but felt a nervous twitch jerk at
his lips. A numbness covered his brain like a film as he concentrated
on staring down Red the psycho. But Red kept looking, his eyes bright
but dead. Then he began struggling it up again with the scared little
mouse.
The waiter sat the Crusher down. Wayne signed a chit; tonight he was in
the pay of the state.
"What else, teener?"
"One thing. Fade."
"Sure, teener," the waiter said, his breathy words dripping like syrup.
Wayne drank. Liquored heat dripped into his stomach. Fire tickled his
veins, became hot wire twisting in his head.
He drank again and forced out a shaky breath. The jazz beat thumped
fast and muted brass moaned. Drumpulse, stabbing trumpet raped the
air. Tension mounted as Wayne watched her pale throat convulsing, the
white eyelids fluttering. Red fingered at her legs and salivated at her
throat, glancing now and then at Wayne, baiting him good.
"Okay, you creep," Wayne said.
He stood up and started through the haze. The psycho leaped and a table
crashed. Wayne's .38 dropped from its spring-clip holster and the blast
filled the room. The psycho screamed and stumbled toward the door
holding something in. The mouse darted by, eluded Wayne's grasp and was
out the door.
Wayne went out after her in a laughing frenzy of release. He felt the
cold strange breath of moist air on his sweating skin as he sprinted
down the alley into a wind full of blowing wet.
He ran laughing under the crazy starlight and glimpsed her now and
then, fading in and out of shadows, jumping, crawling, running with the
life-or-death animation of a wild deer.
Up and down alleys, a rat's maze. A rabbit run. Across vacant lots.
Through shattered tenement ruins. Over a fence. There she was, falling,
sliding down a brick shute.
He gained. He moved up. His labored breath pumped more fire. And her
scream was a rejuvenation hypo in his blood.
She quivered above him on the stoop, panting, her eyes afire with
terror.
"You, baby," Wayne gasped. "I gotcha."
She backed into darkness, up there against the sagging tenement wall,
her arms out and poised like crippled wings. Wayne crept up. She gave
a squeaking sob, turned, ran. Wayne leaped into gloom. Wood cracked.
He clambered over rotten lumber. The doorway sagged and he hesitated
in the musty dark. A few feet away was the sound of loose trickling
plaster, a whimpering whine.
"No use running," Wayne said. "Go loose. Give, baby. Give now."
She scurried up sagging stairs. Wayne laughed and dug up after her,
feeling his way through debris. Dim moonlight filtered through a
sagging stairway from a shattered skylight three floors up. The mouse's
shadow floated ahead.
He started up. The entire stair structure canted sickeningly. A railing
ripped and he nearly went with it back down to the first floor. He
heard a scream as rotten boards crumbled and dust exploded from
cracks. A rat ran past Wayne and fell into space. He burst into the
third-floor hallway and saw her half-falling through a door under the
jagged skylight.
Wayne took his time. He knew how she felt waiting in there, listening
to his creeping, implacable footfalls.
Then he yelled and slammed open the door.
Dust and stench, filth so awful it made nothing of the dust. In
the corner he saw something hardly to be called a bed. More like
a nest. A dirty, lumpy pile of torn mattress, felt, excelsior,
shredded newspapers and rags. It seemed to crawl a little under the
moon-streaming skylight.
She crouched in the corner panting. He took his time moving in. He
snickered as he flashed the switchblade and circled it like a serpent's
tongue. He watched what was left of her nerves go to pieces like rotten
cloth.
"Do it quick, hunter," she whispered. "Please do it quick."
"What's that, baby?"
"I'm tired running. Kill me first. Beat me after. They won't know the
difference."
"I'm gonna bruise and beat you," he said.
"Kill me first," she begged. "I don't want—" She began to cry. She
cried right up in his face, her wide eyes unblinking, and her mouth
open.
"You got bad blood, baby," he snarled. He laughed but it didn't sound
like him and something was wrong with his belly. It was knotting up.
"Bad, I know! So get it over with, please. Hurry, hurry."
She was small and white and quivering. She moaned but kept staring up
at him.
He ripped off his rivet-studded belt and swung once, then groaned and
shuffled away from her.
He kept backing toward the door. She crawled after him, begging and
clutching with both arms as she wriggled forward on her knees.
"Don't run. Please. Kill me! It'll be someone else if you don't. Oh,
God, I'm so tired waiting and running!"
"I can't," he said, and sickness soured in his throat.
"Please."
"I can't, I can't!"
He turned and ran blindly, half-fell down the cracking stairs.
Doctor Burns, head of the readjustment staff at the Youth Center,
studied Wayne with abstract interest.
"You enjoyed the hunt, Seton? You got your kicks?"
"Yes, sir."
"But you couldn't execute them?"
"No, sir."
"They're undesirables. Incurables. You know that, Seton?"
"Yes, sir."
"The psycho you only wounded. He's a five-times murderer. And that girl
killed her father when she was twelve. You realize there's nothing can
be done for them? That they have to be executed?"
"I know."
"Too bad," the doctor said. "We all have aggressive impulses, primitive
needs that must be expressed early, purged. There's murder in all
of us, Seton. The impulse shouldn't be denied or suppressed, but
educated
. The state used to kill them. Isn't it better all around,
Seton, for us to do it, as part of growing up? What was the matter,
Seton?"
"I—felt sorry for her."
"Is that all you can say about it?"
"Yes, sir."
The doctor pressed a buzzer. Two men in white coats entered.
"You should have got it out of your system, Seton, but now it's still
in there. I can't turn you out and have it erupt later—and maybe shed
clean innocent blood, can I?"
"No, sir," Wayne mumbled. He didn't look up. "I'm sorry I punked out."
"Give him the treatment," the doctor said wearily. "And send him back
to his mother."
Wayne nodded and they led him away. His mind screamed still to split
open some prison of bone and lay bare and breathing wide. But there
was no way out for the trapped. Now he knew about the old man and his
poker-playing pals.
They had all punked out.
Like him.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/1/2/0/61204//61204-h//61204-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | What is the paradox of Wayne’s “breaking out” experience?
| 61204_7K3R71T6_6 | [
"The fact that Wayne feels bad for the stewbum demonstrates that he feels more for humanity than the Corporal accuses him of. \n",
"The fact that Wayne laughs during his chase with Red is paradoxical to the way he demonstrates empathy for his father. \n",
"-The fact that Wayne cannot complete his kill suggests that violence is not necessarily an inherent part of humanity, such as the state claims. \n",
"The fact that Wayne cannot complete his kills suggests that he will become like how mother, which is the opposite of what he wants for himself. \n"
] | 3 | 3 | [
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61,204 | 61204_7K3R71T6 | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | The Recruit | 1953.0 | Walton, Bryce | Executions and executioners -- Fiction; Teenage boys -- Fiction; Science fiction; PS; Psychological fiction; Short stories | THE RECRUIT
BY BRYCE WALTON
It was dirty work, but it would
make him a man. And kids had a
right to grow up—some of them!
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of If Science Fiction, July 1962.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
Wayne, unseen, sneered down from the head of the stairs.
The old man with his thick neck, thick cigar, evening highball, potgut
and bald head without a brain in it. His slim mother with nervously
polite smiles and voice fluttering, assuring the old man by her frailty
that he was big in the world. They were squareheads one and all,
marking moron time in a gray dream. Man, was he glad to break out.
The old man said, "He'll be okay. Let him alone."
"But he won't eat. Just lies there all the time."
"Hell," the old man said. "Sixteen's a bad time. School over, waiting
for the draft and all. He's in between. It's rough."
Mother clasped her forearms and shook her head once slowly.
"We got to let him go, Eva. It's a dangerous time. You got to remember
about all these dangerous repressed impulses piling up with nowhere to
go, like they say. You read the books."
"But he's unhappy."
"Are we specialists? That's the Youth Board's headache, ain't it? What
do we know about adolescent trauma and like that? Now get dressed or
we'll be late."
Wayne watched the ritual, grinning. He listened to their purposeless
noises, their blabbing and yakking as if they had something to say.
Blab-blab about the same old bones, and end up chewing them in the
same old ways. Then they begin all over again. A freak sideshow all the
way to nowhere. Squareheads going around either unconscious or with
eyes looking dead from the millennium in the office waiting to retire
into limbo.
How come he'd been stuck with parental images like that? One
thing—when he was jockeying a rocket to Mars or maybe firing the pants
off Asiatic reds in some steamy gone jungle paradise, he'd forget his
punkie origins in teeveeland.
But the old man was right on for once about the dangerous repressed
impulses. Wayne had heard about it often enough. Anyway there was no
doubt about it when every move he made was a restrained explosion.
So he'd waited in his room, and it wasn't easy sweating it out alone
waiting for the breakout call from HQ.
"Well, dear, if you say so," Mother said, with the old resigned sigh
that must make the old man feel like Superman with a beerbelly.
They heard Wayne slouching loosely down the stairs and looked up.
"Relax," Wayne said. "You're not going anywhere tonight."
"What, son?" his old man said uneasily. "Sure we are. We're going to
the movies."
He could feel them watching him, waiting; and yet still he didn't
answer. Somewhere out in suburban grayness a dog barked, then was
silent.
"Okay, go," Wayne said. "If you wanta walk. I'm taking the family
boltbucket."
"But we promised the Clemons, dear," his mother said.
"Hell," Wayne said, grinning straight into the old man. "I just got my
draft call."
He saw the old man's Adam's apple move. "Oh, my dear boy," Mother cried
out.
"So gimme the keys," Wayne said. The old man handed the keys over. His
understanding smile was strained, and fear flicked in his sagging eyes.
"Do be careful, dear," his mother said. She ran toward him as he
laughed and shut the door on her. He was still laughing as he whoomed
the Olds between the pale dead glow of houses and roared up the ramp
onto the Freeway. Ahead was the promising glitter of adventure-calling
neon, and he looked up at the high skies of night and his eyes sailed
the glaring wonders of escape.
He burned off some rubber finding a slot in the park-lot. He strode
under a sign reading
Public Youth Center No. 947
and walked casually
to the reception desk, where a thin man with sergeant's stripes and a
pansy haircut looked out of a pile of paperwork.
"Where you think you're going, my pretty lad?"
Wayne grinned down. "Higher I hope than a typewriter jockey."
"Well," the sergeant said. "How tough we are this evening. You have a
pass, killer?"
"Wayne Seton. Draft call."
"Oh." The sergeant checked his name off a roster and nodded. He wrote
on a slip of paper, handed the pass to Wayne. "Go to the Armory and
check out whatever your lusting little heart desires. Then report to
Captain Jack, room 307."
"Thanks, sarge dear," Wayne said and took the elevator up to the Armory.
A tired fat corporal with a naked head blinked up at tall Wayne.
Finally he said, "So make up your mind, bud. Think you're the only kid
breaking out tonight?"
"Hold your teeth, pop," Wayne said, coolly and slowly lighting a
cigarette. "I've decided."
The corporal's little eyes studied Wayne with malicious amusement.
"Take it from a vet, bud. Sooner you go the better. It's a big city and
you're starting late. You can get a cat, not a mouse, and some babes
are clever hellcats in a dark alley."
"You must be a genius," Wayne said. "A corporal with no hair and still
a counterboy. I'm impressed. I'm all ears, Dad."
The corporal sighed wearily. "You can get that balloon head
ventilated, bud, and good."
Wayne's mouth twitched. He leaned across the counter toward the
shelves and racks of weapons. "I'll remember that crack when I get
my commission." He blew smoke in the corporal's face. "Bring me a
Smith and Wesson .38, shoulder holster with spring-clip. And throw in
a Skelly switchblade for kicks—the six-inch disguised job with the
double springs."
The corporal waddled back with the revolver and the switchblade
disguised in a leather comb case. He checked them on a receipt ledger,
while Wayne examined the weapons, broke open the revolver, twirled the
cylinder and pushed cartridges into the waiting chamber. He slipped
the knife from the comb case, flicked open the blade and stared at its
gleam in the buttery light as his mouth went dry and the refracted
incandescence of it trickled on his brain like melted ice, exciting and
scary.
He removed his leather jacket. He slung the holster under his left
armpit and tested the spring clip release several times, feeling the
way the serrated butt dropped into his wet palm. He put his jacket
back on and the switchblade case in his pocket. He walked toward the
elevator and didn't look back as the corporal said, "Good luck, tiger."
Captain Jack moved massively. The big stone-walled office, alive with
stuffed lion and tiger and gunracks, seemed to grow smaller. Captain
Jack crossed black-booted legs and whacked a cane at the floor. It had
a head shaped like a grinning bear.
Wayne felt the assured smile die on his face. Something seemed to
shrink him. If he didn't watch himself he'd begin feeling like a pea
among bowling balls.
Contemptuously amused little eyes glittered at Wayne from a shaggy
head. Shoulders hunched like stuffed sea-bags.
"Wayne Seton," said Captain Jack as if he were discussing something
in a bug collection. "Well, well, you're really fired up aren't you?
Really going out to eat 'em. Right, punk?"
"Yes, sir," Wayne said. He ran wet hands down the sides of his chinos.
His legs seemed sheathed in lead as he bit inwardly at shrinking fear
the way a dog snaps at a wound. You big overblown son, he thought, I'll
show you but good who is a punk. They made a guy wait and sweat until
he screamed. They kept a guy on the fire until desire leaped in him,
ran and billowed and roared until his brain was filled with it. But
that wasn't enough. If this muscle-bound creep was such a big boy,
what was he doing holding down a desk?
"Well, this is it, punk. You go the distance or start a butterfly
collection."
The cane darted up. A blade snicked from the end and stopped an inch
from Wayne's nose. He jerked up a shaky hand involuntarily and clamped
a knuckle-ridged gag to his gasping mouth.
Captain Jack chuckled. "All right, superboy." He handed Wayne his
passcard. "Curfew's off, punk, for 6 hours. You got 6 hours to make
out."
"Yes, sir."
"Your beast is primed and waiting at the Four Aces Club on the West
Side. Know where that is, punk?"
"No, sir, but I'll find it fast."
"Sure you will, punk," smiled Captain Jack. "She'll be wearing yellow
slacks and a red shirt. Black hair, a cute trick. She's with a hefty
psycho who eats punks for breakfast. He's butchered five people.
They're both on top of the Undesirable list, Seton. They got to go and
they're your key to the stars."
"Yes, sir," Wayne said.
"So run along and make out, punk," grinned Captain Jack.
A copcar stopped Wayne as he started over the bridge, out of bright
respectable neon into the murky westside slum over the river.
Wayne waved the pass card, signed by Captain Jack, under the cop's
quivering nose. The cop shivered and stepped back and waved him on. The
Olds roared over the bridge as the night's rain blew away.
The air through the open window was chill and damp coming from
Slumville, but Wayne felt a cold that wasn't of the night or the wind.
He turned off into a rat's warren of the inferiors. Lights turned pale,
secretive and sparse, the uncared-for streets became rough with pitted
potholes, narrow and winding and humid with wet unpleasant smells.
Wayne's fearful exhilaration increased as he cruised with bated breath
through the dark mazes of streets and rickety tenements crawling with
the shadows of mysterious promise.
He found the alley, dark, a gloom-dripping tunnel. He drove cautiously
into it and rolled along, watching. His belly ached with expectancy as
he spotted the sick-looking dab of neon wanly sparkling.
FOUR ACES CLUB
He parked across the alley. He got out and stood in shadows, digging
the sultry beat of a combo, the wild pulse of drums and spinning brass
filtering through windows painted black.
He breathed deep, started over, ducked back. A stewbum weaved out of
a bank of garbage cans, humming to himself, pulling at a rainsoaked
shirt clinging to a pale stick body. He reminded Wayne of a slim grub
balanced on one end.
The stewbum stumbled. His bearded face in dim breaking moonlight had
a dirty, greenish tinge as he sensed Wayne there. He turned in a
grotesque uncoordinated jiggling and his eyes were wide with terror and
doom.
"I gotta hide, kid. They're on me."
Wayne's chest rose and his hands curled.
The bum's fingers drew at the air like white talons.
"Help me, kid."
He turned with a scratchy cry and retreated before the sudden blast
of headlights from a Cad bulleting into the alley. The Cad rushed
past Wayne and he felt the engine-hot fumes against his legs. Tires
squealed. The Cad stopped and a teener in black jacket jumped out and
crouched as he began stalking the old rummy.
"This is him! This is him all right," the teener yelled, and one hand
came up swinging a baseball bat.
A head bobbed out of the Cad window and giggled.
The fumble-footed rummy tried to run and plopped on wet pavement. The
teener moved in, while a faint odor of burnt rubber hovered in the air
as the Cad cruised in a slow follow-up.
Wayne's breath quickened as he watched, feeling somehow blank wonder
at finding himself there, free and breaking out at last with no curfew
and no law but his own. He felt as though he couldn't stop anything.
Living seemed directionless, but he still would go with it regardless,
until something dropped off or blew to hell like a hot light-bulb. He
held his breath, waiting. His body was tensed and rigid as he moved in
spirit with the hunting teener, an omniscient shadow with a hunting
license and a ghetto jungle twenty miles deep.
The crawling stewbum screamed as the baseball bat whacked. The teener
laughed. Wayne wanted to shout. He opened his mouth, but the yell
clogged up somewhere, so that he remained soundless yet with his mouth
still open as he heard the payoff thuds where the useless wino curled
up with stick arms over his rheumy face.
The teener laughed, tossed the bat away and began jumping up and down
with his hobnailed, mail-order air force boots. Then he ran into the
Cad. A hootch bottle soared out, made a brittle tink-tink of falling
glass.
"Go, man!"
The Cad wooshed by. It made a sort of hollow sucking noise as it
bounced over the old man twice. Then the finlights diminished like
bright wind-blown sparks.
Wayne walked over and sneered down at the human garbage lying in
scummed rain pools. The smell of raw violence, the scent of blood, made
his heart thump like a trapped rubber ball in a cage.
He hurried into the Four Aces, drawn by an exhilarating vision ... and
pursued by the hollow haunting fears of his own desires.
He walked through the wavering haze of smoke and liquored dizziness and
stood until his eyes learned the dark. He spotted her red shirt and
yellow legs over in the corner above a murky lighted table.
He walked toward her, watching her little subhuman pixie face lift.
The eyes widened with exciting terror, turned even paler behind a red
slash of sensuous mouth. Briefed and waiting, primed and eager for
running, she recognized her pursuer at once. He sat at a table near
her, watching and grinning and seeing her squirm.
She sat in that slightly baffled, fearful and uncomprehending attitude
of being motionless, as though they were all actors performing in a
weirdo drama being staged in that smoky thick-aired dive.
Wayne smiled with wry superiority at the redheaded psycho in a dirty
T-shirt, a big bruiser with a gorilla face. He was tussling his mouse
heavy.
"What's yours, teener?" the slug-faced waiter asked.
"Bring me a Crusher, buddyroo," Wayne said, and flashed his pass card.
"Sure, teener."
Red nuzzled the mouse's neck and made drooly noises. Wayne watched and
fed on the promising terror and helplessness of her hunted face. She
sat rigid, eyes fixed on Wayne like balls of frozen glass.
Red looked up and stared straight at Wayne with eyes like black buttons
imbedded in the waxlike skin of his face. Then he grinned all on one
side. One huge hand scratched across the wet table top like a furious
cat's.
Wayne returned the challenging move but felt a nervous twitch jerk at
his lips. A numbness covered his brain like a film as he concentrated
on staring down Red the psycho. But Red kept looking, his eyes bright
but dead. Then he began struggling it up again with the scared little
mouse.
The waiter sat the Crusher down. Wayne signed a chit; tonight he was in
the pay of the state.
"What else, teener?"
"One thing. Fade."
"Sure, teener," the waiter said, his breathy words dripping like syrup.
Wayne drank. Liquored heat dripped into his stomach. Fire tickled his
veins, became hot wire twisting in his head.
He drank again and forced out a shaky breath. The jazz beat thumped
fast and muted brass moaned. Drumpulse, stabbing trumpet raped the
air. Tension mounted as Wayne watched her pale throat convulsing, the
white eyelids fluttering. Red fingered at her legs and salivated at her
throat, glancing now and then at Wayne, baiting him good.
"Okay, you creep," Wayne said.
He stood up and started through the haze. The psycho leaped and a table
crashed. Wayne's .38 dropped from its spring-clip holster and the blast
filled the room. The psycho screamed and stumbled toward the door
holding something in. The mouse darted by, eluded Wayne's grasp and was
out the door.
Wayne went out after her in a laughing frenzy of release. He felt the
cold strange breath of moist air on his sweating skin as he sprinted
down the alley into a wind full of blowing wet.
He ran laughing under the crazy starlight and glimpsed her now and
then, fading in and out of shadows, jumping, crawling, running with the
life-or-death animation of a wild deer.
Up and down alleys, a rat's maze. A rabbit run. Across vacant lots.
Through shattered tenement ruins. Over a fence. There she was, falling,
sliding down a brick shute.
He gained. He moved up. His labored breath pumped more fire. And her
scream was a rejuvenation hypo in his blood.
She quivered above him on the stoop, panting, her eyes afire with
terror.
"You, baby," Wayne gasped. "I gotcha."
She backed into darkness, up there against the sagging tenement wall,
her arms out and poised like crippled wings. Wayne crept up. She gave
a squeaking sob, turned, ran. Wayne leaped into gloom. Wood cracked.
He clambered over rotten lumber. The doorway sagged and he hesitated
in the musty dark. A few feet away was the sound of loose trickling
plaster, a whimpering whine.
"No use running," Wayne said. "Go loose. Give, baby. Give now."
She scurried up sagging stairs. Wayne laughed and dug up after her,
feeling his way through debris. Dim moonlight filtered through a
sagging stairway from a shattered skylight three floors up. The mouse's
shadow floated ahead.
He started up. The entire stair structure canted sickeningly. A railing
ripped and he nearly went with it back down to the first floor. He
heard a scream as rotten boards crumbled and dust exploded from
cracks. A rat ran past Wayne and fell into space. He burst into the
third-floor hallway and saw her half-falling through a door under the
jagged skylight.
Wayne took his time. He knew how she felt waiting in there, listening
to his creeping, implacable footfalls.
Then he yelled and slammed open the door.
Dust and stench, filth so awful it made nothing of the dust. In
the corner he saw something hardly to be called a bed. More like
a nest. A dirty, lumpy pile of torn mattress, felt, excelsior,
shredded newspapers and rags. It seemed to crawl a little under the
moon-streaming skylight.
She crouched in the corner panting. He took his time moving in. He
snickered as he flashed the switchblade and circled it like a serpent's
tongue. He watched what was left of her nerves go to pieces like rotten
cloth.
"Do it quick, hunter," she whispered. "Please do it quick."
"What's that, baby?"
"I'm tired running. Kill me first. Beat me after. They won't know the
difference."
"I'm gonna bruise and beat you," he said.
"Kill me first," she begged. "I don't want—" She began to cry. She
cried right up in his face, her wide eyes unblinking, and her mouth
open.
"You got bad blood, baby," he snarled. He laughed but it didn't sound
like him and something was wrong with his belly. It was knotting up.
"Bad, I know! So get it over with, please. Hurry, hurry."
She was small and white and quivering. She moaned but kept staring up
at him.
He ripped off his rivet-studded belt and swung once, then groaned and
shuffled away from her.
He kept backing toward the door. She crawled after him, begging and
clutching with both arms as she wriggled forward on her knees.
"Don't run. Please. Kill me! It'll be someone else if you don't. Oh,
God, I'm so tired waiting and running!"
"I can't," he said, and sickness soured in his throat.
"Please."
"I can't, I can't!"
He turned and ran blindly, half-fell down the cracking stairs.
Doctor Burns, head of the readjustment staff at the Youth Center,
studied Wayne with abstract interest.
"You enjoyed the hunt, Seton? You got your kicks?"
"Yes, sir."
"But you couldn't execute them?"
"No, sir."
"They're undesirables. Incurables. You know that, Seton?"
"Yes, sir."
"The psycho you only wounded. He's a five-times murderer. And that girl
killed her father when she was twelve. You realize there's nothing can
be done for them? That they have to be executed?"
"I know."
"Too bad," the doctor said. "We all have aggressive impulses, primitive
needs that must be expressed early, purged. There's murder in all
of us, Seton. The impulse shouldn't be denied or suppressed, but
educated
. The state used to kill them. Isn't it better all around,
Seton, for us to do it, as part of growing up? What was the matter,
Seton?"
"I—felt sorry for her."
"Is that all you can say about it?"
"Yes, sir."
The doctor pressed a buzzer. Two men in white coats entered.
"You should have got it out of your system, Seton, but now it's still
in there. I can't turn you out and have it erupt later—and maybe shed
clean innocent blood, can I?"
"No, sir," Wayne mumbled. He didn't look up. "I'm sorry I punked out."
"Give him the treatment," the doctor said wearily. "And send him back
to his mother."
Wayne nodded and they led him away. His mind screamed still to split
open some prison of bone and lay bare and breathing wide. But there
was no way out for the trapped. Now he knew about the old man and his
poker-playing pals.
They had all punked out.
Like him.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/1/2/0/61204//61204-h//61204-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | Who is with Red when Wayne enters the Four Aces Club?
| 61204_7K3R71T6_7 | [
"A hefty psycho who drinks too much \n",
"A hefty psycho who has killed five people \n",
"A hefty psycho with a cat’s face \n",
"A hefty psycho who has abducted Red \n"
] | 2 | 2 | [
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61,204 | 61204_7K3R71T6 | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | The Recruit | 1953.0 | Walton, Bryce | Executions and executioners -- Fiction; Teenage boys -- Fiction; Science fiction; PS; Psychological fiction; Short stories | THE RECRUIT
BY BRYCE WALTON
It was dirty work, but it would
make him a man. And kids had a
right to grow up—some of them!
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of If Science Fiction, July 1962.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
Wayne, unseen, sneered down from the head of the stairs.
The old man with his thick neck, thick cigar, evening highball, potgut
and bald head without a brain in it. His slim mother with nervously
polite smiles and voice fluttering, assuring the old man by her frailty
that he was big in the world. They were squareheads one and all,
marking moron time in a gray dream. Man, was he glad to break out.
The old man said, "He'll be okay. Let him alone."
"But he won't eat. Just lies there all the time."
"Hell," the old man said. "Sixteen's a bad time. School over, waiting
for the draft and all. He's in between. It's rough."
Mother clasped her forearms and shook her head once slowly.
"We got to let him go, Eva. It's a dangerous time. You got to remember
about all these dangerous repressed impulses piling up with nowhere to
go, like they say. You read the books."
"But he's unhappy."
"Are we specialists? That's the Youth Board's headache, ain't it? What
do we know about adolescent trauma and like that? Now get dressed or
we'll be late."
Wayne watched the ritual, grinning. He listened to their purposeless
noises, their blabbing and yakking as if they had something to say.
Blab-blab about the same old bones, and end up chewing them in the
same old ways. Then they begin all over again. A freak sideshow all the
way to nowhere. Squareheads going around either unconscious or with
eyes looking dead from the millennium in the office waiting to retire
into limbo.
How come he'd been stuck with parental images like that? One
thing—when he was jockeying a rocket to Mars or maybe firing the pants
off Asiatic reds in some steamy gone jungle paradise, he'd forget his
punkie origins in teeveeland.
But the old man was right on for once about the dangerous repressed
impulses. Wayne had heard about it often enough. Anyway there was no
doubt about it when every move he made was a restrained explosion.
So he'd waited in his room, and it wasn't easy sweating it out alone
waiting for the breakout call from HQ.
"Well, dear, if you say so," Mother said, with the old resigned sigh
that must make the old man feel like Superman with a beerbelly.
They heard Wayne slouching loosely down the stairs and looked up.
"Relax," Wayne said. "You're not going anywhere tonight."
"What, son?" his old man said uneasily. "Sure we are. We're going to
the movies."
He could feel them watching him, waiting; and yet still he didn't
answer. Somewhere out in suburban grayness a dog barked, then was
silent.
"Okay, go," Wayne said. "If you wanta walk. I'm taking the family
boltbucket."
"But we promised the Clemons, dear," his mother said.
"Hell," Wayne said, grinning straight into the old man. "I just got my
draft call."
He saw the old man's Adam's apple move. "Oh, my dear boy," Mother cried
out.
"So gimme the keys," Wayne said. The old man handed the keys over. His
understanding smile was strained, and fear flicked in his sagging eyes.
"Do be careful, dear," his mother said. She ran toward him as he
laughed and shut the door on her. He was still laughing as he whoomed
the Olds between the pale dead glow of houses and roared up the ramp
onto the Freeway. Ahead was the promising glitter of adventure-calling
neon, and he looked up at the high skies of night and his eyes sailed
the glaring wonders of escape.
He burned off some rubber finding a slot in the park-lot. He strode
under a sign reading
Public Youth Center No. 947
and walked casually
to the reception desk, where a thin man with sergeant's stripes and a
pansy haircut looked out of a pile of paperwork.
"Where you think you're going, my pretty lad?"
Wayne grinned down. "Higher I hope than a typewriter jockey."
"Well," the sergeant said. "How tough we are this evening. You have a
pass, killer?"
"Wayne Seton. Draft call."
"Oh." The sergeant checked his name off a roster and nodded. He wrote
on a slip of paper, handed the pass to Wayne. "Go to the Armory and
check out whatever your lusting little heart desires. Then report to
Captain Jack, room 307."
"Thanks, sarge dear," Wayne said and took the elevator up to the Armory.
A tired fat corporal with a naked head blinked up at tall Wayne.
Finally he said, "So make up your mind, bud. Think you're the only kid
breaking out tonight?"
"Hold your teeth, pop," Wayne said, coolly and slowly lighting a
cigarette. "I've decided."
The corporal's little eyes studied Wayne with malicious amusement.
"Take it from a vet, bud. Sooner you go the better. It's a big city and
you're starting late. You can get a cat, not a mouse, and some babes
are clever hellcats in a dark alley."
"You must be a genius," Wayne said. "A corporal with no hair and still
a counterboy. I'm impressed. I'm all ears, Dad."
The corporal sighed wearily. "You can get that balloon head
ventilated, bud, and good."
Wayne's mouth twitched. He leaned across the counter toward the
shelves and racks of weapons. "I'll remember that crack when I get
my commission." He blew smoke in the corporal's face. "Bring me a
Smith and Wesson .38, shoulder holster with spring-clip. And throw in
a Skelly switchblade for kicks—the six-inch disguised job with the
double springs."
The corporal waddled back with the revolver and the switchblade
disguised in a leather comb case. He checked them on a receipt ledger,
while Wayne examined the weapons, broke open the revolver, twirled the
cylinder and pushed cartridges into the waiting chamber. He slipped
the knife from the comb case, flicked open the blade and stared at its
gleam in the buttery light as his mouth went dry and the refracted
incandescence of it trickled on his brain like melted ice, exciting and
scary.
He removed his leather jacket. He slung the holster under his left
armpit and tested the spring clip release several times, feeling the
way the serrated butt dropped into his wet palm. He put his jacket
back on and the switchblade case in his pocket. He walked toward the
elevator and didn't look back as the corporal said, "Good luck, tiger."
Captain Jack moved massively. The big stone-walled office, alive with
stuffed lion and tiger and gunracks, seemed to grow smaller. Captain
Jack crossed black-booted legs and whacked a cane at the floor. It had
a head shaped like a grinning bear.
Wayne felt the assured smile die on his face. Something seemed to
shrink him. If he didn't watch himself he'd begin feeling like a pea
among bowling balls.
Contemptuously amused little eyes glittered at Wayne from a shaggy
head. Shoulders hunched like stuffed sea-bags.
"Wayne Seton," said Captain Jack as if he were discussing something
in a bug collection. "Well, well, you're really fired up aren't you?
Really going out to eat 'em. Right, punk?"
"Yes, sir," Wayne said. He ran wet hands down the sides of his chinos.
His legs seemed sheathed in lead as he bit inwardly at shrinking fear
the way a dog snaps at a wound. You big overblown son, he thought, I'll
show you but good who is a punk. They made a guy wait and sweat until
he screamed. They kept a guy on the fire until desire leaped in him,
ran and billowed and roared until his brain was filled with it. But
that wasn't enough. If this muscle-bound creep was such a big boy,
what was he doing holding down a desk?
"Well, this is it, punk. You go the distance or start a butterfly
collection."
The cane darted up. A blade snicked from the end and stopped an inch
from Wayne's nose. He jerked up a shaky hand involuntarily and clamped
a knuckle-ridged gag to his gasping mouth.
Captain Jack chuckled. "All right, superboy." He handed Wayne his
passcard. "Curfew's off, punk, for 6 hours. You got 6 hours to make
out."
"Yes, sir."
"Your beast is primed and waiting at the Four Aces Club on the West
Side. Know where that is, punk?"
"No, sir, but I'll find it fast."
"Sure you will, punk," smiled Captain Jack. "She'll be wearing yellow
slacks and a red shirt. Black hair, a cute trick. She's with a hefty
psycho who eats punks for breakfast. He's butchered five people.
They're both on top of the Undesirable list, Seton. They got to go and
they're your key to the stars."
"Yes, sir," Wayne said.
"So run along and make out, punk," grinned Captain Jack.
A copcar stopped Wayne as he started over the bridge, out of bright
respectable neon into the murky westside slum over the river.
Wayne waved the pass card, signed by Captain Jack, under the cop's
quivering nose. The cop shivered and stepped back and waved him on. The
Olds roared over the bridge as the night's rain blew away.
The air through the open window was chill and damp coming from
Slumville, but Wayne felt a cold that wasn't of the night or the wind.
He turned off into a rat's warren of the inferiors. Lights turned pale,
secretive and sparse, the uncared-for streets became rough with pitted
potholes, narrow and winding and humid with wet unpleasant smells.
Wayne's fearful exhilaration increased as he cruised with bated breath
through the dark mazes of streets and rickety tenements crawling with
the shadows of mysterious promise.
He found the alley, dark, a gloom-dripping tunnel. He drove cautiously
into it and rolled along, watching. His belly ached with expectancy as
he spotted the sick-looking dab of neon wanly sparkling.
FOUR ACES CLUB
He parked across the alley. He got out and stood in shadows, digging
the sultry beat of a combo, the wild pulse of drums and spinning brass
filtering through windows painted black.
He breathed deep, started over, ducked back. A stewbum weaved out of
a bank of garbage cans, humming to himself, pulling at a rainsoaked
shirt clinging to a pale stick body. He reminded Wayne of a slim grub
balanced on one end.
The stewbum stumbled. His bearded face in dim breaking moonlight had
a dirty, greenish tinge as he sensed Wayne there. He turned in a
grotesque uncoordinated jiggling and his eyes were wide with terror and
doom.
"I gotta hide, kid. They're on me."
Wayne's chest rose and his hands curled.
The bum's fingers drew at the air like white talons.
"Help me, kid."
He turned with a scratchy cry and retreated before the sudden blast
of headlights from a Cad bulleting into the alley. The Cad rushed
past Wayne and he felt the engine-hot fumes against his legs. Tires
squealed. The Cad stopped and a teener in black jacket jumped out and
crouched as he began stalking the old rummy.
"This is him! This is him all right," the teener yelled, and one hand
came up swinging a baseball bat.
A head bobbed out of the Cad window and giggled.
The fumble-footed rummy tried to run and plopped on wet pavement. The
teener moved in, while a faint odor of burnt rubber hovered in the air
as the Cad cruised in a slow follow-up.
Wayne's breath quickened as he watched, feeling somehow blank wonder
at finding himself there, free and breaking out at last with no curfew
and no law but his own. He felt as though he couldn't stop anything.
Living seemed directionless, but he still would go with it regardless,
until something dropped off or blew to hell like a hot light-bulb. He
held his breath, waiting. His body was tensed and rigid as he moved in
spirit with the hunting teener, an omniscient shadow with a hunting
license and a ghetto jungle twenty miles deep.
The crawling stewbum screamed as the baseball bat whacked. The teener
laughed. Wayne wanted to shout. He opened his mouth, but the yell
clogged up somewhere, so that he remained soundless yet with his mouth
still open as he heard the payoff thuds where the useless wino curled
up with stick arms over his rheumy face.
The teener laughed, tossed the bat away and began jumping up and down
with his hobnailed, mail-order air force boots. Then he ran into the
Cad. A hootch bottle soared out, made a brittle tink-tink of falling
glass.
"Go, man!"
The Cad wooshed by. It made a sort of hollow sucking noise as it
bounced over the old man twice. Then the finlights diminished like
bright wind-blown sparks.
Wayne walked over and sneered down at the human garbage lying in
scummed rain pools. The smell of raw violence, the scent of blood, made
his heart thump like a trapped rubber ball in a cage.
He hurried into the Four Aces, drawn by an exhilarating vision ... and
pursued by the hollow haunting fears of his own desires.
He walked through the wavering haze of smoke and liquored dizziness and
stood until his eyes learned the dark. He spotted her red shirt and
yellow legs over in the corner above a murky lighted table.
He walked toward her, watching her little subhuman pixie face lift.
The eyes widened with exciting terror, turned even paler behind a red
slash of sensuous mouth. Briefed and waiting, primed and eager for
running, she recognized her pursuer at once. He sat at a table near
her, watching and grinning and seeing her squirm.
She sat in that slightly baffled, fearful and uncomprehending attitude
of being motionless, as though they were all actors performing in a
weirdo drama being staged in that smoky thick-aired dive.
Wayne smiled with wry superiority at the redheaded psycho in a dirty
T-shirt, a big bruiser with a gorilla face. He was tussling his mouse
heavy.
"What's yours, teener?" the slug-faced waiter asked.
"Bring me a Crusher, buddyroo," Wayne said, and flashed his pass card.
"Sure, teener."
Red nuzzled the mouse's neck and made drooly noises. Wayne watched and
fed on the promising terror and helplessness of her hunted face. She
sat rigid, eyes fixed on Wayne like balls of frozen glass.
Red looked up and stared straight at Wayne with eyes like black buttons
imbedded in the waxlike skin of his face. Then he grinned all on one
side. One huge hand scratched across the wet table top like a furious
cat's.
Wayne returned the challenging move but felt a nervous twitch jerk at
his lips. A numbness covered his brain like a film as he concentrated
on staring down Red the psycho. But Red kept looking, his eyes bright
but dead. Then he began struggling it up again with the scared little
mouse.
The waiter sat the Crusher down. Wayne signed a chit; tonight he was in
the pay of the state.
"What else, teener?"
"One thing. Fade."
"Sure, teener," the waiter said, his breathy words dripping like syrup.
Wayne drank. Liquored heat dripped into his stomach. Fire tickled his
veins, became hot wire twisting in his head.
He drank again and forced out a shaky breath. The jazz beat thumped
fast and muted brass moaned. Drumpulse, stabbing trumpet raped the
air. Tension mounted as Wayne watched her pale throat convulsing, the
white eyelids fluttering. Red fingered at her legs and salivated at her
throat, glancing now and then at Wayne, baiting him good.
"Okay, you creep," Wayne said.
He stood up and started through the haze. The psycho leaped and a table
crashed. Wayne's .38 dropped from its spring-clip holster and the blast
filled the room. The psycho screamed and stumbled toward the door
holding something in. The mouse darted by, eluded Wayne's grasp and was
out the door.
Wayne went out after her in a laughing frenzy of release. He felt the
cold strange breath of moist air on his sweating skin as he sprinted
down the alley into a wind full of blowing wet.
He ran laughing under the crazy starlight and glimpsed her now and
then, fading in and out of shadows, jumping, crawling, running with the
life-or-death animation of a wild deer.
Up and down alleys, a rat's maze. A rabbit run. Across vacant lots.
Through shattered tenement ruins. Over a fence. There she was, falling,
sliding down a brick shute.
He gained. He moved up. His labored breath pumped more fire. And her
scream was a rejuvenation hypo in his blood.
She quivered above him on the stoop, panting, her eyes afire with
terror.
"You, baby," Wayne gasped. "I gotcha."
She backed into darkness, up there against the sagging tenement wall,
her arms out and poised like crippled wings. Wayne crept up. She gave
a squeaking sob, turned, ran. Wayne leaped into gloom. Wood cracked.
He clambered over rotten lumber. The doorway sagged and he hesitated
in the musty dark. A few feet away was the sound of loose trickling
plaster, a whimpering whine.
"No use running," Wayne said. "Go loose. Give, baby. Give now."
She scurried up sagging stairs. Wayne laughed and dug up after her,
feeling his way through debris. Dim moonlight filtered through a
sagging stairway from a shattered skylight three floors up. The mouse's
shadow floated ahead.
He started up. The entire stair structure canted sickeningly. A railing
ripped and he nearly went with it back down to the first floor. He
heard a scream as rotten boards crumbled and dust exploded from
cracks. A rat ran past Wayne and fell into space. He burst into the
third-floor hallway and saw her half-falling through a door under the
jagged skylight.
Wayne took his time. He knew how she felt waiting in there, listening
to his creeping, implacable footfalls.
Then he yelled and slammed open the door.
Dust and stench, filth so awful it made nothing of the dust. In
the corner he saw something hardly to be called a bed. More like
a nest. A dirty, lumpy pile of torn mattress, felt, excelsior,
shredded newspapers and rags. It seemed to crawl a little under the
moon-streaming skylight.
She crouched in the corner panting. He took his time moving in. He
snickered as he flashed the switchblade and circled it like a serpent's
tongue. He watched what was left of her nerves go to pieces like rotten
cloth.
"Do it quick, hunter," she whispered. "Please do it quick."
"What's that, baby?"
"I'm tired running. Kill me first. Beat me after. They won't know the
difference."
"I'm gonna bruise and beat you," he said.
"Kill me first," she begged. "I don't want—" She began to cry. She
cried right up in his face, her wide eyes unblinking, and her mouth
open.
"You got bad blood, baby," he snarled. He laughed but it didn't sound
like him and something was wrong with his belly. It was knotting up.
"Bad, I know! So get it over with, please. Hurry, hurry."
She was small and white and quivering. She moaned but kept staring up
at him.
He ripped off his rivet-studded belt and swung once, then groaned and
shuffled away from her.
He kept backing toward the door. She crawled after him, begging and
clutching with both arms as she wriggled forward on her knees.
"Don't run. Please. Kill me! It'll be someone else if you don't. Oh,
God, I'm so tired waiting and running!"
"I can't," he said, and sickness soured in his throat.
"Please."
"I can't, I can't!"
He turned and ran blindly, half-fell down the cracking stairs.
Doctor Burns, head of the readjustment staff at the Youth Center,
studied Wayne with abstract interest.
"You enjoyed the hunt, Seton? You got your kicks?"
"Yes, sir."
"But you couldn't execute them?"
"No, sir."
"They're undesirables. Incurables. You know that, Seton?"
"Yes, sir."
"The psycho you only wounded. He's a five-times murderer. And that girl
killed her father when she was twelve. You realize there's nothing can
be done for them? That they have to be executed?"
"I know."
"Too bad," the doctor said. "We all have aggressive impulses, primitive
needs that must be expressed early, purged. There's murder in all
of us, Seton. The impulse shouldn't be denied or suppressed, but
educated
. The state used to kill them. Isn't it better all around,
Seton, for us to do it, as part of growing up? What was the matter,
Seton?"
"I—felt sorry for her."
"Is that all you can say about it?"
"Yes, sir."
The doctor pressed a buzzer. Two men in white coats entered.
"You should have got it out of your system, Seton, but now it's still
in there. I can't turn you out and have it erupt later—and maybe shed
clean innocent blood, can I?"
"No, sir," Wayne mumbled. He didn't look up. "I'm sorry I punked out."
"Give him the treatment," the doctor said wearily. "And send him back
to his mother."
Wayne nodded and they led him away. His mind screamed still to split
open some prison of bone and lay bare and breathing wide. But there
was no way out for the trapped. Now he knew about the old man and his
poker-playing pals.
They had all punked out.
Like him.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/1/2/0/61204//61204-h//61204-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | What is significant about Wayne’s averse reaction to witnessing the stewbum beating?
| 61204_7K3R71T6_8 | [
"It foreshadows that Wayne will not be able to go through with his kill\n",
"It is symbolic for the inner rage bubbling within Wayne’s teenage brain. \n",
"It references the rage he feels toward his cowardly and stupid father\n",
"It foreshadows the violence Wayne will do to Red\n"
] | 1 | 1 | [
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61,204 | 61204_7K3R71T6 | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | The Recruit | 1953.0 | Walton, Bryce | Executions and executioners -- Fiction; Teenage boys -- Fiction; Science fiction; PS; Psychological fiction; Short stories | THE RECRUIT
BY BRYCE WALTON
It was dirty work, but it would
make him a man. And kids had a
right to grow up—some of them!
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of If Science Fiction, July 1962.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
Wayne, unseen, sneered down from the head of the stairs.
The old man with his thick neck, thick cigar, evening highball, potgut
and bald head without a brain in it. His slim mother with nervously
polite smiles and voice fluttering, assuring the old man by her frailty
that he was big in the world. They were squareheads one and all,
marking moron time in a gray dream. Man, was he glad to break out.
The old man said, "He'll be okay. Let him alone."
"But he won't eat. Just lies there all the time."
"Hell," the old man said. "Sixteen's a bad time. School over, waiting
for the draft and all. He's in between. It's rough."
Mother clasped her forearms and shook her head once slowly.
"We got to let him go, Eva. It's a dangerous time. You got to remember
about all these dangerous repressed impulses piling up with nowhere to
go, like they say. You read the books."
"But he's unhappy."
"Are we specialists? That's the Youth Board's headache, ain't it? What
do we know about adolescent trauma and like that? Now get dressed or
we'll be late."
Wayne watched the ritual, grinning. He listened to their purposeless
noises, their blabbing and yakking as if they had something to say.
Blab-blab about the same old bones, and end up chewing them in the
same old ways. Then they begin all over again. A freak sideshow all the
way to nowhere. Squareheads going around either unconscious or with
eyes looking dead from the millennium in the office waiting to retire
into limbo.
How come he'd been stuck with parental images like that? One
thing—when he was jockeying a rocket to Mars or maybe firing the pants
off Asiatic reds in some steamy gone jungle paradise, he'd forget his
punkie origins in teeveeland.
But the old man was right on for once about the dangerous repressed
impulses. Wayne had heard about it often enough. Anyway there was no
doubt about it when every move he made was a restrained explosion.
So he'd waited in his room, and it wasn't easy sweating it out alone
waiting for the breakout call from HQ.
"Well, dear, if you say so," Mother said, with the old resigned sigh
that must make the old man feel like Superman with a beerbelly.
They heard Wayne slouching loosely down the stairs and looked up.
"Relax," Wayne said. "You're not going anywhere tonight."
"What, son?" his old man said uneasily. "Sure we are. We're going to
the movies."
He could feel them watching him, waiting; and yet still he didn't
answer. Somewhere out in suburban grayness a dog barked, then was
silent.
"Okay, go," Wayne said. "If you wanta walk. I'm taking the family
boltbucket."
"But we promised the Clemons, dear," his mother said.
"Hell," Wayne said, grinning straight into the old man. "I just got my
draft call."
He saw the old man's Adam's apple move. "Oh, my dear boy," Mother cried
out.
"So gimme the keys," Wayne said. The old man handed the keys over. His
understanding smile was strained, and fear flicked in his sagging eyes.
"Do be careful, dear," his mother said. She ran toward him as he
laughed and shut the door on her. He was still laughing as he whoomed
the Olds between the pale dead glow of houses and roared up the ramp
onto the Freeway. Ahead was the promising glitter of adventure-calling
neon, and he looked up at the high skies of night and his eyes sailed
the glaring wonders of escape.
He burned off some rubber finding a slot in the park-lot. He strode
under a sign reading
Public Youth Center No. 947
and walked casually
to the reception desk, where a thin man with sergeant's stripes and a
pansy haircut looked out of a pile of paperwork.
"Where you think you're going, my pretty lad?"
Wayne grinned down. "Higher I hope than a typewriter jockey."
"Well," the sergeant said. "How tough we are this evening. You have a
pass, killer?"
"Wayne Seton. Draft call."
"Oh." The sergeant checked his name off a roster and nodded. He wrote
on a slip of paper, handed the pass to Wayne. "Go to the Armory and
check out whatever your lusting little heart desires. Then report to
Captain Jack, room 307."
"Thanks, sarge dear," Wayne said and took the elevator up to the Armory.
A tired fat corporal with a naked head blinked up at tall Wayne.
Finally he said, "So make up your mind, bud. Think you're the only kid
breaking out tonight?"
"Hold your teeth, pop," Wayne said, coolly and slowly lighting a
cigarette. "I've decided."
The corporal's little eyes studied Wayne with malicious amusement.
"Take it from a vet, bud. Sooner you go the better. It's a big city and
you're starting late. You can get a cat, not a mouse, and some babes
are clever hellcats in a dark alley."
"You must be a genius," Wayne said. "A corporal with no hair and still
a counterboy. I'm impressed. I'm all ears, Dad."
The corporal sighed wearily. "You can get that balloon head
ventilated, bud, and good."
Wayne's mouth twitched. He leaned across the counter toward the
shelves and racks of weapons. "I'll remember that crack when I get
my commission." He blew smoke in the corporal's face. "Bring me a
Smith and Wesson .38, shoulder holster with spring-clip. And throw in
a Skelly switchblade for kicks—the six-inch disguised job with the
double springs."
The corporal waddled back with the revolver and the switchblade
disguised in a leather comb case. He checked them on a receipt ledger,
while Wayne examined the weapons, broke open the revolver, twirled the
cylinder and pushed cartridges into the waiting chamber. He slipped
the knife from the comb case, flicked open the blade and stared at its
gleam in the buttery light as his mouth went dry and the refracted
incandescence of it trickled on his brain like melted ice, exciting and
scary.
He removed his leather jacket. He slung the holster under his left
armpit and tested the spring clip release several times, feeling the
way the serrated butt dropped into his wet palm. He put his jacket
back on and the switchblade case in his pocket. He walked toward the
elevator and didn't look back as the corporal said, "Good luck, tiger."
Captain Jack moved massively. The big stone-walled office, alive with
stuffed lion and tiger and gunracks, seemed to grow smaller. Captain
Jack crossed black-booted legs and whacked a cane at the floor. It had
a head shaped like a grinning bear.
Wayne felt the assured smile die on his face. Something seemed to
shrink him. If he didn't watch himself he'd begin feeling like a pea
among bowling balls.
Contemptuously amused little eyes glittered at Wayne from a shaggy
head. Shoulders hunched like stuffed sea-bags.
"Wayne Seton," said Captain Jack as if he were discussing something
in a bug collection. "Well, well, you're really fired up aren't you?
Really going out to eat 'em. Right, punk?"
"Yes, sir," Wayne said. He ran wet hands down the sides of his chinos.
His legs seemed sheathed in lead as he bit inwardly at shrinking fear
the way a dog snaps at a wound. You big overblown son, he thought, I'll
show you but good who is a punk. They made a guy wait and sweat until
he screamed. They kept a guy on the fire until desire leaped in him,
ran and billowed and roared until his brain was filled with it. But
that wasn't enough. If this muscle-bound creep was such a big boy,
what was he doing holding down a desk?
"Well, this is it, punk. You go the distance or start a butterfly
collection."
The cane darted up. A blade snicked from the end and stopped an inch
from Wayne's nose. He jerked up a shaky hand involuntarily and clamped
a knuckle-ridged gag to his gasping mouth.
Captain Jack chuckled. "All right, superboy." He handed Wayne his
passcard. "Curfew's off, punk, for 6 hours. You got 6 hours to make
out."
"Yes, sir."
"Your beast is primed and waiting at the Four Aces Club on the West
Side. Know where that is, punk?"
"No, sir, but I'll find it fast."
"Sure you will, punk," smiled Captain Jack. "She'll be wearing yellow
slacks and a red shirt. Black hair, a cute trick. She's with a hefty
psycho who eats punks for breakfast. He's butchered five people.
They're both on top of the Undesirable list, Seton. They got to go and
they're your key to the stars."
"Yes, sir," Wayne said.
"So run along and make out, punk," grinned Captain Jack.
A copcar stopped Wayne as he started over the bridge, out of bright
respectable neon into the murky westside slum over the river.
Wayne waved the pass card, signed by Captain Jack, under the cop's
quivering nose. The cop shivered and stepped back and waved him on. The
Olds roared over the bridge as the night's rain blew away.
The air through the open window was chill and damp coming from
Slumville, but Wayne felt a cold that wasn't of the night or the wind.
He turned off into a rat's warren of the inferiors. Lights turned pale,
secretive and sparse, the uncared-for streets became rough with pitted
potholes, narrow and winding and humid with wet unpleasant smells.
Wayne's fearful exhilaration increased as he cruised with bated breath
through the dark mazes of streets and rickety tenements crawling with
the shadows of mysterious promise.
He found the alley, dark, a gloom-dripping tunnel. He drove cautiously
into it and rolled along, watching. His belly ached with expectancy as
he spotted the sick-looking dab of neon wanly sparkling.
FOUR ACES CLUB
He parked across the alley. He got out and stood in shadows, digging
the sultry beat of a combo, the wild pulse of drums and spinning brass
filtering through windows painted black.
He breathed deep, started over, ducked back. A stewbum weaved out of
a bank of garbage cans, humming to himself, pulling at a rainsoaked
shirt clinging to a pale stick body. He reminded Wayne of a slim grub
balanced on one end.
The stewbum stumbled. His bearded face in dim breaking moonlight had
a dirty, greenish tinge as he sensed Wayne there. He turned in a
grotesque uncoordinated jiggling and his eyes were wide with terror and
doom.
"I gotta hide, kid. They're on me."
Wayne's chest rose and his hands curled.
The bum's fingers drew at the air like white talons.
"Help me, kid."
He turned with a scratchy cry and retreated before the sudden blast
of headlights from a Cad bulleting into the alley. The Cad rushed
past Wayne and he felt the engine-hot fumes against his legs. Tires
squealed. The Cad stopped and a teener in black jacket jumped out and
crouched as he began stalking the old rummy.
"This is him! This is him all right," the teener yelled, and one hand
came up swinging a baseball bat.
A head bobbed out of the Cad window and giggled.
The fumble-footed rummy tried to run and plopped on wet pavement. The
teener moved in, while a faint odor of burnt rubber hovered in the air
as the Cad cruised in a slow follow-up.
Wayne's breath quickened as he watched, feeling somehow blank wonder
at finding himself there, free and breaking out at last with no curfew
and no law but his own. He felt as though he couldn't stop anything.
Living seemed directionless, but he still would go with it regardless,
until something dropped off or blew to hell like a hot light-bulb. He
held his breath, waiting. His body was tensed and rigid as he moved in
spirit with the hunting teener, an omniscient shadow with a hunting
license and a ghetto jungle twenty miles deep.
The crawling stewbum screamed as the baseball bat whacked. The teener
laughed. Wayne wanted to shout. He opened his mouth, but the yell
clogged up somewhere, so that he remained soundless yet with his mouth
still open as he heard the payoff thuds where the useless wino curled
up with stick arms over his rheumy face.
The teener laughed, tossed the bat away and began jumping up and down
with his hobnailed, mail-order air force boots. Then he ran into the
Cad. A hootch bottle soared out, made a brittle tink-tink of falling
glass.
"Go, man!"
The Cad wooshed by. It made a sort of hollow sucking noise as it
bounced over the old man twice. Then the finlights diminished like
bright wind-blown sparks.
Wayne walked over and sneered down at the human garbage lying in
scummed rain pools. The smell of raw violence, the scent of blood, made
his heart thump like a trapped rubber ball in a cage.
He hurried into the Four Aces, drawn by an exhilarating vision ... and
pursued by the hollow haunting fears of his own desires.
He walked through the wavering haze of smoke and liquored dizziness and
stood until his eyes learned the dark. He spotted her red shirt and
yellow legs over in the corner above a murky lighted table.
He walked toward her, watching her little subhuman pixie face lift.
The eyes widened with exciting terror, turned even paler behind a red
slash of sensuous mouth. Briefed and waiting, primed and eager for
running, she recognized her pursuer at once. He sat at a table near
her, watching and grinning and seeing her squirm.
She sat in that slightly baffled, fearful and uncomprehending attitude
of being motionless, as though they were all actors performing in a
weirdo drama being staged in that smoky thick-aired dive.
Wayne smiled with wry superiority at the redheaded psycho in a dirty
T-shirt, a big bruiser with a gorilla face. He was tussling his mouse
heavy.
"What's yours, teener?" the slug-faced waiter asked.
"Bring me a Crusher, buddyroo," Wayne said, and flashed his pass card.
"Sure, teener."
Red nuzzled the mouse's neck and made drooly noises. Wayne watched and
fed on the promising terror and helplessness of her hunted face. She
sat rigid, eyes fixed on Wayne like balls of frozen glass.
Red looked up and stared straight at Wayne with eyes like black buttons
imbedded in the waxlike skin of his face. Then he grinned all on one
side. One huge hand scratched across the wet table top like a furious
cat's.
Wayne returned the challenging move but felt a nervous twitch jerk at
his lips. A numbness covered his brain like a film as he concentrated
on staring down Red the psycho. But Red kept looking, his eyes bright
but dead. Then he began struggling it up again with the scared little
mouse.
The waiter sat the Crusher down. Wayne signed a chit; tonight he was in
the pay of the state.
"What else, teener?"
"One thing. Fade."
"Sure, teener," the waiter said, his breathy words dripping like syrup.
Wayne drank. Liquored heat dripped into his stomach. Fire tickled his
veins, became hot wire twisting in his head.
He drank again and forced out a shaky breath. The jazz beat thumped
fast and muted brass moaned. Drumpulse, stabbing trumpet raped the
air. Tension mounted as Wayne watched her pale throat convulsing, the
white eyelids fluttering. Red fingered at her legs and salivated at her
throat, glancing now and then at Wayne, baiting him good.
"Okay, you creep," Wayne said.
He stood up and started through the haze. The psycho leaped and a table
crashed. Wayne's .38 dropped from its spring-clip holster and the blast
filled the room. The psycho screamed and stumbled toward the door
holding something in. The mouse darted by, eluded Wayne's grasp and was
out the door.
Wayne went out after her in a laughing frenzy of release. He felt the
cold strange breath of moist air on his sweating skin as he sprinted
down the alley into a wind full of blowing wet.
He ran laughing under the crazy starlight and glimpsed her now and
then, fading in and out of shadows, jumping, crawling, running with the
life-or-death animation of a wild deer.
Up and down alleys, a rat's maze. A rabbit run. Across vacant lots.
Through shattered tenement ruins. Over a fence. There she was, falling,
sliding down a brick shute.
He gained. He moved up. His labored breath pumped more fire. And her
scream was a rejuvenation hypo in his blood.
She quivered above him on the stoop, panting, her eyes afire with
terror.
"You, baby," Wayne gasped. "I gotcha."
She backed into darkness, up there against the sagging tenement wall,
her arms out and poised like crippled wings. Wayne crept up. She gave
a squeaking sob, turned, ran. Wayne leaped into gloom. Wood cracked.
He clambered over rotten lumber. The doorway sagged and he hesitated
in the musty dark. A few feet away was the sound of loose trickling
plaster, a whimpering whine.
"No use running," Wayne said. "Go loose. Give, baby. Give now."
She scurried up sagging stairs. Wayne laughed and dug up after her,
feeling his way through debris. Dim moonlight filtered through a
sagging stairway from a shattered skylight three floors up. The mouse's
shadow floated ahead.
He started up. The entire stair structure canted sickeningly. A railing
ripped and he nearly went with it back down to the first floor. He
heard a scream as rotten boards crumbled and dust exploded from
cracks. A rat ran past Wayne and fell into space. He burst into the
third-floor hallway and saw her half-falling through a door under the
jagged skylight.
Wayne took his time. He knew how she felt waiting in there, listening
to his creeping, implacable footfalls.
Then he yelled and slammed open the door.
Dust and stench, filth so awful it made nothing of the dust. In
the corner he saw something hardly to be called a bed. More like
a nest. A dirty, lumpy pile of torn mattress, felt, excelsior,
shredded newspapers and rags. It seemed to crawl a little under the
moon-streaming skylight.
She crouched in the corner panting. He took his time moving in. He
snickered as he flashed the switchblade and circled it like a serpent's
tongue. He watched what was left of her nerves go to pieces like rotten
cloth.
"Do it quick, hunter," she whispered. "Please do it quick."
"What's that, baby?"
"I'm tired running. Kill me first. Beat me after. They won't know the
difference."
"I'm gonna bruise and beat you," he said.
"Kill me first," she begged. "I don't want—" She began to cry. She
cried right up in his face, her wide eyes unblinking, and her mouth
open.
"You got bad blood, baby," he snarled. He laughed but it didn't sound
like him and something was wrong with his belly. It was knotting up.
"Bad, I know! So get it over with, please. Hurry, hurry."
She was small and white and quivering. She moaned but kept staring up
at him.
He ripped off his rivet-studded belt and swung once, then groaned and
shuffled away from her.
He kept backing toward the door. She crawled after him, begging and
clutching with both arms as she wriggled forward on her knees.
"Don't run. Please. Kill me! It'll be someone else if you don't. Oh,
God, I'm so tired waiting and running!"
"I can't," he said, and sickness soured in his throat.
"Please."
"I can't, I can't!"
He turned and ran blindly, half-fell down the cracking stairs.
Doctor Burns, head of the readjustment staff at the Youth Center,
studied Wayne with abstract interest.
"You enjoyed the hunt, Seton? You got your kicks?"
"Yes, sir."
"But you couldn't execute them?"
"No, sir."
"They're undesirables. Incurables. You know that, Seton?"
"Yes, sir."
"The psycho you only wounded. He's a five-times murderer. And that girl
killed her father when she was twelve. You realize there's nothing can
be done for them? That they have to be executed?"
"I know."
"Too bad," the doctor said. "We all have aggressive impulses, primitive
needs that must be expressed early, purged. There's murder in all
of us, Seton. The impulse shouldn't be denied or suppressed, but
educated
. The state used to kill them. Isn't it better all around,
Seton, for us to do it, as part of growing up? What was the matter,
Seton?"
"I—felt sorry for her."
"Is that all you can say about it?"
"Yes, sir."
The doctor pressed a buzzer. Two men in white coats entered.
"You should have got it out of your system, Seton, but now it's still
in there. I can't turn you out and have it erupt later—and maybe shed
clean innocent blood, can I?"
"No, sir," Wayne mumbled. He didn't look up. "I'm sorry I punked out."
"Give him the treatment," the doctor said wearily. "And send him back
to his mother."
Wayne nodded and they led him away. His mind screamed still to split
open some prison of bone and lay bare and breathing wide. But there
was no way out for the trapped. Now he knew about the old man and his
poker-playing pals.
They had all punked out.
Like him.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/1/2/0/61204//61204-h//61204-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | What is ironic about Wayne’s laughing in the face of violence?—First when he leaves his parents house and again when he chases Red.
| 61204_7K3R71T6_9 | [
"His laughs suggest he enjoys violence, but really they are a cry for help. \n",
"His real feelings about violence are the opposite of anything comical. He takes his job with the state very seriously.\n",
"His real feelings about violence are the opposite of what his maniacal laugh suggests. It turns out he isn’t a heartless killer. \n",
"Wayne’s laughing suggests that he is always in control, when in reality it is actually his mother and Red who know the truth about the world.\n"
] | 3 | 3 | [
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63,890 | 63890_67FQICLN | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | A Planet Named Joe | 1966.0 | Hunter, Evan | Human-alien encounters -- Fiction; Short stories; Science fiction; PS; Venus (Planet) -- Fiction | A PLANET NAMED JOE
By S. A. LOMBINO
There were more Joes on Venus than you could shake
a ray-gun at. Perhaps there was method in Colonel
Walsh's madness—murder-madness—when he ordered Major
Polk to scan the planet for a guy named Joe.
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from Planet Stories
November 1952. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the
U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
Colonel Walsh had a great sense of humor. I hated his guts ever since
we went through the Academy together, but he had a great sense of humor.
For example, he could have chosen a Second Looie for the job on Venus.
He might even have picked a Captain. But he liked me about as much as
I liked him, and so he decided the job was just right for a Major. At
least, that's what he told me.
I stood at attention before his desk in the Patrol Station. We were
somewhere in Area Two on Earth, takeoff point for any operations in
Space II. The duty was fine, and I liked it a lot. Come to think of
it, the most I ever did was inspect a few defective tubes every now and
then. The rest was gravy, and Colonel Walsh wasn't going to let me get
by with gravy.
"It will be a simple assignment, Major," he said to me, peering over
his fingers. He held them up in front of him like a cathedral.
"Yes, sir," I said.
"It will involve finding one man, a Venusian native."
I wanted to say, "Then why the hell don't you send a green kid on
the job? Why me?" Instead, I nodded and watched him playing with his
fingers.
"The man is a trader of sorts. Rather intelligent." He paused, then
added, "For a native, that is."
I had never liked Walsh's attitude toward natives. I hadn't liked the
way he'd treated the natives on Mars ever since he'd taken over there.
Which brought to mind an important point.
"I always figured Venus was under the jurisdiction of Space III, sir. I
thought our activities were confined to Mars."
He folded his fingers like a deck of cards and dropped them on his desk
as if he were waiting for me to cut.
"Mmmm," he said, "yes, that's true. But this is a special job. It so
happens this Venusian is the one man who can help us understand just
what's happening on Mars."
I tried to picture a Venusian understanding Mars and I didn't get very
far.
"He's had many dealings with the natives there," Walsh explained. "If
anyone can tell us the reasons for the revolt, he can."
If Walsh really wanted to know the reasons for the revolt, I could give
them to him in one word: Walsh. I had to laugh at the way he called
it "revolt." It had been going on for six months now and we'd lost at
least a thousand men from Space II. Revolt.
"And this man is on Venus now?" I asked for confirmation. I'd never
been to Venus, being in Space II ever since I'd left the Moon run. It
was just like Walsh to ship me off to a strange place.
"Yes, Major," he said. "This man is on Venus."
At the Academy he had called me Fred. That was before I'd reported
him for sleeping on Boiler Watch. He'd goofed off on a pile of uranium
that could've, and almost did, blow the barracks sky-high that night.
He still thought it was my fault, as if I'd done the wrong thing by
reporting him. And now, through the fouled-up machinery that exists in
any military organization, he outranked me.
"And the man's name, sir?"
"Joe." A tight smile played on his face.
"Joe what?" I asked.
"Just Joe."
"Just Joe?"
"Yes," Walsh said. "A native, you know. They rarely go in for more than
first names. But then, it should be simple to find a man with a name
like Joe. Among the natives, I mean."
"I don't know, sir."
"A relatively simple assignment," Walsh said.
"Can you tell me anything else about this man? Physical appearance?
Personal habits? Anything?"
Walsh seemed to consider this for a moment. "Well, physically he's like
any of the other Venusians, so I can't give you much help there. He
does have a peculiar habit, though."
"What's that?"
"He has an affinity for Terran cigarettes."
I sighed. "Well, it's not very much to go on."
"You'll find him," Walsh said, grinning. "I'm sure of it."
The trip to Venus came off without a hitch. I did a lot of thinking on
that trip. I thought about Mars and the revolt there. And I thought
about Colonel Leonard Walsh and how he was supposed to be quelling that
revolt. Ever since Walsh had taken command, ever since he'd started
pushing the natives around, there'd been trouble. It was almost as if
the whole damned planet had blown up in our faces the moment he took
over. Swell guy, Walsh.
Venus was hotter than I'd expected it to be. Much too hot for the tunic
I was wearing. It smelled, too. A funny smell I couldn't place. Like
a mixture of old shoe and after-shave. There were plants everywhere
I looked. Big plants and small ones, some blooming with flowers I'd
never seen before, and some as bare as cactus.
I recognized a blue figure as one of the natives the pilot had told me
about. He was tall, looking almost human except that everything about
him was elongated. His features, his muscles, everything seemed to have
been stretched like a rubber band. I kept expecting him to pop back to
normal. Instead, he flashed a double row of brilliant teeth at me.
I wondered if he spoke English. "Hey, boy," I called.
He ambled over with long-legged strides that closed the distance
between us in seconds.
"Call me Joe," he said.
I dropped my bags and stared at him. Maybe this
was
going to be a
simple assignment after all. "I sure am glad to see you, Joe," I said.
"Same here, Toots," he answered.
"The guys back in Space II are searching high and low for you," I told
him.
"You've got the wrong number," he said, and I was a little surprised at
his use of Terran idiom.
"You are Joe, aren't you? Joe the trader?"
"I'm Joe, all right," he said. "Only thing I ever traded, though, was a
pocketknife. Got a set of keys for it."
"Oh," I said, my voice conveying my disappointment. I sighed and began
wondering just how I should go about contacting the Joe I was looking
for. My orders said I was to report to Captain Bransten immediately
upon arrival. I figured the hell with Captain Bransten. I outranked him
anyway, and there wasn't much he could do if I decided to stop for a
drink first.
"Where's the Officer's Club?" I asked the Venusian.
"Are you buying information or are you just curious?"
"Can you take me there?" I asked.
"Sure thing, Toots." He picked up my bags and started walking up a
heavily overgrown path. We'd probably walked for about ten minutes when
he dropped my bags and said, "There it is."
The Officer's Club was a plasteel hut with window shields that
protected it from the heat of the sun. It didn't look too comfortable
but I really wanted that drink. I reached into my tunic and slipped
the native thirty solars.
He stared at the credits curiously and then shrugged his shoulders. "Oh
well, you're new here. We'll let it go."
He took off then, while I stared after him, wondering just what he'd
meant. Had I tipped him too little?
I shrugged and looked over at the Officer's Club. From the outside it
looked as hot as hell.
On the inside it was about two degrees short of that mark. I began to
curse Walsh for taking me away from my nice soft job in Space II.
There wasn't much inside the club. A few tables and chairs, a dart game
and a bar. Behind the bar a tall Venusian lounged.
I walked over and asked, "What are you serving, pal?"
"Call me Joe," he answered.
He caught me off balance. "What?"
"Joe," he said again.
A faint glimmer of understanding began to penetrate my thick skull.
"You wouldn't happen to be Joe the trader? The guy who knows all about
Mars, would you?"
"I never left home," he said simply. "What are you drinking?"
That rat! That dirty, filthy, stinking, unprincipled....
But then, it should be simple to find a man with a name like
Joe.
Among the natives, I mean.
Sure. Oh sure. Real simple. Walsh was about the lowest, most
contemptible....
"What are you drinking, pal?" the Venusian asked again.
"Skip it," I said. "How do I get to the captain's shack?"
"Follow your nose, pal. Can't miss it."
I started to pick up my bag as another Venusian entered. He waved at
the bartender.
"Hello, Joe," he said. "How's it going?"
"Not so hot, Joe," the bartender replied.
I listened in fascination. Joe, Joe, Joe. So this was Walsh's idea of a
great gag. Very funny. Very....
"You Major Polk, sweetheart?" the Venusian who'd just come in asked.
"Yes," I said, still thinking of Colonel Walsh.
"You better get your butt over to the captain's shack," he said. "He's
about ready to post you as overdue."
"Sure," I said wearily. "Will you take my bags, please?"
"Roger," he answered. He picked up the bags and nodded at the bar.
"So long, Joe," he said to the bartender.
"See you, Joe," the bartender called back.
Captain Bransten was a mousey, unimpressive sort of man. He was wearing
a tropical tunic, but he still resembled a wilted lily more than he did
an officer.
"Have a seat, Major," he offered. He reached for a cigarette box on the
desk and extended it to me. He coughed in embarrassment when he saw it
was empty. Quickly, he pressed a button on his desk and the door popped
open. A tall, blue Venusian stepped lithely into the room.
"Sir?" the Venusian asked.
"We're out of cigarettes, Joe," the Captain said. "Will you get us
some, please?"
"Sure thing," the Venusian answered. He smiled broadly and closed the
door behind him.
Another Joe
, I thought.
Another damned Joe.
"They steal them," Captain Bransten said abruptly.
"Steal what?" I asked.
"Cigarettes. I sometimes think the cigarette is one of the few things
they like about Terran culture."
So Walsh had taken care of that angle too.
He does have a peculiar
habit, though. He has an affinity for Terran cigarettes.
Cigarettes
was the tip I should have given; not solars.
"All right," I said, "suppose we start at the beginning."
Captain Bransten opened his eyes wide. "Sir?" he asked.
"What's with all this Joe business? It may be a very original name but
I think its popularity here is a little outstanding."
Captain Bransten began to chuckle softly. I personally didn't think it
was so funny. I tossed him my withering Superior Officer's gaze and
waited for his explanation.
"I hadn't realized this was your first time on Venus," he said.
"Is there a local hero named Joe?" I asked.
"No, no, nothing like that," he assured me. "It's a simple culture, you
know. Not nearly as developed as Mars."
"I can see that," I said bitingly.
"And the natives are only now becoming acquainted with Terran culture.
Lots of enlisted men, you know."
I began to get the idea. And I began to appreciate Walsh's doubtful
ancestry more keenly.
"It's impossible to tell exactly where it all started, of course,"
Bransten was saying.
I was beginning to get angry. Very angry. I was thinking of Walsh
sitting back in a nice cozy foam chair back on Earth.
"Get to the point, Captain!" I barked.
"Easy, sir," Bransten said, turning pale. I could see that the Captain
wasn't used to entertaining Majors. "The enlisted men. You know how
they are. They'll ask a native to do something and they'll call him
Joe. 'Hey, Joe, give me a hand with this.' Or 'Listen, Joe, how'd you
like to earn some cigarettes?' Do you follow?"
"I follow, all right," I said bitterly.
"Well," Bransten went on, "that sort of thing mushrooms. The natives
are a simple, almost childish people. It appealed to them—the Joe
business, I mean. Now they're all Joe. They like it. That and the
cigarettes."
He cleared his throat and looked at me apologetically as if he were
personally responsible for Venusian culture. In fact, he looked as if
he were responsible for having put Venus in the heavens in the first
place.
"Do you understand, Major? Just a case of extended idiom, that's all."
Just a case of extended
idiot
, I thought. An idiot on a wild goose
chase a hell of a long way from home.
"I understand perfectly," I snapped. "Where are my quarters?"
Bransten asked a Venusian named Joe to show me my quarters, reminding
me that chow was at thirteen hundred. As I was leaving, the first
Venusian came back with the cigarettes Bransten had ordered.
I could tell by the look on his face that he probably had half a carton
stuffed into his pockets. I shrugged and went to change into a tropical
tunic.
I called Earth right after chow. The Captain assured me that this sort
of thing was definitely against regulations, but he submitted when I
twinkled my little gold leaf under his nose.
Walsh's face appeared on the screen. He was smiling, looking like a fat
pussy cat.
"What is it, Major?" he asked.
"This man Joe," I said. "Can you give me any more on him?"
Walsh's grin grew wider. "Why, Major," he said, "you're not having any
difficulties, are you?"
"None at all," I snapped back. "I just thought I'd be able to find him
a lot sooner if...."
"Take your time, Major," Walsh beamed. "There's no rush at all."
"I thought...."
"I'm sure you can do the job," Walsh cut in. "I wouldn't have sent you
otherwise."
Hell, I was through kidding around. "Look...."
"He's somewhere in the jungle, you know," Walsh said.
I wanted to ram my fist into the screen, right smack up against those
big white teeth. Instead, I cut off the transmission and watched the
surprised look on his face as his screen went blank millions of miles
away.
He blinked at the screen, trying to realize I'd deliberately hung up on
him.
"Polk!" he shouted, "can you hear me?"
I smiled, saw the twisted hatred on his features, and then the screen
on my end went blank, too.
He's somewhere in the jungle, you know.
I thanked Captain Bransten for his hospitality and went back to my
quarters.
As I saw it, there were two courses for me to follow.
One: I could say the hell with Walsh and Venus. That would mean hopping
the next ship back to Earth.
It would also mean disobeying the direct order of a superior officer.
It might mean demotion, and it might mean getting bounced out of the
Service altogether.
Two: I could assume there really was a guy name Joe somewhere in that
jungle, a Joe separate and apart from the other Joes on this planet, a
trader Joe who knew the Martians well. I could always admit failure, of
course, and return empty handed. Mission not accomplished. Or, I might
really find a guy who was trader Joe.
I made my decision quickly. I wanted to stay in the Service, and
besides Walsh may have been on the level for the first time in his
life. Maybe there was a Joe here who could help us on Mars. If there
was I'd try to find him. It was still a hell of a trick though.
I cursed Walsh again and pushed the buzzer near my bed.
A tall Venusian stepped into the room.
"Joe?" I asked, just to be sure.
"Who else, boss?" he answered.
"I'm trying to locate someone," I said. "I'll need a guide to take me
into the jungle. Can you get me one?"
"It'll cost you, boss," the Venusian said.
"How much?"
"Two cartons of cigarettes at least."
"Who's the guide?" I asked.
"How's the price sound?"
"Fine, fine," I said impatiently. And the Captain had said they were
almost a childish people!
"His name is Joe," the Venusian told me. "Best damn guide on the
planet. Take you anywhere you want to go, do anything you want to do.
Courageous. Doesn't know the meaning of fear. I've known him to...."
"Skip it," I said, cutting the promotion short. "Tell him to show up
around fifteen hundred with a complete list of what we'll need."
The Venusian started to leave.
"And Joe," I said, stopping him at the door, "I hope you're not
overlooking your commission on the deal."
His face broke into a wide grin. "No danger of that, boss," he said.
When he was gone I began figuring out a plan of action. Obviously, I'd
just have to traipse through the jungle looking for a guy named Joe on
a planet where everyone was named Joe. Everybody, at least, but the
Captain, the small garrison attached to the Station, and me.
I began wondering why Walsh had gone to so much trouble to get rid of
me. The job, as I saw it, would take a hell of a long time. It seemed
like a silly thing to do, just to get even with a guy for something
that had happened years ago. He surely must have realized that I'd be
back again, sooner or later. Maybe he had another little junket all set
for me.
Or maybe he didn't expect me to come back.
The thought hadn't occurred to me before this, and I began to consider
it seriously. Walsh was no good, rotten clear through. He was failing
at the job of keeping Mars in hand, and he probably realized that a
few more mistakes on his part would mean the end of his career with
Space II. I chuckled as I thought of him isolated in some God-forsaken
place like Space V or Space VII. This probably bothered him a lot, too.
But what probably bothered him more was the fact that I was next in
command. If he were transferred, I'd be in charge of Space II, and I
could understand how much that would appeal to Walsh.
I tried to figure the thing out sensibly, tried to weigh his good
points against his bad. But it all came back to the same thing. A
guy who would deliberately go to sleep on Boiler Watch with a ton of
uranium ready to blast a barracks to smithereens if it wasn't watched,
would deliberately do just about anything.
Sending me off on a wild goose chase after a character named Joe may
have been a gag. But it may have been something a little grimmer than a
gag, and I made up my mind to be extremely careful from here on in.
The guide arrived at fifteen hundred on the dot. He was tall,
elongated, looked almost like all the other Venusians I'd seen so far.
"I understand you need a Grade A guide, sir," he said.
"Are you familiar with the jungle?" I asked him.
"Born and raised there, sir. Know it like the back of my hand."
"Has Joe told you what the payment will be?"
"Yes, sir. A carton and a half of cigarettes."
I thought about Joe deducting his commission and smiled.
"When can we leave?"
"Right away, sir. We won't need much really. I've made a list of
supplies and I can get them in less than an hour. I suggest you wear
light clothing, boots, and a hat."
"Will I need a weapon?"
He looked at me, his eyes faintly amused. "Why, what for, sir?"
"Never mind," I said. "What's your name, by the way?"
He lifted his eyebrows, and his eyes widened in his narrow face. He was
definitely surprised.
"Joe," he said. "Didn't you know?"
When we'd been out for a while I discovered why Joe had suggested the
boots and the hat. The undergrowth was often sharp and jagged and it
would have sliced my legs to ribbons were they not protected by the
high boots. The hat kept the strong sun off my head.
Joe was an excellent guide and a pleasant companion. He seemed to be
enjoying a great romp, seemed to love the jungle and take a secret
pleasure in the work he was doing. There were times when I couldn't
see three feet ahead of me. He'd stand stock still for a few minutes,
his head barely moving, his eyes darting from one plant to another.
Then he'd say, "This way," and take off into what looked like more
impenetrable jungle invariably to find a little path leading directly
to another village.
Each village was the same. The natives would come running out of their
huts, tall and blue, shouting, "Cigarettes, Joe? Cigarettes?" It took
me a while to realize they were addressing me and not my guide.
Everybody was Joe. It was one beautiful, happy, joyous round of
stinking, hot jungle. And I wasn't getting any nearer my man. Nor had
I any idea how I was supposed to find him. I began to feel pretty low
about the whole affair.
Joe, on the other hand, enjoyed every moment of the trip. In each
village he greeted the natives cheerfully, told them stories, swapped
gossip and jokes. And when it was time to leave, he would say goodbye
to all his friends and we would plunge into the twisted foliage again.
His spirits were always high and he never failed to say the right thing
that would give a momentary lift to my own depressed state of mind. He
would talk for hours on end as we hacked our way through the jungle.
"I like Venus," he said once. "I would never leave it."
"Have you ever been to Earth?" I asked.
"No," Joe replied. "I like Terrans too, you understand. They are good
for Venus. And they are fun."
"Fun?" I asked, thinking of a particular species of Terran: species
Leonard Walsh.
"Yes, yes," he said wholeheartedly. "They joke and they laugh and ...
well, you know."
"I suppose so," I admitted.
Joe smiled secretly, and we pushed on. I began to find, more and more,
that I had started to talk freely to Joe. In the beginning he had been
just my guide. There had been the strained relationship of employer and
employee. But as the days lengthened into weeks, the formal atmosphere
began to crumble. I found myself telling him all about Earth, about
the people there, about my decision to attend the Academy, the rigid
tests, the grind, even the Moon run. Joe was a good listener, nodding
sympathetically, finding experiences in his own life to parallel my own.
And as our relationship progressed from a casual one to a definitely
friendly one, Joe seemed more enthusiastic than ever to keep up our
grinding pace to find what we were looking for.
Once we stopped in a clearing to rest. Joe lounged on the matted
greenery, his long body stretched out in front of him, the knife
gleaming in his belt. I'd seen him slash his way through thick, tangled
vines with that knife, his long, muscular arms powerfully slicing
through them like strips of silk.
"How far are we from the Station?" I asked.
"Three or four Earth weeks," he replied.
I sighed wearily. "Where do we go from here?"
"There are more villages," he said.
"We'll never find him."
"Possibly," Joe mused, the smile creeping over his face again.
"A wild goose chase. A fool's errand."
"We'd better get started," Joe said simply.
I got to my feet and we started the march again. Joe was still fresh, a
brilliant contrast to me, weary and dejected. Somehow, I had the same
feeling I'd had a long time ago on my sixteenth birthday. One of my
friends had taken me all over the city, finally dropping me off at my
own house where the whole gang was gathered for a surprise party. Joe
reminded me of that friend.
"There's a village ahead," he said, and the grin on his face was large
now, his eyes shining.
Something was missing here. Natives. There were no natives rushing out
to greet us. No cries of "Cigarettes? Cigarettes?" I caught up with Joe.
"What's the story?" I whispered.
He shrugged knowingly and continued walking.
And then I saw the ship, nose pointing into space, catching the rays of
the sun like a great silver bullet.
"What...?" I started.
"It's all right," Joe said, smiling.
The ship looked vaguely familiar. I noticed the crest of Space II near
the nose, and a lot of things became clear then. I also saw Walsh
standing near one of the huts, a stun gun in his hand.
"Hello, Major," he called, almost cheerfully. The gun didn't look
cheerful, though. It was pointed at my head.
"Fancy meeting you here, Colonel," I said, trying to match his
joviality. Somehow it didn't quite come off.
Joe was walking beside me, waving at the colonel, beaming all over with
happiness.
"I see you found your man," Walsh said.
I turned rapidly. Joe nodded and kept grinning, a grin that told me he
was getting a big kick out of all this. Like a kid playing a game.
I faced Walsh again. "Okay, what's it all about, pal?"
"Colonel," Walsh corrected me. "You mustn't forget to say Colonel,
Major
." He emphasized my rank, and he said it with a sort of ruthless
finality.
I waited. I could see he was just busting to tell me how clever he'd
been. Besides, there wasn't much I could do but wait. Not with Walsh
pointing the stun gun at my middle.
"We've come a long way since the Academy, haven't we, Major?"
"If you mean in miles," I said, looking around at the plants, "we sure
have."
Walsh grinned a little. "Always the wit," he said drily. And then the
smile faded from his lips and his eyes took on a hard lustre. "I'm
going to kill you, you know." He said it as if he were saying, "I think
it'll rain tomorrow."
Joe almost clapped his hands together with glee. He was really enjoying
this. Another of those funny Terran games.
"You gave me a powerful handicap to overcome," Walsh said. "I suppose I
should thank you, really."
"You're welcome," I said.
"It wasn't easy living down the disgrace you caused me."
"It was your own damn fault," I said. "You knew what you were doing
when you decided to cork off."
Beside me, Joe chuckled a little, enjoying the game immensely.
"You didn't have to report me," Walsh said.
"No? Maybe I should have forgotten all about it? Maybe I should have
nudged you and served you orange juice? So you could do it again
sometime and maybe blow up the whole damn Academy!"
Walsh was silent for a long time. When he spoke his voice was barely
audible. The heat was oppressive, as if it were concentrated on this
little spot in the jungle, focusing all its penetration on a small,
unimportant drama.
I could hear Joe breathing beside me.
"I'm on my way out," Walsh rasped. "Finished, do you understand?"
"Good," I said. And I meant it.
"This Mars thing. A terrible fix. Terrible."
Beside me, a slight frown crossed Joe's face. Apparently he couldn't
understand the seriousness of our voices. What had happened to the
game, the fun?
"You brought the Mars business on yourself," I told Walsh. "There was
never any trouble before you took command."
"The natives," he practically shouted. "They ... they...."
Joe caught his breath sharply, and I wondered what Walsh was going to
say about the natives. Apparently he'd realized that Joe was a native.
Or maybe Joe's knife had something to do with it.
"What about the natives?" I asked.
"Nothing," Walsh said. "Nothing." He was silent for a while.
"A man of my calibre," he said then, his face grim. "Dealing with
savages." He caught himself again and threw a hasty glance at Joe.
The perplexed frown had grown heavier on Joe's face. He looked at the
colonel in puzzlement.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/3/8/9/63890//63890-h//63890-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | What is the origin of the name Joe on Venus?
| 63890_67FQICLN_1 | [
"The Venusians use “Joe” as an idiom, referring to friends and family as Joe, even though that is not their given Venusian name. \n",
"Terrans use the term “Joe” to refer to each other. The Venusians took the idiom literally and adopted it in earnest as the global name.",
"There is a Venusian hero named Joe, prompting all Venusians to take the name.\n",
"Venusians are required by Terrans to use the name as a sign of enslavement.\n"
] | 2 | 2 | [
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63,890 | 63890_67FQICLN | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | A Planet Named Joe | 1966.0 | Hunter, Evan | Human-alien encounters -- Fiction; Short stories; Science fiction; PS; Venus (Planet) -- Fiction | A PLANET NAMED JOE
By S. A. LOMBINO
There were more Joes on Venus than you could shake
a ray-gun at. Perhaps there was method in Colonel
Walsh's madness—murder-madness—when he ordered Major
Polk to scan the planet for a guy named Joe.
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from Planet Stories
November 1952. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the
U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
Colonel Walsh had a great sense of humor. I hated his guts ever since
we went through the Academy together, but he had a great sense of humor.
For example, he could have chosen a Second Looie for the job on Venus.
He might even have picked a Captain. But he liked me about as much as
I liked him, and so he decided the job was just right for a Major. At
least, that's what he told me.
I stood at attention before his desk in the Patrol Station. We were
somewhere in Area Two on Earth, takeoff point for any operations in
Space II. The duty was fine, and I liked it a lot. Come to think of
it, the most I ever did was inspect a few defective tubes every now and
then. The rest was gravy, and Colonel Walsh wasn't going to let me get
by with gravy.
"It will be a simple assignment, Major," he said to me, peering over
his fingers. He held them up in front of him like a cathedral.
"Yes, sir," I said.
"It will involve finding one man, a Venusian native."
I wanted to say, "Then why the hell don't you send a green kid on
the job? Why me?" Instead, I nodded and watched him playing with his
fingers.
"The man is a trader of sorts. Rather intelligent." He paused, then
added, "For a native, that is."
I had never liked Walsh's attitude toward natives. I hadn't liked the
way he'd treated the natives on Mars ever since he'd taken over there.
Which brought to mind an important point.
"I always figured Venus was under the jurisdiction of Space III, sir. I
thought our activities were confined to Mars."
He folded his fingers like a deck of cards and dropped them on his desk
as if he were waiting for me to cut.
"Mmmm," he said, "yes, that's true. But this is a special job. It so
happens this Venusian is the one man who can help us understand just
what's happening on Mars."
I tried to picture a Venusian understanding Mars and I didn't get very
far.
"He's had many dealings with the natives there," Walsh explained. "If
anyone can tell us the reasons for the revolt, he can."
If Walsh really wanted to know the reasons for the revolt, I could give
them to him in one word: Walsh. I had to laugh at the way he called
it "revolt." It had been going on for six months now and we'd lost at
least a thousand men from Space II. Revolt.
"And this man is on Venus now?" I asked for confirmation. I'd never
been to Venus, being in Space II ever since I'd left the Moon run. It
was just like Walsh to ship me off to a strange place.
"Yes, Major," he said. "This man is on Venus."
At the Academy he had called me Fred. That was before I'd reported
him for sleeping on Boiler Watch. He'd goofed off on a pile of uranium
that could've, and almost did, blow the barracks sky-high that night.
He still thought it was my fault, as if I'd done the wrong thing by
reporting him. And now, through the fouled-up machinery that exists in
any military organization, he outranked me.
"And the man's name, sir?"
"Joe." A tight smile played on his face.
"Joe what?" I asked.
"Just Joe."
"Just Joe?"
"Yes," Walsh said. "A native, you know. They rarely go in for more than
first names. But then, it should be simple to find a man with a name
like Joe. Among the natives, I mean."
"I don't know, sir."
"A relatively simple assignment," Walsh said.
"Can you tell me anything else about this man? Physical appearance?
Personal habits? Anything?"
Walsh seemed to consider this for a moment. "Well, physically he's like
any of the other Venusians, so I can't give you much help there. He
does have a peculiar habit, though."
"What's that?"
"He has an affinity for Terran cigarettes."
I sighed. "Well, it's not very much to go on."
"You'll find him," Walsh said, grinning. "I'm sure of it."
The trip to Venus came off without a hitch. I did a lot of thinking on
that trip. I thought about Mars and the revolt there. And I thought
about Colonel Leonard Walsh and how he was supposed to be quelling that
revolt. Ever since Walsh had taken command, ever since he'd started
pushing the natives around, there'd been trouble. It was almost as if
the whole damned planet had blown up in our faces the moment he took
over. Swell guy, Walsh.
Venus was hotter than I'd expected it to be. Much too hot for the tunic
I was wearing. It smelled, too. A funny smell I couldn't place. Like
a mixture of old shoe and after-shave. There were plants everywhere
I looked. Big plants and small ones, some blooming with flowers I'd
never seen before, and some as bare as cactus.
I recognized a blue figure as one of the natives the pilot had told me
about. He was tall, looking almost human except that everything about
him was elongated. His features, his muscles, everything seemed to have
been stretched like a rubber band. I kept expecting him to pop back to
normal. Instead, he flashed a double row of brilliant teeth at me.
I wondered if he spoke English. "Hey, boy," I called.
He ambled over with long-legged strides that closed the distance
between us in seconds.
"Call me Joe," he said.
I dropped my bags and stared at him. Maybe this
was
going to be a
simple assignment after all. "I sure am glad to see you, Joe," I said.
"Same here, Toots," he answered.
"The guys back in Space II are searching high and low for you," I told
him.
"You've got the wrong number," he said, and I was a little surprised at
his use of Terran idiom.
"You are Joe, aren't you? Joe the trader?"
"I'm Joe, all right," he said. "Only thing I ever traded, though, was a
pocketknife. Got a set of keys for it."
"Oh," I said, my voice conveying my disappointment. I sighed and began
wondering just how I should go about contacting the Joe I was looking
for. My orders said I was to report to Captain Bransten immediately
upon arrival. I figured the hell with Captain Bransten. I outranked him
anyway, and there wasn't much he could do if I decided to stop for a
drink first.
"Where's the Officer's Club?" I asked the Venusian.
"Are you buying information or are you just curious?"
"Can you take me there?" I asked.
"Sure thing, Toots." He picked up my bags and started walking up a
heavily overgrown path. We'd probably walked for about ten minutes when
he dropped my bags and said, "There it is."
The Officer's Club was a plasteel hut with window shields that
protected it from the heat of the sun. It didn't look too comfortable
but I really wanted that drink. I reached into my tunic and slipped
the native thirty solars.
He stared at the credits curiously and then shrugged his shoulders. "Oh
well, you're new here. We'll let it go."
He took off then, while I stared after him, wondering just what he'd
meant. Had I tipped him too little?
I shrugged and looked over at the Officer's Club. From the outside it
looked as hot as hell.
On the inside it was about two degrees short of that mark. I began to
curse Walsh for taking me away from my nice soft job in Space II.
There wasn't much inside the club. A few tables and chairs, a dart game
and a bar. Behind the bar a tall Venusian lounged.
I walked over and asked, "What are you serving, pal?"
"Call me Joe," he answered.
He caught me off balance. "What?"
"Joe," he said again.
A faint glimmer of understanding began to penetrate my thick skull.
"You wouldn't happen to be Joe the trader? The guy who knows all about
Mars, would you?"
"I never left home," he said simply. "What are you drinking?"
That rat! That dirty, filthy, stinking, unprincipled....
But then, it should be simple to find a man with a name like
Joe.
Among the natives, I mean.
Sure. Oh sure. Real simple. Walsh was about the lowest, most
contemptible....
"What are you drinking, pal?" the Venusian asked again.
"Skip it," I said. "How do I get to the captain's shack?"
"Follow your nose, pal. Can't miss it."
I started to pick up my bag as another Venusian entered. He waved at
the bartender.
"Hello, Joe," he said. "How's it going?"
"Not so hot, Joe," the bartender replied.
I listened in fascination. Joe, Joe, Joe. So this was Walsh's idea of a
great gag. Very funny. Very....
"You Major Polk, sweetheart?" the Venusian who'd just come in asked.
"Yes," I said, still thinking of Colonel Walsh.
"You better get your butt over to the captain's shack," he said. "He's
about ready to post you as overdue."
"Sure," I said wearily. "Will you take my bags, please?"
"Roger," he answered. He picked up the bags and nodded at the bar.
"So long, Joe," he said to the bartender.
"See you, Joe," the bartender called back.
Captain Bransten was a mousey, unimpressive sort of man. He was wearing
a tropical tunic, but he still resembled a wilted lily more than he did
an officer.
"Have a seat, Major," he offered. He reached for a cigarette box on the
desk and extended it to me. He coughed in embarrassment when he saw it
was empty. Quickly, he pressed a button on his desk and the door popped
open. A tall, blue Venusian stepped lithely into the room.
"Sir?" the Venusian asked.
"We're out of cigarettes, Joe," the Captain said. "Will you get us
some, please?"
"Sure thing," the Venusian answered. He smiled broadly and closed the
door behind him.
Another Joe
, I thought.
Another damned Joe.
"They steal them," Captain Bransten said abruptly.
"Steal what?" I asked.
"Cigarettes. I sometimes think the cigarette is one of the few things
they like about Terran culture."
So Walsh had taken care of that angle too.
He does have a peculiar
habit, though. He has an affinity for Terran cigarettes.
Cigarettes
was the tip I should have given; not solars.
"All right," I said, "suppose we start at the beginning."
Captain Bransten opened his eyes wide. "Sir?" he asked.
"What's with all this Joe business? It may be a very original name but
I think its popularity here is a little outstanding."
Captain Bransten began to chuckle softly. I personally didn't think it
was so funny. I tossed him my withering Superior Officer's gaze and
waited for his explanation.
"I hadn't realized this was your first time on Venus," he said.
"Is there a local hero named Joe?" I asked.
"No, no, nothing like that," he assured me. "It's a simple culture, you
know. Not nearly as developed as Mars."
"I can see that," I said bitingly.
"And the natives are only now becoming acquainted with Terran culture.
Lots of enlisted men, you know."
I began to get the idea. And I began to appreciate Walsh's doubtful
ancestry more keenly.
"It's impossible to tell exactly where it all started, of course,"
Bransten was saying.
I was beginning to get angry. Very angry. I was thinking of Walsh
sitting back in a nice cozy foam chair back on Earth.
"Get to the point, Captain!" I barked.
"Easy, sir," Bransten said, turning pale. I could see that the Captain
wasn't used to entertaining Majors. "The enlisted men. You know how
they are. They'll ask a native to do something and they'll call him
Joe. 'Hey, Joe, give me a hand with this.' Or 'Listen, Joe, how'd you
like to earn some cigarettes?' Do you follow?"
"I follow, all right," I said bitterly.
"Well," Bransten went on, "that sort of thing mushrooms. The natives
are a simple, almost childish people. It appealed to them—the Joe
business, I mean. Now they're all Joe. They like it. That and the
cigarettes."
He cleared his throat and looked at me apologetically as if he were
personally responsible for Venusian culture. In fact, he looked as if
he were responsible for having put Venus in the heavens in the first
place.
"Do you understand, Major? Just a case of extended idiom, that's all."
Just a case of extended
idiot
, I thought. An idiot on a wild goose
chase a hell of a long way from home.
"I understand perfectly," I snapped. "Where are my quarters?"
Bransten asked a Venusian named Joe to show me my quarters, reminding
me that chow was at thirteen hundred. As I was leaving, the first
Venusian came back with the cigarettes Bransten had ordered.
I could tell by the look on his face that he probably had half a carton
stuffed into his pockets. I shrugged and went to change into a tropical
tunic.
I called Earth right after chow. The Captain assured me that this sort
of thing was definitely against regulations, but he submitted when I
twinkled my little gold leaf under his nose.
Walsh's face appeared on the screen. He was smiling, looking like a fat
pussy cat.
"What is it, Major?" he asked.
"This man Joe," I said. "Can you give me any more on him?"
Walsh's grin grew wider. "Why, Major," he said, "you're not having any
difficulties, are you?"
"None at all," I snapped back. "I just thought I'd be able to find him
a lot sooner if...."
"Take your time, Major," Walsh beamed. "There's no rush at all."
"I thought...."
"I'm sure you can do the job," Walsh cut in. "I wouldn't have sent you
otherwise."
Hell, I was through kidding around. "Look...."
"He's somewhere in the jungle, you know," Walsh said.
I wanted to ram my fist into the screen, right smack up against those
big white teeth. Instead, I cut off the transmission and watched the
surprised look on his face as his screen went blank millions of miles
away.
He blinked at the screen, trying to realize I'd deliberately hung up on
him.
"Polk!" he shouted, "can you hear me?"
I smiled, saw the twisted hatred on his features, and then the screen
on my end went blank, too.
He's somewhere in the jungle, you know.
I thanked Captain Bransten for his hospitality and went back to my
quarters.
As I saw it, there were two courses for me to follow.
One: I could say the hell with Walsh and Venus. That would mean hopping
the next ship back to Earth.
It would also mean disobeying the direct order of a superior officer.
It might mean demotion, and it might mean getting bounced out of the
Service altogether.
Two: I could assume there really was a guy name Joe somewhere in that
jungle, a Joe separate and apart from the other Joes on this planet, a
trader Joe who knew the Martians well. I could always admit failure, of
course, and return empty handed. Mission not accomplished. Or, I might
really find a guy who was trader Joe.
I made my decision quickly. I wanted to stay in the Service, and
besides Walsh may have been on the level for the first time in his
life. Maybe there was a Joe here who could help us on Mars. If there
was I'd try to find him. It was still a hell of a trick though.
I cursed Walsh again and pushed the buzzer near my bed.
A tall Venusian stepped into the room.
"Joe?" I asked, just to be sure.
"Who else, boss?" he answered.
"I'm trying to locate someone," I said. "I'll need a guide to take me
into the jungle. Can you get me one?"
"It'll cost you, boss," the Venusian said.
"How much?"
"Two cartons of cigarettes at least."
"Who's the guide?" I asked.
"How's the price sound?"
"Fine, fine," I said impatiently. And the Captain had said they were
almost a childish people!
"His name is Joe," the Venusian told me. "Best damn guide on the
planet. Take you anywhere you want to go, do anything you want to do.
Courageous. Doesn't know the meaning of fear. I've known him to...."
"Skip it," I said, cutting the promotion short. "Tell him to show up
around fifteen hundred with a complete list of what we'll need."
The Venusian started to leave.
"And Joe," I said, stopping him at the door, "I hope you're not
overlooking your commission on the deal."
His face broke into a wide grin. "No danger of that, boss," he said.
When he was gone I began figuring out a plan of action. Obviously, I'd
just have to traipse through the jungle looking for a guy named Joe on
a planet where everyone was named Joe. Everybody, at least, but the
Captain, the small garrison attached to the Station, and me.
I began wondering why Walsh had gone to so much trouble to get rid of
me. The job, as I saw it, would take a hell of a long time. It seemed
like a silly thing to do, just to get even with a guy for something
that had happened years ago. He surely must have realized that I'd be
back again, sooner or later. Maybe he had another little junket all set
for me.
Or maybe he didn't expect me to come back.
The thought hadn't occurred to me before this, and I began to consider
it seriously. Walsh was no good, rotten clear through. He was failing
at the job of keeping Mars in hand, and he probably realized that a
few more mistakes on his part would mean the end of his career with
Space II. I chuckled as I thought of him isolated in some God-forsaken
place like Space V or Space VII. This probably bothered him a lot, too.
But what probably bothered him more was the fact that I was next in
command. If he were transferred, I'd be in charge of Space II, and I
could understand how much that would appeal to Walsh.
I tried to figure the thing out sensibly, tried to weigh his good
points against his bad. But it all came back to the same thing. A
guy who would deliberately go to sleep on Boiler Watch with a ton of
uranium ready to blast a barracks to smithereens if it wasn't watched,
would deliberately do just about anything.
Sending me off on a wild goose chase after a character named Joe may
have been a gag. But it may have been something a little grimmer than a
gag, and I made up my mind to be extremely careful from here on in.
The guide arrived at fifteen hundred on the dot. He was tall,
elongated, looked almost like all the other Venusians I'd seen so far.
"I understand you need a Grade A guide, sir," he said.
"Are you familiar with the jungle?" I asked him.
"Born and raised there, sir. Know it like the back of my hand."
"Has Joe told you what the payment will be?"
"Yes, sir. A carton and a half of cigarettes."
I thought about Joe deducting his commission and smiled.
"When can we leave?"
"Right away, sir. We won't need much really. I've made a list of
supplies and I can get them in less than an hour. I suggest you wear
light clothing, boots, and a hat."
"Will I need a weapon?"
He looked at me, his eyes faintly amused. "Why, what for, sir?"
"Never mind," I said. "What's your name, by the way?"
He lifted his eyebrows, and his eyes widened in his narrow face. He was
definitely surprised.
"Joe," he said. "Didn't you know?"
When we'd been out for a while I discovered why Joe had suggested the
boots and the hat. The undergrowth was often sharp and jagged and it
would have sliced my legs to ribbons were they not protected by the
high boots. The hat kept the strong sun off my head.
Joe was an excellent guide and a pleasant companion. He seemed to be
enjoying a great romp, seemed to love the jungle and take a secret
pleasure in the work he was doing. There were times when I couldn't
see three feet ahead of me. He'd stand stock still for a few minutes,
his head barely moving, his eyes darting from one plant to another.
Then he'd say, "This way," and take off into what looked like more
impenetrable jungle invariably to find a little path leading directly
to another village.
Each village was the same. The natives would come running out of their
huts, tall and blue, shouting, "Cigarettes, Joe? Cigarettes?" It took
me a while to realize they were addressing me and not my guide.
Everybody was Joe. It was one beautiful, happy, joyous round of
stinking, hot jungle. And I wasn't getting any nearer my man. Nor had
I any idea how I was supposed to find him. I began to feel pretty low
about the whole affair.
Joe, on the other hand, enjoyed every moment of the trip. In each
village he greeted the natives cheerfully, told them stories, swapped
gossip and jokes. And when it was time to leave, he would say goodbye
to all his friends and we would plunge into the twisted foliage again.
His spirits were always high and he never failed to say the right thing
that would give a momentary lift to my own depressed state of mind. He
would talk for hours on end as we hacked our way through the jungle.
"I like Venus," he said once. "I would never leave it."
"Have you ever been to Earth?" I asked.
"No," Joe replied. "I like Terrans too, you understand. They are good
for Venus. And they are fun."
"Fun?" I asked, thinking of a particular species of Terran: species
Leonard Walsh.
"Yes, yes," he said wholeheartedly. "They joke and they laugh and ...
well, you know."
"I suppose so," I admitted.
Joe smiled secretly, and we pushed on. I began to find, more and more,
that I had started to talk freely to Joe. In the beginning he had been
just my guide. There had been the strained relationship of employer and
employee. But as the days lengthened into weeks, the formal atmosphere
began to crumble. I found myself telling him all about Earth, about
the people there, about my decision to attend the Academy, the rigid
tests, the grind, even the Moon run. Joe was a good listener, nodding
sympathetically, finding experiences in his own life to parallel my own.
And as our relationship progressed from a casual one to a definitely
friendly one, Joe seemed more enthusiastic than ever to keep up our
grinding pace to find what we were looking for.
Once we stopped in a clearing to rest. Joe lounged on the matted
greenery, his long body stretched out in front of him, the knife
gleaming in his belt. I'd seen him slash his way through thick, tangled
vines with that knife, his long, muscular arms powerfully slicing
through them like strips of silk.
"How far are we from the Station?" I asked.
"Three or four Earth weeks," he replied.
I sighed wearily. "Where do we go from here?"
"There are more villages," he said.
"We'll never find him."
"Possibly," Joe mused, the smile creeping over his face again.
"A wild goose chase. A fool's errand."
"We'd better get started," Joe said simply.
I got to my feet and we started the march again. Joe was still fresh, a
brilliant contrast to me, weary and dejected. Somehow, I had the same
feeling I'd had a long time ago on my sixteenth birthday. One of my
friends had taken me all over the city, finally dropping me off at my
own house where the whole gang was gathered for a surprise party. Joe
reminded me of that friend.
"There's a village ahead," he said, and the grin on his face was large
now, his eyes shining.
Something was missing here. Natives. There were no natives rushing out
to greet us. No cries of "Cigarettes? Cigarettes?" I caught up with Joe.
"What's the story?" I whispered.
He shrugged knowingly and continued walking.
And then I saw the ship, nose pointing into space, catching the rays of
the sun like a great silver bullet.
"What...?" I started.
"It's all right," Joe said, smiling.
The ship looked vaguely familiar. I noticed the crest of Space II near
the nose, and a lot of things became clear then. I also saw Walsh
standing near one of the huts, a stun gun in his hand.
"Hello, Major," he called, almost cheerfully. The gun didn't look
cheerful, though. It was pointed at my head.
"Fancy meeting you here, Colonel," I said, trying to match his
joviality. Somehow it didn't quite come off.
Joe was walking beside me, waving at the colonel, beaming all over with
happiness.
"I see you found your man," Walsh said.
I turned rapidly. Joe nodded and kept grinning, a grin that told me he
was getting a big kick out of all this. Like a kid playing a game.
I faced Walsh again. "Okay, what's it all about, pal?"
"Colonel," Walsh corrected me. "You mustn't forget to say Colonel,
Major
." He emphasized my rank, and he said it with a sort of ruthless
finality.
I waited. I could see he was just busting to tell me how clever he'd
been. Besides, there wasn't much I could do but wait. Not with Walsh
pointing the stun gun at my middle.
"We've come a long way since the Academy, haven't we, Major?"
"If you mean in miles," I said, looking around at the plants, "we sure
have."
Walsh grinned a little. "Always the wit," he said drily. And then the
smile faded from his lips and his eyes took on a hard lustre. "I'm
going to kill you, you know." He said it as if he were saying, "I think
it'll rain tomorrow."
Joe almost clapped his hands together with glee. He was really enjoying
this. Another of those funny Terran games.
"You gave me a powerful handicap to overcome," Walsh said. "I suppose I
should thank you, really."
"You're welcome," I said.
"It wasn't easy living down the disgrace you caused me."
"It was your own damn fault," I said. "You knew what you were doing
when you decided to cork off."
Beside me, Joe chuckled a little, enjoying the game immensely.
"You didn't have to report me," Walsh said.
"No? Maybe I should have forgotten all about it? Maybe I should have
nudged you and served you orange juice? So you could do it again
sometime and maybe blow up the whole damn Academy!"
Walsh was silent for a long time. When he spoke his voice was barely
audible. The heat was oppressive, as if it were concentrated on this
little spot in the jungle, focusing all its penetration on a small,
unimportant drama.
I could hear Joe breathing beside me.
"I'm on my way out," Walsh rasped. "Finished, do you understand?"
"Good," I said. And I meant it.
"This Mars thing. A terrible fix. Terrible."
Beside me, a slight frown crossed Joe's face. Apparently he couldn't
understand the seriousness of our voices. What had happened to the
game, the fun?
"You brought the Mars business on yourself," I told Walsh. "There was
never any trouble before you took command."
"The natives," he practically shouted. "They ... they...."
Joe caught his breath sharply, and I wondered what Walsh was going to
say about the natives. Apparently he'd realized that Joe was a native.
Or maybe Joe's knife had something to do with it.
"What about the natives?" I asked.
"Nothing," Walsh said. "Nothing." He was silent for a while.
"A man of my calibre," he said then, his face grim. "Dealing with
savages." He caught himself again and threw a hasty glance at Joe.
The perplexed frown had grown heavier on Joe's face. He looked at the
colonel in puzzlement.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/3/8/9/63890//63890-h//63890-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | Who is Joe?
| 63890_67FQICLN_2 | [
"The Major’s senior officer \n",
"A Venusian who doesn’t like cigarettes \n",
"The entire population of Venus \n",
"A Venusian Trader \n"
] | 3 | 3 | [
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63,890 | 63890_67FQICLN | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | A Planet Named Joe | 1966.0 | Hunter, Evan | Human-alien encounters -- Fiction; Short stories; Science fiction; PS; Venus (Planet) -- Fiction | A PLANET NAMED JOE
By S. A. LOMBINO
There were more Joes on Venus than you could shake
a ray-gun at. Perhaps there was method in Colonel
Walsh's madness—murder-madness—when he ordered Major
Polk to scan the planet for a guy named Joe.
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from Planet Stories
November 1952. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the
U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
Colonel Walsh had a great sense of humor. I hated his guts ever since
we went through the Academy together, but he had a great sense of humor.
For example, he could have chosen a Second Looie for the job on Venus.
He might even have picked a Captain. But he liked me about as much as
I liked him, and so he decided the job was just right for a Major. At
least, that's what he told me.
I stood at attention before his desk in the Patrol Station. We were
somewhere in Area Two on Earth, takeoff point for any operations in
Space II. The duty was fine, and I liked it a lot. Come to think of
it, the most I ever did was inspect a few defective tubes every now and
then. The rest was gravy, and Colonel Walsh wasn't going to let me get
by with gravy.
"It will be a simple assignment, Major," he said to me, peering over
his fingers. He held them up in front of him like a cathedral.
"Yes, sir," I said.
"It will involve finding one man, a Venusian native."
I wanted to say, "Then why the hell don't you send a green kid on
the job? Why me?" Instead, I nodded and watched him playing with his
fingers.
"The man is a trader of sorts. Rather intelligent." He paused, then
added, "For a native, that is."
I had never liked Walsh's attitude toward natives. I hadn't liked the
way he'd treated the natives on Mars ever since he'd taken over there.
Which brought to mind an important point.
"I always figured Venus was under the jurisdiction of Space III, sir. I
thought our activities were confined to Mars."
He folded his fingers like a deck of cards and dropped them on his desk
as if he were waiting for me to cut.
"Mmmm," he said, "yes, that's true. But this is a special job. It so
happens this Venusian is the one man who can help us understand just
what's happening on Mars."
I tried to picture a Venusian understanding Mars and I didn't get very
far.
"He's had many dealings with the natives there," Walsh explained. "If
anyone can tell us the reasons for the revolt, he can."
If Walsh really wanted to know the reasons for the revolt, I could give
them to him in one word: Walsh. I had to laugh at the way he called
it "revolt." It had been going on for six months now and we'd lost at
least a thousand men from Space II. Revolt.
"And this man is on Venus now?" I asked for confirmation. I'd never
been to Venus, being in Space II ever since I'd left the Moon run. It
was just like Walsh to ship me off to a strange place.
"Yes, Major," he said. "This man is on Venus."
At the Academy he had called me Fred. That was before I'd reported
him for sleeping on Boiler Watch. He'd goofed off on a pile of uranium
that could've, and almost did, blow the barracks sky-high that night.
He still thought it was my fault, as if I'd done the wrong thing by
reporting him. And now, through the fouled-up machinery that exists in
any military organization, he outranked me.
"And the man's name, sir?"
"Joe." A tight smile played on his face.
"Joe what?" I asked.
"Just Joe."
"Just Joe?"
"Yes," Walsh said. "A native, you know. They rarely go in for more than
first names. But then, it should be simple to find a man with a name
like Joe. Among the natives, I mean."
"I don't know, sir."
"A relatively simple assignment," Walsh said.
"Can you tell me anything else about this man? Physical appearance?
Personal habits? Anything?"
Walsh seemed to consider this for a moment. "Well, physically he's like
any of the other Venusians, so I can't give you much help there. He
does have a peculiar habit, though."
"What's that?"
"He has an affinity for Terran cigarettes."
I sighed. "Well, it's not very much to go on."
"You'll find him," Walsh said, grinning. "I'm sure of it."
The trip to Venus came off without a hitch. I did a lot of thinking on
that trip. I thought about Mars and the revolt there. And I thought
about Colonel Leonard Walsh and how he was supposed to be quelling that
revolt. Ever since Walsh had taken command, ever since he'd started
pushing the natives around, there'd been trouble. It was almost as if
the whole damned planet had blown up in our faces the moment he took
over. Swell guy, Walsh.
Venus was hotter than I'd expected it to be. Much too hot for the tunic
I was wearing. It smelled, too. A funny smell I couldn't place. Like
a mixture of old shoe and after-shave. There were plants everywhere
I looked. Big plants and small ones, some blooming with flowers I'd
never seen before, and some as bare as cactus.
I recognized a blue figure as one of the natives the pilot had told me
about. He was tall, looking almost human except that everything about
him was elongated. His features, his muscles, everything seemed to have
been stretched like a rubber band. I kept expecting him to pop back to
normal. Instead, he flashed a double row of brilliant teeth at me.
I wondered if he spoke English. "Hey, boy," I called.
He ambled over with long-legged strides that closed the distance
between us in seconds.
"Call me Joe," he said.
I dropped my bags and stared at him. Maybe this
was
going to be a
simple assignment after all. "I sure am glad to see you, Joe," I said.
"Same here, Toots," he answered.
"The guys back in Space II are searching high and low for you," I told
him.
"You've got the wrong number," he said, and I was a little surprised at
his use of Terran idiom.
"You are Joe, aren't you? Joe the trader?"
"I'm Joe, all right," he said. "Only thing I ever traded, though, was a
pocketknife. Got a set of keys for it."
"Oh," I said, my voice conveying my disappointment. I sighed and began
wondering just how I should go about contacting the Joe I was looking
for. My orders said I was to report to Captain Bransten immediately
upon arrival. I figured the hell with Captain Bransten. I outranked him
anyway, and there wasn't much he could do if I decided to stop for a
drink first.
"Where's the Officer's Club?" I asked the Venusian.
"Are you buying information or are you just curious?"
"Can you take me there?" I asked.
"Sure thing, Toots." He picked up my bags and started walking up a
heavily overgrown path. We'd probably walked for about ten minutes when
he dropped my bags and said, "There it is."
The Officer's Club was a plasteel hut with window shields that
protected it from the heat of the sun. It didn't look too comfortable
but I really wanted that drink. I reached into my tunic and slipped
the native thirty solars.
He stared at the credits curiously and then shrugged his shoulders. "Oh
well, you're new here. We'll let it go."
He took off then, while I stared after him, wondering just what he'd
meant. Had I tipped him too little?
I shrugged and looked over at the Officer's Club. From the outside it
looked as hot as hell.
On the inside it was about two degrees short of that mark. I began to
curse Walsh for taking me away from my nice soft job in Space II.
There wasn't much inside the club. A few tables and chairs, a dart game
and a bar. Behind the bar a tall Venusian lounged.
I walked over and asked, "What are you serving, pal?"
"Call me Joe," he answered.
He caught me off balance. "What?"
"Joe," he said again.
A faint glimmer of understanding began to penetrate my thick skull.
"You wouldn't happen to be Joe the trader? The guy who knows all about
Mars, would you?"
"I never left home," he said simply. "What are you drinking?"
That rat! That dirty, filthy, stinking, unprincipled....
But then, it should be simple to find a man with a name like
Joe.
Among the natives, I mean.
Sure. Oh sure. Real simple. Walsh was about the lowest, most
contemptible....
"What are you drinking, pal?" the Venusian asked again.
"Skip it," I said. "How do I get to the captain's shack?"
"Follow your nose, pal. Can't miss it."
I started to pick up my bag as another Venusian entered. He waved at
the bartender.
"Hello, Joe," he said. "How's it going?"
"Not so hot, Joe," the bartender replied.
I listened in fascination. Joe, Joe, Joe. So this was Walsh's idea of a
great gag. Very funny. Very....
"You Major Polk, sweetheart?" the Venusian who'd just come in asked.
"Yes," I said, still thinking of Colonel Walsh.
"You better get your butt over to the captain's shack," he said. "He's
about ready to post you as overdue."
"Sure," I said wearily. "Will you take my bags, please?"
"Roger," he answered. He picked up the bags and nodded at the bar.
"So long, Joe," he said to the bartender.
"See you, Joe," the bartender called back.
Captain Bransten was a mousey, unimpressive sort of man. He was wearing
a tropical tunic, but he still resembled a wilted lily more than he did
an officer.
"Have a seat, Major," he offered. He reached for a cigarette box on the
desk and extended it to me. He coughed in embarrassment when he saw it
was empty. Quickly, he pressed a button on his desk and the door popped
open. A tall, blue Venusian stepped lithely into the room.
"Sir?" the Venusian asked.
"We're out of cigarettes, Joe," the Captain said. "Will you get us
some, please?"
"Sure thing," the Venusian answered. He smiled broadly and closed the
door behind him.
Another Joe
, I thought.
Another damned Joe.
"They steal them," Captain Bransten said abruptly.
"Steal what?" I asked.
"Cigarettes. I sometimes think the cigarette is one of the few things
they like about Terran culture."
So Walsh had taken care of that angle too.
He does have a peculiar
habit, though. He has an affinity for Terran cigarettes.
Cigarettes
was the tip I should have given; not solars.
"All right," I said, "suppose we start at the beginning."
Captain Bransten opened his eyes wide. "Sir?" he asked.
"What's with all this Joe business? It may be a very original name but
I think its popularity here is a little outstanding."
Captain Bransten began to chuckle softly. I personally didn't think it
was so funny. I tossed him my withering Superior Officer's gaze and
waited for his explanation.
"I hadn't realized this was your first time on Venus," he said.
"Is there a local hero named Joe?" I asked.
"No, no, nothing like that," he assured me. "It's a simple culture, you
know. Not nearly as developed as Mars."
"I can see that," I said bitingly.
"And the natives are only now becoming acquainted with Terran culture.
Lots of enlisted men, you know."
I began to get the idea. And I began to appreciate Walsh's doubtful
ancestry more keenly.
"It's impossible to tell exactly where it all started, of course,"
Bransten was saying.
I was beginning to get angry. Very angry. I was thinking of Walsh
sitting back in a nice cozy foam chair back on Earth.
"Get to the point, Captain!" I barked.
"Easy, sir," Bransten said, turning pale. I could see that the Captain
wasn't used to entertaining Majors. "The enlisted men. You know how
they are. They'll ask a native to do something and they'll call him
Joe. 'Hey, Joe, give me a hand with this.' Or 'Listen, Joe, how'd you
like to earn some cigarettes?' Do you follow?"
"I follow, all right," I said bitterly.
"Well," Bransten went on, "that sort of thing mushrooms. The natives
are a simple, almost childish people. It appealed to them—the Joe
business, I mean. Now they're all Joe. They like it. That and the
cigarettes."
He cleared his throat and looked at me apologetically as if he were
personally responsible for Venusian culture. In fact, he looked as if
he were responsible for having put Venus in the heavens in the first
place.
"Do you understand, Major? Just a case of extended idiom, that's all."
Just a case of extended
idiot
, I thought. An idiot on a wild goose
chase a hell of a long way from home.
"I understand perfectly," I snapped. "Where are my quarters?"
Bransten asked a Venusian named Joe to show me my quarters, reminding
me that chow was at thirteen hundred. As I was leaving, the first
Venusian came back with the cigarettes Bransten had ordered.
I could tell by the look on his face that he probably had half a carton
stuffed into his pockets. I shrugged and went to change into a tropical
tunic.
I called Earth right after chow. The Captain assured me that this sort
of thing was definitely against regulations, but he submitted when I
twinkled my little gold leaf under his nose.
Walsh's face appeared on the screen. He was smiling, looking like a fat
pussy cat.
"What is it, Major?" he asked.
"This man Joe," I said. "Can you give me any more on him?"
Walsh's grin grew wider. "Why, Major," he said, "you're not having any
difficulties, are you?"
"None at all," I snapped back. "I just thought I'd be able to find him
a lot sooner if...."
"Take your time, Major," Walsh beamed. "There's no rush at all."
"I thought...."
"I'm sure you can do the job," Walsh cut in. "I wouldn't have sent you
otherwise."
Hell, I was through kidding around. "Look...."
"He's somewhere in the jungle, you know," Walsh said.
I wanted to ram my fist into the screen, right smack up against those
big white teeth. Instead, I cut off the transmission and watched the
surprised look on his face as his screen went blank millions of miles
away.
He blinked at the screen, trying to realize I'd deliberately hung up on
him.
"Polk!" he shouted, "can you hear me?"
I smiled, saw the twisted hatred on his features, and then the screen
on my end went blank, too.
He's somewhere in the jungle, you know.
I thanked Captain Bransten for his hospitality and went back to my
quarters.
As I saw it, there were two courses for me to follow.
One: I could say the hell with Walsh and Venus. That would mean hopping
the next ship back to Earth.
It would also mean disobeying the direct order of a superior officer.
It might mean demotion, and it might mean getting bounced out of the
Service altogether.
Two: I could assume there really was a guy name Joe somewhere in that
jungle, a Joe separate and apart from the other Joes on this planet, a
trader Joe who knew the Martians well. I could always admit failure, of
course, and return empty handed. Mission not accomplished. Or, I might
really find a guy who was trader Joe.
I made my decision quickly. I wanted to stay in the Service, and
besides Walsh may have been on the level for the first time in his
life. Maybe there was a Joe here who could help us on Mars. If there
was I'd try to find him. It was still a hell of a trick though.
I cursed Walsh again and pushed the buzzer near my bed.
A tall Venusian stepped into the room.
"Joe?" I asked, just to be sure.
"Who else, boss?" he answered.
"I'm trying to locate someone," I said. "I'll need a guide to take me
into the jungle. Can you get me one?"
"It'll cost you, boss," the Venusian said.
"How much?"
"Two cartons of cigarettes at least."
"Who's the guide?" I asked.
"How's the price sound?"
"Fine, fine," I said impatiently. And the Captain had said they were
almost a childish people!
"His name is Joe," the Venusian told me. "Best damn guide on the
planet. Take you anywhere you want to go, do anything you want to do.
Courageous. Doesn't know the meaning of fear. I've known him to...."
"Skip it," I said, cutting the promotion short. "Tell him to show up
around fifteen hundred with a complete list of what we'll need."
The Venusian started to leave.
"And Joe," I said, stopping him at the door, "I hope you're not
overlooking your commission on the deal."
His face broke into a wide grin. "No danger of that, boss," he said.
When he was gone I began figuring out a plan of action. Obviously, I'd
just have to traipse through the jungle looking for a guy named Joe on
a planet where everyone was named Joe. Everybody, at least, but the
Captain, the small garrison attached to the Station, and me.
I began wondering why Walsh had gone to so much trouble to get rid of
me. The job, as I saw it, would take a hell of a long time. It seemed
like a silly thing to do, just to get even with a guy for something
that had happened years ago. He surely must have realized that I'd be
back again, sooner or later. Maybe he had another little junket all set
for me.
Or maybe he didn't expect me to come back.
The thought hadn't occurred to me before this, and I began to consider
it seriously. Walsh was no good, rotten clear through. He was failing
at the job of keeping Mars in hand, and he probably realized that a
few more mistakes on his part would mean the end of his career with
Space II. I chuckled as I thought of him isolated in some God-forsaken
place like Space V or Space VII. This probably bothered him a lot, too.
But what probably bothered him more was the fact that I was next in
command. If he were transferred, I'd be in charge of Space II, and I
could understand how much that would appeal to Walsh.
I tried to figure the thing out sensibly, tried to weigh his good
points against his bad. But it all came back to the same thing. A
guy who would deliberately go to sleep on Boiler Watch with a ton of
uranium ready to blast a barracks to smithereens if it wasn't watched,
would deliberately do just about anything.
Sending me off on a wild goose chase after a character named Joe may
have been a gag. But it may have been something a little grimmer than a
gag, and I made up my mind to be extremely careful from here on in.
The guide arrived at fifteen hundred on the dot. He was tall,
elongated, looked almost like all the other Venusians I'd seen so far.
"I understand you need a Grade A guide, sir," he said.
"Are you familiar with the jungle?" I asked him.
"Born and raised there, sir. Know it like the back of my hand."
"Has Joe told you what the payment will be?"
"Yes, sir. A carton and a half of cigarettes."
I thought about Joe deducting his commission and smiled.
"When can we leave?"
"Right away, sir. We won't need much really. I've made a list of
supplies and I can get them in less than an hour. I suggest you wear
light clothing, boots, and a hat."
"Will I need a weapon?"
He looked at me, his eyes faintly amused. "Why, what for, sir?"
"Never mind," I said. "What's your name, by the way?"
He lifted his eyebrows, and his eyes widened in his narrow face. He was
definitely surprised.
"Joe," he said. "Didn't you know?"
When we'd been out for a while I discovered why Joe had suggested the
boots and the hat. The undergrowth was often sharp and jagged and it
would have sliced my legs to ribbons were they not protected by the
high boots. The hat kept the strong sun off my head.
Joe was an excellent guide and a pleasant companion. He seemed to be
enjoying a great romp, seemed to love the jungle and take a secret
pleasure in the work he was doing. There were times when I couldn't
see three feet ahead of me. He'd stand stock still for a few minutes,
his head barely moving, his eyes darting from one plant to another.
Then he'd say, "This way," and take off into what looked like more
impenetrable jungle invariably to find a little path leading directly
to another village.
Each village was the same. The natives would come running out of their
huts, tall and blue, shouting, "Cigarettes, Joe? Cigarettes?" It took
me a while to realize they were addressing me and not my guide.
Everybody was Joe. It was one beautiful, happy, joyous round of
stinking, hot jungle. And I wasn't getting any nearer my man. Nor had
I any idea how I was supposed to find him. I began to feel pretty low
about the whole affair.
Joe, on the other hand, enjoyed every moment of the trip. In each
village he greeted the natives cheerfully, told them stories, swapped
gossip and jokes. And when it was time to leave, he would say goodbye
to all his friends and we would plunge into the twisted foliage again.
His spirits were always high and he never failed to say the right thing
that would give a momentary lift to my own depressed state of mind. He
would talk for hours on end as we hacked our way through the jungle.
"I like Venus," he said once. "I would never leave it."
"Have you ever been to Earth?" I asked.
"No," Joe replied. "I like Terrans too, you understand. They are good
for Venus. And they are fun."
"Fun?" I asked, thinking of a particular species of Terran: species
Leonard Walsh.
"Yes, yes," he said wholeheartedly. "They joke and they laugh and ...
well, you know."
"I suppose so," I admitted.
Joe smiled secretly, and we pushed on. I began to find, more and more,
that I had started to talk freely to Joe. In the beginning he had been
just my guide. There had been the strained relationship of employer and
employee. But as the days lengthened into weeks, the formal atmosphere
began to crumble. I found myself telling him all about Earth, about
the people there, about my decision to attend the Academy, the rigid
tests, the grind, even the Moon run. Joe was a good listener, nodding
sympathetically, finding experiences in his own life to parallel my own.
And as our relationship progressed from a casual one to a definitely
friendly one, Joe seemed more enthusiastic than ever to keep up our
grinding pace to find what we were looking for.
Once we stopped in a clearing to rest. Joe lounged on the matted
greenery, his long body stretched out in front of him, the knife
gleaming in his belt. I'd seen him slash his way through thick, tangled
vines with that knife, his long, muscular arms powerfully slicing
through them like strips of silk.
"How far are we from the Station?" I asked.
"Three or four Earth weeks," he replied.
I sighed wearily. "Where do we go from here?"
"There are more villages," he said.
"We'll never find him."
"Possibly," Joe mused, the smile creeping over his face again.
"A wild goose chase. A fool's errand."
"We'd better get started," Joe said simply.
I got to my feet and we started the march again. Joe was still fresh, a
brilliant contrast to me, weary and dejected. Somehow, I had the same
feeling I'd had a long time ago on my sixteenth birthday. One of my
friends had taken me all over the city, finally dropping me off at my
own house where the whole gang was gathered for a surprise party. Joe
reminded me of that friend.
"There's a village ahead," he said, and the grin on his face was large
now, his eyes shining.
Something was missing here. Natives. There were no natives rushing out
to greet us. No cries of "Cigarettes? Cigarettes?" I caught up with Joe.
"What's the story?" I whispered.
He shrugged knowingly and continued walking.
And then I saw the ship, nose pointing into space, catching the rays of
the sun like a great silver bullet.
"What...?" I started.
"It's all right," Joe said, smiling.
The ship looked vaguely familiar. I noticed the crest of Space II near
the nose, and a lot of things became clear then. I also saw Walsh
standing near one of the huts, a stun gun in his hand.
"Hello, Major," he called, almost cheerfully. The gun didn't look
cheerful, though. It was pointed at my head.
"Fancy meeting you here, Colonel," I said, trying to match his
joviality. Somehow it didn't quite come off.
Joe was walking beside me, waving at the colonel, beaming all over with
happiness.
"I see you found your man," Walsh said.
I turned rapidly. Joe nodded and kept grinning, a grin that told me he
was getting a big kick out of all this. Like a kid playing a game.
I faced Walsh again. "Okay, what's it all about, pal?"
"Colonel," Walsh corrected me. "You mustn't forget to say Colonel,
Major
." He emphasized my rank, and he said it with a sort of ruthless
finality.
I waited. I could see he was just busting to tell me how clever he'd
been. Besides, there wasn't much I could do but wait. Not with Walsh
pointing the stun gun at my middle.
"We've come a long way since the Academy, haven't we, Major?"
"If you mean in miles," I said, looking around at the plants, "we sure
have."
Walsh grinned a little. "Always the wit," he said drily. And then the
smile faded from his lips and his eyes took on a hard lustre. "I'm
going to kill you, you know." He said it as if he were saying, "I think
it'll rain tomorrow."
Joe almost clapped his hands together with glee. He was really enjoying
this. Another of those funny Terran games.
"You gave me a powerful handicap to overcome," Walsh said. "I suppose I
should thank you, really."
"You're welcome," I said.
"It wasn't easy living down the disgrace you caused me."
"It was your own damn fault," I said. "You knew what you were doing
when you decided to cork off."
Beside me, Joe chuckled a little, enjoying the game immensely.
"You didn't have to report me," Walsh said.
"No? Maybe I should have forgotten all about it? Maybe I should have
nudged you and served you orange juice? So you could do it again
sometime and maybe blow up the whole damn Academy!"
Walsh was silent for a long time. When he spoke his voice was barely
audible. The heat was oppressive, as if it were concentrated on this
little spot in the jungle, focusing all its penetration on a small,
unimportant drama.
I could hear Joe breathing beside me.
"I'm on my way out," Walsh rasped. "Finished, do you understand?"
"Good," I said. And I meant it.
"This Mars thing. A terrible fix. Terrible."
Beside me, a slight frown crossed Joe's face. Apparently he couldn't
understand the seriousness of our voices. What had happened to the
game, the fun?
"You brought the Mars business on yourself," I told Walsh. "There was
never any trouble before you took command."
"The natives," he practically shouted. "They ... they...."
Joe caught his breath sharply, and I wondered what Walsh was going to
say about the natives. Apparently he'd realized that Joe was a native.
Or maybe Joe's knife had something to do with it.
"What about the natives?" I asked.
"Nothing," Walsh said. "Nothing." He was silent for a while.
"A man of my calibre," he said then, his face grim. "Dealing with
savages." He caught himself again and threw a hasty glance at Joe.
The perplexed frown had grown heavier on Joe's face. He looked at the
colonel in puzzlement.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/3/8/9/63890//63890-h//63890-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | What is the first clue that hints at how Venusian culture has absorbed the name Joe?
| 63890_67FQICLN_3 | [
"The first Joe who Major Polk meets knows the Terran idiom, “stabbed in the back.” \n",
"The first Joe who Major Polk meets knows the Terran idiom, “you’ve got the wrong number.”\n",
"The first Joe who Major Polk meets knows the Terran idiom, “bite the bullet.” \n",
"The first Joe who Major Polk meets knows the Terran idiom, “Joe,” as a way of causally referring to others. \n"
] | 2 | 2 | [
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63,890 | 63890_67FQICLN | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | A Planet Named Joe | 1966.0 | Hunter, Evan | Human-alien encounters -- Fiction; Short stories; Science fiction; PS; Venus (Planet) -- Fiction | A PLANET NAMED JOE
By S. A. LOMBINO
There were more Joes on Venus than you could shake
a ray-gun at. Perhaps there was method in Colonel
Walsh's madness—murder-madness—when he ordered Major
Polk to scan the planet for a guy named Joe.
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from Planet Stories
November 1952. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the
U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
Colonel Walsh had a great sense of humor. I hated his guts ever since
we went through the Academy together, but he had a great sense of humor.
For example, he could have chosen a Second Looie for the job on Venus.
He might even have picked a Captain. But he liked me about as much as
I liked him, and so he decided the job was just right for a Major. At
least, that's what he told me.
I stood at attention before his desk in the Patrol Station. We were
somewhere in Area Two on Earth, takeoff point for any operations in
Space II. The duty was fine, and I liked it a lot. Come to think of
it, the most I ever did was inspect a few defective tubes every now and
then. The rest was gravy, and Colonel Walsh wasn't going to let me get
by with gravy.
"It will be a simple assignment, Major," he said to me, peering over
his fingers. He held them up in front of him like a cathedral.
"Yes, sir," I said.
"It will involve finding one man, a Venusian native."
I wanted to say, "Then why the hell don't you send a green kid on
the job? Why me?" Instead, I nodded and watched him playing with his
fingers.
"The man is a trader of sorts. Rather intelligent." He paused, then
added, "For a native, that is."
I had never liked Walsh's attitude toward natives. I hadn't liked the
way he'd treated the natives on Mars ever since he'd taken over there.
Which brought to mind an important point.
"I always figured Venus was under the jurisdiction of Space III, sir. I
thought our activities were confined to Mars."
He folded his fingers like a deck of cards and dropped them on his desk
as if he were waiting for me to cut.
"Mmmm," he said, "yes, that's true. But this is a special job. It so
happens this Venusian is the one man who can help us understand just
what's happening on Mars."
I tried to picture a Venusian understanding Mars and I didn't get very
far.
"He's had many dealings with the natives there," Walsh explained. "If
anyone can tell us the reasons for the revolt, he can."
If Walsh really wanted to know the reasons for the revolt, I could give
them to him in one word: Walsh. I had to laugh at the way he called
it "revolt." It had been going on for six months now and we'd lost at
least a thousand men from Space II. Revolt.
"And this man is on Venus now?" I asked for confirmation. I'd never
been to Venus, being in Space II ever since I'd left the Moon run. It
was just like Walsh to ship me off to a strange place.
"Yes, Major," he said. "This man is on Venus."
At the Academy he had called me Fred. That was before I'd reported
him for sleeping on Boiler Watch. He'd goofed off on a pile of uranium
that could've, and almost did, blow the barracks sky-high that night.
He still thought it was my fault, as if I'd done the wrong thing by
reporting him. And now, through the fouled-up machinery that exists in
any military organization, he outranked me.
"And the man's name, sir?"
"Joe." A tight smile played on his face.
"Joe what?" I asked.
"Just Joe."
"Just Joe?"
"Yes," Walsh said. "A native, you know. They rarely go in for more than
first names. But then, it should be simple to find a man with a name
like Joe. Among the natives, I mean."
"I don't know, sir."
"A relatively simple assignment," Walsh said.
"Can you tell me anything else about this man? Physical appearance?
Personal habits? Anything?"
Walsh seemed to consider this for a moment. "Well, physically he's like
any of the other Venusians, so I can't give you much help there. He
does have a peculiar habit, though."
"What's that?"
"He has an affinity for Terran cigarettes."
I sighed. "Well, it's not very much to go on."
"You'll find him," Walsh said, grinning. "I'm sure of it."
The trip to Venus came off without a hitch. I did a lot of thinking on
that trip. I thought about Mars and the revolt there. And I thought
about Colonel Leonard Walsh and how he was supposed to be quelling that
revolt. Ever since Walsh had taken command, ever since he'd started
pushing the natives around, there'd been trouble. It was almost as if
the whole damned planet had blown up in our faces the moment he took
over. Swell guy, Walsh.
Venus was hotter than I'd expected it to be. Much too hot for the tunic
I was wearing. It smelled, too. A funny smell I couldn't place. Like
a mixture of old shoe and after-shave. There were plants everywhere
I looked. Big plants and small ones, some blooming with flowers I'd
never seen before, and some as bare as cactus.
I recognized a blue figure as one of the natives the pilot had told me
about. He was tall, looking almost human except that everything about
him was elongated. His features, his muscles, everything seemed to have
been stretched like a rubber band. I kept expecting him to pop back to
normal. Instead, he flashed a double row of brilliant teeth at me.
I wondered if he spoke English. "Hey, boy," I called.
He ambled over with long-legged strides that closed the distance
between us in seconds.
"Call me Joe," he said.
I dropped my bags and stared at him. Maybe this
was
going to be a
simple assignment after all. "I sure am glad to see you, Joe," I said.
"Same here, Toots," he answered.
"The guys back in Space II are searching high and low for you," I told
him.
"You've got the wrong number," he said, and I was a little surprised at
his use of Terran idiom.
"You are Joe, aren't you? Joe the trader?"
"I'm Joe, all right," he said. "Only thing I ever traded, though, was a
pocketknife. Got a set of keys for it."
"Oh," I said, my voice conveying my disappointment. I sighed and began
wondering just how I should go about contacting the Joe I was looking
for. My orders said I was to report to Captain Bransten immediately
upon arrival. I figured the hell with Captain Bransten. I outranked him
anyway, and there wasn't much he could do if I decided to stop for a
drink first.
"Where's the Officer's Club?" I asked the Venusian.
"Are you buying information or are you just curious?"
"Can you take me there?" I asked.
"Sure thing, Toots." He picked up my bags and started walking up a
heavily overgrown path. We'd probably walked for about ten minutes when
he dropped my bags and said, "There it is."
The Officer's Club was a plasteel hut with window shields that
protected it from the heat of the sun. It didn't look too comfortable
but I really wanted that drink. I reached into my tunic and slipped
the native thirty solars.
He stared at the credits curiously and then shrugged his shoulders. "Oh
well, you're new here. We'll let it go."
He took off then, while I stared after him, wondering just what he'd
meant. Had I tipped him too little?
I shrugged and looked over at the Officer's Club. From the outside it
looked as hot as hell.
On the inside it was about two degrees short of that mark. I began to
curse Walsh for taking me away from my nice soft job in Space II.
There wasn't much inside the club. A few tables and chairs, a dart game
and a bar. Behind the bar a tall Venusian lounged.
I walked over and asked, "What are you serving, pal?"
"Call me Joe," he answered.
He caught me off balance. "What?"
"Joe," he said again.
A faint glimmer of understanding began to penetrate my thick skull.
"You wouldn't happen to be Joe the trader? The guy who knows all about
Mars, would you?"
"I never left home," he said simply. "What are you drinking?"
That rat! That dirty, filthy, stinking, unprincipled....
But then, it should be simple to find a man with a name like
Joe.
Among the natives, I mean.
Sure. Oh sure. Real simple. Walsh was about the lowest, most
contemptible....
"What are you drinking, pal?" the Venusian asked again.
"Skip it," I said. "How do I get to the captain's shack?"
"Follow your nose, pal. Can't miss it."
I started to pick up my bag as another Venusian entered. He waved at
the bartender.
"Hello, Joe," he said. "How's it going?"
"Not so hot, Joe," the bartender replied.
I listened in fascination. Joe, Joe, Joe. So this was Walsh's idea of a
great gag. Very funny. Very....
"You Major Polk, sweetheart?" the Venusian who'd just come in asked.
"Yes," I said, still thinking of Colonel Walsh.
"You better get your butt over to the captain's shack," he said. "He's
about ready to post you as overdue."
"Sure," I said wearily. "Will you take my bags, please?"
"Roger," he answered. He picked up the bags and nodded at the bar.
"So long, Joe," he said to the bartender.
"See you, Joe," the bartender called back.
Captain Bransten was a mousey, unimpressive sort of man. He was wearing
a tropical tunic, but he still resembled a wilted lily more than he did
an officer.
"Have a seat, Major," he offered. He reached for a cigarette box on the
desk and extended it to me. He coughed in embarrassment when he saw it
was empty. Quickly, he pressed a button on his desk and the door popped
open. A tall, blue Venusian stepped lithely into the room.
"Sir?" the Venusian asked.
"We're out of cigarettes, Joe," the Captain said. "Will you get us
some, please?"
"Sure thing," the Venusian answered. He smiled broadly and closed the
door behind him.
Another Joe
, I thought.
Another damned Joe.
"They steal them," Captain Bransten said abruptly.
"Steal what?" I asked.
"Cigarettes. I sometimes think the cigarette is one of the few things
they like about Terran culture."
So Walsh had taken care of that angle too.
He does have a peculiar
habit, though. He has an affinity for Terran cigarettes.
Cigarettes
was the tip I should have given; not solars.
"All right," I said, "suppose we start at the beginning."
Captain Bransten opened his eyes wide. "Sir?" he asked.
"What's with all this Joe business? It may be a very original name but
I think its popularity here is a little outstanding."
Captain Bransten began to chuckle softly. I personally didn't think it
was so funny. I tossed him my withering Superior Officer's gaze and
waited for his explanation.
"I hadn't realized this was your first time on Venus," he said.
"Is there a local hero named Joe?" I asked.
"No, no, nothing like that," he assured me. "It's a simple culture, you
know. Not nearly as developed as Mars."
"I can see that," I said bitingly.
"And the natives are only now becoming acquainted with Terran culture.
Lots of enlisted men, you know."
I began to get the idea. And I began to appreciate Walsh's doubtful
ancestry more keenly.
"It's impossible to tell exactly where it all started, of course,"
Bransten was saying.
I was beginning to get angry. Very angry. I was thinking of Walsh
sitting back in a nice cozy foam chair back on Earth.
"Get to the point, Captain!" I barked.
"Easy, sir," Bransten said, turning pale. I could see that the Captain
wasn't used to entertaining Majors. "The enlisted men. You know how
they are. They'll ask a native to do something and they'll call him
Joe. 'Hey, Joe, give me a hand with this.' Or 'Listen, Joe, how'd you
like to earn some cigarettes?' Do you follow?"
"I follow, all right," I said bitterly.
"Well," Bransten went on, "that sort of thing mushrooms. The natives
are a simple, almost childish people. It appealed to them—the Joe
business, I mean. Now they're all Joe. They like it. That and the
cigarettes."
He cleared his throat and looked at me apologetically as if he were
personally responsible for Venusian culture. In fact, he looked as if
he were responsible for having put Venus in the heavens in the first
place.
"Do you understand, Major? Just a case of extended idiom, that's all."
Just a case of extended
idiot
, I thought. An idiot on a wild goose
chase a hell of a long way from home.
"I understand perfectly," I snapped. "Where are my quarters?"
Bransten asked a Venusian named Joe to show me my quarters, reminding
me that chow was at thirteen hundred. As I was leaving, the first
Venusian came back with the cigarettes Bransten had ordered.
I could tell by the look on his face that he probably had half a carton
stuffed into his pockets. I shrugged and went to change into a tropical
tunic.
I called Earth right after chow. The Captain assured me that this sort
of thing was definitely against regulations, but he submitted when I
twinkled my little gold leaf under his nose.
Walsh's face appeared on the screen. He was smiling, looking like a fat
pussy cat.
"What is it, Major?" he asked.
"This man Joe," I said. "Can you give me any more on him?"
Walsh's grin grew wider. "Why, Major," he said, "you're not having any
difficulties, are you?"
"None at all," I snapped back. "I just thought I'd be able to find him
a lot sooner if...."
"Take your time, Major," Walsh beamed. "There's no rush at all."
"I thought...."
"I'm sure you can do the job," Walsh cut in. "I wouldn't have sent you
otherwise."
Hell, I was through kidding around. "Look...."
"He's somewhere in the jungle, you know," Walsh said.
I wanted to ram my fist into the screen, right smack up against those
big white teeth. Instead, I cut off the transmission and watched the
surprised look on his face as his screen went blank millions of miles
away.
He blinked at the screen, trying to realize I'd deliberately hung up on
him.
"Polk!" he shouted, "can you hear me?"
I smiled, saw the twisted hatred on his features, and then the screen
on my end went blank, too.
He's somewhere in the jungle, you know.
I thanked Captain Bransten for his hospitality and went back to my
quarters.
As I saw it, there were two courses for me to follow.
One: I could say the hell with Walsh and Venus. That would mean hopping
the next ship back to Earth.
It would also mean disobeying the direct order of a superior officer.
It might mean demotion, and it might mean getting bounced out of the
Service altogether.
Two: I could assume there really was a guy name Joe somewhere in that
jungle, a Joe separate and apart from the other Joes on this planet, a
trader Joe who knew the Martians well. I could always admit failure, of
course, and return empty handed. Mission not accomplished. Or, I might
really find a guy who was trader Joe.
I made my decision quickly. I wanted to stay in the Service, and
besides Walsh may have been on the level for the first time in his
life. Maybe there was a Joe here who could help us on Mars. If there
was I'd try to find him. It was still a hell of a trick though.
I cursed Walsh again and pushed the buzzer near my bed.
A tall Venusian stepped into the room.
"Joe?" I asked, just to be sure.
"Who else, boss?" he answered.
"I'm trying to locate someone," I said. "I'll need a guide to take me
into the jungle. Can you get me one?"
"It'll cost you, boss," the Venusian said.
"How much?"
"Two cartons of cigarettes at least."
"Who's the guide?" I asked.
"How's the price sound?"
"Fine, fine," I said impatiently. And the Captain had said they were
almost a childish people!
"His name is Joe," the Venusian told me. "Best damn guide on the
planet. Take you anywhere you want to go, do anything you want to do.
Courageous. Doesn't know the meaning of fear. I've known him to...."
"Skip it," I said, cutting the promotion short. "Tell him to show up
around fifteen hundred with a complete list of what we'll need."
The Venusian started to leave.
"And Joe," I said, stopping him at the door, "I hope you're not
overlooking your commission on the deal."
His face broke into a wide grin. "No danger of that, boss," he said.
When he was gone I began figuring out a plan of action. Obviously, I'd
just have to traipse through the jungle looking for a guy named Joe on
a planet where everyone was named Joe. Everybody, at least, but the
Captain, the small garrison attached to the Station, and me.
I began wondering why Walsh had gone to so much trouble to get rid of
me. The job, as I saw it, would take a hell of a long time. It seemed
like a silly thing to do, just to get even with a guy for something
that had happened years ago. He surely must have realized that I'd be
back again, sooner or later. Maybe he had another little junket all set
for me.
Or maybe he didn't expect me to come back.
The thought hadn't occurred to me before this, and I began to consider
it seriously. Walsh was no good, rotten clear through. He was failing
at the job of keeping Mars in hand, and he probably realized that a
few more mistakes on his part would mean the end of his career with
Space II. I chuckled as I thought of him isolated in some God-forsaken
place like Space V or Space VII. This probably bothered him a lot, too.
But what probably bothered him more was the fact that I was next in
command. If he were transferred, I'd be in charge of Space II, and I
could understand how much that would appeal to Walsh.
I tried to figure the thing out sensibly, tried to weigh his good
points against his bad. But it all came back to the same thing. A
guy who would deliberately go to sleep on Boiler Watch with a ton of
uranium ready to blast a barracks to smithereens if it wasn't watched,
would deliberately do just about anything.
Sending me off on a wild goose chase after a character named Joe may
have been a gag. But it may have been something a little grimmer than a
gag, and I made up my mind to be extremely careful from here on in.
The guide arrived at fifteen hundred on the dot. He was tall,
elongated, looked almost like all the other Venusians I'd seen so far.
"I understand you need a Grade A guide, sir," he said.
"Are you familiar with the jungle?" I asked him.
"Born and raised there, sir. Know it like the back of my hand."
"Has Joe told you what the payment will be?"
"Yes, sir. A carton and a half of cigarettes."
I thought about Joe deducting his commission and smiled.
"When can we leave?"
"Right away, sir. We won't need much really. I've made a list of
supplies and I can get them in less than an hour. I suggest you wear
light clothing, boots, and a hat."
"Will I need a weapon?"
He looked at me, his eyes faintly amused. "Why, what for, sir?"
"Never mind," I said. "What's your name, by the way?"
He lifted his eyebrows, and his eyes widened in his narrow face. He was
definitely surprised.
"Joe," he said. "Didn't you know?"
When we'd been out for a while I discovered why Joe had suggested the
boots and the hat. The undergrowth was often sharp and jagged and it
would have sliced my legs to ribbons were they not protected by the
high boots. The hat kept the strong sun off my head.
Joe was an excellent guide and a pleasant companion. He seemed to be
enjoying a great romp, seemed to love the jungle and take a secret
pleasure in the work he was doing. There were times when I couldn't
see three feet ahead of me. He'd stand stock still for a few minutes,
his head barely moving, his eyes darting from one plant to another.
Then he'd say, "This way," and take off into what looked like more
impenetrable jungle invariably to find a little path leading directly
to another village.
Each village was the same. The natives would come running out of their
huts, tall and blue, shouting, "Cigarettes, Joe? Cigarettes?" It took
me a while to realize they were addressing me and not my guide.
Everybody was Joe. It was one beautiful, happy, joyous round of
stinking, hot jungle. And I wasn't getting any nearer my man. Nor had
I any idea how I was supposed to find him. I began to feel pretty low
about the whole affair.
Joe, on the other hand, enjoyed every moment of the trip. In each
village he greeted the natives cheerfully, told them stories, swapped
gossip and jokes. And when it was time to leave, he would say goodbye
to all his friends and we would plunge into the twisted foliage again.
His spirits were always high and he never failed to say the right thing
that would give a momentary lift to my own depressed state of mind. He
would talk for hours on end as we hacked our way through the jungle.
"I like Venus," he said once. "I would never leave it."
"Have you ever been to Earth?" I asked.
"No," Joe replied. "I like Terrans too, you understand. They are good
for Venus. And they are fun."
"Fun?" I asked, thinking of a particular species of Terran: species
Leonard Walsh.
"Yes, yes," he said wholeheartedly. "They joke and they laugh and ...
well, you know."
"I suppose so," I admitted.
Joe smiled secretly, and we pushed on. I began to find, more and more,
that I had started to talk freely to Joe. In the beginning he had been
just my guide. There had been the strained relationship of employer and
employee. But as the days lengthened into weeks, the formal atmosphere
began to crumble. I found myself telling him all about Earth, about
the people there, about my decision to attend the Academy, the rigid
tests, the grind, even the Moon run. Joe was a good listener, nodding
sympathetically, finding experiences in his own life to parallel my own.
And as our relationship progressed from a casual one to a definitely
friendly one, Joe seemed more enthusiastic than ever to keep up our
grinding pace to find what we were looking for.
Once we stopped in a clearing to rest. Joe lounged on the matted
greenery, his long body stretched out in front of him, the knife
gleaming in his belt. I'd seen him slash his way through thick, tangled
vines with that knife, his long, muscular arms powerfully slicing
through them like strips of silk.
"How far are we from the Station?" I asked.
"Three or four Earth weeks," he replied.
I sighed wearily. "Where do we go from here?"
"There are more villages," he said.
"We'll never find him."
"Possibly," Joe mused, the smile creeping over his face again.
"A wild goose chase. A fool's errand."
"We'd better get started," Joe said simply.
I got to my feet and we started the march again. Joe was still fresh, a
brilliant contrast to me, weary and dejected. Somehow, I had the same
feeling I'd had a long time ago on my sixteenth birthday. One of my
friends had taken me all over the city, finally dropping me off at my
own house where the whole gang was gathered for a surprise party. Joe
reminded me of that friend.
"There's a village ahead," he said, and the grin on his face was large
now, his eyes shining.
Something was missing here. Natives. There were no natives rushing out
to greet us. No cries of "Cigarettes? Cigarettes?" I caught up with Joe.
"What's the story?" I whispered.
He shrugged knowingly and continued walking.
And then I saw the ship, nose pointing into space, catching the rays of
the sun like a great silver bullet.
"What...?" I started.
"It's all right," Joe said, smiling.
The ship looked vaguely familiar. I noticed the crest of Space II near
the nose, and a lot of things became clear then. I also saw Walsh
standing near one of the huts, a stun gun in his hand.
"Hello, Major," he called, almost cheerfully. The gun didn't look
cheerful, though. It was pointed at my head.
"Fancy meeting you here, Colonel," I said, trying to match his
joviality. Somehow it didn't quite come off.
Joe was walking beside me, waving at the colonel, beaming all over with
happiness.
"I see you found your man," Walsh said.
I turned rapidly. Joe nodded and kept grinning, a grin that told me he
was getting a big kick out of all this. Like a kid playing a game.
I faced Walsh again. "Okay, what's it all about, pal?"
"Colonel," Walsh corrected me. "You mustn't forget to say Colonel,
Major
." He emphasized my rank, and he said it with a sort of ruthless
finality.
I waited. I could see he was just busting to tell me how clever he'd
been. Besides, there wasn't much I could do but wait. Not with Walsh
pointing the stun gun at my middle.
"We've come a long way since the Academy, haven't we, Major?"
"If you mean in miles," I said, looking around at the plants, "we sure
have."
Walsh grinned a little. "Always the wit," he said drily. And then the
smile faded from his lips and his eyes took on a hard lustre. "I'm
going to kill you, you know." He said it as if he were saying, "I think
it'll rain tomorrow."
Joe almost clapped his hands together with glee. He was really enjoying
this. Another of those funny Terran games.
"You gave me a powerful handicap to overcome," Walsh said. "I suppose I
should thank you, really."
"You're welcome," I said.
"It wasn't easy living down the disgrace you caused me."
"It was your own damn fault," I said. "You knew what you were doing
when you decided to cork off."
Beside me, Joe chuckled a little, enjoying the game immensely.
"You didn't have to report me," Walsh said.
"No? Maybe I should have forgotten all about it? Maybe I should have
nudged you and served you orange juice? So you could do it again
sometime and maybe blow up the whole damn Academy!"
Walsh was silent for a long time. When he spoke his voice was barely
audible. The heat was oppressive, as if it were concentrated on this
little spot in the jungle, focusing all its penetration on a small,
unimportant drama.
I could hear Joe breathing beside me.
"I'm on my way out," Walsh rasped. "Finished, do you understand?"
"Good," I said. And I meant it.
"This Mars thing. A terrible fix. Terrible."
Beside me, a slight frown crossed Joe's face. Apparently he couldn't
understand the seriousness of our voices. What had happened to the
game, the fun?
"You brought the Mars business on yourself," I told Walsh. "There was
never any trouble before you took command."
"The natives," he practically shouted. "They ... they...."
Joe caught his breath sharply, and I wondered what Walsh was going to
say about the natives. Apparently he'd realized that Joe was a native.
Or maybe Joe's knife had something to do with it.
"What about the natives?" I asked.
"Nothing," Walsh said. "Nothing." He was silent for a while.
"A man of my calibre," he said then, his face grim. "Dealing with
savages." He caught himself again and threw a hasty glance at Joe.
The perplexed frown had grown heavier on Joe's face. He looked at the
colonel in puzzlement.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/3/8/9/63890//63890-h//63890-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | What is the significance of the mission Colonel Walsh gives Major Polk?
| 63890_67FQICLN_4 | [
"Walsh sends Polk on a fools errand in order to trick him into time away from Earth so that Walsh can botch the occupation on Mars once and for all. \n",
"Walsh sends Major Polk on a fools errand so that he can trick Polk into the Venusian jungle and kill him, serving as revenge for the embarrassment Polk caused him years ago. \n",
"Walsh sends Polk on a fools errands in order to trick him into a full time job on Venus.\n",
"Walsh sends Polk on a fools errand in order to trick him into finding trader Joe, who is responsible for some of Walsh’s recent military problems.\n"
] | 2 | 2 | [
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63,890 | 63890_67FQICLN | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | A Planet Named Joe | 1966.0 | Hunter, Evan | Human-alien encounters -- Fiction; Short stories; Science fiction; PS; Venus (Planet) -- Fiction | A PLANET NAMED JOE
By S. A. LOMBINO
There were more Joes on Venus than you could shake
a ray-gun at. Perhaps there was method in Colonel
Walsh's madness—murder-madness—when he ordered Major
Polk to scan the planet for a guy named Joe.
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from Planet Stories
November 1952. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the
U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
Colonel Walsh had a great sense of humor. I hated his guts ever since
we went through the Academy together, but he had a great sense of humor.
For example, he could have chosen a Second Looie for the job on Venus.
He might even have picked a Captain. But he liked me about as much as
I liked him, and so he decided the job was just right for a Major. At
least, that's what he told me.
I stood at attention before his desk in the Patrol Station. We were
somewhere in Area Two on Earth, takeoff point for any operations in
Space II. The duty was fine, and I liked it a lot. Come to think of
it, the most I ever did was inspect a few defective tubes every now and
then. The rest was gravy, and Colonel Walsh wasn't going to let me get
by with gravy.
"It will be a simple assignment, Major," he said to me, peering over
his fingers. He held them up in front of him like a cathedral.
"Yes, sir," I said.
"It will involve finding one man, a Venusian native."
I wanted to say, "Then why the hell don't you send a green kid on
the job? Why me?" Instead, I nodded and watched him playing with his
fingers.
"The man is a trader of sorts. Rather intelligent." He paused, then
added, "For a native, that is."
I had never liked Walsh's attitude toward natives. I hadn't liked the
way he'd treated the natives on Mars ever since he'd taken over there.
Which brought to mind an important point.
"I always figured Venus was under the jurisdiction of Space III, sir. I
thought our activities were confined to Mars."
He folded his fingers like a deck of cards and dropped them on his desk
as if he were waiting for me to cut.
"Mmmm," he said, "yes, that's true. But this is a special job. It so
happens this Venusian is the one man who can help us understand just
what's happening on Mars."
I tried to picture a Venusian understanding Mars and I didn't get very
far.
"He's had many dealings with the natives there," Walsh explained. "If
anyone can tell us the reasons for the revolt, he can."
If Walsh really wanted to know the reasons for the revolt, I could give
them to him in one word: Walsh. I had to laugh at the way he called
it "revolt." It had been going on for six months now and we'd lost at
least a thousand men from Space II. Revolt.
"And this man is on Venus now?" I asked for confirmation. I'd never
been to Venus, being in Space II ever since I'd left the Moon run. It
was just like Walsh to ship me off to a strange place.
"Yes, Major," he said. "This man is on Venus."
At the Academy he had called me Fred. That was before I'd reported
him for sleeping on Boiler Watch. He'd goofed off on a pile of uranium
that could've, and almost did, blow the barracks sky-high that night.
He still thought it was my fault, as if I'd done the wrong thing by
reporting him. And now, through the fouled-up machinery that exists in
any military organization, he outranked me.
"And the man's name, sir?"
"Joe." A tight smile played on his face.
"Joe what?" I asked.
"Just Joe."
"Just Joe?"
"Yes," Walsh said. "A native, you know. They rarely go in for more than
first names. But then, it should be simple to find a man with a name
like Joe. Among the natives, I mean."
"I don't know, sir."
"A relatively simple assignment," Walsh said.
"Can you tell me anything else about this man? Physical appearance?
Personal habits? Anything?"
Walsh seemed to consider this for a moment. "Well, physically he's like
any of the other Venusians, so I can't give you much help there. He
does have a peculiar habit, though."
"What's that?"
"He has an affinity for Terran cigarettes."
I sighed. "Well, it's not very much to go on."
"You'll find him," Walsh said, grinning. "I'm sure of it."
The trip to Venus came off without a hitch. I did a lot of thinking on
that trip. I thought about Mars and the revolt there. And I thought
about Colonel Leonard Walsh and how he was supposed to be quelling that
revolt. Ever since Walsh had taken command, ever since he'd started
pushing the natives around, there'd been trouble. It was almost as if
the whole damned planet had blown up in our faces the moment he took
over. Swell guy, Walsh.
Venus was hotter than I'd expected it to be. Much too hot for the tunic
I was wearing. It smelled, too. A funny smell I couldn't place. Like
a mixture of old shoe and after-shave. There were plants everywhere
I looked. Big plants and small ones, some blooming with flowers I'd
never seen before, and some as bare as cactus.
I recognized a blue figure as one of the natives the pilot had told me
about. He was tall, looking almost human except that everything about
him was elongated. His features, his muscles, everything seemed to have
been stretched like a rubber band. I kept expecting him to pop back to
normal. Instead, he flashed a double row of brilliant teeth at me.
I wondered if he spoke English. "Hey, boy," I called.
He ambled over with long-legged strides that closed the distance
between us in seconds.
"Call me Joe," he said.
I dropped my bags and stared at him. Maybe this
was
going to be a
simple assignment after all. "I sure am glad to see you, Joe," I said.
"Same here, Toots," he answered.
"The guys back in Space II are searching high and low for you," I told
him.
"You've got the wrong number," he said, and I was a little surprised at
his use of Terran idiom.
"You are Joe, aren't you? Joe the trader?"
"I'm Joe, all right," he said. "Only thing I ever traded, though, was a
pocketknife. Got a set of keys for it."
"Oh," I said, my voice conveying my disappointment. I sighed and began
wondering just how I should go about contacting the Joe I was looking
for. My orders said I was to report to Captain Bransten immediately
upon arrival. I figured the hell with Captain Bransten. I outranked him
anyway, and there wasn't much he could do if I decided to stop for a
drink first.
"Where's the Officer's Club?" I asked the Venusian.
"Are you buying information or are you just curious?"
"Can you take me there?" I asked.
"Sure thing, Toots." He picked up my bags and started walking up a
heavily overgrown path. We'd probably walked for about ten minutes when
he dropped my bags and said, "There it is."
The Officer's Club was a plasteel hut with window shields that
protected it from the heat of the sun. It didn't look too comfortable
but I really wanted that drink. I reached into my tunic and slipped
the native thirty solars.
He stared at the credits curiously and then shrugged his shoulders. "Oh
well, you're new here. We'll let it go."
He took off then, while I stared after him, wondering just what he'd
meant. Had I tipped him too little?
I shrugged and looked over at the Officer's Club. From the outside it
looked as hot as hell.
On the inside it was about two degrees short of that mark. I began to
curse Walsh for taking me away from my nice soft job in Space II.
There wasn't much inside the club. A few tables and chairs, a dart game
and a bar. Behind the bar a tall Venusian lounged.
I walked over and asked, "What are you serving, pal?"
"Call me Joe," he answered.
He caught me off balance. "What?"
"Joe," he said again.
A faint glimmer of understanding began to penetrate my thick skull.
"You wouldn't happen to be Joe the trader? The guy who knows all about
Mars, would you?"
"I never left home," he said simply. "What are you drinking?"
That rat! That dirty, filthy, stinking, unprincipled....
But then, it should be simple to find a man with a name like
Joe.
Among the natives, I mean.
Sure. Oh sure. Real simple. Walsh was about the lowest, most
contemptible....
"What are you drinking, pal?" the Venusian asked again.
"Skip it," I said. "How do I get to the captain's shack?"
"Follow your nose, pal. Can't miss it."
I started to pick up my bag as another Venusian entered. He waved at
the bartender.
"Hello, Joe," he said. "How's it going?"
"Not so hot, Joe," the bartender replied.
I listened in fascination. Joe, Joe, Joe. So this was Walsh's idea of a
great gag. Very funny. Very....
"You Major Polk, sweetheart?" the Venusian who'd just come in asked.
"Yes," I said, still thinking of Colonel Walsh.
"You better get your butt over to the captain's shack," he said. "He's
about ready to post you as overdue."
"Sure," I said wearily. "Will you take my bags, please?"
"Roger," he answered. He picked up the bags and nodded at the bar.
"So long, Joe," he said to the bartender.
"See you, Joe," the bartender called back.
Captain Bransten was a mousey, unimpressive sort of man. He was wearing
a tropical tunic, but he still resembled a wilted lily more than he did
an officer.
"Have a seat, Major," he offered. He reached for a cigarette box on the
desk and extended it to me. He coughed in embarrassment when he saw it
was empty. Quickly, he pressed a button on his desk and the door popped
open. A tall, blue Venusian stepped lithely into the room.
"Sir?" the Venusian asked.
"We're out of cigarettes, Joe," the Captain said. "Will you get us
some, please?"
"Sure thing," the Venusian answered. He smiled broadly and closed the
door behind him.
Another Joe
, I thought.
Another damned Joe.
"They steal them," Captain Bransten said abruptly.
"Steal what?" I asked.
"Cigarettes. I sometimes think the cigarette is one of the few things
they like about Terran culture."
So Walsh had taken care of that angle too.
He does have a peculiar
habit, though. He has an affinity for Terran cigarettes.
Cigarettes
was the tip I should have given; not solars.
"All right," I said, "suppose we start at the beginning."
Captain Bransten opened his eyes wide. "Sir?" he asked.
"What's with all this Joe business? It may be a very original name but
I think its popularity here is a little outstanding."
Captain Bransten began to chuckle softly. I personally didn't think it
was so funny. I tossed him my withering Superior Officer's gaze and
waited for his explanation.
"I hadn't realized this was your first time on Venus," he said.
"Is there a local hero named Joe?" I asked.
"No, no, nothing like that," he assured me. "It's a simple culture, you
know. Not nearly as developed as Mars."
"I can see that," I said bitingly.
"And the natives are only now becoming acquainted with Terran culture.
Lots of enlisted men, you know."
I began to get the idea. And I began to appreciate Walsh's doubtful
ancestry more keenly.
"It's impossible to tell exactly where it all started, of course,"
Bransten was saying.
I was beginning to get angry. Very angry. I was thinking of Walsh
sitting back in a nice cozy foam chair back on Earth.
"Get to the point, Captain!" I barked.
"Easy, sir," Bransten said, turning pale. I could see that the Captain
wasn't used to entertaining Majors. "The enlisted men. You know how
they are. They'll ask a native to do something and they'll call him
Joe. 'Hey, Joe, give me a hand with this.' Or 'Listen, Joe, how'd you
like to earn some cigarettes?' Do you follow?"
"I follow, all right," I said bitterly.
"Well," Bransten went on, "that sort of thing mushrooms. The natives
are a simple, almost childish people. It appealed to them—the Joe
business, I mean. Now they're all Joe. They like it. That and the
cigarettes."
He cleared his throat and looked at me apologetically as if he were
personally responsible for Venusian culture. In fact, he looked as if
he were responsible for having put Venus in the heavens in the first
place.
"Do you understand, Major? Just a case of extended idiom, that's all."
Just a case of extended
idiot
, I thought. An idiot on a wild goose
chase a hell of a long way from home.
"I understand perfectly," I snapped. "Where are my quarters?"
Bransten asked a Venusian named Joe to show me my quarters, reminding
me that chow was at thirteen hundred. As I was leaving, the first
Venusian came back with the cigarettes Bransten had ordered.
I could tell by the look on his face that he probably had half a carton
stuffed into his pockets. I shrugged and went to change into a tropical
tunic.
I called Earth right after chow. The Captain assured me that this sort
of thing was definitely against regulations, but he submitted when I
twinkled my little gold leaf under his nose.
Walsh's face appeared on the screen. He was smiling, looking like a fat
pussy cat.
"What is it, Major?" he asked.
"This man Joe," I said. "Can you give me any more on him?"
Walsh's grin grew wider. "Why, Major," he said, "you're not having any
difficulties, are you?"
"None at all," I snapped back. "I just thought I'd be able to find him
a lot sooner if...."
"Take your time, Major," Walsh beamed. "There's no rush at all."
"I thought...."
"I'm sure you can do the job," Walsh cut in. "I wouldn't have sent you
otherwise."
Hell, I was through kidding around. "Look...."
"He's somewhere in the jungle, you know," Walsh said.
I wanted to ram my fist into the screen, right smack up against those
big white teeth. Instead, I cut off the transmission and watched the
surprised look on his face as his screen went blank millions of miles
away.
He blinked at the screen, trying to realize I'd deliberately hung up on
him.
"Polk!" he shouted, "can you hear me?"
I smiled, saw the twisted hatred on his features, and then the screen
on my end went blank, too.
He's somewhere in the jungle, you know.
I thanked Captain Bransten for his hospitality and went back to my
quarters.
As I saw it, there were two courses for me to follow.
One: I could say the hell with Walsh and Venus. That would mean hopping
the next ship back to Earth.
It would also mean disobeying the direct order of a superior officer.
It might mean demotion, and it might mean getting bounced out of the
Service altogether.
Two: I could assume there really was a guy name Joe somewhere in that
jungle, a Joe separate and apart from the other Joes on this planet, a
trader Joe who knew the Martians well. I could always admit failure, of
course, and return empty handed. Mission not accomplished. Or, I might
really find a guy who was trader Joe.
I made my decision quickly. I wanted to stay in the Service, and
besides Walsh may have been on the level for the first time in his
life. Maybe there was a Joe here who could help us on Mars. If there
was I'd try to find him. It was still a hell of a trick though.
I cursed Walsh again and pushed the buzzer near my bed.
A tall Venusian stepped into the room.
"Joe?" I asked, just to be sure.
"Who else, boss?" he answered.
"I'm trying to locate someone," I said. "I'll need a guide to take me
into the jungle. Can you get me one?"
"It'll cost you, boss," the Venusian said.
"How much?"
"Two cartons of cigarettes at least."
"Who's the guide?" I asked.
"How's the price sound?"
"Fine, fine," I said impatiently. And the Captain had said they were
almost a childish people!
"His name is Joe," the Venusian told me. "Best damn guide on the
planet. Take you anywhere you want to go, do anything you want to do.
Courageous. Doesn't know the meaning of fear. I've known him to...."
"Skip it," I said, cutting the promotion short. "Tell him to show up
around fifteen hundred with a complete list of what we'll need."
The Venusian started to leave.
"And Joe," I said, stopping him at the door, "I hope you're not
overlooking your commission on the deal."
His face broke into a wide grin. "No danger of that, boss," he said.
When he was gone I began figuring out a plan of action. Obviously, I'd
just have to traipse through the jungle looking for a guy named Joe on
a planet where everyone was named Joe. Everybody, at least, but the
Captain, the small garrison attached to the Station, and me.
I began wondering why Walsh had gone to so much trouble to get rid of
me. The job, as I saw it, would take a hell of a long time. It seemed
like a silly thing to do, just to get even with a guy for something
that had happened years ago. He surely must have realized that I'd be
back again, sooner or later. Maybe he had another little junket all set
for me.
Or maybe he didn't expect me to come back.
The thought hadn't occurred to me before this, and I began to consider
it seriously. Walsh was no good, rotten clear through. He was failing
at the job of keeping Mars in hand, and he probably realized that a
few more mistakes on his part would mean the end of his career with
Space II. I chuckled as I thought of him isolated in some God-forsaken
place like Space V or Space VII. This probably bothered him a lot, too.
But what probably bothered him more was the fact that I was next in
command. If he were transferred, I'd be in charge of Space II, and I
could understand how much that would appeal to Walsh.
I tried to figure the thing out sensibly, tried to weigh his good
points against his bad. But it all came back to the same thing. A
guy who would deliberately go to sleep on Boiler Watch with a ton of
uranium ready to blast a barracks to smithereens if it wasn't watched,
would deliberately do just about anything.
Sending me off on a wild goose chase after a character named Joe may
have been a gag. But it may have been something a little grimmer than a
gag, and I made up my mind to be extremely careful from here on in.
The guide arrived at fifteen hundred on the dot. He was tall,
elongated, looked almost like all the other Venusians I'd seen so far.
"I understand you need a Grade A guide, sir," he said.
"Are you familiar with the jungle?" I asked him.
"Born and raised there, sir. Know it like the back of my hand."
"Has Joe told you what the payment will be?"
"Yes, sir. A carton and a half of cigarettes."
I thought about Joe deducting his commission and smiled.
"When can we leave?"
"Right away, sir. We won't need much really. I've made a list of
supplies and I can get them in less than an hour. I suggest you wear
light clothing, boots, and a hat."
"Will I need a weapon?"
He looked at me, his eyes faintly amused. "Why, what for, sir?"
"Never mind," I said. "What's your name, by the way?"
He lifted his eyebrows, and his eyes widened in his narrow face. He was
definitely surprised.
"Joe," he said. "Didn't you know?"
When we'd been out for a while I discovered why Joe had suggested the
boots and the hat. The undergrowth was often sharp and jagged and it
would have sliced my legs to ribbons were they not protected by the
high boots. The hat kept the strong sun off my head.
Joe was an excellent guide and a pleasant companion. He seemed to be
enjoying a great romp, seemed to love the jungle and take a secret
pleasure in the work he was doing. There were times when I couldn't
see three feet ahead of me. He'd stand stock still for a few minutes,
his head barely moving, his eyes darting from one plant to another.
Then he'd say, "This way," and take off into what looked like more
impenetrable jungle invariably to find a little path leading directly
to another village.
Each village was the same. The natives would come running out of their
huts, tall and blue, shouting, "Cigarettes, Joe? Cigarettes?" It took
me a while to realize they were addressing me and not my guide.
Everybody was Joe. It was one beautiful, happy, joyous round of
stinking, hot jungle. And I wasn't getting any nearer my man. Nor had
I any idea how I was supposed to find him. I began to feel pretty low
about the whole affair.
Joe, on the other hand, enjoyed every moment of the trip. In each
village he greeted the natives cheerfully, told them stories, swapped
gossip and jokes. And when it was time to leave, he would say goodbye
to all his friends and we would plunge into the twisted foliage again.
His spirits were always high and he never failed to say the right thing
that would give a momentary lift to my own depressed state of mind. He
would talk for hours on end as we hacked our way through the jungle.
"I like Venus," he said once. "I would never leave it."
"Have you ever been to Earth?" I asked.
"No," Joe replied. "I like Terrans too, you understand. They are good
for Venus. And they are fun."
"Fun?" I asked, thinking of a particular species of Terran: species
Leonard Walsh.
"Yes, yes," he said wholeheartedly. "They joke and they laugh and ...
well, you know."
"I suppose so," I admitted.
Joe smiled secretly, and we pushed on. I began to find, more and more,
that I had started to talk freely to Joe. In the beginning he had been
just my guide. There had been the strained relationship of employer and
employee. But as the days lengthened into weeks, the formal atmosphere
began to crumble. I found myself telling him all about Earth, about
the people there, about my decision to attend the Academy, the rigid
tests, the grind, even the Moon run. Joe was a good listener, nodding
sympathetically, finding experiences in his own life to parallel my own.
And as our relationship progressed from a casual one to a definitely
friendly one, Joe seemed more enthusiastic than ever to keep up our
grinding pace to find what we were looking for.
Once we stopped in a clearing to rest. Joe lounged on the matted
greenery, his long body stretched out in front of him, the knife
gleaming in his belt. I'd seen him slash his way through thick, tangled
vines with that knife, his long, muscular arms powerfully slicing
through them like strips of silk.
"How far are we from the Station?" I asked.
"Three or four Earth weeks," he replied.
I sighed wearily. "Where do we go from here?"
"There are more villages," he said.
"We'll never find him."
"Possibly," Joe mused, the smile creeping over his face again.
"A wild goose chase. A fool's errand."
"We'd better get started," Joe said simply.
I got to my feet and we started the march again. Joe was still fresh, a
brilliant contrast to me, weary and dejected. Somehow, I had the same
feeling I'd had a long time ago on my sixteenth birthday. One of my
friends had taken me all over the city, finally dropping me off at my
own house where the whole gang was gathered for a surprise party. Joe
reminded me of that friend.
"There's a village ahead," he said, and the grin on his face was large
now, his eyes shining.
Something was missing here. Natives. There were no natives rushing out
to greet us. No cries of "Cigarettes? Cigarettes?" I caught up with Joe.
"What's the story?" I whispered.
He shrugged knowingly and continued walking.
And then I saw the ship, nose pointing into space, catching the rays of
the sun like a great silver bullet.
"What...?" I started.
"It's all right," Joe said, smiling.
The ship looked vaguely familiar. I noticed the crest of Space II near
the nose, and a lot of things became clear then. I also saw Walsh
standing near one of the huts, a stun gun in his hand.
"Hello, Major," he called, almost cheerfully. The gun didn't look
cheerful, though. It was pointed at my head.
"Fancy meeting you here, Colonel," I said, trying to match his
joviality. Somehow it didn't quite come off.
Joe was walking beside me, waving at the colonel, beaming all over with
happiness.
"I see you found your man," Walsh said.
I turned rapidly. Joe nodded and kept grinning, a grin that told me he
was getting a big kick out of all this. Like a kid playing a game.
I faced Walsh again. "Okay, what's it all about, pal?"
"Colonel," Walsh corrected me. "You mustn't forget to say Colonel,
Major
." He emphasized my rank, and he said it with a sort of ruthless
finality.
I waited. I could see he was just busting to tell me how clever he'd
been. Besides, there wasn't much I could do but wait. Not with Walsh
pointing the stun gun at my middle.
"We've come a long way since the Academy, haven't we, Major?"
"If you mean in miles," I said, looking around at the plants, "we sure
have."
Walsh grinned a little. "Always the wit," he said drily. And then the
smile faded from his lips and his eyes took on a hard lustre. "I'm
going to kill you, you know." He said it as if he were saying, "I think
it'll rain tomorrow."
Joe almost clapped his hands together with glee. He was really enjoying
this. Another of those funny Terran games.
"You gave me a powerful handicap to overcome," Walsh said. "I suppose I
should thank you, really."
"You're welcome," I said.
"It wasn't easy living down the disgrace you caused me."
"It was your own damn fault," I said. "You knew what you were doing
when you decided to cork off."
Beside me, Joe chuckled a little, enjoying the game immensely.
"You didn't have to report me," Walsh said.
"No? Maybe I should have forgotten all about it? Maybe I should have
nudged you and served you orange juice? So you could do it again
sometime and maybe blow up the whole damn Academy!"
Walsh was silent for a long time. When he spoke his voice was barely
audible. The heat was oppressive, as if it were concentrated on this
little spot in the jungle, focusing all its penetration on a small,
unimportant drama.
I could hear Joe breathing beside me.
"I'm on my way out," Walsh rasped. "Finished, do you understand?"
"Good," I said. And I meant it.
"This Mars thing. A terrible fix. Terrible."
Beside me, a slight frown crossed Joe's face. Apparently he couldn't
understand the seriousness of our voices. What had happened to the
game, the fun?
"You brought the Mars business on yourself," I told Walsh. "There was
never any trouble before you took command."
"The natives," he practically shouted. "They ... they...."
Joe caught his breath sharply, and I wondered what Walsh was going to
say about the natives. Apparently he'd realized that Joe was a native.
Or maybe Joe's knife had something to do with it.
"What about the natives?" I asked.
"Nothing," Walsh said. "Nothing." He was silent for a while.
"A man of my calibre," he said then, his face grim. "Dealing with
savages." He caught himself again and threw a hasty glance at Joe.
The perplexed frown had grown heavier on Joe's face. He looked at the
colonel in puzzlement.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/3/8/9/63890//63890-h//63890-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | Major Polk refers to his long hike through the jungle with guide Joe as being like. . .
| 63890_67FQICLN_5 | [
"The time a friend took him on a journey through the city on his birthday.\n",
"The time Walsh fell asleep on the job and almost destroyed the barracks.",
"His time in boot camp.\n",
"The relentless way in which Venusians constantly ask for more cigarettes.\n"
] | 1 | 1 | [
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63,890 | 63890_67FQICLN | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | A Planet Named Joe | 1966.0 | Hunter, Evan | Human-alien encounters -- Fiction; Short stories; Science fiction; PS; Venus (Planet) -- Fiction | A PLANET NAMED JOE
By S. A. LOMBINO
There were more Joes on Venus than you could shake
a ray-gun at. Perhaps there was method in Colonel
Walsh's madness—murder-madness—when he ordered Major
Polk to scan the planet for a guy named Joe.
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from Planet Stories
November 1952. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the
U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
Colonel Walsh had a great sense of humor. I hated his guts ever since
we went through the Academy together, but he had a great sense of humor.
For example, he could have chosen a Second Looie for the job on Venus.
He might even have picked a Captain. But he liked me about as much as
I liked him, and so he decided the job was just right for a Major. At
least, that's what he told me.
I stood at attention before his desk in the Patrol Station. We were
somewhere in Area Two on Earth, takeoff point for any operations in
Space II. The duty was fine, and I liked it a lot. Come to think of
it, the most I ever did was inspect a few defective tubes every now and
then. The rest was gravy, and Colonel Walsh wasn't going to let me get
by with gravy.
"It will be a simple assignment, Major," he said to me, peering over
his fingers. He held them up in front of him like a cathedral.
"Yes, sir," I said.
"It will involve finding one man, a Venusian native."
I wanted to say, "Then why the hell don't you send a green kid on
the job? Why me?" Instead, I nodded and watched him playing with his
fingers.
"The man is a trader of sorts. Rather intelligent." He paused, then
added, "For a native, that is."
I had never liked Walsh's attitude toward natives. I hadn't liked the
way he'd treated the natives on Mars ever since he'd taken over there.
Which brought to mind an important point.
"I always figured Venus was under the jurisdiction of Space III, sir. I
thought our activities were confined to Mars."
He folded his fingers like a deck of cards and dropped them on his desk
as if he were waiting for me to cut.
"Mmmm," he said, "yes, that's true. But this is a special job. It so
happens this Venusian is the one man who can help us understand just
what's happening on Mars."
I tried to picture a Venusian understanding Mars and I didn't get very
far.
"He's had many dealings with the natives there," Walsh explained. "If
anyone can tell us the reasons for the revolt, he can."
If Walsh really wanted to know the reasons for the revolt, I could give
them to him in one word: Walsh. I had to laugh at the way he called
it "revolt." It had been going on for six months now and we'd lost at
least a thousand men from Space II. Revolt.
"And this man is on Venus now?" I asked for confirmation. I'd never
been to Venus, being in Space II ever since I'd left the Moon run. It
was just like Walsh to ship me off to a strange place.
"Yes, Major," he said. "This man is on Venus."
At the Academy he had called me Fred. That was before I'd reported
him for sleeping on Boiler Watch. He'd goofed off on a pile of uranium
that could've, and almost did, blow the barracks sky-high that night.
He still thought it was my fault, as if I'd done the wrong thing by
reporting him. And now, through the fouled-up machinery that exists in
any military organization, he outranked me.
"And the man's name, sir?"
"Joe." A tight smile played on his face.
"Joe what?" I asked.
"Just Joe."
"Just Joe?"
"Yes," Walsh said. "A native, you know. They rarely go in for more than
first names. But then, it should be simple to find a man with a name
like Joe. Among the natives, I mean."
"I don't know, sir."
"A relatively simple assignment," Walsh said.
"Can you tell me anything else about this man? Physical appearance?
Personal habits? Anything?"
Walsh seemed to consider this for a moment. "Well, physically he's like
any of the other Venusians, so I can't give you much help there. He
does have a peculiar habit, though."
"What's that?"
"He has an affinity for Terran cigarettes."
I sighed. "Well, it's not very much to go on."
"You'll find him," Walsh said, grinning. "I'm sure of it."
The trip to Venus came off without a hitch. I did a lot of thinking on
that trip. I thought about Mars and the revolt there. And I thought
about Colonel Leonard Walsh and how he was supposed to be quelling that
revolt. Ever since Walsh had taken command, ever since he'd started
pushing the natives around, there'd been trouble. It was almost as if
the whole damned planet had blown up in our faces the moment he took
over. Swell guy, Walsh.
Venus was hotter than I'd expected it to be. Much too hot for the tunic
I was wearing. It smelled, too. A funny smell I couldn't place. Like
a mixture of old shoe and after-shave. There were plants everywhere
I looked. Big plants and small ones, some blooming with flowers I'd
never seen before, and some as bare as cactus.
I recognized a blue figure as one of the natives the pilot had told me
about. He was tall, looking almost human except that everything about
him was elongated. His features, his muscles, everything seemed to have
been stretched like a rubber band. I kept expecting him to pop back to
normal. Instead, he flashed a double row of brilliant teeth at me.
I wondered if he spoke English. "Hey, boy," I called.
He ambled over with long-legged strides that closed the distance
between us in seconds.
"Call me Joe," he said.
I dropped my bags and stared at him. Maybe this
was
going to be a
simple assignment after all. "I sure am glad to see you, Joe," I said.
"Same here, Toots," he answered.
"The guys back in Space II are searching high and low for you," I told
him.
"You've got the wrong number," he said, and I was a little surprised at
his use of Terran idiom.
"You are Joe, aren't you? Joe the trader?"
"I'm Joe, all right," he said. "Only thing I ever traded, though, was a
pocketknife. Got a set of keys for it."
"Oh," I said, my voice conveying my disappointment. I sighed and began
wondering just how I should go about contacting the Joe I was looking
for. My orders said I was to report to Captain Bransten immediately
upon arrival. I figured the hell with Captain Bransten. I outranked him
anyway, and there wasn't much he could do if I decided to stop for a
drink first.
"Where's the Officer's Club?" I asked the Venusian.
"Are you buying information or are you just curious?"
"Can you take me there?" I asked.
"Sure thing, Toots." He picked up my bags and started walking up a
heavily overgrown path. We'd probably walked for about ten minutes when
he dropped my bags and said, "There it is."
The Officer's Club was a plasteel hut with window shields that
protected it from the heat of the sun. It didn't look too comfortable
but I really wanted that drink. I reached into my tunic and slipped
the native thirty solars.
He stared at the credits curiously and then shrugged his shoulders. "Oh
well, you're new here. We'll let it go."
He took off then, while I stared after him, wondering just what he'd
meant. Had I tipped him too little?
I shrugged and looked over at the Officer's Club. From the outside it
looked as hot as hell.
On the inside it was about two degrees short of that mark. I began to
curse Walsh for taking me away from my nice soft job in Space II.
There wasn't much inside the club. A few tables and chairs, a dart game
and a bar. Behind the bar a tall Venusian lounged.
I walked over and asked, "What are you serving, pal?"
"Call me Joe," he answered.
He caught me off balance. "What?"
"Joe," he said again.
A faint glimmer of understanding began to penetrate my thick skull.
"You wouldn't happen to be Joe the trader? The guy who knows all about
Mars, would you?"
"I never left home," he said simply. "What are you drinking?"
That rat! That dirty, filthy, stinking, unprincipled....
But then, it should be simple to find a man with a name like
Joe.
Among the natives, I mean.
Sure. Oh sure. Real simple. Walsh was about the lowest, most
contemptible....
"What are you drinking, pal?" the Venusian asked again.
"Skip it," I said. "How do I get to the captain's shack?"
"Follow your nose, pal. Can't miss it."
I started to pick up my bag as another Venusian entered. He waved at
the bartender.
"Hello, Joe," he said. "How's it going?"
"Not so hot, Joe," the bartender replied.
I listened in fascination. Joe, Joe, Joe. So this was Walsh's idea of a
great gag. Very funny. Very....
"You Major Polk, sweetheart?" the Venusian who'd just come in asked.
"Yes," I said, still thinking of Colonel Walsh.
"You better get your butt over to the captain's shack," he said. "He's
about ready to post you as overdue."
"Sure," I said wearily. "Will you take my bags, please?"
"Roger," he answered. He picked up the bags and nodded at the bar.
"So long, Joe," he said to the bartender.
"See you, Joe," the bartender called back.
Captain Bransten was a mousey, unimpressive sort of man. He was wearing
a tropical tunic, but he still resembled a wilted lily more than he did
an officer.
"Have a seat, Major," he offered. He reached for a cigarette box on the
desk and extended it to me. He coughed in embarrassment when he saw it
was empty. Quickly, he pressed a button on his desk and the door popped
open. A tall, blue Venusian stepped lithely into the room.
"Sir?" the Venusian asked.
"We're out of cigarettes, Joe," the Captain said. "Will you get us
some, please?"
"Sure thing," the Venusian answered. He smiled broadly and closed the
door behind him.
Another Joe
, I thought.
Another damned Joe.
"They steal them," Captain Bransten said abruptly.
"Steal what?" I asked.
"Cigarettes. I sometimes think the cigarette is one of the few things
they like about Terran culture."
So Walsh had taken care of that angle too.
He does have a peculiar
habit, though. He has an affinity for Terran cigarettes.
Cigarettes
was the tip I should have given; not solars.
"All right," I said, "suppose we start at the beginning."
Captain Bransten opened his eyes wide. "Sir?" he asked.
"What's with all this Joe business? It may be a very original name but
I think its popularity here is a little outstanding."
Captain Bransten began to chuckle softly. I personally didn't think it
was so funny. I tossed him my withering Superior Officer's gaze and
waited for his explanation.
"I hadn't realized this was your first time on Venus," he said.
"Is there a local hero named Joe?" I asked.
"No, no, nothing like that," he assured me. "It's a simple culture, you
know. Not nearly as developed as Mars."
"I can see that," I said bitingly.
"And the natives are only now becoming acquainted with Terran culture.
Lots of enlisted men, you know."
I began to get the idea. And I began to appreciate Walsh's doubtful
ancestry more keenly.
"It's impossible to tell exactly where it all started, of course,"
Bransten was saying.
I was beginning to get angry. Very angry. I was thinking of Walsh
sitting back in a nice cozy foam chair back on Earth.
"Get to the point, Captain!" I barked.
"Easy, sir," Bransten said, turning pale. I could see that the Captain
wasn't used to entertaining Majors. "The enlisted men. You know how
they are. They'll ask a native to do something and they'll call him
Joe. 'Hey, Joe, give me a hand with this.' Or 'Listen, Joe, how'd you
like to earn some cigarettes?' Do you follow?"
"I follow, all right," I said bitterly.
"Well," Bransten went on, "that sort of thing mushrooms. The natives
are a simple, almost childish people. It appealed to them—the Joe
business, I mean. Now they're all Joe. They like it. That and the
cigarettes."
He cleared his throat and looked at me apologetically as if he were
personally responsible for Venusian culture. In fact, he looked as if
he were responsible for having put Venus in the heavens in the first
place.
"Do you understand, Major? Just a case of extended idiom, that's all."
Just a case of extended
idiot
, I thought. An idiot on a wild goose
chase a hell of a long way from home.
"I understand perfectly," I snapped. "Where are my quarters?"
Bransten asked a Venusian named Joe to show me my quarters, reminding
me that chow was at thirteen hundred. As I was leaving, the first
Venusian came back with the cigarettes Bransten had ordered.
I could tell by the look on his face that he probably had half a carton
stuffed into his pockets. I shrugged and went to change into a tropical
tunic.
I called Earth right after chow. The Captain assured me that this sort
of thing was definitely against regulations, but he submitted when I
twinkled my little gold leaf under his nose.
Walsh's face appeared on the screen. He was smiling, looking like a fat
pussy cat.
"What is it, Major?" he asked.
"This man Joe," I said. "Can you give me any more on him?"
Walsh's grin grew wider. "Why, Major," he said, "you're not having any
difficulties, are you?"
"None at all," I snapped back. "I just thought I'd be able to find him
a lot sooner if...."
"Take your time, Major," Walsh beamed. "There's no rush at all."
"I thought...."
"I'm sure you can do the job," Walsh cut in. "I wouldn't have sent you
otherwise."
Hell, I was through kidding around. "Look...."
"He's somewhere in the jungle, you know," Walsh said.
I wanted to ram my fist into the screen, right smack up against those
big white teeth. Instead, I cut off the transmission and watched the
surprised look on his face as his screen went blank millions of miles
away.
He blinked at the screen, trying to realize I'd deliberately hung up on
him.
"Polk!" he shouted, "can you hear me?"
I smiled, saw the twisted hatred on his features, and then the screen
on my end went blank, too.
He's somewhere in the jungle, you know.
I thanked Captain Bransten for his hospitality and went back to my
quarters.
As I saw it, there were two courses for me to follow.
One: I could say the hell with Walsh and Venus. That would mean hopping
the next ship back to Earth.
It would also mean disobeying the direct order of a superior officer.
It might mean demotion, and it might mean getting bounced out of the
Service altogether.
Two: I could assume there really was a guy name Joe somewhere in that
jungle, a Joe separate and apart from the other Joes on this planet, a
trader Joe who knew the Martians well. I could always admit failure, of
course, and return empty handed. Mission not accomplished. Or, I might
really find a guy who was trader Joe.
I made my decision quickly. I wanted to stay in the Service, and
besides Walsh may have been on the level for the first time in his
life. Maybe there was a Joe here who could help us on Mars. If there
was I'd try to find him. It was still a hell of a trick though.
I cursed Walsh again and pushed the buzzer near my bed.
A tall Venusian stepped into the room.
"Joe?" I asked, just to be sure.
"Who else, boss?" he answered.
"I'm trying to locate someone," I said. "I'll need a guide to take me
into the jungle. Can you get me one?"
"It'll cost you, boss," the Venusian said.
"How much?"
"Two cartons of cigarettes at least."
"Who's the guide?" I asked.
"How's the price sound?"
"Fine, fine," I said impatiently. And the Captain had said they were
almost a childish people!
"His name is Joe," the Venusian told me. "Best damn guide on the
planet. Take you anywhere you want to go, do anything you want to do.
Courageous. Doesn't know the meaning of fear. I've known him to...."
"Skip it," I said, cutting the promotion short. "Tell him to show up
around fifteen hundred with a complete list of what we'll need."
The Venusian started to leave.
"And Joe," I said, stopping him at the door, "I hope you're not
overlooking your commission on the deal."
His face broke into a wide grin. "No danger of that, boss," he said.
When he was gone I began figuring out a plan of action. Obviously, I'd
just have to traipse through the jungle looking for a guy named Joe on
a planet where everyone was named Joe. Everybody, at least, but the
Captain, the small garrison attached to the Station, and me.
I began wondering why Walsh had gone to so much trouble to get rid of
me. The job, as I saw it, would take a hell of a long time. It seemed
like a silly thing to do, just to get even with a guy for something
that had happened years ago. He surely must have realized that I'd be
back again, sooner or later. Maybe he had another little junket all set
for me.
Or maybe he didn't expect me to come back.
The thought hadn't occurred to me before this, and I began to consider
it seriously. Walsh was no good, rotten clear through. He was failing
at the job of keeping Mars in hand, and he probably realized that a
few more mistakes on his part would mean the end of his career with
Space II. I chuckled as I thought of him isolated in some God-forsaken
place like Space V or Space VII. This probably bothered him a lot, too.
But what probably bothered him more was the fact that I was next in
command. If he were transferred, I'd be in charge of Space II, and I
could understand how much that would appeal to Walsh.
I tried to figure the thing out sensibly, tried to weigh his good
points against his bad. But it all came back to the same thing. A
guy who would deliberately go to sleep on Boiler Watch with a ton of
uranium ready to blast a barracks to smithereens if it wasn't watched,
would deliberately do just about anything.
Sending me off on a wild goose chase after a character named Joe may
have been a gag. But it may have been something a little grimmer than a
gag, and I made up my mind to be extremely careful from here on in.
The guide arrived at fifteen hundred on the dot. He was tall,
elongated, looked almost like all the other Venusians I'd seen so far.
"I understand you need a Grade A guide, sir," he said.
"Are you familiar with the jungle?" I asked him.
"Born and raised there, sir. Know it like the back of my hand."
"Has Joe told you what the payment will be?"
"Yes, sir. A carton and a half of cigarettes."
I thought about Joe deducting his commission and smiled.
"When can we leave?"
"Right away, sir. We won't need much really. I've made a list of
supplies and I can get them in less than an hour. I suggest you wear
light clothing, boots, and a hat."
"Will I need a weapon?"
He looked at me, his eyes faintly amused. "Why, what for, sir?"
"Never mind," I said. "What's your name, by the way?"
He lifted his eyebrows, and his eyes widened in his narrow face. He was
definitely surprised.
"Joe," he said. "Didn't you know?"
When we'd been out for a while I discovered why Joe had suggested the
boots and the hat. The undergrowth was often sharp and jagged and it
would have sliced my legs to ribbons were they not protected by the
high boots. The hat kept the strong sun off my head.
Joe was an excellent guide and a pleasant companion. He seemed to be
enjoying a great romp, seemed to love the jungle and take a secret
pleasure in the work he was doing. There were times when I couldn't
see three feet ahead of me. He'd stand stock still for a few minutes,
his head barely moving, his eyes darting from one plant to another.
Then he'd say, "This way," and take off into what looked like more
impenetrable jungle invariably to find a little path leading directly
to another village.
Each village was the same. The natives would come running out of their
huts, tall and blue, shouting, "Cigarettes, Joe? Cigarettes?" It took
me a while to realize they were addressing me and not my guide.
Everybody was Joe. It was one beautiful, happy, joyous round of
stinking, hot jungle. And I wasn't getting any nearer my man. Nor had
I any idea how I was supposed to find him. I began to feel pretty low
about the whole affair.
Joe, on the other hand, enjoyed every moment of the trip. In each
village he greeted the natives cheerfully, told them stories, swapped
gossip and jokes. And when it was time to leave, he would say goodbye
to all his friends and we would plunge into the twisted foliage again.
His spirits were always high and he never failed to say the right thing
that would give a momentary lift to my own depressed state of mind. He
would talk for hours on end as we hacked our way through the jungle.
"I like Venus," he said once. "I would never leave it."
"Have you ever been to Earth?" I asked.
"No," Joe replied. "I like Terrans too, you understand. They are good
for Venus. And they are fun."
"Fun?" I asked, thinking of a particular species of Terran: species
Leonard Walsh.
"Yes, yes," he said wholeheartedly. "They joke and they laugh and ...
well, you know."
"I suppose so," I admitted.
Joe smiled secretly, and we pushed on. I began to find, more and more,
that I had started to talk freely to Joe. In the beginning he had been
just my guide. There had been the strained relationship of employer and
employee. But as the days lengthened into weeks, the formal atmosphere
began to crumble. I found myself telling him all about Earth, about
the people there, about my decision to attend the Academy, the rigid
tests, the grind, even the Moon run. Joe was a good listener, nodding
sympathetically, finding experiences in his own life to parallel my own.
And as our relationship progressed from a casual one to a definitely
friendly one, Joe seemed more enthusiastic than ever to keep up our
grinding pace to find what we were looking for.
Once we stopped in a clearing to rest. Joe lounged on the matted
greenery, his long body stretched out in front of him, the knife
gleaming in his belt. I'd seen him slash his way through thick, tangled
vines with that knife, his long, muscular arms powerfully slicing
through them like strips of silk.
"How far are we from the Station?" I asked.
"Three or four Earth weeks," he replied.
I sighed wearily. "Where do we go from here?"
"There are more villages," he said.
"We'll never find him."
"Possibly," Joe mused, the smile creeping over his face again.
"A wild goose chase. A fool's errand."
"We'd better get started," Joe said simply.
I got to my feet and we started the march again. Joe was still fresh, a
brilliant contrast to me, weary and dejected. Somehow, I had the same
feeling I'd had a long time ago on my sixteenth birthday. One of my
friends had taken me all over the city, finally dropping me off at my
own house where the whole gang was gathered for a surprise party. Joe
reminded me of that friend.
"There's a village ahead," he said, and the grin on his face was large
now, his eyes shining.
Something was missing here. Natives. There were no natives rushing out
to greet us. No cries of "Cigarettes? Cigarettes?" I caught up with Joe.
"What's the story?" I whispered.
He shrugged knowingly and continued walking.
And then I saw the ship, nose pointing into space, catching the rays of
the sun like a great silver bullet.
"What...?" I started.
"It's all right," Joe said, smiling.
The ship looked vaguely familiar. I noticed the crest of Space II near
the nose, and a lot of things became clear then. I also saw Walsh
standing near one of the huts, a stun gun in his hand.
"Hello, Major," he called, almost cheerfully. The gun didn't look
cheerful, though. It was pointed at my head.
"Fancy meeting you here, Colonel," I said, trying to match his
joviality. Somehow it didn't quite come off.
Joe was walking beside me, waving at the colonel, beaming all over with
happiness.
"I see you found your man," Walsh said.
I turned rapidly. Joe nodded and kept grinning, a grin that told me he
was getting a big kick out of all this. Like a kid playing a game.
I faced Walsh again. "Okay, what's it all about, pal?"
"Colonel," Walsh corrected me. "You mustn't forget to say Colonel,
Major
." He emphasized my rank, and he said it with a sort of ruthless
finality.
I waited. I could see he was just busting to tell me how clever he'd
been. Besides, there wasn't much I could do but wait. Not with Walsh
pointing the stun gun at my middle.
"We've come a long way since the Academy, haven't we, Major?"
"If you mean in miles," I said, looking around at the plants, "we sure
have."
Walsh grinned a little. "Always the wit," he said drily. And then the
smile faded from his lips and his eyes took on a hard lustre. "I'm
going to kill you, you know." He said it as if he were saying, "I think
it'll rain tomorrow."
Joe almost clapped his hands together with glee. He was really enjoying
this. Another of those funny Terran games.
"You gave me a powerful handicap to overcome," Walsh said. "I suppose I
should thank you, really."
"You're welcome," I said.
"It wasn't easy living down the disgrace you caused me."
"It was your own damn fault," I said. "You knew what you were doing
when you decided to cork off."
Beside me, Joe chuckled a little, enjoying the game immensely.
"You didn't have to report me," Walsh said.
"No? Maybe I should have forgotten all about it? Maybe I should have
nudged you and served you orange juice? So you could do it again
sometime and maybe blow up the whole damn Academy!"
Walsh was silent for a long time. When he spoke his voice was barely
audible. The heat was oppressive, as if it were concentrated on this
little spot in the jungle, focusing all its penetration on a small,
unimportant drama.
I could hear Joe breathing beside me.
"I'm on my way out," Walsh rasped. "Finished, do you understand?"
"Good," I said. And I meant it.
"This Mars thing. A terrible fix. Terrible."
Beside me, a slight frown crossed Joe's face. Apparently he couldn't
understand the seriousness of our voices. What had happened to the
game, the fun?
"You brought the Mars business on yourself," I told Walsh. "There was
never any trouble before you took command."
"The natives," he practically shouted. "They ... they...."
Joe caught his breath sharply, and I wondered what Walsh was going to
say about the natives. Apparently he'd realized that Joe was a native.
Or maybe Joe's knife had something to do with it.
"What about the natives?" I asked.
"Nothing," Walsh said. "Nothing." He was silent for a while.
"A man of my calibre," he said then, his face grim. "Dealing with
savages." He caught himself again and threw a hasty glance at Joe.
The perplexed frown had grown heavier on Joe's face. He looked at the
colonel in puzzlement.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/3/8/9/63890//63890-h//63890-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | Which three things do Venusians love about Terrans?
| 63890_67FQICLN_6 | [
"The name “Joe,” Terran cigarettes, and their fun jokes. \n",
"The name “Joe,” Terran idioms, and Terran spaceships \n",
"Terran idioms, Terran cigarettes, and the Terran interest in Venus. \n",
"The name “Joe,” Terran spaceships, and Terran cigarettes. \n"
] | 1 | 1 | [
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63,890 | 63890_67FQICLN | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | A Planet Named Joe | 1966.0 | Hunter, Evan | Human-alien encounters -- Fiction; Short stories; Science fiction; PS; Venus (Planet) -- Fiction | A PLANET NAMED JOE
By S. A. LOMBINO
There were more Joes on Venus than you could shake
a ray-gun at. Perhaps there was method in Colonel
Walsh's madness—murder-madness—when he ordered Major
Polk to scan the planet for a guy named Joe.
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from Planet Stories
November 1952. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the
U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
Colonel Walsh had a great sense of humor. I hated his guts ever since
we went through the Academy together, but he had a great sense of humor.
For example, he could have chosen a Second Looie for the job on Venus.
He might even have picked a Captain. But he liked me about as much as
I liked him, and so he decided the job was just right for a Major. At
least, that's what he told me.
I stood at attention before his desk in the Patrol Station. We were
somewhere in Area Two on Earth, takeoff point for any operations in
Space II. The duty was fine, and I liked it a lot. Come to think of
it, the most I ever did was inspect a few defective tubes every now and
then. The rest was gravy, and Colonel Walsh wasn't going to let me get
by with gravy.
"It will be a simple assignment, Major," he said to me, peering over
his fingers. He held them up in front of him like a cathedral.
"Yes, sir," I said.
"It will involve finding one man, a Venusian native."
I wanted to say, "Then why the hell don't you send a green kid on
the job? Why me?" Instead, I nodded and watched him playing with his
fingers.
"The man is a trader of sorts. Rather intelligent." He paused, then
added, "For a native, that is."
I had never liked Walsh's attitude toward natives. I hadn't liked the
way he'd treated the natives on Mars ever since he'd taken over there.
Which brought to mind an important point.
"I always figured Venus was under the jurisdiction of Space III, sir. I
thought our activities were confined to Mars."
He folded his fingers like a deck of cards and dropped them on his desk
as if he were waiting for me to cut.
"Mmmm," he said, "yes, that's true. But this is a special job. It so
happens this Venusian is the one man who can help us understand just
what's happening on Mars."
I tried to picture a Venusian understanding Mars and I didn't get very
far.
"He's had many dealings with the natives there," Walsh explained. "If
anyone can tell us the reasons for the revolt, he can."
If Walsh really wanted to know the reasons for the revolt, I could give
them to him in one word: Walsh. I had to laugh at the way he called
it "revolt." It had been going on for six months now and we'd lost at
least a thousand men from Space II. Revolt.
"And this man is on Venus now?" I asked for confirmation. I'd never
been to Venus, being in Space II ever since I'd left the Moon run. It
was just like Walsh to ship me off to a strange place.
"Yes, Major," he said. "This man is on Venus."
At the Academy he had called me Fred. That was before I'd reported
him for sleeping on Boiler Watch. He'd goofed off on a pile of uranium
that could've, and almost did, blow the barracks sky-high that night.
He still thought it was my fault, as if I'd done the wrong thing by
reporting him. And now, through the fouled-up machinery that exists in
any military organization, he outranked me.
"And the man's name, sir?"
"Joe." A tight smile played on his face.
"Joe what?" I asked.
"Just Joe."
"Just Joe?"
"Yes," Walsh said. "A native, you know. They rarely go in for more than
first names. But then, it should be simple to find a man with a name
like Joe. Among the natives, I mean."
"I don't know, sir."
"A relatively simple assignment," Walsh said.
"Can you tell me anything else about this man? Physical appearance?
Personal habits? Anything?"
Walsh seemed to consider this for a moment. "Well, physically he's like
any of the other Venusians, so I can't give you much help there. He
does have a peculiar habit, though."
"What's that?"
"He has an affinity for Terran cigarettes."
I sighed. "Well, it's not very much to go on."
"You'll find him," Walsh said, grinning. "I'm sure of it."
The trip to Venus came off without a hitch. I did a lot of thinking on
that trip. I thought about Mars and the revolt there. And I thought
about Colonel Leonard Walsh and how he was supposed to be quelling that
revolt. Ever since Walsh had taken command, ever since he'd started
pushing the natives around, there'd been trouble. It was almost as if
the whole damned planet had blown up in our faces the moment he took
over. Swell guy, Walsh.
Venus was hotter than I'd expected it to be. Much too hot for the tunic
I was wearing. It smelled, too. A funny smell I couldn't place. Like
a mixture of old shoe and after-shave. There were plants everywhere
I looked. Big plants and small ones, some blooming with flowers I'd
never seen before, and some as bare as cactus.
I recognized a blue figure as one of the natives the pilot had told me
about. He was tall, looking almost human except that everything about
him was elongated. His features, his muscles, everything seemed to have
been stretched like a rubber band. I kept expecting him to pop back to
normal. Instead, he flashed a double row of brilliant teeth at me.
I wondered if he spoke English. "Hey, boy," I called.
He ambled over with long-legged strides that closed the distance
between us in seconds.
"Call me Joe," he said.
I dropped my bags and stared at him. Maybe this
was
going to be a
simple assignment after all. "I sure am glad to see you, Joe," I said.
"Same here, Toots," he answered.
"The guys back in Space II are searching high and low for you," I told
him.
"You've got the wrong number," he said, and I was a little surprised at
his use of Terran idiom.
"You are Joe, aren't you? Joe the trader?"
"I'm Joe, all right," he said. "Only thing I ever traded, though, was a
pocketknife. Got a set of keys for it."
"Oh," I said, my voice conveying my disappointment. I sighed and began
wondering just how I should go about contacting the Joe I was looking
for. My orders said I was to report to Captain Bransten immediately
upon arrival. I figured the hell with Captain Bransten. I outranked him
anyway, and there wasn't much he could do if I decided to stop for a
drink first.
"Where's the Officer's Club?" I asked the Venusian.
"Are you buying information or are you just curious?"
"Can you take me there?" I asked.
"Sure thing, Toots." He picked up my bags and started walking up a
heavily overgrown path. We'd probably walked for about ten minutes when
he dropped my bags and said, "There it is."
The Officer's Club was a plasteel hut with window shields that
protected it from the heat of the sun. It didn't look too comfortable
but I really wanted that drink. I reached into my tunic and slipped
the native thirty solars.
He stared at the credits curiously and then shrugged his shoulders. "Oh
well, you're new here. We'll let it go."
He took off then, while I stared after him, wondering just what he'd
meant. Had I tipped him too little?
I shrugged and looked over at the Officer's Club. From the outside it
looked as hot as hell.
On the inside it was about two degrees short of that mark. I began to
curse Walsh for taking me away from my nice soft job in Space II.
There wasn't much inside the club. A few tables and chairs, a dart game
and a bar. Behind the bar a tall Venusian lounged.
I walked over and asked, "What are you serving, pal?"
"Call me Joe," he answered.
He caught me off balance. "What?"
"Joe," he said again.
A faint glimmer of understanding began to penetrate my thick skull.
"You wouldn't happen to be Joe the trader? The guy who knows all about
Mars, would you?"
"I never left home," he said simply. "What are you drinking?"
That rat! That dirty, filthy, stinking, unprincipled....
But then, it should be simple to find a man with a name like
Joe.
Among the natives, I mean.
Sure. Oh sure. Real simple. Walsh was about the lowest, most
contemptible....
"What are you drinking, pal?" the Venusian asked again.
"Skip it," I said. "How do I get to the captain's shack?"
"Follow your nose, pal. Can't miss it."
I started to pick up my bag as another Venusian entered. He waved at
the bartender.
"Hello, Joe," he said. "How's it going?"
"Not so hot, Joe," the bartender replied.
I listened in fascination. Joe, Joe, Joe. So this was Walsh's idea of a
great gag. Very funny. Very....
"You Major Polk, sweetheart?" the Venusian who'd just come in asked.
"Yes," I said, still thinking of Colonel Walsh.
"You better get your butt over to the captain's shack," he said. "He's
about ready to post you as overdue."
"Sure," I said wearily. "Will you take my bags, please?"
"Roger," he answered. He picked up the bags and nodded at the bar.
"So long, Joe," he said to the bartender.
"See you, Joe," the bartender called back.
Captain Bransten was a mousey, unimpressive sort of man. He was wearing
a tropical tunic, but he still resembled a wilted lily more than he did
an officer.
"Have a seat, Major," he offered. He reached for a cigarette box on the
desk and extended it to me. He coughed in embarrassment when he saw it
was empty. Quickly, he pressed a button on his desk and the door popped
open. A tall, blue Venusian stepped lithely into the room.
"Sir?" the Venusian asked.
"We're out of cigarettes, Joe," the Captain said. "Will you get us
some, please?"
"Sure thing," the Venusian answered. He smiled broadly and closed the
door behind him.
Another Joe
, I thought.
Another damned Joe.
"They steal them," Captain Bransten said abruptly.
"Steal what?" I asked.
"Cigarettes. I sometimes think the cigarette is one of the few things
they like about Terran culture."
So Walsh had taken care of that angle too.
He does have a peculiar
habit, though. He has an affinity for Terran cigarettes.
Cigarettes
was the tip I should have given; not solars.
"All right," I said, "suppose we start at the beginning."
Captain Bransten opened his eyes wide. "Sir?" he asked.
"What's with all this Joe business? It may be a very original name but
I think its popularity here is a little outstanding."
Captain Bransten began to chuckle softly. I personally didn't think it
was so funny. I tossed him my withering Superior Officer's gaze and
waited for his explanation.
"I hadn't realized this was your first time on Venus," he said.
"Is there a local hero named Joe?" I asked.
"No, no, nothing like that," he assured me. "It's a simple culture, you
know. Not nearly as developed as Mars."
"I can see that," I said bitingly.
"And the natives are only now becoming acquainted with Terran culture.
Lots of enlisted men, you know."
I began to get the idea. And I began to appreciate Walsh's doubtful
ancestry more keenly.
"It's impossible to tell exactly where it all started, of course,"
Bransten was saying.
I was beginning to get angry. Very angry. I was thinking of Walsh
sitting back in a nice cozy foam chair back on Earth.
"Get to the point, Captain!" I barked.
"Easy, sir," Bransten said, turning pale. I could see that the Captain
wasn't used to entertaining Majors. "The enlisted men. You know how
they are. They'll ask a native to do something and they'll call him
Joe. 'Hey, Joe, give me a hand with this.' Or 'Listen, Joe, how'd you
like to earn some cigarettes?' Do you follow?"
"I follow, all right," I said bitterly.
"Well," Bransten went on, "that sort of thing mushrooms. The natives
are a simple, almost childish people. It appealed to them—the Joe
business, I mean. Now they're all Joe. They like it. That and the
cigarettes."
He cleared his throat and looked at me apologetically as if he were
personally responsible for Venusian culture. In fact, he looked as if
he were responsible for having put Venus in the heavens in the first
place.
"Do you understand, Major? Just a case of extended idiom, that's all."
Just a case of extended
idiot
, I thought. An idiot on a wild goose
chase a hell of a long way from home.
"I understand perfectly," I snapped. "Where are my quarters?"
Bransten asked a Venusian named Joe to show me my quarters, reminding
me that chow was at thirteen hundred. As I was leaving, the first
Venusian came back with the cigarettes Bransten had ordered.
I could tell by the look on his face that he probably had half a carton
stuffed into his pockets. I shrugged and went to change into a tropical
tunic.
I called Earth right after chow. The Captain assured me that this sort
of thing was definitely against regulations, but he submitted when I
twinkled my little gold leaf under his nose.
Walsh's face appeared on the screen. He was smiling, looking like a fat
pussy cat.
"What is it, Major?" he asked.
"This man Joe," I said. "Can you give me any more on him?"
Walsh's grin grew wider. "Why, Major," he said, "you're not having any
difficulties, are you?"
"None at all," I snapped back. "I just thought I'd be able to find him
a lot sooner if...."
"Take your time, Major," Walsh beamed. "There's no rush at all."
"I thought...."
"I'm sure you can do the job," Walsh cut in. "I wouldn't have sent you
otherwise."
Hell, I was through kidding around. "Look...."
"He's somewhere in the jungle, you know," Walsh said.
I wanted to ram my fist into the screen, right smack up against those
big white teeth. Instead, I cut off the transmission and watched the
surprised look on his face as his screen went blank millions of miles
away.
He blinked at the screen, trying to realize I'd deliberately hung up on
him.
"Polk!" he shouted, "can you hear me?"
I smiled, saw the twisted hatred on his features, and then the screen
on my end went blank, too.
He's somewhere in the jungle, you know.
I thanked Captain Bransten for his hospitality and went back to my
quarters.
As I saw it, there were two courses for me to follow.
One: I could say the hell with Walsh and Venus. That would mean hopping
the next ship back to Earth.
It would also mean disobeying the direct order of a superior officer.
It might mean demotion, and it might mean getting bounced out of the
Service altogether.
Two: I could assume there really was a guy name Joe somewhere in that
jungle, a Joe separate and apart from the other Joes on this planet, a
trader Joe who knew the Martians well. I could always admit failure, of
course, and return empty handed. Mission not accomplished. Or, I might
really find a guy who was trader Joe.
I made my decision quickly. I wanted to stay in the Service, and
besides Walsh may have been on the level for the first time in his
life. Maybe there was a Joe here who could help us on Mars. If there
was I'd try to find him. It was still a hell of a trick though.
I cursed Walsh again and pushed the buzzer near my bed.
A tall Venusian stepped into the room.
"Joe?" I asked, just to be sure.
"Who else, boss?" he answered.
"I'm trying to locate someone," I said. "I'll need a guide to take me
into the jungle. Can you get me one?"
"It'll cost you, boss," the Venusian said.
"How much?"
"Two cartons of cigarettes at least."
"Who's the guide?" I asked.
"How's the price sound?"
"Fine, fine," I said impatiently. And the Captain had said they were
almost a childish people!
"His name is Joe," the Venusian told me. "Best damn guide on the
planet. Take you anywhere you want to go, do anything you want to do.
Courageous. Doesn't know the meaning of fear. I've known him to...."
"Skip it," I said, cutting the promotion short. "Tell him to show up
around fifteen hundred with a complete list of what we'll need."
The Venusian started to leave.
"And Joe," I said, stopping him at the door, "I hope you're not
overlooking your commission on the deal."
His face broke into a wide grin. "No danger of that, boss," he said.
When he was gone I began figuring out a plan of action. Obviously, I'd
just have to traipse through the jungle looking for a guy named Joe on
a planet where everyone was named Joe. Everybody, at least, but the
Captain, the small garrison attached to the Station, and me.
I began wondering why Walsh had gone to so much trouble to get rid of
me. The job, as I saw it, would take a hell of a long time. It seemed
like a silly thing to do, just to get even with a guy for something
that had happened years ago. He surely must have realized that I'd be
back again, sooner or later. Maybe he had another little junket all set
for me.
Or maybe he didn't expect me to come back.
The thought hadn't occurred to me before this, and I began to consider
it seriously. Walsh was no good, rotten clear through. He was failing
at the job of keeping Mars in hand, and he probably realized that a
few more mistakes on his part would mean the end of his career with
Space II. I chuckled as I thought of him isolated in some God-forsaken
place like Space V or Space VII. This probably bothered him a lot, too.
But what probably bothered him more was the fact that I was next in
command. If he were transferred, I'd be in charge of Space II, and I
could understand how much that would appeal to Walsh.
I tried to figure the thing out sensibly, tried to weigh his good
points against his bad. But it all came back to the same thing. A
guy who would deliberately go to sleep on Boiler Watch with a ton of
uranium ready to blast a barracks to smithereens if it wasn't watched,
would deliberately do just about anything.
Sending me off on a wild goose chase after a character named Joe may
have been a gag. But it may have been something a little grimmer than a
gag, and I made up my mind to be extremely careful from here on in.
The guide arrived at fifteen hundred on the dot. He was tall,
elongated, looked almost like all the other Venusians I'd seen so far.
"I understand you need a Grade A guide, sir," he said.
"Are you familiar with the jungle?" I asked him.
"Born and raised there, sir. Know it like the back of my hand."
"Has Joe told you what the payment will be?"
"Yes, sir. A carton and a half of cigarettes."
I thought about Joe deducting his commission and smiled.
"When can we leave?"
"Right away, sir. We won't need much really. I've made a list of
supplies and I can get them in less than an hour. I suggest you wear
light clothing, boots, and a hat."
"Will I need a weapon?"
He looked at me, his eyes faintly amused. "Why, what for, sir?"
"Never mind," I said. "What's your name, by the way?"
He lifted his eyebrows, and his eyes widened in his narrow face. He was
definitely surprised.
"Joe," he said. "Didn't you know?"
When we'd been out for a while I discovered why Joe had suggested the
boots and the hat. The undergrowth was often sharp and jagged and it
would have sliced my legs to ribbons were they not protected by the
high boots. The hat kept the strong sun off my head.
Joe was an excellent guide and a pleasant companion. He seemed to be
enjoying a great romp, seemed to love the jungle and take a secret
pleasure in the work he was doing. There were times when I couldn't
see three feet ahead of me. He'd stand stock still for a few minutes,
his head barely moving, his eyes darting from one plant to another.
Then he'd say, "This way," and take off into what looked like more
impenetrable jungle invariably to find a little path leading directly
to another village.
Each village was the same. The natives would come running out of their
huts, tall and blue, shouting, "Cigarettes, Joe? Cigarettes?" It took
me a while to realize they were addressing me and not my guide.
Everybody was Joe. It was one beautiful, happy, joyous round of
stinking, hot jungle. And I wasn't getting any nearer my man. Nor had
I any idea how I was supposed to find him. I began to feel pretty low
about the whole affair.
Joe, on the other hand, enjoyed every moment of the trip. In each
village he greeted the natives cheerfully, told them stories, swapped
gossip and jokes. And when it was time to leave, he would say goodbye
to all his friends and we would plunge into the twisted foliage again.
His spirits were always high and he never failed to say the right thing
that would give a momentary lift to my own depressed state of mind. He
would talk for hours on end as we hacked our way through the jungle.
"I like Venus," he said once. "I would never leave it."
"Have you ever been to Earth?" I asked.
"No," Joe replied. "I like Terrans too, you understand. They are good
for Venus. And they are fun."
"Fun?" I asked, thinking of a particular species of Terran: species
Leonard Walsh.
"Yes, yes," he said wholeheartedly. "They joke and they laugh and ...
well, you know."
"I suppose so," I admitted.
Joe smiled secretly, and we pushed on. I began to find, more and more,
that I had started to talk freely to Joe. In the beginning he had been
just my guide. There had been the strained relationship of employer and
employee. But as the days lengthened into weeks, the formal atmosphere
began to crumble. I found myself telling him all about Earth, about
the people there, about my decision to attend the Academy, the rigid
tests, the grind, even the Moon run. Joe was a good listener, nodding
sympathetically, finding experiences in his own life to parallel my own.
And as our relationship progressed from a casual one to a definitely
friendly one, Joe seemed more enthusiastic than ever to keep up our
grinding pace to find what we were looking for.
Once we stopped in a clearing to rest. Joe lounged on the matted
greenery, his long body stretched out in front of him, the knife
gleaming in his belt. I'd seen him slash his way through thick, tangled
vines with that knife, his long, muscular arms powerfully slicing
through them like strips of silk.
"How far are we from the Station?" I asked.
"Three or four Earth weeks," he replied.
I sighed wearily. "Where do we go from here?"
"There are more villages," he said.
"We'll never find him."
"Possibly," Joe mused, the smile creeping over his face again.
"A wild goose chase. A fool's errand."
"We'd better get started," Joe said simply.
I got to my feet and we started the march again. Joe was still fresh, a
brilliant contrast to me, weary and dejected. Somehow, I had the same
feeling I'd had a long time ago on my sixteenth birthday. One of my
friends had taken me all over the city, finally dropping me off at my
own house where the whole gang was gathered for a surprise party. Joe
reminded me of that friend.
"There's a village ahead," he said, and the grin on his face was large
now, his eyes shining.
Something was missing here. Natives. There were no natives rushing out
to greet us. No cries of "Cigarettes? Cigarettes?" I caught up with Joe.
"What's the story?" I whispered.
He shrugged knowingly and continued walking.
And then I saw the ship, nose pointing into space, catching the rays of
the sun like a great silver bullet.
"What...?" I started.
"It's all right," Joe said, smiling.
The ship looked vaguely familiar. I noticed the crest of Space II near
the nose, and a lot of things became clear then. I also saw Walsh
standing near one of the huts, a stun gun in his hand.
"Hello, Major," he called, almost cheerfully. The gun didn't look
cheerful, though. It was pointed at my head.
"Fancy meeting you here, Colonel," I said, trying to match his
joviality. Somehow it didn't quite come off.
Joe was walking beside me, waving at the colonel, beaming all over with
happiness.
"I see you found your man," Walsh said.
I turned rapidly. Joe nodded and kept grinning, a grin that told me he
was getting a big kick out of all this. Like a kid playing a game.
I faced Walsh again. "Okay, what's it all about, pal?"
"Colonel," Walsh corrected me. "You mustn't forget to say Colonel,
Major
." He emphasized my rank, and he said it with a sort of ruthless
finality.
I waited. I could see he was just busting to tell me how clever he'd
been. Besides, there wasn't much I could do but wait. Not with Walsh
pointing the stun gun at my middle.
"We've come a long way since the Academy, haven't we, Major?"
"If you mean in miles," I said, looking around at the plants, "we sure
have."
Walsh grinned a little. "Always the wit," he said drily. And then the
smile faded from his lips and his eyes took on a hard lustre. "I'm
going to kill you, you know." He said it as if he were saying, "I think
it'll rain tomorrow."
Joe almost clapped his hands together with glee. He was really enjoying
this. Another of those funny Terran games.
"You gave me a powerful handicap to overcome," Walsh said. "I suppose I
should thank you, really."
"You're welcome," I said.
"It wasn't easy living down the disgrace you caused me."
"It was your own damn fault," I said. "You knew what you were doing
when you decided to cork off."
Beside me, Joe chuckled a little, enjoying the game immensely.
"You didn't have to report me," Walsh said.
"No? Maybe I should have forgotten all about it? Maybe I should have
nudged you and served you orange juice? So you could do it again
sometime and maybe blow up the whole damn Academy!"
Walsh was silent for a long time. When he spoke his voice was barely
audible. The heat was oppressive, as if it were concentrated on this
little spot in the jungle, focusing all its penetration on a small,
unimportant drama.
I could hear Joe breathing beside me.
"I'm on my way out," Walsh rasped. "Finished, do you understand?"
"Good," I said. And I meant it.
"This Mars thing. A terrible fix. Terrible."
Beside me, a slight frown crossed Joe's face. Apparently he couldn't
understand the seriousness of our voices. What had happened to the
game, the fun?
"You brought the Mars business on yourself," I told Walsh. "There was
never any trouble before you took command."
"The natives," he practically shouted. "They ... they...."
Joe caught his breath sharply, and I wondered what Walsh was going to
say about the natives. Apparently he'd realized that Joe was a native.
Or maybe Joe's knife had something to do with it.
"What about the natives?" I asked.
"Nothing," Walsh said. "Nothing." He was silent for a while.
"A man of my calibre," he said then, his face grim. "Dealing with
savages." He caught himself again and threw a hasty glance at Joe.
The perplexed frown had grown heavier on Joe's face. He looked at the
colonel in puzzlement.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/3/8/9/63890//63890-h//63890-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | What is the relationship between Polk and Walsh? What is the central complication in their history together?
| 63890_67FQICLN_7 | [
"Colonel Walsh is Major Polk’s senior officer. Their relationship became contentious in boot camp, when Walsh reported Polk for falling asleep on the job. \n",
"Colonel Walsh is Major Polk’s ex best friend. Their relationship became contentious during the Terran occupation of Mars, when Polk realized Walsh was prejudiced against Martian natives. \n",
"Colonel Polk is Major Walsh’s ex best friend. Their relationship became contentious in boot camp, when Polk reported Walsh for falling asleep on the job.\n",
"Colonel Walsh is Major Polk’s senior officer. Their relationship became contentious in boot camp, when Polk reported Walsh for falling asleep on the job. \n"
] | 1 | 4 | [
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63,890 | 63890_67FQICLN | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | A Planet Named Joe | 1966.0 | Hunter, Evan | Human-alien encounters -- Fiction; Short stories; Science fiction; PS; Venus (Planet) -- Fiction | A PLANET NAMED JOE
By S. A. LOMBINO
There were more Joes on Venus than you could shake
a ray-gun at. Perhaps there was method in Colonel
Walsh's madness—murder-madness—when he ordered Major
Polk to scan the planet for a guy named Joe.
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from Planet Stories
November 1952. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the
U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
Colonel Walsh had a great sense of humor. I hated his guts ever since
we went through the Academy together, but he had a great sense of humor.
For example, he could have chosen a Second Looie for the job on Venus.
He might even have picked a Captain. But he liked me about as much as
I liked him, and so he decided the job was just right for a Major. At
least, that's what he told me.
I stood at attention before his desk in the Patrol Station. We were
somewhere in Area Two on Earth, takeoff point for any operations in
Space II. The duty was fine, and I liked it a lot. Come to think of
it, the most I ever did was inspect a few defective tubes every now and
then. The rest was gravy, and Colonel Walsh wasn't going to let me get
by with gravy.
"It will be a simple assignment, Major," he said to me, peering over
his fingers. He held them up in front of him like a cathedral.
"Yes, sir," I said.
"It will involve finding one man, a Venusian native."
I wanted to say, "Then why the hell don't you send a green kid on
the job? Why me?" Instead, I nodded and watched him playing with his
fingers.
"The man is a trader of sorts. Rather intelligent." He paused, then
added, "For a native, that is."
I had never liked Walsh's attitude toward natives. I hadn't liked the
way he'd treated the natives on Mars ever since he'd taken over there.
Which brought to mind an important point.
"I always figured Venus was under the jurisdiction of Space III, sir. I
thought our activities were confined to Mars."
He folded his fingers like a deck of cards and dropped them on his desk
as if he were waiting for me to cut.
"Mmmm," he said, "yes, that's true. But this is a special job. It so
happens this Venusian is the one man who can help us understand just
what's happening on Mars."
I tried to picture a Venusian understanding Mars and I didn't get very
far.
"He's had many dealings with the natives there," Walsh explained. "If
anyone can tell us the reasons for the revolt, he can."
If Walsh really wanted to know the reasons for the revolt, I could give
them to him in one word: Walsh. I had to laugh at the way he called
it "revolt." It had been going on for six months now and we'd lost at
least a thousand men from Space II. Revolt.
"And this man is on Venus now?" I asked for confirmation. I'd never
been to Venus, being in Space II ever since I'd left the Moon run. It
was just like Walsh to ship me off to a strange place.
"Yes, Major," he said. "This man is on Venus."
At the Academy he had called me Fred. That was before I'd reported
him for sleeping on Boiler Watch. He'd goofed off on a pile of uranium
that could've, and almost did, blow the barracks sky-high that night.
He still thought it was my fault, as if I'd done the wrong thing by
reporting him. And now, through the fouled-up machinery that exists in
any military organization, he outranked me.
"And the man's name, sir?"
"Joe." A tight smile played on his face.
"Joe what?" I asked.
"Just Joe."
"Just Joe?"
"Yes," Walsh said. "A native, you know. They rarely go in for more than
first names. But then, it should be simple to find a man with a name
like Joe. Among the natives, I mean."
"I don't know, sir."
"A relatively simple assignment," Walsh said.
"Can you tell me anything else about this man? Physical appearance?
Personal habits? Anything?"
Walsh seemed to consider this for a moment. "Well, physically he's like
any of the other Venusians, so I can't give you much help there. He
does have a peculiar habit, though."
"What's that?"
"He has an affinity for Terran cigarettes."
I sighed. "Well, it's not very much to go on."
"You'll find him," Walsh said, grinning. "I'm sure of it."
The trip to Venus came off without a hitch. I did a lot of thinking on
that trip. I thought about Mars and the revolt there. And I thought
about Colonel Leonard Walsh and how he was supposed to be quelling that
revolt. Ever since Walsh had taken command, ever since he'd started
pushing the natives around, there'd been trouble. It was almost as if
the whole damned planet had blown up in our faces the moment he took
over. Swell guy, Walsh.
Venus was hotter than I'd expected it to be. Much too hot for the tunic
I was wearing. It smelled, too. A funny smell I couldn't place. Like
a mixture of old shoe and after-shave. There were plants everywhere
I looked. Big plants and small ones, some blooming with flowers I'd
never seen before, and some as bare as cactus.
I recognized a blue figure as one of the natives the pilot had told me
about. He was tall, looking almost human except that everything about
him was elongated. His features, his muscles, everything seemed to have
been stretched like a rubber band. I kept expecting him to pop back to
normal. Instead, he flashed a double row of brilliant teeth at me.
I wondered if he spoke English. "Hey, boy," I called.
He ambled over with long-legged strides that closed the distance
between us in seconds.
"Call me Joe," he said.
I dropped my bags and stared at him. Maybe this
was
going to be a
simple assignment after all. "I sure am glad to see you, Joe," I said.
"Same here, Toots," he answered.
"The guys back in Space II are searching high and low for you," I told
him.
"You've got the wrong number," he said, and I was a little surprised at
his use of Terran idiom.
"You are Joe, aren't you? Joe the trader?"
"I'm Joe, all right," he said. "Only thing I ever traded, though, was a
pocketknife. Got a set of keys for it."
"Oh," I said, my voice conveying my disappointment. I sighed and began
wondering just how I should go about contacting the Joe I was looking
for. My orders said I was to report to Captain Bransten immediately
upon arrival. I figured the hell with Captain Bransten. I outranked him
anyway, and there wasn't much he could do if I decided to stop for a
drink first.
"Where's the Officer's Club?" I asked the Venusian.
"Are you buying information or are you just curious?"
"Can you take me there?" I asked.
"Sure thing, Toots." He picked up my bags and started walking up a
heavily overgrown path. We'd probably walked for about ten minutes when
he dropped my bags and said, "There it is."
The Officer's Club was a plasteel hut with window shields that
protected it from the heat of the sun. It didn't look too comfortable
but I really wanted that drink. I reached into my tunic and slipped
the native thirty solars.
He stared at the credits curiously and then shrugged his shoulders. "Oh
well, you're new here. We'll let it go."
He took off then, while I stared after him, wondering just what he'd
meant. Had I tipped him too little?
I shrugged and looked over at the Officer's Club. From the outside it
looked as hot as hell.
On the inside it was about two degrees short of that mark. I began to
curse Walsh for taking me away from my nice soft job in Space II.
There wasn't much inside the club. A few tables and chairs, a dart game
and a bar. Behind the bar a tall Venusian lounged.
I walked over and asked, "What are you serving, pal?"
"Call me Joe," he answered.
He caught me off balance. "What?"
"Joe," he said again.
A faint glimmer of understanding began to penetrate my thick skull.
"You wouldn't happen to be Joe the trader? The guy who knows all about
Mars, would you?"
"I never left home," he said simply. "What are you drinking?"
That rat! That dirty, filthy, stinking, unprincipled....
But then, it should be simple to find a man with a name like
Joe.
Among the natives, I mean.
Sure. Oh sure. Real simple. Walsh was about the lowest, most
contemptible....
"What are you drinking, pal?" the Venusian asked again.
"Skip it," I said. "How do I get to the captain's shack?"
"Follow your nose, pal. Can't miss it."
I started to pick up my bag as another Venusian entered. He waved at
the bartender.
"Hello, Joe," he said. "How's it going?"
"Not so hot, Joe," the bartender replied.
I listened in fascination. Joe, Joe, Joe. So this was Walsh's idea of a
great gag. Very funny. Very....
"You Major Polk, sweetheart?" the Venusian who'd just come in asked.
"Yes," I said, still thinking of Colonel Walsh.
"You better get your butt over to the captain's shack," he said. "He's
about ready to post you as overdue."
"Sure," I said wearily. "Will you take my bags, please?"
"Roger," he answered. He picked up the bags and nodded at the bar.
"So long, Joe," he said to the bartender.
"See you, Joe," the bartender called back.
Captain Bransten was a mousey, unimpressive sort of man. He was wearing
a tropical tunic, but he still resembled a wilted lily more than he did
an officer.
"Have a seat, Major," he offered. He reached for a cigarette box on the
desk and extended it to me. He coughed in embarrassment when he saw it
was empty. Quickly, he pressed a button on his desk and the door popped
open. A tall, blue Venusian stepped lithely into the room.
"Sir?" the Venusian asked.
"We're out of cigarettes, Joe," the Captain said. "Will you get us
some, please?"
"Sure thing," the Venusian answered. He smiled broadly and closed the
door behind him.
Another Joe
, I thought.
Another damned Joe.
"They steal them," Captain Bransten said abruptly.
"Steal what?" I asked.
"Cigarettes. I sometimes think the cigarette is one of the few things
they like about Terran culture."
So Walsh had taken care of that angle too.
He does have a peculiar
habit, though. He has an affinity for Terran cigarettes.
Cigarettes
was the tip I should have given; not solars.
"All right," I said, "suppose we start at the beginning."
Captain Bransten opened his eyes wide. "Sir?" he asked.
"What's with all this Joe business? It may be a very original name but
I think its popularity here is a little outstanding."
Captain Bransten began to chuckle softly. I personally didn't think it
was so funny. I tossed him my withering Superior Officer's gaze and
waited for his explanation.
"I hadn't realized this was your first time on Venus," he said.
"Is there a local hero named Joe?" I asked.
"No, no, nothing like that," he assured me. "It's a simple culture, you
know. Not nearly as developed as Mars."
"I can see that," I said bitingly.
"And the natives are only now becoming acquainted with Terran culture.
Lots of enlisted men, you know."
I began to get the idea. And I began to appreciate Walsh's doubtful
ancestry more keenly.
"It's impossible to tell exactly where it all started, of course,"
Bransten was saying.
I was beginning to get angry. Very angry. I was thinking of Walsh
sitting back in a nice cozy foam chair back on Earth.
"Get to the point, Captain!" I barked.
"Easy, sir," Bransten said, turning pale. I could see that the Captain
wasn't used to entertaining Majors. "The enlisted men. You know how
they are. They'll ask a native to do something and they'll call him
Joe. 'Hey, Joe, give me a hand with this.' Or 'Listen, Joe, how'd you
like to earn some cigarettes?' Do you follow?"
"I follow, all right," I said bitterly.
"Well," Bransten went on, "that sort of thing mushrooms. The natives
are a simple, almost childish people. It appealed to them—the Joe
business, I mean. Now they're all Joe. They like it. That and the
cigarettes."
He cleared his throat and looked at me apologetically as if he were
personally responsible for Venusian culture. In fact, he looked as if
he were responsible for having put Venus in the heavens in the first
place.
"Do you understand, Major? Just a case of extended idiom, that's all."
Just a case of extended
idiot
, I thought. An idiot on a wild goose
chase a hell of a long way from home.
"I understand perfectly," I snapped. "Where are my quarters?"
Bransten asked a Venusian named Joe to show me my quarters, reminding
me that chow was at thirteen hundred. As I was leaving, the first
Venusian came back with the cigarettes Bransten had ordered.
I could tell by the look on his face that he probably had half a carton
stuffed into his pockets. I shrugged and went to change into a tropical
tunic.
I called Earth right after chow. The Captain assured me that this sort
of thing was definitely against regulations, but he submitted when I
twinkled my little gold leaf under his nose.
Walsh's face appeared on the screen. He was smiling, looking like a fat
pussy cat.
"What is it, Major?" he asked.
"This man Joe," I said. "Can you give me any more on him?"
Walsh's grin grew wider. "Why, Major," he said, "you're not having any
difficulties, are you?"
"None at all," I snapped back. "I just thought I'd be able to find him
a lot sooner if...."
"Take your time, Major," Walsh beamed. "There's no rush at all."
"I thought...."
"I'm sure you can do the job," Walsh cut in. "I wouldn't have sent you
otherwise."
Hell, I was through kidding around. "Look...."
"He's somewhere in the jungle, you know," Walsh said.
I wanted to ram my fist into the screen, right smack up against those
big white teeth. Instead, I cut off the transmission and watched the
surprised look on his face as his screen went blank millions of miles
away.
He blinked at the screen, trying to realize I'd deliberately hung up on
him.
"Polk!" he shouted, "can you hear me?"
I smiled, saw the twisted hatred on his features, and then the screen
on my end went blank, too.
He's somewhere in the jungle, you know.
I thanked Captain Bransten for his hospitality and went back to my
quarters.
As I saw it, there were two courses for me to follow.
One: I could say the hell with Walsh and Venus. That would mean hopping
the next ship back to Earth.
It would also mean disobeying the direct order of a superior officer.
It might mean demotion, and it might mean getting bounced out of the
Service altogether.
Two: I could assume there really was a guy name Joe somewhere in that
jungle, a Joe separate and apart from the other Joes on this planet, a
trader Joe who knew the Martians well. I could always admit failure, of
course, and return empty handed. Mission not accomplished. Or, I might
really find a guy who was trader Joe.
I made my decision quickly. I wanted to stay in the Service, and
besides Walsh may have been on the level for the first time in his
life. Maybe there was a Joe here who could help us on Mars. If there
was I'd try to find him. It was still a hell of a trick though.
I cursed Walsh again and pushed the buzzer near my bed.
A tall Venusian stepped into the room.
"Joe?" I asked, just to be sure.
"Who else, boss?" he answered.
"I'm trying to locate someone," I said. "I'll need a guide to take me
into the jungle. Can you get me one?"
"It'll cost you, boss," the Venusian said.
"How much?"
"Two cartons of cigarettes at least."
"Who's the guide?" I asked.
"How's the price sound?"
"Fine, fine," I said impatiently. And the Captain had said they were
almost a childish people!
"His name is Joe," the Venusian told me. "Best damn guide on the
planet. Take you anywhere you want to go, do anything you want to do.
Courageous. Doesn't know the meaning of fear. I've known him to...."
"Skip it," I said, cutting the promotion short. "Tell him to show up
around fifteen hundred with a complete list of what we'll need."
The Venusian started to leave.
"And Joe," I said, stopping him at the door, "I hope you're not
overlooking your commission on the deal."
His face broke into a wide grin. "No danger of that, boss," he said.
When he was gone I began figuring out a plan of action. Obviously, I'd
just have to traipse through the jungle looking for a guy named Joe on
a planet where everyone was named Joe. Everybody, at least, but the
Captain, the small garrison attached to the Station, and me.
I began wondering why Walsh had gone to so much trouble to get rid of
me. The job, as I saw it, would take a hell of a long time. It seemed
like a silly thing to do, just to get even with a guy for something
that had happened years ago. He surely must have realized that I'd be
back again, sooner or later. Maybe he had another little junket all set
for me.
Or maybe he didn't expect me to come back.
The thought hadn't occurred to me before this, and I began to consider
it seriously. Walsh was no good, rotten clear through. He was failing
at the job of keeping Mars in hand, and he probably realized that a
few more mistakes on his part would mean the end of his career with
Space II. I chuckled as I thought of him isolated in some God-forsaken
place like Space V or Space VII. This probably bothered him a lot, too.
But what probably bothered him more was the fact that I was next in
command. If he were transferred, I'd be in charge of Space II, and I
could understand how much that would appeal to Walsh.
I tried to figure the thing out sensibly, tried to weigh his good
points against his bad. But it all came back to the same thing. A
guy who would deliberately go to sleep on Boiler Watch with a ton of
uranium ready to blast a barracks to smithereens if it wasn't watched,
would deliberately do just about anything.
Sending me off on a wild goose chase after a character named Joe may
have been a gag. But it may have been something a little grimmer than a
gag, and I made up my mind to be extremely careful from here on in.
The guide arrived at fifteen hundred on the dot. He was tall,
elongated, looked almost like all the other Venusians I'd seen so far.
"I understand you need a Grade A guide, sir," he said.
"Are you familiar with the jungle?" I asked him.
"Born and raised there, sir. Know it like the back of my hand."
"Has Joe told you what the payment will be?"
"Yes, sir. A carton and a half of cigarettes."
I thought about Joe deducting his commission and smiled.
"When can we leave?"
"Right away, sir. We won't need much really. I've made a list of
supplies and I can get them in less than an hour. I suggest you wear
light clothing, boots, and a hat."
"Will I need a weapon?"
He looked at me, his eyes faintly amused. "Why, what for, sir?"
"Never mind," I said. "What's your name, by the way?"
He lifted his eyebrows, and his eyes widened in his narrow face. He was
definitely surprised.
"Joe," he said. "Didn't you know?"
When we'd been out for a while I discovered why Joe had suggested the
boots and the hat. The undergrowth was often sharp and jagged and it
would have sliced my legs to ribbons were they not protected by the
high boots. The hat kept the strong sun off my head.
Joe was an excellent guide and a pleasant companion. He seemed to be
enjoying a great romp, seemed to love the jungle and take a secret
pleasure in the work he was doing. There were times when I couldn't
see three feet ahead of me. He'd stand stock still for a few minutes,
his head barely moving, his eyes darting from one plant to another.
Then he'd say, "This way," and take off into what looked like more
impenetrable jungle invariably to find a little path leading directly
to another village.
Each village was the same. The natives would come running out of their
huts, tall and blue, shouting, "Cigarettes, Joe? Cigarettes?" It took
me a while to realize they were addressing me and not my guide.
Everybody was Joe. It was one beautiful, happy, joyous round of
stinking, hot jungle. And I wasn't getting any nearer my man. Nor had
I any idea how I was supposed to find him. I began to feel pretty low
about the whole affair.
Joe, on the other hand, enjoyed every moment of the trip. In each
village he greeted the natives cheerfully, told them stories, swapped
gossip and jokes. And when it was time to leave, he would say goodbye
to all his friends and we would plunge into the twisted foliage again.
His spirits were always high and he never failed to say the right thing
that would give a momentary lift to my own depressed state of mind. He
would talk for hours on end as we hacked our way through the jungle.
"I like Venus," he said once. "I would never leave it."
"Have you ever been to Earth?" I asked.
"No," Joe replied. "I like Terrans too, you understand. They are good
for Venus. And they are fun."
"Fun?" I asked, thinking of a particular species of Terran: species
Leonard Walsh.
"Yes, yes," he said wholeheartedly. "They joke and they laugh and ...
well, you know."
"I suppose so," I admitted.
Joe smiled secretly, and we pushed on. I began to find, more and more,
that I had started to talk freely to Joe. In the beginning he had been
just my guide. There had been the strained relationship of employer and
employee. But as the days lengthened into weeks, the formal atmosphere
began to crumble. I found myself telling him all about Earth, about
the people there, about my decision to attend the Academy, the rigid
tests, the grind, even the Moon run. Joe was a good listener, nodding
sympathetically, finding experiences in his own life to parallel my own.
And as our relationship progressed from a casual one to a definitely
friendly one, Joe seemed more enthusiastic than ever to keep up our
grinding pace to find what we were looking for.
Once we stopped in a clearing to rest. Joe lounged on the matted
greenery, his long body stretched out in front of him, the knife
gleaming in his belt. I'd seen him slash his way through thick, tangled
vines with that knife, his long, muscular arms powerfully slicing
through them like strips of silk.
"How far are we from the Station?" I asked.
"Three or four Earth weeks," he replied.
I sighed wearily. "Where do we go from here?"
"There are more villages," he said.
"We'll never find him."
"Possibly," Joe mused, the smile creeping over his face again.
"A wild goose chase. A fool's errand."
"We'd better get started," Joe said simply.
I got to my feet and we started the march again. Joe was still fresh, a
brilliant contrast to me, weary and dejected. Somehow, I had the same
feeling I'd had a long time ago on my sixteenth birthday. One of my
friends had taken me all over the city, finally dropping me off at my
own house where the whole gang was gathered for a surprise party. Joe
reminded me of that friend.
"There's a village ahead," he said, and the grin on his face was large
now, his eyes shining.
Something was missing here. Natives. There were no natives rushing out
to greet us. No cries of "Cigarettes? Cigarettes?" I caught up with Joe.
"What's the story?" I whispered.
He shrugged knowingly and continued walking.
And then I saw the ship, nose pointing into space, catching the rays of
the sun like a great silver bullet.
"What...?" I started.
"It's all right," Joe said, smiling.
The ship looked vaguely familiar. I noticed the crest of Space II near
the nose, and a lot of things became clear then. I also saw Walsh
standing near one of the huts, a stun gun in his hand.
"Hello, Major," he called, almost cheerfully. The gun didn't look
cheerful, though. It was pointed at my head.
"Fancy meeting you here, Colonel," I said, trying to match his
joviality. Somehow it didn't quite come off.
Joe was walking beside me, waving at the colonel, beaming all over with
happiness.
"I see you found your man," Walsh said.
I turned rapidly. Joe nodded and kept grinning, a grin that told me he
was getting a big kick out of all this. Like a kid playing a game.
I faced Walsh again. "Okay, what's it all about, pal?"
"Colonel," Walsh corrected me. "You mustn't forget to say Colonel,
Major
." He emphasized my rank, and he said it with a sort of ruthless
finality.
I waited. I could see he was just busting to tell me how clever he'd
been. Besides, there wasn't much I could do but wait. Not with Walsh
pointing the stun gun at my middle.
"We've come a long way since the Academy, haven't we, Major?"
"If you mean in miles," I said, looking around at the plants, "we sure
have."
Walsh grinned a little. "Always the wit," he said drily. And then the
smile faded from his lips and his eyes took on a hard lustre. "I'm
going to kill you, you know." He said it as if he were saying, "I think
it'll rain tomorrow."
Joe almost clapped his hands together with glee. He was really enjoying
this. Another of those funny Terran games.
"You gave me a powerful handicap to overcome," Walsh said. "I suppose I
should thank you, really."
"You're welcome," I said.
"It wasn't easy living down the disgrace you caused me."
"It was your own damn fault," I said. "You knew what you were doing
when you decided to cork off."
Beside me, Joe chuckled a little, enjoying the game immensely.
"You didn't have to report me," Walsh said.
"No? Maybe I should have forgotten all about it? Maybe I should have
nudged you and served you orange juice? So you could do it again
sometime and maybe blow up the whole damn Academy!"
Walsh was silent for a long time. When he spoke his voice was barely
audible. The heat was oppressive, as if it were concentrated on this
little spot in the jungle, focusing all its penetration on a small,
unimportant drama.
I could hear Joe breathing beside me.
"I'm on my way out," Walsh rasped. "Finished, do you understand?"
"Good," I said. And I meant it.
"This Mars thing. A terrible fix. Terrible."
Beside me, a slight frown crossed Joe's face. Apparently he couldn't
understand the seriousness of our voices. What had happened to the
game, the fun?
"You brought the Mars business on yourself," I told Walsh. "There was
never any trouble before you took command."
"The natives," he practically shouted. "They ... they...."
Joe caught his breath sharply, and I wondered what Walsh was going to
say about the natives. Apparently he'd realized that Joe was a native.
Or maybe Joe's knife had something to do with it.
"What about the natives?" I asked.
"Nothing," Walsh said. "Nothing." He was silent for a while.
"A man of my calibre," he said then, his face grim. "Dealing with
savages." He caught himself again and threw a hasty glance at Joe.
The perplexed frown had grown heavier on Joe's face. He looked at the
colonel in puzzlement.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/3/8/9/63890//63890-h//63890-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | Which “Joe” faces the brunt of Colonel Walsh’s racism?
| 63890_67FQICLN_8 | [
"Bartender Joe \n",
"Trader Joe \n",
"Military Joe\n",
"Jungle Guide Joe\n"
] | 4 | 4 | [
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63,890 | 63890_67FQICLN | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | A Planet Named Joe | 1966.0 | Hunter, Evan | Human-alien encounters -- Fiction; Short stories; Science fiction; PS; Venus (Planet) -- Fiction | A PLANET NAMED JOE
By S. A. LOMBINO
There were more Joes on Venus than you could shake
a ray-gun at. Perhaps there was method in Colonel
Walsh's madness—murder-madness—when he ordered Major
Polk to scan the planet for a guy named Joe.
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from Planet Stories
November 1952. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the
U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
Colonel Walsh had a great sense of humor. I hated his guts ever since
we went through the Academy together, but he had a great sense of humor.
For example, he could have chosen a Second Looie for the job on Venus.
He might even have picked a Captain. But he liked me about as much as
I liked him, and so he decided the job was just right for a Major. At
least, that's what he told me.
I stood at attention before his desk in the Patrol Station. We were
somewhere in Area Two on Earth, takeoff point for any operations in
Space II. The duty was fine, and I liked it a lot. Come to think of
it, the most I ever did was inspect a few defective tubes every now and
then. The rest was gravy, and Colonel Walsh wasn't going to let me get
by with gravy.
"It will be a simple assignment, Major," he said to me, peering over
his fingers. He held them up in front of him like a cathedral.
"Yes, sir," I said.
"It will involve finding one man, a Venusian native."
I wanted to say, "Then why the hell don't you send a green kid on
the job? Why me?" Instead, I nodded and watched him playing with his
fingers.
"The man is a trader of sorts. Rather intelligent." He paused, then
added, "For a native, that is."
I had never liked Walsh's attitude toward natives. I hadn't liked the
way he'd treated the natives on Mars ever since he'd taken over there.
Which brought to mind an important point.
"I always figured Venus was under the jurisdiction of Space III, sir. I
thought our activities were confined to Mars."
He folded his fingers like a deck of cards and dropped them on his desk
as if he were waiting for me to cut.
"Mmmm," he said, "yes, that's true. But this is a special job. It so
happens this Venusian is the one man who can help us understand just
what's happening on Mars."
I tried to picture a Venusian understanding Mars and I didn't get very
far.
"He's had many dealings with the natives there," Walsh explained. "If
anyone can tell us the reasons for the revolt, he can."
If Walsh really wanted to know the reasons for the revolt, I could give
them to him in one word: Walsh. I had to laugh at the way he called
it "revolt." It had been going on for six months now and we'd lost at
least a thousand men from Space II. Revolt.
"And this man is on Venus now?" I asked for confirmation. I'd never
been to Venus, being in Space II ever since I'd left the Moon run. It
was just like Walsh to ship me off to a strange place.
"Yes, Major," he said. "This man is on Venus."
At the Academy he had called me Fred. That was before I'd reported
him for sleeping on Boiler Watch. He'd goofed off on a pile of uranium
that could've, and almost did, blow the barracks sky-high that night.
He still thought it was my fault, as if I'd done the wrong thing by
reporting him. And now, through the fouled-up machinery that exists in
any military organization, he outranked me.
"And the man's name, sir?"
"Joe." A tight smile played on his face.
"Joe what?" I asked.
"Just Joe."
"Just Joe?"
"Yes," Walsh said. "A native, you know. They rarely go in for more than
first names. But then, it should be simple to find a man with a name
like Joe. Among the natives, I mean."
"I don't know, sir."
"A relatively simple assignment," Walsh said.
"Can you tell me anything else about this man? Physical appearance?
Personal habits? Anything?"
Walsh seemed to consider this for a moment. "Well, physically he's like
any of the other Venusians, so I can't give you much help there. He
does have a peculiar habit, though."
"What's that?"
"He has an affinity for Terran cigarettes."
I sighed. "Well, it's not very much to go on."
"You'll find him," Walsh said, grinning. "I'm sure of it."
The trip to Venus came off without a hitch. I did a lot of thinking on
that trip. I thought about Mars and the revolt there. And I thought
about Colonel Leonard Walsh and how he was supposed to be quelling that
revolt. Ever since Walsh had taken command, ever since he'd started
pushing the natives around, there'd been trouble. It was almost as if
the whole damned planet had blown up in our faces the moment he took
over. Swell guy, Walsh.
Venus was hotter than I'd expected it to be. Much too hot for the tunic
I was wearing. It smelled, too. A funny smell I couldn't place. Like
a mixture of old shoe and after-shave. There were plants everywhere
I looked. Big plants and small ones, some blooming with flowers I'd
never seen before, and some as bare as cactus.
I recognized a blue figure as one of the natives the pilot had told me
about. He was tall, looking almost human except that everything about
him was elongated. His features, his muscles, everything seemed to have
been stretched like a rubber band. I kept expecting him to pop back to
normal. Instead, he flashed a double row of brilliant teeth at me.
I wondered if he spoke English. "Hey, boy," I called.
He ambled over with long-legged strides that closed the distance
between us in seconds.
"Call me Joe," he said.
I dropped my bags and stared at him. Maybe this
was
going to be a
simple assignment after all. "I sure am glad to see you, Joe," I said.
"Same here, Toots," he answered.
"The guys back in Space II are searching high and low for you," I told
him.
"You've got the wrong number," he said, and I was a little surprised at
his use of Terran idiom.
"You are Joe, aren't you? Joe the trader?"
"I'm Joe, all right," he said. "Only thing I ever traded, though, was a
pocketknife. Got a set of keys for it."
"Oh," I said, my voice conveying my disappointment. I sighed and began
wondering just how I should go about contacting the Joe I was looking
for. My orders said I was to report to Captain Bransten immediately
upon arrival. I figured the hell with Captain Bransten. I outranked him
anyway, and there wasn't much he could do if I decided to stop for a
drink first.
"Where's the Officer's Club?" I asked the Venusian.
"Are you buying information or are you just curious?"
"Can you take me there?" I asked.
"Sure thing, Toots." He picked up my bags and started walking up a
heavily overgrown path. We'd probably walked for about ten minutes when
he dropped my bags and said, "There it is."
The Officer's Club was a plasteel hut with window shields that
protected it from the heat of the sun. It didn't look too comfortable
but I really wanted that drink. I reached into my tunic and slipped
the native thirty solars.
He stared at the credits curiously and then shrugged his shoulders. "Oh
well, you're new here. We'll let it go."
He took off then, while I stared after him, wondering just what he'd
meant. Had I tipped him too little?
I shrugged and looked over at the Officer's Club. From the outside it
looked as hot as hell.
On the inside it was about two degrees short of that mark. I began to
curse Walsh for taking me away from my nice soft job in Space II.
There wasn't much inside the club. A few tables and chairs, a dart game
and a bar. Behind the bar a tall Venusian lounged.
I walked over and asked, "What are you serving, pal?"
"Call me Joe," he answered.
He caught me off balance. "What?"
"Joe," he said again.
A faint glimmer of understanding began to penetrate my thick skull.
"You wouldn't happen to be Joe the trader? The guy who knows all about
Mars, would you?"
"I never left home," he said simply. "What are you drinking?"
That rat! That dirty, filthy, stinking, unprincipled....
But then, it should be simple to find a man with a name like
Joe.
Among the natives, I mean.
Sure. Oh sure. Real simple. Walsh was about the lowest, most
contemptible....
"What are you drinking, pal?" the Venusian asked again.
"Skip it," I said. "How do I get to the captain's shack?"
"Follow your nose, pal. Can't miss it."
I started to pick up my bag as another Venusian entered. He waved at
the bartender.
"Hello, Joe," he said. "How's it going?"
"Not so hot, Joe," the bartender replied.
I listened in fascination. Joe, Joe, Joe. So this was Walsh's idea of a
great gag. Very funny. Very....
"You Major Polk, sweetheart?" the Venusian who'd just come in asked.
"Yes," I said, still thinking of Colonel Walsh.
"You better get your butt over to the captain's shack," he said. "He's
about ready to post you as overdue."
"Sure," I said wearily. "Will you take my bags, please?"
"Roger," he answered. He picked up the bags and nodded at the bar.
"So long, Joe," he said to the bartender.
"See you, Joe," the bartender called back.
Captain Bransten was a mousey, unimpressive sort of man. He was wearing
a tropical tunic, but he still resembled a wilted lily more than he did
an officer.
"Have a seat, Major," he offered. He reached for a cigarette box on the
desk and extended it to me. He coughed in embarrassment when he saw it
was empty. Quickly, he pressed a button on his desk and the door popped
open. A tall, blue Venusian stepped lithely into the room.
"Sir?" the Venusian asked.
"We're out of cigarettes, Joe," the Captain said. "Will you get us
some, please?"
"Sure thing," the Venusian answered. He smiled broadly and closed the
door behind him.
Another Joe
, I thought.
Another damned Joe.
"They steal them," Captain Bransten said abruptly.
"Steal what?" I asked.
"Cigarettes. I sometimes think the cigarette is one of the few things
they like about Terran culture."
So Walsh had taken care of that angle too.
He does have a peculiar
habit, though. He has an affinity for Terran cigarettes.
Cigarettes
was the tip I should have given; not solars.
"All right," I said, "suppose we start at the beginning."
Captain Bransten opened his eyes wide. "Sir?" he asked.
"What's with all this Joe business? It may be a very original name but
I think its popularity here is a little outstanding."
Captain Bransten began to chuckle softly. I personally didn't think it
was so funny. I tossed him my withering Superior Officer's gaze and
waited for his explanation.
"I hadn't realized this was your first time on Venus," he said.
"Is there a local hero named Joe?" I asked.
"No, no, nothing like that," he assured me. "It's a simple culture, you
know. Not nearly as developed as Mars."
"I can see that," I said bitingly.
"And the natives are only now becoming acquainted with Terran culture.
Lots of enlisted men, you know."
I began to get the idea. And I began to appreciate Walsh's doubtful
ancestry more keenly.
"It's impossible to tell exactly where it all started, of course,"
Bransten was saying.
I was beginning to get angry. Very angry. I was thinking of Walsh
sitting back in a nice cozy foam chair back on Earth.
"Get to the point, Captain!" I barked.
"Easy, sir," Bransten said, turning pale. I could see that the Captain
wasn't used to entertaining Majors. "The enlisted men. You know how
they are. They'll ask a native to do something and they'll call him
Joe. 'Hey, Joe, give me a hand with this.' Or 'Listen, Joe, how'd you
like to earn some cigarettes?' Do you follow?"
"I follow, all right," I said bitterly.
"Well," Bransten went on, "that sort of thing mushrooms. The natives
are a simple, almost childish people. It appealed to them—the Joe
business, I mean. Now they're all Joe. They like it. That and the
cigarettes."
He cleared his throat and looked at me apologetically as if he were
personally responsible for Venusian culture. In fact, he looked as if
he were responsible for having put Venus in the heavens in the first
place.
"Do you understand, Major? Just a case of extended idiom, that's all."
Just a case of extended
idiot
, I thought. An idiot on a wild goose
chase a hell of a long way from home.
"I understand perfectly," I snapped. "Where are my quarters?"
Bransten asked a Venusian named Joe to show me my quarters, reminding
me that chow was at thirteen hundred. As I was leaving, the first
Venusian came back with the cigarettes Bransten had ordered.
I could tell by the look on his face that he probably had half a carton
stuffed into his pockets. I shrugged and went to change into a tropical
tunic.
I called Earth right after chow. The Captain assured me that this sort
of thing was definitely against regulations, but he submitted when I
twinkled my little gold leaf under his nose.
Walsh's face appeared on the screen. He was smiling, looking like a fat
pussy cat.
"What is it, Major?" he asked.
"This man Joe," I said. "Can you give me any more on him?"
Walsh's grin grew wider. "Why, Major," he said, "you're not having any
difficulties, are you?"
"None at all," I snapped back. "I just thought I'd be able to find him
a lot sooner if...."
"Take your time, Major," Walsh beamed. "There's no rush at all."
"I thought...."
"I'm sure you can do the job," Walsh cut in. "I wouldn't have sent you
otherwise."
Hell, I was through kidding around. "Look...."
"He's somewhere in the jungle, you know," Walsh said.
I wanted to ram my fist into the screen, right smack up against those
big white teeth. Instead, I cut off the transmission and watched the
surprised look on his face as his screen went blank millions of miles
away.
He blinked at the screen, trying to realize I'd deliberately hung up on
him.
"Polk!" he shouted, "can you hear me?"
I smiled, saw the twisted hatred on his features, and then the screen
on my end went blank, too.
He's somewhere in the jungle, you know.
I thanked Captain Bransten for his hospitality and went back to my
quarters.
As I saw it, there were two courses for me to follow.
One: I could say the hell with Walsh and Venus. That would mean hopping
the next ship back to Earth.
It would also mean disobeying the direct order of a superior officer.
It might mean demotion, and it might mean getting bounced out of the
Service altogether.
Two: I could assume there really was a guy name Joe somewhere in that
jungle, a Joe separate and apart from the other Joes on this planet, a
trader Joe who knew the Martians well. I could always admit failure, of
course, and return empty handed. Mission not accomplished. Or, I might
really find a guy who was trader Joe.
I made my decision quickly. I wanted to stay in the Service, and
besides Walsh may have been on the level for the first time in his
life. Maybe there was a Joe here who could help us on Mars. If there
was I'd try to find him. It was still a hell of a trick though.
I cursed Walsh again and pushed the buzzer near my bed.
A tall Venusian stepped into the room.
"Joe?" I asked, just to be sure.
"Who else, boss?" he answered.
"I'm trying to locate someone," I said. "I'll need a guide to take me
into the jungle. Can you get me one?"
"It'll cost you, boss," the Venusian said.
"How much?"
"Two cartons of cigarettes at least."
"Who's the guide?" I asked.
"How's the price sound?"
"Fine, fine," I said impatiently. And the Captain had said they were
almost a childish people!
"His name is Joe," the Venusian told me. "Best damn guide on the
planet. Take you anywhere you want to go, do anything you want to do.
Courageous. Doesn't know the meaning of fear. I've known him to...."
"Skip it," I said, cutting the promotion short. "Tell him to show up
around fifteen hundred with a complete list of what we'll need."
The Venusian started to leave.
"And Joe," I said, stopping him at the door, "I hope you're not
overlooking your commission on the deal."
His face broke into a wide grin. "No danger of that, boss," he said.
When he was gone I began figuring out a plan of action. Obviously, I'd
just have to traipse through the jungle looking for a guy named Joe on
a planet where everyone was named Joe. Everybody, at least, but the
Captain, the small garrison attached to the Station, and me.
I began wondering why Walsh had gone to so much trouble to get rid of
me. The job, as I saw it, would take a hell of a long time. It seemed
like a silly thing to do, just to get even with a guy for something
that had happened years ago. He surely must have realized that I'd be
back again, sooner or later. Maybe he had another little junket all set
for me.
Or maybe he didn't expect me to come back.
The thought hadn't occurred to me before this, and I began to consider
it seriously. Walsh was no good, rotten clear through. He was failing
at the job of keeping Mars in hand, and he probably realized that a
few more mistakes on his part would mean the end of his career with
Space II. I chuckled as I thought of him isolated in some God-forsaken
place like Space V or Space VII. This probably bothered him a lot, too.
But what probably bothered him more was the fact that I was next in
command. If he were transferred, I'd be in charge of Space II, and I
could understand how much that would appeal to Walsh.
I tried to figure the thing out sensibly, tried to weigh his good
points against his bad. But it all came back to the same thing. A
guy who would deliberately go to sleep on Boiler Watch with a ton of
uranium ready to blast a barracks to smithereens if it wasn't watched,
would deliberately do just about anything.
Sending me off on a wild goose chase after a character named Joe may
have been a gag. But it may have been something a little grimmer than a
gag, and I made up my mind to be extremely careful from here on in.
The guide arrived at fifteen hundred on the dot. He was tall,
elongated, looked almost like all the other Venusians I'd seen so far.
"I understand you need a Grade A guide, sir," he said.
"Are you familiar with the jungle?" I asked him.
"Born and raised there, sir. Know it like the back of my hand."
"Has Joe told you what the payment will be?"
"Yes, sir. A carton and a half of cigarettes."
I thought about Joe deducting his commission and smiled.
"When can we leave?"
"Right away, sir. We won't need much really. I've made a list of
supplies and I can get them in less than an hour. I suggest you wear
light clothing, boots, and a hat."
"Will I need a weapon?"
He looked at me, his eyes faintly amused. "Why, what for, sir?"
"Never mind," I said. "What's your name, by the way?"
He lifted his eyebrows, and his eyes widened in his narrow face. He was
definitely surprised.
"Joe," he said. "Didn't you know?"
When we'd been out for a while I discovered why Joe had suggested the
boots and the hat. The undergrowth was often sharp and jagged and it
would have sliced my legs to ribbons were they not protected by the
high boots. The hat kept the strong sun off my head.
Joe was an excellent guide and a pleasant companion. He seemed to be
enjoying a great romp, seemed to love the jungle and take a secret
pleasure in the work he was doing. There were times when I couldn't
see three feet ahead of me. He'd stand stock still for a few minutes,
his head barely moving, his eyes darting from one plant to another.
Then he'd say, "This way," and take off into what looked like more
impenetrable jungle invariably to find a little path leading directly
to another village.
Each village was the same. The natives would come running out of their
huts, tall and blue, shouting, "Cigarettes, Joe? Cigarettes?" It took
me a while to realize they were addressing me and not my guide.
Everybody was Joe. It was one beautiful, happy, joyous round of
stinking, hot jungle. And I wasn't getting any nearer my man. Nor had
I any idea how I was supposed to find him. I began to feel pretty low
about the whole affair.
Joe, on the other hand, enjoyed every moment of the trip. In each
village he greeted the natives cheerfully, told them stories, swapped
gossip and jokes. And when it was time to leave, he would say goodbye
to all his friends and we would plunge into the twisted foliage again.
His spirits were always high and he never failed to say the right thing
that would give a momentary lift to my own depressed state of mind. He
would talk for hours on end as we hacked our way through the jungle.
"I like Venus," he said once. "I would never leave it."
"Have you ever been to Earth?" I asked.
"No," Joe replied. "I like Terrans too, you understand. They are good
for Venus. And they are fun."
"Fun?" I asked, thinking of a particular species of Terran: species
Leonard Walsh.
"Yes, yes," he said wholeheartedly. "They joke and they laugh and ...
well, you know."
"I suppose so," I admitted.
Joe smiled secretly, and we pushed on. I began to find, more and more,
that I had started to talk freely to Joe. In the beginning he had been
just my guide. There had been the strained relationship of employer and
employee. But as the days lengthened into weeks, the formal atmosphere
began to crumble. I found myself telling him all about Earth, about
the people there, about my decision to attend the Academy, the rigid
tests, the grind, even the Moon run. Joe was a good listener, nodding
sympathetically, finding experiences in his own life to parallel my own.
And as our relationship progressed from a casual one to a definitely
friendly one, Joe seemed more enthusiastic than ever to keep up our
grinding pace to find what we were looking for.
Once we stopped in a clearing to rest. Joe lounged on the matted
greenery, his long body stretched out in front of him, the knife
gleaming in his belt. I'd seen him slash his way through thick, tangled
vines with that knife, his long, muscular arms powerfully slicing
through them like strips of silk.
"How far are we from the Station?" I asked.
"Three or four Earth weeks," he replied.
I sighed wearily. "Where do we go from here?"
"There are more villages," he said.
"We'll never find him."
"Possibly," Joe mused, the smile creeping over his face again.
"A wild goose chase. A fool's errand."
"We'd better get started," Joe said simply.
I got to my feet and we started the march again. Joe was still fresh, a
brilliant contrast to me, weary and dejected. Somehow, I had the same
feeling I'd had a long time ago on my sixteenth birthday. One of my
friends had taken me all over the city, finally dropping me off at my
own house where the whole gang was gathered for a surprise party. Joe
reminded me of that friend.
"There's a village ahead," he said, and the grin on his face was large
now, his eyes shining.
Something was missing here. Natives. There were no natives rushing out
to greet us. No cries of "Cigarettes? Cigarettes?" I caught up with Joe.
"What's the story?" I whispered.
He shrugged knowingly and continued walking.
And then I saw the ship, nose pointing into space, catching the rays of
the sun like a great silver bullet.
"What...?" I started.
"It's all right," Joe said, smiling.
The ship looked vaguely familiar. I noticed the crest of Space II near
the nose, and a lot of things became clear then. I also saw Walsh
standing near one of the huts, a stun gun in his hand.
"Hello, Major," he called, almost cheerfully. The gun didn't look
cheerful, though. It was pointed at my head.
"Fancy meeting you here, Colonel," I said, trying to match his
joviality. Somehow it didn't quite come off.
Joe was walking beside me, waving at the colonel, beaming all over with
happiness.
"I see you found your man," Walsh said.
I turned rapidly. Joe nodded and kept grinning, a grin that told me he
was getting a big kick out of all this. Like a kid playing a game.
I faced Walsh again. "Okay, what's it all about, pal?"
"Colonel," Walsh corrected me. "You mustn't forget to say Colonel,
Major
." He emphasized my rank, and he said it with a sort of ruthless
finality.
I waited. I could see he was just busting to tell me how clever he'd
been. Besides, there wasn't much I could do but wait. Not with Walsh
pointing the stun gun at my middle.
"We've come a long way since the Academy, haven't we, Major?"
"If you mean in miles," I said, looking around at the plants, "we sure
have."
Walsh grinned a little. "Always the wit," he said drily. And then the
smile faded from his lips and his eyes took on a hard lustre. "I'm
going to kill you, you know." He said it as if he were saying, "I think
it'll rain tomorrow."
Joe almost clapped his hands together with glee. He was really enjoying
this. Another of those funny Terran games.
"You gave me a powerful handicap to overcome," Walsh said. "I suppose I
should thank you, really."
"You're welcome," I said.
"It wasn't easy living down the disgrace you caused me."
"It was your own damn fault," I said. "You knew what you were doing
when you decided to cork off."
Beside me, Joe chuckled a little, enjoying the game immensely.
"You didn't have to report me," Walsh said.
"No? Maybe I should have forgotten all about it? Maybe I should have
nudged you and served you orange juice? So you could do it again
sometime and maybe blow up the whole damn Academy!"
Walsh was silent for a long time. When he spoke his voice was barely
audible. The heat was oppressive, as if it were concentrated on this
little spot in the jungle, focusing all its penetration on a small,
unimportant drama.
I could hear Joe breathing beside me.
"I'm on my way out," Walsh rasped. "Finished, do you understand?"
"Good," I said. And I meant it.
"This Mars thing. A terrible fix. Terrible."
Beside me, a slight frown crossed Joe's face. Apparently he couldn't
understand the seriousness of our voices. What had happened to the
game, the fun?
"You brought the Mars business on yourself," I told Walsh. "There was
never any trouble before you took command."
"The natives," he practically shouted. "They ... they...."
Joe caught his breath sharply, and I wondered what Walsh was going to
say about the natives. Apparently he'd realized that Joe was a native.
Or maybe Joe's knife had something to do with it.
"What about the natives?" I asked.
"Nothing," Walsh said. "Nothing." He was silent for a while.
"A man of my calibre," he said then, his face grim. "Dealing with
savages." He caught himself again and threw a hasty glance at Joe.
The perplexed frown had grown heavier on Joe's face. He looked at the
colonel in puzzlement.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/3/8/9/63890//63890-h//63890-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | What is the name of the Captain in charge of briefing the Major when he arrives on Venus?
| 63890_67FQICLN_9 | [
"Bransten \n",
"Trader Joe \n",
"Walsh\n",
"Bartender Joe \n"
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53,269 | 53269_4YLGV4PU | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Atom Mystery [Young Atom Detective] | 1954.0 | Coombs, Charles Ira | Mystery and detective stories; Nuclear physics -- Juvenile fiction; Scientists -- Juvenile fiction; PZ | YOUNG READERS
Atom Mystery
11
CHAPTER ONE
It was only a dream. Eddie Taylor would like
to have finished it, but the bar of morning sunlight
poking in under the window shade pried
his eyes open. The dream fled. Eddie kicked
off the sheet, swung his feet to the floor, and
groped under the bed for his tennis shoes.
He heard his father’s heavy footsteps in the
hallway. They stopped outside of his bedroom
door.
“You awake, Eddie?”
“I’m awake, Dad,” Eddie answered.
“Breakfast’s ready. Get washed and
dressed.”
12
“Be right there,” Eddie said. Then, remembering
the dream, he added, “Oh, Dad, is it
all right if I use the Geiger counter today?”
Mr. Taylor opened the door. He was a big
man, broad-shouldered and still thin-waisted.
Eddie found it easy to believe the stories he
had heard about his father being an outstanding
football player in his time. Even his glasses
and the gray hair at his temples didn’t add
much age, although Eddie knew it had been
eighteen years since his father had played his
last game of college football.
“You may use the Geiger counter any time
you want, Eddie,” Mr. Taylor said, “as long as
you take good care of it. You figured out where
you can find some uranium ore?”
Eddie smiled sheepishly. “I—I had a
dream,” he said. “Plain as day. It was out on
Cedar Point. I was walking along over some
rocks. Suddenly the Geiger counter began
clicking like everything.”
13
“Cedar Point?” his father asked. “I’ve
never been out there. But, from what I hear,
there are plenty of rock formations. Might
be worth a try, at that. You never can tell
where you might strike some radioactivity.”
“Do you believe in dreams, Dad?”
“Well, now, that’s a tough question, son.
I can’t say that I really do. Still, one clue is
as good as another when it comes to hunting
uranium ore, I guess. But right now we’d
better get out to breakfast before your mother
scalps us. Hurry it up.” His father turned
and went back down the hallway toward the
kitchen.
Eddie pulled on his trousers and T shirt
and went into the bathroom. He washed hurriedly,
knowing that even if he missed a spot
or two, he was fairly safe. During the summer
months his freckles got so thick and dark that
it would take a magnifying glass to detect any
small smudges of dirt hiding among them. He
plastered some water on his dark-red hair,
pushed a comb through it, and shrugged as it
snapped back almost to its original position.
Oh, well, he had tried.
14
He grinned into the mirror, reached a
finger into his mouth, and unhooked the
small rubber bands from his tooth braces.
He dropped them into the waste basket. He’d
put fresh ones in after breakfast.
He brushed his teeth carefully, taking particular
pains around the metal braces. The
tooth-straightening orthodontist had warned
him about letting food gather around the
metal clamps. It could start cavities.
Finished, Eddie went out to breakfast.
“Good morning, dear,” his mother greeted
him, handing him a plate of eggs.
“Hi, Mom,” Eddie said. “Gotta hurry. Big
day today.”
“So your father says. But I’m afraid your
big day will have to start with sorting out and
tying up those newspapers and magazines that
have been collecting in the garage.”
“Aw, Mom—”
“Eddie, I asked you to do it three days ago.
Remember? And the Goodwill truck comes
around today.”
“But, Mom—”
15
“No arguments, son,” his father put in
calmly but firmly. “School vacation doesn’t
mean that your chores around here are on
vacation, too. Get at it right away, and you’ll
still have time to hunt your uranium.
“Well,” Mr. Taylor added, excusing himself
from the table, “I’d better be getting over
to school. I’m expecting to receive shipment
of a new radioisotope today.”
The very word excited Eddie. In fact, anything
having to do with atomic science
excited him. He knew something about
isotopes—pronounced
eye-suh-tope
. You
couldn’t have a father who was head of the
atomic-science department at Oceanview
College without picking up a little knowledge
along the way. Eddie knew that a radioisotope
was a material which had been “cooked” in an
atomic reactor until it was “hot” with radioactivity.
When carefully controlled, the radiation
stored up in such isotopes was used in
many beneficial ways.
16
“Why don’t college professors get summer
vacations, too?” Eddie asked. One reason for
asking that particular question was to keep
from prying deeper into the subject of the
radioisotope. Much of his father’s work at
Oceanview College was of a secret nature.
Eddie had learned not to ask questions about
it. His father usually volunteered any information
he wanted known, so Eddie stuck to
questions which could and would be answered.
“We get vacations,” his father said. “But—well,
my work is a little different, you know.
At the speed atomic science is moving today,
we simply can’t afford to waste time. But don’t
worry. We’ll take a week or so off before school
starts in the fall. Maybe head for the mountains
with our tent and sleeping bags.”
“And Geiger counter?” Eddie asked
eagerly.
“Wouldn’t think of leaving it home,” his
father said, smiling. “By the way, I put new
batteries in it the other day. Take it easy on
them. Remember to switch it off when you’re
not actually using it.”
“I will,” Eddie promised. He had forgotten
several times before, weakening the batteries.
17
It took Eddie over an hour to sort out the
newspapers and magazines in the garage, tie
them in neat bundles, and place them out on
the front curb for the Goodwill pickup. By
that time the sun was high overhead. It had
driven off the coolness which the ocean air
had provided during the earlier hours.
“Anything else, Mom?” he asked, returning
to the house and getting the Geiger counter
out of the closet. He edged toward the back
door before his mother had much time to
think of something more for him to do.
“I guess not, dear,” Mrs. Taylor said, smiling
over his hasty retreat. “What are you going
to do?”
“Think I’ll do a little prospecting,” Eddie
said.
“Where?”
“Probably in the hills beyond the college,”
Eddie said. The more he thought about it, the
more he realized it was a little late in the day
to go to Cedar Point. The best way to get
there was by rowboat across Moon Bay, and
that was too long a row to be starting now.
Besides, there were plenty of other places
around the outskirts of Oceanview where
likely looking rock formations invited search
with a Geiger counter.
18
“Are you going alone?” his mother asked.
“Oh, guess I’ll stop by and see if Teena
wants to go,” Eddie answered casually. He
tried to make it sound as though he would
be doing Teena Ross a big favor. After all,
she was only a girl. Eddie didn’t figure a girl
would make a very good uranium prospecting
partner, but most of the fellows he knew were
away at camp, or vacationing with their folks,
or something like that.
“She’ll enjoy it, I’m sure,” his mother said.
“I’ll take Sandy, too,” Eddie said. “He needs
the exercise.”
“That’s a good idea, dear. Be back in time
for an early dinner.”
Eddie let Sandy off his chain. The taffy-colored
cocker spaniel yipped wildly over his
freedom, racing back and forth as Eddie
started down the street.
19
Christina Ross—whom everybody called
Teena—lived at the far end of the block.
Eddie went around to the side door of the
light-green stucco house and knocked.
“Oh, hi, Eddie,” Teena greeted him, appearing
at the screen door. “I was hoping
you’d come over.”
“Well, I—I just happened to be going by,”
Eddie said. “Thought you might want to
watch me do a little prospecting with the Geiger
counter. But maybe you’re too busy.”
That’s how to handle it, Eddie thought.
Don’t act anxious. Let Teena be anxious.
Then maybe she’ll even offer to bring along
a couple of sandwiches or some fruit.
“Oh, I’d love to go,” Teena said eagerly,
“but I’m just finishing the dishes. Come on
in.”
“I’m in kind of a hurry.”
“I’ll only be a minute.” She pushed the
screen door open for him. “I’ll make us some
sandwiches.”
“Stay here, Sandy,” Eddie said. “Sit.” The
dog minded, although he looked a bit rebellious.
20
Eddie went inside and followed Teena to
the kitchen. He felt triumphant about the
sandwiches.
Teena tossed him a dish towel. “You dry
them,” she said.
“Who, me?”
“Why not? You’re in a hurry, aren’t you?
I can make the sandwiches while you dry the
silverware.” She smiled, putting tiny crinkles
in her small, slightly upturned nose. She wore
her hair in a pony tail. Even though her hair
was blond all year long, it seemed even
lighter in the summer. Eddie couldn’t tell
whether the sun had faded it, or whether her
deep summer tan simply made her hair look
lighter by contrast. Maybe both.
“Hello, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross said, coming into
the kitchen. “Looks like Teena put you to
work.”
“She always does, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie said,
pretending great injury. “Don’t know why I
keep coming over here.”
“I know,” Teena spoke up quickly. “It’s
because we’re friends, that’s why.”
21
Eddie knew she was right. They were
friends—good friends. They had been ever
since Eddie’s family had moved to Oceanview
and his father had become head of the college’s
atomic-science department. In fact, their
parents were close friends, also. Teena’s father
was chief engineer for the Acme Aviation
Company, one of the coast town’s largest
manufacturing concerns.
“Well, I’ll be glad to finish them, Eddie,”
Mrs. Ross offered. “I know how boys detest
doing dishes.”
“Oh, I don’t really mind, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie
said. “Besides, Teena’s making sandwiches to
take with us.”
“Another prospecting trip?” Teena’s
mother glanced at the Geiger counter which
Eddie had set carefully on the dinette table.
“I still think there must be some uranium
around here,” Eddie insisted. “And we can
find it if anyone can.”
“I agree,” Mrs. Ross said. “But even if you
don’t find it, you both seem to enjoy your
hikes.”
22
“Oh, yes, it’s fun, Mother,” Teena replied,
wrapping wax paper around a sandwich.
“Guess I’m ready. I’ve got a bone for Sandy,
too.”
“Don’t go too far out from town,” Mrs.
Ross cautioned, as Eddie picked up the Geiger
counter. “And stick near the main roads.
You know the rules.”
“We sure do, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie assured
her. “And we’ll be back early.”
They walked past the college campus, and
toward the rocky foothills beyond. At various
rock mounds and outcroppings, Eddie
switched on the Geiger counter. The needle
of the dial on the black box wavered slightly.
A slow clicking came through the earphones,
but Eddie knew these indicated no more than
a normal background count. There were slight
traces of radioactivity in almost all earth or
rocks. It was in the air itself, caused by mysterious
and ever-present cosmic rays, so there
was always a mild background count when
the Geiger counter was turned on; but to
mean anything, the needle had to jump far
ahead on the gauge, and the clicking through
the earphones had to speed up until it sounded
almost like bacon frying in a hot skillet.
23
There was none of that today. After they
had hiked and searched most of the forenoon,
Eddie said, “We might as well call it a day,
Teena. Doesn’t seem to be anything out here.”
“It’s all right with me,” Teena agreed,
plucking foxtails from Sandy’s ears. “Pretty
hot, anyway. Let’s eat our sandwiches and go
back home.”
“All right,” Eddie said. “You know, one of
these days I’d like to go out to Cedar Point
and scout around. Maybe we’ll find something
there.” Then he told Teena about his dream.
Teena smiled. “A dream sure isn’t much to
go on,” she said, “but they say it’s pretty out on
Cedar Point. I’ll go any time you want to,
Eddie.” She handed him one of the sandwiches.
It was midafternoon by the time they arrived
back at Teena’s house. They worked a while
on a new jigsaw puzzle Teena had received
on a recent birthday. Then Eddie said good-by
and went on down the street toward his
own home.
24
After putting Sandy on his long chain and
filling his water dish, Eddie went in the back
door. He put the Geiger counter in the closet
and went into the kitchen.
“What’s for dinner, Mom?” he asked.
Mrs. Taylor turned from the sink. Eddie
knew at once, just seeing the expression on
his mother’s face, that something was wrong.
“Dinner?” his mother said absently. “It’s
not quite four o’clock yet, Eddie. Besides,
dinner may be a little late today.”
“But this morning you said it would be
early,” Eddie reminded her, puzzled.
“This morning I didn’t know what might
happen.”
25
Then Eddie heard the sound of his father’s
voice coming from the den. There was a
strange urgent tone in it. The door to the den
was open. Eddie went through the dining
room and glanced into the den. His father
sat stiffly behind his homemade desk, talking
rapidly into the telephone. Eddie caught only
the last few sketchy words. Then his father
placed the telephone in its cradle, glanced up,
and saw Eddie.
If there had been even the slightest doubt
in Eddie’s mind about something being
wrong, it vanished now. Mr. Taylor looked
years older than he had that very morning.
Worry lay deep in his eyes. He fumbled
thoughtfully with a pencil, turning it end over
end on his desk.
“Hello, son,” he said. He didn’t even ask
whether Eddie had discovered any uranium
ore that day. Always before, he had shown
genuine interest in Eddie’s prospecting trips.
“Dad,” Eddie said anxiously, “what—what’s
the matter?”
“It shows that much, does it, son?” his
father said tiredly.
“What’s wrong, Dad?” Eddie prompted.
“Or can’t you tell me?”
Mr. Taylor leaned back. “Quite a bit’s
wrong, Eddie,” he said, “and I guess there’s
no reason why I shouldn’t tell you. It’ll be in
the evening papers, anyway.”
26
“Evening papers?”
“Eddie, you remember me mentioning this
morning about that radioisotope shipment I
was expecting today?”
“I remember,” Eddie said. “Did it come?”
“It did—and it didn’t,” his father said.
“What does that mean, Dad?” Eddie asked,
puzzled.
“The delivery truck arrived at the school
with it,” his father explained, “but while the
driver was inquiring where to put it, the container
disappeared.”
“Disappeared?”
“The radioisotope was stolen, Eddie,” his
father said slowly. “Stolen right out from
under our noses!”
27
CHAPTER TWO
At the moment, Eddie didn’t pry for further
information on the theft of the valuable radioactive
isotope. His father had plenty on his
mind, as it was. The main information was in
the evening
Globe
, which Eddie rushed out
to get as soon as he heard it plop onto the
front porch.
He took the newspaper to his father to read
first. After having finished, Mr. Taylor handed
the paper to Eddie and leaned back thoughtfully
in his chair.
28
“They’ve got it pretty straight, at that,” Mr.
Taylor said, “but I’m afraid this is going to
stir up quite a bit of trouble.”
“It wasn’t your fault, was it, Dad?” Eddie
defended.
“It was as much mine as anybody’s, son,”
his father said. “Probably more so. After all,
I am head of the department. I knew about
the shipment. That should make it my responsibility
to see that it was properly received
and placed in our atomic-materials storage
vault. But there is little point in trying to
place the blame on anyone. I’m willing to accept
that part of it. The important thing is
that we recover that radioisotope. Not only is
it of a secret nature, but it is also dangerously
radioactive if improperly handled.”
“But—but wasn’t it in a safe container?”
Eddie asked.
29
“Of course,” his father said. “There were
only two ounces of it in a fifty-pound lead
capsule. As long as it remains in that capsule
it’s safe. As you know, the lead prevents any
radiation from escaping. Out of that capsule,
however, those two ounces of radioisotope can
be very dangerous.”
“Fifty pounds,” Eddie said thoughtfully.
“That’s a pretty big thing to steal, isn’t it?”
“Not when it’s lead, son,” his father replied.
“Not much bigger than a two-quart
milk bottle, in fact.”
“Even at that, no kid could have taken it,”
Eddie said.
“Kid?” His father smiled thinly. “We don’t
think it was any kid, Eddie. Not by a long
shot. The whole thing was carefully planned
and carefully carried out. It was not the work
of amateurs.”
Eddie read the newspaper account. The
small truck from Drake Ridge, where one of
the country’s newest atomic reactors was
located, had arrived earlier than expected at
Oceanview College. It had backed up to the
receiving dock where all of the college supplies
were delivered. Since deliveries during vacation
months were few, there was no one on the
dock when the truck arrived. A half hour later,
when the delivery was expected, there would
have been. The truck’s early arrival had
caught them unprepared.
30
The driver had left the truck and had gone
around the building to the front office. It had
taken him less than five minutes to locate the
receiving-dock foreman. Together, they had
returned through the small warehouse and
opened the rear door onto the dock.
During that short time someone had pried
open the heavy padlock on the delivery truck’s
rear door and had stolen the fifty-pound lead
capsule containing the radioisotope.
Dusty footprints on the pavement around
the rear of the truck indicated that two men
had carried out the theft. A heavy iron pry bar
had been dropped at the rear of the truck after
the lock was sprung. It was a common type
used by carpenters. There were no fingerprints
or other identifying marks on it. The footprints
were barely visible and of no help other
than to indicate that two men were involved
in the crime.
31
“Dad,” Eddie asked, looking up from the
paper, “how could anyone carry away something
weighing fifty pounds without being noticed?”
“Chances are they had their car parked
nearby,” his father said. “As you know, there
are no fences or gates around Oceanview College.
People come and go as they please. As a
matter of fact, there are always quite a few
automobiles parked around the shipping and
receiving building, and parking space is scarce
even during summer sessions. Anyone could
park and wait there unnoticed. Or they could
walk around without attracting any undue attention.”
“But, Dad,” Eddie continued, “how would
the men know that the delivery truck would
arrive a half hour early?”
“They wouldn’t,” his father said. “They
may have had another plan. The way things
worked out, they didn’t need to use it. The
early delivery and the business of leaving the
truck unguarded for a few minutes probably
gave them a better opportunity than they had
expected. At least, they took quick advantage
of it.”
32
“I don’t see what anyone would want with
a radioisotope,” Eddie said. “Maybe they figured
there was something else inside of that
lead capsule.”
“That’s unlikely, son,” Mr. Taylor said.
“Believe me, it was no common theft. Nor
were the thieves ordinary thieves. That isotope
was a new one. A very secret one. Our job at
the college was to conduct various tests with it
in order to find out exactly how it could best
be put to use as a cure for disease, or for sterilizing
food, or even as a source of power.”
“Power?” Eddie said. “Boy, it must have
been a strong isotope.” He knew that the
strength of radioisotopes could be controlled
largely by the length of time they were allowed
to “cook” in an atomic reactor and soak up
radioactivity.
33
“We weren’t planning to run a submarine
with it,” his father said. “It wasn’t that strong.
Still, it doesn’t take so very much radioactivity
to make two ounces of an isotope quite powerful—and
quite deadly. I only hope whoever
stole it knows what he’s doing. However, I’m
sure he does.”
“You mean he must have been an atomic
scientist himself?” Eddie asked.
“Let’s just say he—or both of them—have
enough training in the subject to know how to
handle that isotope safely,” Mr. Taylor said.
“But, Dad,” Eddie wondered, “what could
they do with it?”
“They could study it,” his father explained.
“At least, they could send it somewhere to be
broken down and studied. Being a new isotope,
the formula is of great value.”
“What do you mean, send it somewhere?”
Eddie asked.
“Perhaps to some other country.”
“Then—then you mean whoever stole it
were spies!” Eddie exclaimed breathlessly.
“That’s entirely possible,” his father said.
“In fact, it’s the only logical explanation I can
think of. People simply don’t go around stealing
radioactive isotopes without a mighty important
reason.”
34
“Dinner’s ready,” Eddie’s mother called
from the kitchen.
During dinner Eddie wasn’t sure just what
he was eating. The idea of spies stealing atomic
materials kept building up in his mind. By the
time dessert was finished, he was anxious to
talk with someone, yet he knew he shouldn’t
bother his father with any more questions. He
asked if he could go over and visit with Teena
for a while.
“Well, you were together most of the day,”
his mother said, “but I guess it’s all right. Be
back in about an hour, though.”
It was a balmy evening. On such evenings,
he and Teena sometimes walked along the
beach barefoot, collecting sea shells. Today
Eddie had no desire to do that. He ran down
the block.
Teena answered his knock.
“Come on in, Eddie,” she invited, seeming
surprised to see him. “Mother and I are just
finishing dinner.”
“Oh, I figured you’d be through by now,”
Eddie apologized, following her inside.
35
“Hello, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross said, but she
didn’t seem as cheerful as usual.
“Good evening, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie said. “I—I
hope I’m not making a pest of myself.” He
looked around for Mr. Ross, but Teena’s
father apparently hadn’t arrived home from
Acme Aircraft yet. There wasn’t a place set for
him at the table, either.
“You’re never a pest, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross assured
him. “I was going to call your mother in
a little while about that newspaper write-up.”
“Oh, you read it?” Eddie said.
“How could anyone miss it?” Teena said.
“Right on the front page.”
“I suppose your father is quite concerned
over it,” Teena’s mother said.
“Oh, yes,” Eddie affirmed. “He was the one
who ordered the isotope.”
“What’s an isotope?” Teena asked.
“I’m not sure I know, either,” Mrs. Ross
said. “Maybe we could understand more of
what it’s all about if you could explain what a
radioisotope is, Eddie.”
36
“Well,” Eddie said slowly, “it’s not easy to
explain, but I’ll try. You know how rare
uranium is. There’s not nearly enough of it to
fill all the needs for radioactive materials. Besides,
pure uranium is so powerful and expensive
and dangerous to handle that it’s not
a very good idea to try using it in its true form.
So they build an atomic reactor like the one at
Drake Ridge.”
“We’ve driven by it,” Mrs. Ross said. “My,
it’s a big place.”
“I’ll say,” Eddie agreed. “Of course, only
one building holds the reactor itself. It’s the
biggest building near the center.”
“I remember it,” Teena said.
“Well, the reactor is about four stories
high,” Eddie went on. “They call it a uranium
‘pile.’ It’s made up of hundreds and hundreds
of graphite bricks. That’s where they get the
name ‘pile’—from brick pile. Anyway, scattered
around in between the bricks are small
bits of uranium. Uranium atoms are radioactive.
That is, they keep splitting up and sending
out rays.”
“Why do they do that?” Teena asked.
37
“It’s just the way nature made uranium, I
guess,” Eddie said. “Most atoms stay in one
piece, although they move around lickety-split
all of the time. Uranium atoms not only move
around, but they break apart. They shoot out
little particles called neutrons. These neutrons
hit other atoms and split them apart, sending
out more neutrons. It’s a regular chain reaction.”
“I’ve heard of chain reactions,” Mrs. Ross
said.
“Well, with all of the splitting up and moving
around of the uranium atoms,” Eddie went
on, “an awful lot of heat builds up. If they
don’t control it—well, you’ve seen pictures of
atomic-bomb explosions. That’s a chain reaction
out of control.”
“Out of control is right,” Teena said.
38
“But the atomic piles control the reaction,”
Eddie said. “The graphite bricks keep the
splitting-up atoms apart so one neutron won’t
go smashing into other atoms unless they want
it to. They have ways of controlling it so that
only as much radiation builds up as they want.
You can even hear the reactor hum as the radioactive
rays go tearing through it. But by
careful tending, the scientists keep the atomic
collisions far enough apart so the thing doesn’t
blow up.”
“Boy, that sounds dangerous,” Teena said.
“Well, they know just how to do it,” Eddie
replied.
“Aren’t the rays dangerous?” Mrs. Ross
asked.
“I’ll say they’re dangerous,” Eddie said.
“But the whole pile is covered by a shield of
concrete about eight feet thick. That keeps the
rays from getting out and injuring the workmen.”
“Goodness. Eight feet is a lot of cement.”
“It takes a lot to stop radioactive atomic
particles,” Eddie explained. “Especially the
gamma rays. They’re the fastest and most dangerous,
and the hardest to stop. Alpha and beta
rays are fairly easy to stop. But the gamma
rays are regular high-velocity invisible bullets.
They’ll go right through a stone wall unless
it’s plenty thick. Of course, you can’t see them.
Not with even the most powerful microscope
in the world.”
39
“I wouldn’t want to work around a place
where I might get shot at by—by dangerous
rays you can’t even see,” Teena said.
“I would,” Eddie said. “Everyone is carefully
protected. They see to that. Well, anyway,
if all of those uranium atoms were shooting
radioactive rays around inside of that pile
and doing nothing, there would be an awful
lot of energy going to waste. So the atomic
scientists take certain elements which aren’t
radioactive, but can be made radioactive, and
shove small pieces of them into holes drilled
in the pile.”
“Isn’t that dangerous?” Teena asked.
“They don’t shove them in with their bare
hands,” Eddie said, trying not to show exasperation.
“They use long holders to push the
small chunks of material into the holes in the
reactor. Then, as those uranium atoms keep
splitting up and shooting particles around inside
of the pile, some of them smack into the
chunks of material, and stick there. Most elements
will soak up radiation, just like a sponge
soaks up water.”
40
“My, that’s interesting, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross
said.
“I’ve seen them do it,” Eddie said proudly,
then added, “from behind a protective shield,
of course. When the material has soaked up
enough radiation, they pull it back out. They
say it’s ‘cooked.’”
“You mean it’s hot?” Teena asked.
“It’s hot,” Eddie said, “but not like if it
came out of a stove. By hot, they mean it’s
radioactive. If you touched it, or even got near
it, you would get burned, but you probably
wouldn’t even know it for a while. It would be
a radiation burn. That’s a kind of burn you
don’t feel, but it destroys your blood cells and
tissues, and—well, you’ve had it.”
“So that’s what a radioisotope is,” Mrs. Ross
said. “It’s like a sponge. Only instead of soaking
up water, it soaks up radiation.”
41
“That’s about it,” Eddie said. “My dad says
that as more is learned about the ways to use
isotopes, the whole world is going to be improved.
You’ve heard of radiocobalt for curing
cancer. Well, that’s an isotope. They make it
by cooking cobalt in an atomic reactor. Oh,
there are hundreds of different isotopes. Like
I said, isotopes can be made of most of the
elements. And there are over a hundred elements.
Some soak up a lot of radioactivity, and
are strong and dangerous. Others absorb only
a little and are pretty safe to use. Depends, too,
on how long they let them cook in the reactor.”
“What kind was the one stolen from the
college today?” Teena asked.
“Dad didn’t say exactly,” Eddie answered,
“except he did say that if whoever took it
didn’t know what he was doing and opened up
the lead capsule, it could kill him. Of course,
even the mild isotopes are deadly if they’re not
handled right.”
“My goodness, it is a serious matter, isn’t
it?” Mrs. Ross said.
42
Eddie nodded. It was even more serious
than its threat of danger to anyone who
handled it carelessly. It was a new isotope—a
secret isotope. His father hadn’t said whether
it had been developed for curing things or for
destroying things. But many radioisotopes
could do either; it depended on how they were
used. Eddie assumed that anyone who would
stoop to stealing isotopes more than likely
would be interested in their ability to destroy
rather than their ability to benefit mankind.
“Well, I certainly do hope everything works
out all right,” Teena’s mother said.
“So do I,” Teena agreed.
Eddie glanced at the kitchen clock. “Oh,
boy,” he said, “I’d better be heading back
home. I didn’t mean to come over here and
talk so long.”
“Oh, we’re glad you did, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross
said. “I’m afraid too few of us know anything
about this atom business.”
43
“That’s right, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie agreed.
“People should talk more and read more about
it. After all, this is an atomic age. We might as
well face it. My father says that in horse-and-buggy
days everyone knew how to feed a horse
and grease a wagon wheel. They knew what was
needed to get the work done. But now that
atoms are being harnessed to do the work, not
many people even bother to find out what an
atom is.”
Mrs. Ross smiled. “I guess you’re right,
Eddie,” she said, “but I wouldn’t quite know
how to go about feeding an atom.”
“Or greasing one,” Teena added.
Eddie laughed. “I sure wouldn’t want the
job of trying to feed a herd of them the size of
a period,” he said. “Did you know that there
are about three million billion atoms of carbon
in a single period printed at the end of a
sentence. That’s how small atoms are.”
“Three million billion is a lot of something,”
a man’s voice spoke behind him.
“What are we talking about, Eddie?”
“Oh, hello, Mr. Ross,” Eddie said, turning
around and standing up. “I didn’t hear you
come in.”
44
Teena’s father was a medium-sized man
with light-brown hair which was getting somewhat
thin on top. He was usually quite cheerful
and full of fun, but tonight his face seemed
unusually drawn and sober. He stepped to the
table, leaned over, and gave both Teena and
Mrs. Ross a kiss on the cheek.
“Eddie was telling us about atoms,” Teena’s
mother said. “Did you know there were three
million billion of them in a period?”
“How many in a comma?” Mr. Ross said to
Eddie, then added quickly, “forget it, Eddie.
It wasn’t very funny. I—I’m afraid I don’t feel
very funny tonight.”
“Sit down, dear,” Mrs. Ross said. “I’ll warm
your dinner. You didn’t sound very cheerful
when you called to say you would be late. How
did everything go at the plant today?”
“Not so good,” Teena’s father said tiredly.
“In fact, not good at all.”
Problems. It seemed that everyone had
problems, Eddie thought, as he started to
leave.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/5/3/2/6/53269//53269-h//53269-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | In Chapter one, what is the significance of describing Mr. Taylor as not having aged much?
| 53269_4YLGV4PU_1 | [
"It provides the notion that Mr. Taylor is a fun, understanding, and competent professor. \n",
"It provides the notion that despite Mr. Taylor’s dangerous job, the radioactivity hasn’t aged him a day. \n",
"It provides a contrast for later in the story, when Mr. Taylor is described as looking aged and wary after the isotope is stolen. \n",
"It provides a contrast against Mr. Ross, who is described as older and balding. \n"
] | 3 | 3 | [
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53,269 | 53269_4YLGV4PU | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Atom Mystery [Young Atom Detective] | 1954.0 | Coombs, Charles Ira | Mystery and detective stories; Nuclear physics -- Juvenile fiction; Scientists -- Juvenile fiction; PZ | YOUNG READERS
Atom Mystery
11
CHAPTER ONE
It was only a dream. Eddie Taylor would like
to have finished it, but the bar of morning sunlight
poking in under the window shade pried
his eyes open. The dream fled. Eddie kicked
off the sheet, swung his feet to the floor, and
groped under the bed for his tennis shoes.
He heard his father’s heavy footsteps in the
hallway. They stopped outside of his bedroom
door.
“You awake, Eddie?”
“I’m awake, Dad,” Eddie answered.
“Breakfast’s ready. Get washed and
dressed.”
12
“Be right there,” Eddie said. Then, remembering
the dream, he added, “Oh, Dad, is it
all right if I use the Geiger counter today?”
Mr. Taylor opened the door. He was a big
man, broad-shouldered and still thin-waisted.
Eddie found it easy to believe the stories he
had heard about his father being an outstanding
football player in his time. Even his glasses
and the gray hair at his temples didn’t add
much age, although Eddie knew it had been
eighteen years since his father had played his
last game of college football.
“You may use the Geiger counter any time
you want, Eddie,” Mr. Taylor said, “as long as
you take good care of it. You figured out where
you can find some uranium ore?”
Eddie smiled sheepishly. “I—I had a
dream,” he said. “Plain as day. It was out on
Cedar Point. I was walking along over some
rocks. Suddenly the Geiger counter began
clicking like everything.”
13
“Cedar Point?” his father asked. “I’ve
never been out there. But, from what I hear,
there are plenty of rock formations. Might
be worth a try, at that. You never can tell
where you might strike some radioactivity.”
“Do you believe in dreams, Dad?”
“Well, now, that’s a tough question, son.
I can’t say that I really do. Still, one clue is
as good as another when it comes to hunting
uranium ore, I guess. But right now we’d
better get out to breakfast before your mother
scalps us. Hurry it up.” His father turned
and went back down the hallway toward the
kitchen.
Eddie pulled on his trousers and T shirt
and went into the bathroom. He washed hurriedly,
knowing that even if he missed a spot
or two, he was fairly safe. During the summer
months his freckles got so thick and dark that
it would take a magnifying glass to detect any
small smudges of dirt hiding among them. He
plastered some water on his dark-red hair,
pushed a comb through it, and shrugged as it
snapped back almost to its original position.
Oh, well, he had tried.
14
He grinned into the mirror, reached a
finger into his mouth, and unhooked the
small rubber bands from his tooth braces.
He dropped them into the waste basket. He’d
put fresh ones in after breakfast.
He brushed his teeth carefully, taking particular
pains around the metal braces. The
tooth-straightening orthodontist had warned
him about letting food gather around the
metal clamps. It could start cavities.
Finished, Eddie went out to breakfast.
“Good morning, dear,” his mother greeted
him, handing him a plate of eggs.
“Hi, Mom,” Eddie said. “Gotta hurry. Big
day today.”
“So your father says. But I’m afraid your
big day will have to start with sorting out and
tying up those newspapers and magazines that
have been collecting in the garage.”
“Aw, Mom—”
“Eddie, I asked you to do it three days ago.
Remember? And the Goodwill truck comes
around today.”
“But, Mom—”
15
“No arguments, son,” his father put in
calmly but firmly. “School vacation doesn’t
mean that your chores around here are on
vacation, too. Get at it right away, and you’ll
still have time to hunt your uranium.
“Well,” Mr. Taylor added, excusing himself
from the table, “I’d better be getting over
to school. I’m expecting to receive shipment
of a new radioisotope today.”
The very word excited Eddie. In fact, anything
having to do with atomic science
excited him. He knew something about
isotopes—pronounced
eye-suh-tope
. You
couldn’t have a father who was head of the
atomic-science department at Oceanview
College without picking up a little knowledge
along the way. Eddie knew that a radioisotope
was a material which had been “cooked” in an
atomic reactor until it was “hot” with radioactivity.
When carefully controlled, the radiation
stored up in such isotopes was used in
many beneficial ways.
16
“Why don’t college professors get summer
vacations, too?” Eddie asked. One reason for
asking that particular question was to keep
from prying deeper into the subject of the
radioisotope. Much of his father’s work at
Oceanview College was of a secret nature.
Eddie had learned not to ask questions about
it. His father usually volunteered any information
he wanted known, so Eddie stuck to
questions which could and would be answered.
“We get vacations,” his father said. “But—well,
my work is a little different, you know.
At the speed atomic science is moving today,
we simply can’t afford to waste time. But don’t
worry. We’ll take a week or so off before school
starts in the fall. Maybe head for the mountains
with our tent and sleeping bags.”
“And Geiger counter?” Eddie asked
eagerly.
“Wouldn’t think of leaving it home,” his
father said, smiling. “By the way, I put new
batteries in it the other day. Take it easy on
them. Remember to switch it off when you’re
not actually using it.”
“I will,” Eddie promised. He had forgotten
several times before, weakening the batteries.
17
It took Eddie over an hour to sort out the
newspapers and magazines in the garage, tie
them in neat bundles, and place them out on
the front curb for the Goodwill pickup. By
that time the sun was high overhead. It had
driven off the coolness which the ocean air
had provided during the earlier hours.
“Anything else, Mom?” he asked, returning
to the house and getting the Geiger counter
out of the closet. He edged toward the back
door before his mother had much time to
think of something more for him to do.
“I guess not, dear,” Mrs. Taylor said, smiling
over his hasty retreat. “What are you going
to do?”
“Think I’ll do a little prospecting,” Eddie
said.
“Where?”
“Probably in the hills beyond the college,”
Eddie said. The more he thought about it, the
more he realized it was a little late in the day
to go to Cedar Point. The best way to get
there was by rowboat across Moon Bay, and
that was too long a row to be starting now.
Besides, there were plenty of other places
around the outskirts of Oceanview where
likely looking rock formations invited search
with a Geiger counter.
18
“Are you going alone?” his mother asked.
“Oh, guess I’ll stop by and see if Teena
wants to go,” Eddie answered casually. He
tried to make it sound as though he would
be doing Teena Ross a big favor. After all,
she was only a girl. Eddie didn’t figure a girl
would make a very good uranium prospecting
partner, but most of the fellows he knew were
away at camp, or vacationing with their folks,
or something like that.
“She’ll enjoy it, I’m sure,” his mother said.
“I’ll take Sandy, too,” Eddie said. “He needs
the exercise.”
“That’s a good idea, dear. Be back in time
for an early dinner.”
Eddie let Sandy off his chain. The taffy-colored
cocker spaniel yipped wildly over his
freedom, racing back and forth as Eddie
started down the street.
19
Christina Ross—whom everybody called
Teena—lived at the far end of the block.
Eddie went around to the side door of the
light-green stucco house and knocked.
“Oh, hi, Eddie,” Teena greeted him, appearing
at the screen door. “I was hoping
you’d come over.”
“Well, I—I just happened to be going by,”
Eddie said. “Thought you might want to
watch me do a little prospecting with the Geiger
counter. But maybe you’re too busy.”
That’s how to handle it, Eddie thought.
Don’t act anxious. Let Teena be anxious.
Then maybe she’ll even offer to bring along
a couple of sandwiches or some fruit.
“Oh, I’d love to go,” Teena said eagerly,
“but I’m just finishing the dishes. Come on
in.”
“I’m in kind of a hurry.”
“I’ll only be a minute.” She pushed the
screen door open for him. “I’ll make us some
sandwiches.”
“Stay here, Sandy,” Eddie said. “Sit.” The
dog minded, although he looked a bit rebellious.
20
Eddie went inside and followed Teena to
the kitchen. He felt triumphant about the
sandwiches.
Teena tossed him a dish towel. “You dry
them,” she said.
“Who, me?”
“Why not? You’re in a hurry, aren’t you?
I can make the sandwiches while you dry the
silverware.” She smiled, putting tiny crinkles
in her small, slightly upturned nose. She wore
her hair in a pony tail. Even though her hair
was blond all year long, it seemed even
lighter in the summer. Eddie couldn’t tell
whether the sun had faded it, or whether her
deep summer tan simply made her hair look
lighter by contrast. Maybe both.
“Hello, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross said, coming into
the kitchen. “Looks like Teena put you to
work.”
“She always does, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie said,
pretending great injury. “Don’t know why I
keep coming over here.”
“I know,” Teena spoke up quickly. “It’s
because we’re friends, that’s why.”
21
Eddie knew she was right. They were
friends—good friends. They had been ever
since Eddie’s family had moved to Oceanview
and his father had become head of the college’s
atomic-science department. In fact, their
parents were close friends, also. Teena’s father
was chief engineer for the Acme Aviation
Company, one of the coast town’s largest
manufacturing concerns.
“Well, I’ll be glad to finish them, Eddie,”
Mrs. Ross offered. “I know how boys detest
doing dishes.”
“Oh, I don’t really mind, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie
said. “Besides, Teena’s making sandwiches to
take with us.”
“Another prospecting trip?” Teena’s
mother glanced at the Geiger counter which
Eddie had set carefully on the dinette table.
“I still think there must be some uranium
around here,” Eddie insisted. “And we can
find it if anyone can.”
“I agree,” Mrs. Ross said. “But even if you
don’t find it, you both seem to enjoy your
hikes.”
22
“Oh, yes, it’s fun, Mother,” Teena replied,
wrapping wax paper around a sandwich.
“Guess I’m ready. I’ve got a bone for Sandy,
too.”
“Don’t go too far out from town,” Mrs.
Ross cautioned, as Eddie picked up the Geiger
counter. “And stick near the main roads.
You know the rules.”
“We sure do, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie assured
her. “And we’ll be back early.”
They walked past the college campus, and
toward the rocky foothills beyond. At various
rock mounds and outcroppings, Eddie
switched on the Geiger counter. The needle
of the dial on the black box wavered slightly.
A slow clicking came through the earphones,
but Eddie knew these indicated no more than
a normal background count. There were slight
traces of radioactivity in almost all earth or
rocks. It was in the air itself, caused by mysterious
and ever-present cosmic rays, so there
was always a mild background count when
the Geiger counter was turned on; but to
mean anything, the needle had to jump far
ahead on the gauge, and the clicking through
the earphones had to speed up until it sounded
almost like bacon frying in a hot skillet.
23
There was none of that today. After they
had hiked and searched most of the forenoon,
Eddie said, “We might as well call it a day,
Teena. Doesn’t seem to be anything out here.”
“It’s all right with me,” Teena agreed,
plucking foxtails from Sandy’s ears. “Pretty
hot, anyway. Let’s eat our sandwiches and go
back home.”
“All right,” Eddie said. “You know, one of
these days I’d like to go out to Cedar Point
and scout around. Maybe we’ll find something
there.” Then he told Teena about his dream.
Teena smiled. “A dream sure isn’t much to
go on,” she said, “but they say it’s pretty out on
Cedar Point. I’ll go any time you want to,
Eddie.” She handed him one of the sandwiches.
It was midafternoon by the time they arrived
back at Teena’s house. They worked a while
on a new jigsaw puzzle Teena had received
on a recent birthday. Then Eddie said good-by
and went on down the street toward his
own home.
24
After putting Sandy on his long chain and
filling his water dish, Eddie went in the back
door. He put the Geiger counter in the closet
and went into the kitchen.
“What’s for dinner, Mom?” he asked.
Mrs. Taylor turned from the sink. Eddie
knew at once, just seeing the expression on
his mother’s face, that something was wrong.
“Dinner?” his mother said absently. “It’s
not quite four o’clock yet, Eddie. Besides,
dinner may be a little late today.”
“But this morning you said it would be
early,” Eddie reminded her, puzzled.
“This morning I didn’t know what might
happen.”
25
Then Eddie heard the sound of his father’s
voice coming from the den. There was a
strange urgent tone in it. The door to the den
was open. Eddie went through the dining
room and glanced into the den. His father
sat stiffly behind his homemade desk, talking
rapidly into the telephone. Eddie caught only
the last few sketchy words. Then his father
placed the telephone in its cradle, glanced up,
and saw Eddie.
If there had been even the slightest doubt
in Eddie’s mind about something being
wrong, it vanished now. Mr. Taylor looked
years older than he had that very morning.
Worry lay deep in his eyes. He fumbled
thoughtfully with a pencil, turning it end over
end on his desk.
“Hello, son,” he said. He didn’t even ask
whether Eddie had discovered any uranium
ore that day. Always before, he had shown
genuine interest in Eddie’s prospecting trips.
“Dad,” Eddie said anxiously, “what—what’s
the matter?”
“It shows that much, does it, son?” his
father said tiredly.
“What’s wrong, Dad?” Eddie prompted.
“Or can’t you tell me?”
Mr. Taylor leaned back. “Quite a bit’s
wrong, Eddie,” he said, “and I guess there’s
no reason why I shouldn’t tell you. It’ll be in
the evening papers, anyway.”
26
“Evening papers?”
“Eddie, you remember me mentioning this
morning about that radioisotope shipment I
was expecting today?”
“I remember,” Eddie said. “Did it come?”
“It did—and it didn’t,” his father said.
“What does that mean, Dad?” Eddie asked,
puzzled.
“The delivery truck arrived at the school
with it,” his father explained, “but while the
driver was inquiring where to put it, the container
disappeared.”
“Disappeared?”
“The radioisotope was stolen, Eddie,” his
father said slowly. “Stolen right out from
under our noses!”
27
CHAPTER TWO
At the moment, Eddie didn’t pry for further
information on the theft of the valuable radioactive
isotope. His father had plenty on his
mind, as it was. The main information was in
the evening
Globe
, which Eddie rushed out
to get as soon as he heard it plop onto the
front porch.
He took the newspaper to his father to read
first. After having finished, Mr. Taylor handed
the paper to Eddie and leaned back thoughtfully
in his chair.
28
“They’ve got it pretty straight, at that,” Mr.
Taylor said, “but I’m afraid this is going to
stir up quite a bit of trouble.”
“It wasn’t your fault, was it, Dad?” Eddie
defended.
“It was as much mine as anybody’s, son,”
his father said. “Probably more so. After all,
I am head of the department. I knew about
the shipment. That should make it my responsibility
to see that it was properly received
and placed in our atomic-materials storage
vault. But there is little point in trying to
place the blame on anyone. I’m willing to accept
that part of it. The important thing is
that we recover that radioisotope. Not only is
it of a secret nature, but it is also dangerously
radioactive if improperly handled.”
“But—but wasn’t it in a safe container?”
Eddie asked.
29
“Of course,” his father said. “There were
only two ounces of it in a fifty-pound lead
capsule. As long as it remains in that capsule
it’s safe. As you know, the lead prevents any
radiation from escaping. Out of that capsule,
however, those two ounces of radioisotope can
be very dangerous.”
“Fifty pounds,” Eddie said thoughtfully.
“That’s a pretty big thing to steal, isn’t it?”
“Not when it’s lead, son,” his father replied.
“Not much bigger than a two-quart
milk bottle, in fact.”
“Even at that, no kid could have taken it,”
Eddie said.
“Kid?” His father smiled thinly. “We don’t
think it was any kid, Eddie. Not by a long
shot. The whole thing was carefully planned
and carefully carried out. It was not the work
of amateurs.”
Eddie read the newspaper account. The
small truck from Drake Ridge, where one of
the country’s newest atomic reactors was
located, had arrived earlier than expected at
Oceanview College. It had backed up to the
receiving dock where all of the college supplies
were delivered. Since deliveries during vacation
months were few, there was no one on the
dock when the truck arrived. A half hour later,
when the delivery was expected, there would
have been. The truck’s early arrival had
caught them unprepared.
30
The driver had left the truck and had gone
around the building to the front office. It had
taken him less than five minutes to locate the
receiving-dock foreman. Together, they had
returned through the small warehouse and
opened the rear door onto the dock.
During that short time someone had pried
open the heavy padlock on the delivery truck’s
rear door and had stolen the fifty-pound lead
capsule containing the radioisotope.
Dusty footprints on the pavement around
the rear of the truck indicated that two men
had carried out the theft. A heavy iron pry bar
had been dropped at the rear of the truck after
the lock was sprung. It was a common type
used by carpenters. There were no fingerprints
or other identifying marks on it. The footprints
were barely visible and of no help other
than to indicate that two men were involved
in the crime.
31
“Dad,” Eddie asked, looking up from the
paper, “how could anyone carry away something
weighing fifty pounds without being noticed?”
“Chances are they had their car parked
nearby,” his father said. “As you know, there
are no fences or gates around Oceanview College.
People come and go as they please. As a
matter of fact, there are always quite a few
automobiles parked around the shipping and
receiving building, and parking space is scarce
even during summer sessions. Anyone could
park and wait there unnoticed. Or they could
walk around without attracting any undue attention.”
“But, Dad,” Eddie continued, “how would
the men know that the delivery truck would
arrive a half hour early?”
“They wouldn’t,” his father said. “They
may have had another plan. The way things
worked out, they didn’t need to use it. The
early delivery and the business of leaving the
truck unguarded for a few minutes probably
gave them a better opportunity than they had
expected. At least, they took quick advantage
of it.”
32
“I don’t see what anyone would want with
a radioisotope,” Eddie said. “Maybe they figured
there was something else inside of that
lead capsule.”
“That’s unlikely, son,” Mr. Taylor said.
“Believe me, it was no common theft. Nor
were the thieves ordinary thieves. That isotope
was a new one. A very secret one. Our job at
the college was to conduct various tests with it
in order to find out exactly how it could best
be put to use as a cure for disease, or for sterilizing
food, or even as a source of power.”
“Power?” Eddie said. “Boy, it must have
been a strong isotope.” He knew that the
strength of radioisotopes could be controlled
largely by the length of time they were allowed
to “cook” in an atomic reactor and soak up
radioactivity.
33
“We weren’t planning to run a submarine
with it,” his father said. “It wasn’t that strong.
Still, it doesn’t take so very much radioactivity
to make two ounces of an isotope quite powerful—and
quite deadly. I only hope whoever
stole it knows what he’s doing. However, I’m
sure he does.”
“You mean he must have been an atomic
scientist himself?” Eddie asked.
“Let’s just say he—or both of them—have
enough training in the subject to know how to
handle that isotope safely,” Mr. Taylor said.
“But, Dad,” Eddie wondered, “what could
they do with it?”
“They could study it,” his father explained.
“At least, they could send it somewhere to be
broken down and studied. Being a new isotope,
the formula is of great value.”
“What do you mean, send it somewhere?”
Eddie asked.
“Perhaps to some other country.”
“Then—then you mean whoever stole it
were spies!” Eddie exclaimed breathlessly.
“That’s entirely possible,” his father said.
“In fact, it’s the only logical explanation I can
think of. People simply don’t go around stealing
radioactive isotopes without a mighty important
reason.”
34
“Dinner’s ready,” Eddie’s mother called
from the kitchen.
During dinner Eddie wasn’t sure just what
he was eating. The idea of spies stealing atomic
materials kept building up in his mind. By the
time dessert was finished, he was anxious to
talk with someone, yet he knew he shouldn’t
bother his father with any more questions. He
asked if he could go over and visit with Teena
for a while.
“Well, you were together most of the day,”
his mother said, “but I guess it’s all right. Be
back in about an hour, though.”
It was a balmy evening. On such evenings,
he and Teena sometimes walked along the
beach barefoot, collecting sea shells. Today
Eddie had no desire to do that. He ran down
the block.
Teena answered his knock.
“Come on in, Eddie,” she invited, seeming
surprised to see him. “Mother and I are just
finishing dinner.”
“Oh, I figured you’d be through by now,”
Eddie apologized, following her inside.
35
“Hello, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross said, but she
didn’t seem as cheerful as usual.
“Good evening, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie said. “I—I
hope I’m not making a pest of myself.” He
looked around for Mr. Ross, but Teena’s
father apparently hadn’t arrived home from
Acme Aircraft yet. There wasn’t a place set for
him at the table, either.
“You’re never a pest, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross assured
him. “I was going to call your mother in
a little while about that newspaper write-up.”
“Oh, you read it?” Eddie said.
“How could anyone miss it?” Teena said.
“Right on the front page.”
“I suppose your father is quite concerned
over it,” Teena’s mother said.
“Oh, yes,” Eddie affirmed. “He was the one
who ordered the isotope.”
“What’s an isotope?” Teena asked.
“I’m not sure I know, either,” Mrs. Ross
said. “Maybe we could understand more of
what it’s all about if you could explain what a
radioisotope is, Eddie.”
36
“Well,” Eddie said slowly, “it’s not easy to
explain, but I’ll try. You know how rare
uranium is. There’s not nearly enough of it to
fill all the needs for radioactive materials. Besides,
pure uranium is so powerful and expensive
and dangerous to handle that it’s not
a very good idea to try using it in its true form.
So they build an atomic reactor like the one at
Drake Ridge.”
“We’ve driven by it,” Mrs. Ross said. “My,
it’s a big place.”
“I’ll say,” Eddie agreed. “Of course, only
one building holds the reactor itself. It’s the
biggest building near the center.”
“I remember it,” Teena said.
“Well, the reactor is about four stories
high,” Eddie went on. “They call it a uranium
‘pile.’ It’s made up of hundreds and hundreds
of graphite bricks. That’s where they get the
name ‘pile’—from brick pile. Anyway, scattered
around in between the bricks are small
bits of uranium. Uranium atoms are radioactive.
That is, they keep splitting up and sending
out rays.”
“Why do they do that?” Teena asked.
37
“It’s just the way nature made uranium, I
guess,” Eddie said. “Most atoms stay in one
piece, although they move around lickety-split
all of the time. Uranium atoms not only move
around, but they break apart. They shoot out
little particles called neutrons. These neutrons
hit other atoms and split them apart, sending
out more neutrons. It’s a regular chain reaction.”
“I’ve heard of chain reactions,” Mrs. Ross
said.
“Well, with all of the splitting up and moving
around of the uranium atoms,” Eddie went
on, “an awful lot of heat builds up. If they
don’t control it—well, you’ve seen pictures of
atomic-bomb explosions. That’s a chain reaction
out of control.”
“Out of control is right,” Teena said.
38
“But the atomic piles control the reaction,”
Eddie said. “The graphite bricks keep the
splitting-up atoms apart so one neutron won’t
go smashing into other atoms unless they want
it to. They have ways of controlling it so that
only as much radiation builds up as they want.
You can even hear the reactor hum as the radioactive
rays go tearing through it. But by
careful tending, the scientists keep the atomic
collisions far enough apart so the thing doesn’t
blow up.”
“Boy, that sounds dangerous,” Teena said.
“Well, they know just how to do it,” Eddie
replied.
“Aren’t the rays dangerous?” Mrs. Ross
asked.
“I’ll say they’re dangerous,” Eddie said.
“But the whole pile is covered by a shield of
concrete about eight feet thick. That keeps the
rays from getting out and injuring the workmen.”
“Goodness. Eight feet is a lot of cement.”
“It takes a lot to stop radioactive atomic
particles,” Eddie explained. “Especially the
gamma rays. They’re the fastest and most dangerous,
and the hardest to stop. Alpha and beta
rays are fairly easy to stop. But the gamma
rays are regular high-velocity invisible bullets.
They’ll go right through a stone wall unless
it’s plenty thick. Of course, you can’t see them.
Not with even the most powerful microscope
in the world.”
39
“I wouldn’t want to work around a place
where I might get shot at by—by dangerous
rays you can’t even see,” Teena said.
“I would,” Eddie said. “Everyone is carefully
protected. They see to that. Well, anyway,
if all of those uranium atoms were shooting
radioactive rays around inside of that pile
and doing nothing, there would be an awful
lot of energy going to waste. So the atomic
scientists take certain elements which aren’t
radioactive, but can be made radioactive, and
shove small pieces of them into holes drilled
in the pile.”
“Isn’t that dangerous?” Teena asked.
“They don’t shove them in with their bare
hands,” Eddie said, trying not to show exasperation.
“They use long holders to push the
small chunks of material into the holes in the
reactor. Then, as those uranium atoms keep
splitting up and shooting particles around inside
of the pile, some of them smack into the
chunks of material, and stick there. Most elements
will soak up radiation, just like a sponge
soaks up water.”
40
“My, that’s interesting, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross
said.
“I’ve seen them do it,” Eddie said proudly,
then added, “from behind a protective shield,
of course. When the material has soaked up
enough radiation, they pull it back out. They
say it’s ‘cooked.’”
“You mean it’s hot?” Teena asked.
“It’s hot,” Eddie said, “but not like if it
came out of a stove. By hot, they mean it’s
radioactive. If you touched it, or even got near
it, you would get burned, but you probably
wouldn’t even know it for a while. It would be
a radiation burn. That’s a kind of burn you
don’t feel, but it destroys your blood cells and
tissues, and—well, you’ve had it.”
“So that’s what a radioisotope is,” Mrs. Ross
said. “It’s like a sponge. Only instead of soaking
up water, it soaks up radiation.”
41
“That’s about it,” Eddie said. “My dad says
that as more is learned about the ways to use
isotopes, the whole world is going to be improved.
You’ve heard of radiocobalt for curing
cancer. Well, that’s an isotope. They make it
by cooking cobalt in an atomic reactor. Oh,
there are hundreds of different isotopes. Like
I said, isotopes can be made of most of the
elements. And there are over a hundred elements.
Some soak up a lot of radioactivity, and
are strong and dangerous. Others absorb only
a little and are pretty safe to use. Depends, too,
on how long they let them cook in the reactor.”
“What kind was the one stolen from the
college today?” Teena asked.
“Dad didn’t say exactly,” Eddie answered,
“except he did say that if whoever took it
didn’t know what he was doing and opened up
the lead capsule, it could kill him. Of course,
even the mild isotopes are deadly if they’re not
handled right.”
“My goodness, it is a serious matter, isn’t
it?” Mrs. Ross said.
42
Eddie nodded. It was even more serious
than its threat of danger to anyone who
handled it carelessly. It was a new isotope—a
secret isotope. His father hadn’t said whether
it had been developed for curing things or for
destroying things. But many radioisotopes
could do either; it depended on how they were
used. Eddie assumed that anyone who would
stoop to stealing isotopes more than likely
would be interested in their ability to destroy
rather than their ability to benefit mankind.
“Well, I certainly do hope everything works
out all right,” Teena’s mother said.
“So do I,” Teena agreed.
Eddie glanced at the kitchen clock. “Oh,
boy,” he said, “I’d better be heading back
home. I didn’t mean to come over here and
talk so long.”
“Oh, we’re glad you did, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross
said. “I’m afraid too few of us know anything
about this atom business.”
43
“That’s right, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie agreed.
“People should talk more and read more about
it. After all, this is an atomic age. We might as
well face it. My father says that in horse-and-buggy
days everyone knew how to feed a horse
and grease a wagon wheel. They knew what was
needed to get the work done. But now that
atoms are being harnessed to do the work, not
many people even bother to find out what an
atom is.”
Mrs. Ross smiled. “I guess you’re right,
Eddie,” she said, “but I wouldn’t quite know
how to go about feeding an atom.”
“Or greasing one,” Teena added.
Eddie laughed. “I sure wouldn’t want the
job of trying to feed a herd of them the size of
a period,” he said. “Did you know that there
are about three million billion atoms of carbon
in a single period printed at the end of a
sentence. That’s how small atoms are.”
“Three million billion is a lot of something,”
a man’s voice spoke behind him.
“What are we talking about, Eddie?”
“Oh, hello, Mr. Ross,” Eddie said, turning
around and standing up. “I didn’t hear you
come in.”
44
Teena’s father was a medium-sized man
with light-brown hair which was getting somewhat
thin on top. He was usually quite cheerful
and full of fun, but tonight his face seemed
unusually drawn and sober. He stepped to the
table, leaned over, and gave both Teena and
Mrs. Ross a kiss on the cheek.
“Eddie was telling us about atoms,” Teena’s
mother said. “Did you know there were three
million billion of them in a period?”
“How many in a comma?” Mr. Ross said to
Eddie, then added quickly, “forget it, Eddie.
It wasn’t very funny. I—I’m afraid I don’t feel
very funny tonight.”
“Sit down, dear,” Mrs. Ross said. “I’ll warm
your dinner. You didn’t sound very cheerful
when you called to say you would be late. How
did everything go at the plant today?”
“Not so good,” Teena’s father said tiredly.
“In fact, not good at all.”
Problems. It seemed that everyone had
problems, Eddie thought, as he started to
leave.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/5/3/2/6/53269//53269-h//53269-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | Who is Teena and what role does she play in Chapter one and chapter two?
| 53269_4YLGV4PU_2 | [
"Teena is Eddie’s friend and neighbor. She accompanies Eddie on a hike through the hills behind the college, where he teaches her all about isotopes. \n",
"Teena is Eddie’s friend and neighbor. She accompanies him on a prospecting hike, where they don’t find any trace of radioactivity but still enjoy a lunch together. \n",
"Teena is Eddie’s friend and neighbor. She accompanies Eddie to Cedar Point, where they are looking for traces of radioactivity. \n",
"Teena is Eddie’s friend and neighbor. She accompanies Eddie to Cedar Point, where they eat sandwiches and prospect for radioactivity.\n"
] | 2 | 2 | [
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53,269 | 53269_4YLGV4PU | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Atom Mystery [Young Atom Detective] | 1954.0 | Coombs, Charles Ira | Mystery and detective stories; Nuclear physics -- Juvenile fiction; Scientists -- Juvenile fiction; PZ | YOUNG READERS
Atom Mystery
11
CHAPTER ONE
It was only a dream. Eddie Taylor would like
to have finished it, but the bar of morning sunlight
poking in under the window shade pried
his eyes open. The dream fled. Eddie kicked
off the sheet, swung his feet to the floor, and
groped under the bed for his tennis shoes.
He heard his father’s heavy footsteps in the
hallway. They stopped outside of his bedroom
door.
“You awake, Eddie?”
“I’m awake, Dad,” Eddie answered.
“Breakfast’s ready. Get washed and
dressed.”
12
“Be right there,” Eddie said. Then, remembering
the dream, he added, “Oh, Dad, is it
all right if I use the Geiger counter today?”
Mr. Taylor opened the door. He was a big
man, broad-shouldered and still thin-waisted.
Eddie found it easy to believe the stories he
had heard about his father being an outstanding
football player in his time. Even his glasses
and the gray hair at his temples didn’t add
much age, although Eddie knew it had been
eighteen years since his father had played his
last game of college football.
“You may use the Geiger counter any time
you want, Eddie,” Mr. Taylor said, “as long as
you take good care of it. You figured out where
you can find some uranium ore?”
Eddie smiled sheepishly. “I—I had a
dream,” he said. “Plain as day. It was out on
Cedar Point. I was walking along over some
rocks. Suddenly the Geiger counter began
clicking like everything.”
13
“Cedar Point?” his father asked. “I’ve
never been out there. But, from what I hear,
there are plenty of rock formations. Might
be worth a try, at that. You never can tell
where you might strike some radioactivity.”
“Do you believe in dreams, Dad?”
“Well, now, that’s a tough question, son.
I can’t say that I really do. Still, one clue is
as good as another when it comes to hunting
uranium ore, I guess. But right now we’d
better get out to breakfast before your mother
scalps us. Hurry it up.” His father turned
and went back down the hallway toward the
kitchen.
Eddie pulled on his trousers and T shirt
and went into the bathroom. He washed hurriedly,
knowing that even if he missed a spot
or two, he was fairly safe. During the summer
months his freckles got so thick and dark that
it would take a magnifying glass to detect any
small smudges of dirt hiding among them. He
plastered some water on his dark-red hair,
pushed a comb through it, and shrugged as it
snapped back almost to its original position.
Oh, well, he had tried.
14
He grinned into the mirror, reached a
finger into his mouth, and unhooked the
small rubber bands from his tooth braces.
He dropped them into the waste basket. He’d
put fresh ones in after breakfast.
He brushed his teeth carefully, taking particular
pains around the metal braces. The
tooth-straightening orthodontist had warned
him about letting food gather around the
metal clamps. It could start cavities.
Finished, Eddie went out to breakfast.
“Good morning, dear,” his mother greeted
him, handing him a plate of eggs.
“Hi, Mom,” Eddie said. “Gotta hurry. Big
day today.”
“So your father says. But I’m afraid your
big day will have to start with sorting out and
tying up those newspapers and magazines that
have been collecting in the garage.”
“Aw, Mom—”
“Eddie, I asked you to do it three days ago.
Remember? And the Goodwill truck comes
around today.”
“But, Mom—”
15
“No arguments, son,” his father put in
calmly but firmly. “School vacation doesn’t
mean that your chores around here are on
vacation, too. Get at it right away, and you’ll
still have time to hunt your uranium.
“Well,” Mr. Taylor added, excusing himself
from the table, “I’d better be getting over
to school. I’m expecting to receive shipment
of a new radioisotope today.”
The very word excited Eddie. In fact, anything
having to do with atomic science
excited him. He knew something about
isotopes—pronounced
eye-suh-tope
. You
couldn’t have a father who was head of the
atomic-science department at Oceanview
College without picking up a little knowledge
along the way. Eddie knew that a radioisotope
was a material which had been “cooked” in an
atomic reactor until it was “hot” with radioactivity.
When carefully controlled, the radiation
stored up in such isotopes was used in
many beneficial ways.
16
“Why don’t college professors get summer
vacations, too?” Eddie asked. One reason for
asking that particular question was to keep
from prying deeper into the subject of the
radioisotope. Much of his father’s work at
Oceanview College was of a secret nature.
Eddie had learned not to ask questions about
it. His father usually volunteered any information
he wanted known, so Eddie stuck to
questions which could and would be answered.
“We get vacations,” his father said. “But—well,
my work is a little different, you know.
At the speed atomic science is moving today,
we simply can’t afford to waste time. But don’t
worry. We’ll take a week or so off before school
starts in the fall. Maybe head for the mountains
with our tent and sleeping bags.”
“And Geiger counter?” Eddie asked
eagerly.
“Wouldn’t think of leaving it home,” his
father said, smiling. “By the way, I put new
batteries in it the other day. Take it easy on
them. Remember to switch it off when you’re
not actually using it.”
“I will,” Eddie promised. He had forgotten
several times before, weakening the batteries.
17
It took Eddie over an hour to sort out the
newspapers and magazines in the garage, tie
them in neat bundles, and place them out on
the front curb for the Goodwill pickup. By
that time the sun was high overhead. It had
driven off the coolness which the ocean air
had provided during the earlier hours.
“Anything else, Mom?” he asked, returning
to the house and getting the Geiger counter
out of the closet. He edged toward the back
door before his mother had much time to
think of something more for him to do.
“I guess not, dear,” Mrs. Taylor said, smiling
over his hasty retreat. “What are you going
to do?”
“Think I’ll do a little prospecting,” Eddie
said.
“Where?”
“Probably in the hills beyond the college,”
Eddie said. The more he thought about it, the
more he realized it was a little late in the day
to go to Cedar Point. The best way to get
there was by rowboat across Moon Bay, and
that was too long a row to be starting now.
Besides, there were plenty of other places
around the outskirts of Oceanview where
likely looking rock formations invited search
with a Geiger counter.
18
“Are you going alone?” his mother asked.
“Oh, guess I’ll stop by and see if Teena
wants to go,” Eddie answered casually. He
tried to make it sound as though he would
be doing Teena Ross a big favor. After all,
she was only a girl. Eddie didn’t figure a girl
would make a very good uranium prospecting
partner, but most of the fellows he knew were
away at camp, or vacationing with their folks,
or something like that.
“She’ll enjoy it, I’m sure,” his mother said.
“I’ll take Sandy, too,” Eddie said. “He needs
the exercise.”
“That’s a good idea, dear. Be back in time
for an early dinner.”
Eddie let Sandy off his chain. The taffy-colored
cocker spaniel yipped wildly over his
freedom, racing back and forth as Eddie
started down the street.
19
Christina Ross—whom everybody called
Teena—lived at the far end of the block.
Eddie went around to the side door of the
light-green stucco house and knocked.
“Oh, hi, Eddie,” Teena greeted him, appearing
at the screen door. “I was hoping
you’d come over.”
“Well, I—I just happened to be going by,”
Eddie said. “Thought you might want to
watch me do a little prospecting with the Geiger
counter. But maybe you’re too busy.”
That’s how to handle it, Eddie thought.
Don’t act anxious. Let Teena be anxious.
Then maybe she’ll even offer to bring along
a couple of sandwiches or some fruit.
“Oh, I’d love to go,” Teena said eagerly,
“but I’m just finishing the dishes. Come on
in.”
“I’m in kind of a hurry.”
“I’ll only be a minute.” She pushed the
screen door open for him. “I’ll make us some
sandwiches.”
“Stay here, Sandy,” Eddie said. “Sit.” The
dog minded, although he looked a bit rebellious.
20
Eddie went inside and followed Teena to
the kitchen. He felt triumphant about the
sandwiches.
Teena tossed him a dish towel. “You dry
them,” she said.
“Who, me?”
“Why not? You’re in a hurry, aren’t you?
I can make the sandwiches while you dry the
silverware.” She smiled, putting tiny crinkles
in her small, slightly upturned nose. She wore
her hair in a pony tail. Even though her hair
was blond all year long, it seemed even
lighter in the summer. Eddie couldn’t tell
whether the sun had faded it, or whether her
deep summer tan simply made her hair look
lighter by contrast. Maybe both.
“Hello, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross said, coming into
the kitchen. “Looks like Teena put you to
work.”
“She always does, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie said,
pretending great injury. “Don’t know why I
keep coming over here.”
“I know,” Teena spoke up quickly. “It’s
because we’re friends, that’s why.”
21
Eddie knew she was right. They were
friends—good friends. They had been ever
since Eddie’s family had moved to Oceanview
and his father had become head of the college’s
atomic-science department. In fact, their
parents were close friends, also. Teena’s father
was chief engineer for the Acme Aviation
Company, one of the coast town’s largest
manufacturing concerns.
“Well, I’ll be glad to finish them, Eddie,”
Mrs. Ross offered. “I know how boys detest
doing dishes.”
“Oh, I don’t really mind, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie
said. “Besides, Teena’s making sandwiches to
take with us.”
“Another prospecting trip?” Teena’s
mother glanced at the Geiger counter which
Eddie had set carefully on the dinette table.
“I still think there must be some uranium
around here,” Eddie insisted. “And we can
find it if anyone can.”
“I agree,” Mrs. Ross said. “But even if you
don’t find it, you both seem to enjoy your
hikes.”
22
“Oh, yes, it’s fun, Mother,” Teena replied,
wrapping wax paper around a sandwich.
“Guess I’m ready. I’ve got a bone for Sandy,
too.”
“Don’t go too far out from town,” Mrs.
Ross cautioned, as Eddie picked up the Geiger
counter. “And stick near the main roads.
You know the rules.”
“We sure do, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie assured
her. “And we’ll be back early.”
They walked past the college campus, and
toward the rocky foothills beyond. At various
rock mounds and outcroppings, Eddie
switched on the Geiger counter. The needle
of the dial on the black box wavered slightly.
A slow clicking came through the earphones,
but Eddie knew these indicated no more than
a normal background count. There were slight
traces of radioactivity in almost all earth or
rocks. It was in the air itself, caused by mysterious
and ever-present cosmic rays, so there
was always a mild background count when
the Geiger counter was turned on; but to
mean anything, the needle had to jump far
ahead on the gauge, and the clicking through
the earphones had to speed up until it sounded
almost like bacon frying in a hot skillet.
23
There was none of that today. After they
had hiked and searched most of the forenoon,
Eddie said, “We might as well call it a day,
Teena. Doesn’t seem to be anything out here.”
“It’s all right with me,” Teena agreed,
plucking foxtails from Sandy’s ears. “Pretty
hot, anyway. Let’s eat our sandwiches and go
back home.”
“All right,” Eddie said. “You know, one of
these days I’d like to go out to Cedar Point
and scout around. Maybe we’ll find something
there.” Then he told Teena about his dream.
Teena smiled. “A dream sure isn’t much to
go on,” she said, “but they say it’s pretty out on
Cedar Point. I’ll go any time you want to,
Eddie.” She handed him one of the sandwiches.
It was midafternoon by the time they arrived
back at Teena’s house. They worked a while
on a new jigsaw puzzle Teena had received
on a recent birthday. Then Eddie said good-by
and went on down the street toward his
own home.
24
After putting Sandy on his long chain and
filling his water dish, Eddie went in the back
door. He put the Geiger counter in the closet
and went into the kitchen.
“What’s for dinner, Mom?” he asked.
Mrs. Taylor turned from the sink. Eddie
knew at once, just seeing the expression on
his mother’s face, that something was wrong.
“Dinner?” his mother said absently. “It’s
not quite four o’clock yet, Eddie. Besides,
dinner may be a little late today.”
“But this morning you said it would be
early,” Eddie reminded her, puzzled.
“This morning I didn’t know what might
happen.”
25
Then Eddie heard the sound of his father’s
voice coming from the den. There was a
strange urgent tone in it. The door to the den
was open. Eddie went through the dining
room and glanced into the den. His father
sat stiffly behind his homemade desk, talking
rapidly into the telephone. Eddie caught only
the last few sketchy words. Then his father
placed the telephone in its cradle, glanced up,
and saw Eddie.
If there had been even the slightest doubt
in Eddie’s mind about something being
wrong, it vanished now. Mr. Taylor looked
years older than he had that very morning.
Worry lay deep in his eyes. He fumbled
thoughtfully with a pencil, turning it end over
end on his desk.
“Hello, son,” he said. He didn’t even ask
whether Eddie had discovered any uranium
ore that day. Always before, he had shown
genuine interest in Eddie’s prospecting trips.
“Dad,” Eddie said anxiously, “what—what’s
the matter?”
“It shows that much, does it, son?” his
father said tiredly.
“What’s wrong, Dad?” Eddie prompted.
“Or can’t you tell me?”
Mr. Taylor leaned back. “Quite a bit’s
wrong, Eddie,” he said, “and I guess there’s
no reason why I shouldn’t tell you. It’ll be in
the evening papers, anyway.”
26
“Evening papers?”
“Eddie, you remember me mentioning this
morning about that radioisotope shipment I
was expecting today?”
“I remember,” Eddie said. “Did it come?”
“It did—and it didn’t,” his father said.
“What does that mean, Dad?” Eddie asked,
puzzled.
“The delivery truck arrived at the school
with it,” his father explained, “but while the
driver was inquiring where to put it, the container
disappeared.”
“Disappeared?”
“The radioisotope was stolen, Eddie,” his
father said slowly. “Stolen right out from
under our noses!”
27
CHAPTER TWO
At the moment, Eddie didn’t pry for further
information on the theft of the valuable radioactive
isotope. His father had plenty on his
mind, as it was. The main information was in
the evening
Globe
, which Eddie rushed out
to get as soon as he heard it plop onto the
front porch.
He took the newspaper to his father to read
first. After having finished, Mr. Taylor handed
the paper to Eddie and leaned back thoughtfully
in his chair.
28
“They’ve got it pretty straight, at that,” Mr.
Taylor said, “but I’m afraid this is going to
stir up quite a bit of trouble.”
“It wasn’t your fault, was it, Dad?” Eddie
defended.
“It was as much mine as anybody’s, son,”
his father said. “Probably more so. After all,
I am head of the department. I knew about
the shipment. That should make it my responsibility
to see that it was properly received
and placed in our atomic-materials storage
vault. But there is little point in trying to
place the blame on anyone. I’m willing to accept
that part of it. The important thing is
that we recover that radioisotope. Not only is
it of a secret nature, but it is also dangerously
radioactive if improperly handled.”
“But—but wasn’t it in a safe container?”
Eddie asked.
29
“Of course,” his father said. “There were
only two ounces of it in a fifty-pound lead
capsule. As long as it remains in that capsule
it’s safe. As you know, the lead prevents any
radiation from escaping. Out of that capsule,
however, those two ounces of radioisotope can
be very dangerous.”
“Fifty pounds,” Eddie said thoughtfully.
“That’s a pretty big thing to steal, isn’t it?”
“Not when it’s lead, son,” his father replied.
“Not much bigger than a two-quart
milk bottle, in fact.”
“Even at that, no kid could have taken it,”
Eddie said.
“Kid?” His father smiled thinly. “We don’t
think it was any kid, Eddie. Not by a long
shot. The whole thing was carefully planned
and carefully carried out. It was not the work
of amateurs.”
Eddie read the newspaper account. The
small truck from Drake Ridge, where one of
the country’s newest atomic reactors was
located, had arrived earlier than expected at
Oceanview College. It had backed up to the
receiving dock where all of the college supplies
were delivered. Since deliveries during vacation
months were few, there was no one on the
dock when the truck arrived. A half hour later,
when the delivery was expected, there would
have been. The truck’s early arrival had
caught them unprepared.
30
The driver had left the truck and had gone
around the building to the front office. It had
taken him less than five minutes to locate the
receiving-dock foreman. Together, they had
returned through the small warehouse and
opened the rear door onto the dock.
During that short time someone had pried
open the heavy padlock on the delivery truck’s
rear door and had stolen the fifty-pound lead
capsule containing the radioisotope.
Dusty footprints on the pavement around
the rear of the truck indicated that two men
had carried out the theft. A heavy iron pry bar
had been dropped at the rear of the truck after
the lock was sprung. It was a common type
used by carpenters. There were no fingerprints
or other identifying marks on it. The footprints
were barely visible and of no help other
than to indicate that two men were involved
in the crime.
31
“Dad,” Eddie asked, looking up from the
paper, “how could anyone carry away something
weighing fifty pounds without being noticed?”
“Chances are they had their car parked
nearby,” his father said. “As you know, there
are no fences or gates around Oceanview College.
People come and go as they please. As a
matter of fact, there are always quite a few
automobiles parked around the shipping and
receiving building, and parking space is scarce
even during summer sessions. Anyone could
park and wait there unnoticed. Or they could
walk around without attracting any undue attention.”
“But, Dad,” Eddie continued, “how would
the men know that the delivery truck would
arrive a half hour early?”
“They wouldn’t,” his father said. “They
may have had another plan. The way things
worked out, they didn’t need to use it. The
early delivery and the business of leaving the
truck unguarded for a few minutes probably
gave them a better opportunity than they had
expected. At least, they took quick advantage
of it.”
32
“I don’t see what anyone would want with
a radioisotope,” Eddie said. “Maybe they figured
there was something else inside of that
lead capsule.”
“That’s unlikely, son,” Mr. Taylor said.
“Believe me, it was no common theft. Nor
were the thieves ordinary thieves. That isotope
was a new one. A very secret one. Our job at
the college was to conduct various tests with it
in order to find out exactly how it could best
be put to use as a cure for disease, or for sterilizing
food, or even as a source of power.”
“Power?” Eddie said. “Boy, it must have
been a strong isotope.” He knew that the
strength of radioisotopes could be controlled
largely by the length of time they were allowed
to “cook” in an atomic reactor and soak up
radioactivity.
33
“We weren’t planning to run a submarine
with it,” his father said. “It wasn’t that strong.
Still, it doesn’t take so very much radioactivity
to make two ounces of an isotope quite powerful—and
quite deadly. I only hope whoever
stole it knows what he’s doing. However, I’m
sure he does.”
“You mean he must have been an atomic
scientist himself?” Eddie asked.
“Let’s just say he—or both of them—have
enough training in the subject to know how to
handle that isotope safely,” Mr. Taylor said.
“But, Dad,” Eddie wondered, “what could
they do with it?”
“They could study it,” his father explained.
“At least, they could send it somewhere to be
broken down and studied. Being a new isotope,
the formula is of great value.”
“What do you mean, send it somewhere?”
Eddie asked.
“Perhaps to some other country.”
“Then—then you mean whoever stole it
were spies!” Eddie exclaimed breathlessly.
“That’s entirely possible,” his father said.
“In fact, it’s the only logical explanation I can
think of. People simply don’t go around stealing
radioactive isotopes without a mighty important
reason.”
34
“Dinner’s ready,” Eddie’s mother called
from the kitchen.
During dinner Eddie wasn’t sure just what
he was eating. The idea of spies stealing atomic
materials kept building up in his mind. By the
time dessert was finished, he was anxious to
talk with someone, yet he knew he shouldn’t
bother his father with any more questions. He
asked if he could go over and visit with Teena
for a while.
“Well, you were together most of the day,”
his mother said, “but I guess it’s all right. Be
back in about an hour, though.”
It was a balmy evening. On such evenings,
he and Teena sometimes walked along the
beach barefoot, collecting sea shells. Today
Eddie had no desire to do that. He ran down
the block.
Teena answered his knock.
“Come on in, Eddie,” she invited, seeming
surprised to see him. “Mother and I are just
finishing dinner.”
“Oh, I figured you’d be through by now,”
Eddie apologized, following her inside.
35
“Hello, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross said, but she
didn’t seem as cheerful as usual.
“Good evening, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie said. “I—I
hope I’m not making a pest of myself.” He
looked around for Mr. Ross, but Teena’s
father apparently hadn’t arrived home from
Acme Aircraft yet. There wasn’t a place set for
him at the table, either.
“You’re never a pest, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross assured
him. “I was going to call your mother in
a little while about that newspaper write-up.”
“Oh, you read it?” Eddie said.
“How could anyone miss it?” Teena said.
“Right on the front page.”
“I suppose your father is quite concerned
over it,” Teena’s mother said.
“Oh, yes,” Eddie affirmed. “He was the one
who ordered the isotope.”
“What’s an isotope?” Teena asked.
“I’m not sure I know, either,” Mrs. Ross
said. “Maybe we could understand more of
what it’s all about if you could explain what a
radioisotope is, Eddie.”
36
“Well,” Eddie said slowly, “it’s not easy to
explain, but I’ll try. You know how rare
uranium is. There’s not nearly enough of it to
fill all the needs for radioactive materials. Besides,
pure uranium is so powerful and expensive
and dangerous to handle that it’s not
a very good idea to try using it in its true form.
So they build an atomic reactor like the one at
Drake Ridge.”
“We’ve driven by it,” Mrs. Ross said. “My,
it’s a big place.”
“I’ll say,” Eddie agreed. “Of course, only
one building holds the reactor itself. It’s the
biggest building near the center.”
“I remember it,” Teena said.
“Well, the reactor is about four stories
high,” Eddie went on. “They call it a uranium
‘pile.’ It’s made up of hundreds and hundreds
of graphite bricks. That’s where they get the
name ‘pile’—from brick pile. Anyway, scattered
around in between the bricks are small
bits of uranium. Uranium atoms are radioactive.
That is, they keep splitting up and sending
out rays.”
“Why do they do that?” Teena asked.
37
“It’s just the way nature made uranium, I
guess,” Eddie said. “Most atoms stay in one
piece, although they move around lickety-split
all of the time. Uranium atoms not only move
around, but they break apart. They shoot out
little particles called neutrons. These neutrons
hit other atoms and split them apart, sending
out more neutrons. It’s a regular chain reaction.”
“I’ve heard of chain reactions,” Mrs. Ross
said.
“Well, with all of the splitting up and moving
around of the uranium atoms,” Eddie went
on, “an awful lot of heat builds up. If they
don’t control it—well, you’ve seen pictures of
atomic-bomb explosions. That’s a chain reaction
out of control.”
“Out of control is right,” Teena said.
38
“But the atomic piles control the reaction,”
Eddie said. “The graphite bricks keep the
splitting-up atoms apart so one neutron won’t
go smashing into other atoms unless they want
it to. They have ways of controlling it so that
only as much radiation builds up as they want.
You can even hear the reactor hum as the radioactive
rays go tearing through it. But by
careful tending, the scientists keep the atomic
collisions far enough apart so the thing doesn’t
blow up.”
“Boy, that sounds dangerous,” Teena said.
“Well, they know just how to do it,” Eddie
replied.
“Aren’t the rays dangerous?” Mrs. Ross
asked.
“I’ll say they’re dangerous,” Eddie said.
“But the whole pile is covered by a shield of
concrete about eight feet thick. That keeps the
rays from getting out and injuring the workmen.”
“Goodness. Eight feet is a lot of cement.”
“It takes a lot to stop radioactive atomic
particles,” Eddie explained. “Especially the
gamma rays. They’re the fastest and most dangerous,
and the hardest to stop. Alpha and beta
rays are fairly easy to stop. But the gamma
rays are regular high-velocity invisible bullets.
They’ll go right through a stone wall unless
it’s plenty thick. Of course, you can’t see them.
Not with even the most powerful microscope
in the world.”
39
“I wouldn’t want to work around a place
where I might get shot at by—by dangerous
rays you can’t even see,” Teena said.
“I would,” Eddie said. “Everyone is carefully
protected. They see to that. Well, anyway,
if all of those uranium atoms were shooting
radioactive rays around inside of that pile
and doing nothing, there would be an awful
lot of energy going to waste. So the atomic
scientists take certain elements which aren’t
radioactive, but can be made radioactive, and
shove small pieces of them into holes drilled
in the pile.”
“Isn’t that dangerous?” Teena asked.
“They don’t shove them in with their bare
hands,” Eddie said, trying not to show exasperation.
“They use long holders to push the
small chunks of material into the holes in the
reactor. Then, as those uranium atoms keep
splitting up and shooting particles around inside
of the pile, some of them smack into the
chunks of material, and stick there. Most elements
will soak up radiation, just like a sponge
soaks up water.”
40
“My, that’s interesting, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross
said.
“I’ve seen them do it,” Eddie said proudly,
then added, “from behind a protective shield,
of course. When the material has soaked up
enough radiation, they pull it back out. They
say it’s ‘cooked.’”
“You mean it’s hot?” Teena asked.
“It’s hot,” Eddie said, “but not like if it
came out of a stove. By hot, they mean it’s
radioactive. If you touched it, or even got near
it, you would get burned, but you probably
wouldn’t even know it for a while. It would be
a radiation burn. That’s a kind of burn you
don’t feel, but it destroys your blood cells and
tissues, and—well, you’ve had it.”
“So that’s what a radioisotope is,” Mrs. Ross
said. “It’s like a sponge. Only instead of soaking
up water, it soaks up radiation.”
41
“That’s about it,” Eddie said. “My dad says
that as more is learned about the ways to use
isotopes, the whole world is going to be improved.
You’ve heard of radiocobalt for curing
cancer. Well, that’s an isotope. They make it
by cooking cobalt in an atomic reactor. Oh,
there are hundreds of different isotopes. Like
I said, isotopes can be made of most of the
elements. And there are over a hundred elements.
Some soak up a lot of radioactivity, and
are strong and dangerous. Others absorb only
a little and are pretty safe to use. Depends, too,
on how long they let them cook in the reactor.”
“What kind was the one stolen from the
college today?” Teena asked.
“Dad didn’t say exactly,” Eddie answered,
“except he did say that if whoever took it
didn’t know what he was doing and opened up
the lead capsule, it could kill him. Of course,
even the mild isotopes are deadly if they’re not
handled right.”
“My goodness, it is a serious matter, isn’t
it?” Mrs. Ross said.
42
Eddie nodded. It was even more serious
than its threat of danger to anyone who
handled it carelessly. It was a new isotope—a
secret isotope. His father hadn’t said whether
it had been developed for curing things or for
destroying things. But many radioisotopes
could do either; it depended on how they were
used. Eddie assumed that anyone who would
stoop to stealing isotopes more than likely
would be interested in their ability to destroy
rather than their ability to benefit mankind.
“Well, I certainly do hope everything works
out all right,” Teena’s mother said.
“So do I,” Teena agreed.
Eddie glanced at the kitchen clock. “Oh,
boy,” he said, “I’d better be heading back
home. I didn’t mean to come over here and
talk so long.”
“Oh, we’re glad you did, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross
said. “I’m afraid too few of us know anything
about this atom business.”
43
“That’s right, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie agreed.
“People should talk more and read more about
it. After all, this is an atomic age. We might as
well face it. My father says that in horse-and-buggy
days everyone knew how to feed a horse
and grease a wagon wheel. They knew what was
needed to get the work done. But now that
atoms are being harnessed to do the work, not
many people even bother to find out what an
atom is.”
Mrs. Ross smiled. “I guess you’re right,
Eddie,” she said, “but I wouldn’t quite know
how to go about feeding an atom.”
“Or greasing one,” Teena added.
Eddie laughed. “I sure wouldn’t want the
job of trying to feed a herd of them the size of
a period,” he said. “Did you know that there
are about three million billion atoms of carbon
in a single period printed at the end of a
sentence. That’s how small atoms are.”
“Three million billion is a lot of something,”
a man’s voice spoke behind him.
“What are we talking about, Eddie?”
“Oh, hello, Mr. Ross,” Eddie said, turning
around and standing up. “I didn’t hear you
come in.”
44
Teena’s father was a medium-sized man
with light-brown hair which was getting somewhat
thin on top. He was usually quite cheerful
and full of fun, but tonight his face seemed
unusually drawn and sober. He stepped to the
table, leaned over, and gave both Teena and
Mrs. Ross a kiss on the cheek.
“Eddie was telling us about atoms,” Teena’s
mother said. “Did you know there were three
million billion of them in a period?”
“How many in a comma?” Mr. Ross said to
Eddie, then added quickly, “forget it, Eddie.
It wasn’t very funny. I—I’m afraid I don’t feel
very funny tonight.”
“Sit down, dear,” Mrs. Ross said. “I’ll warm
your dinner. You didn’t sound very cheerful
when you called to say you would be late. How
did everything go at the plant today?”
“Not so good,” Teena’s father said tiredly.
“In fact, not good at all.”
Problems. It seemed that everyone had
problems, Eddie thought, as he started to
leave.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/5/3/2/6/53269//53269-h//53269-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | What is the Geiger counter and how exactly is it used in the present chapters?
| 53269_4YLGV4PU_3 | [
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"A Geiger counter is used to measure radioactivity. Eddie uses it to prospect Cedar Point. \n"
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53,269 | 53269_4YLGV4PU | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Atom Mystery [Young Atom Detective] | 1954.0 | Coombs, Charles Ira | Mystery and detective stories; Nuclear physics -- Juvenile fiction; Scientists -- Juvenile fiction; PZ | YOUNG READERS
Atom Mystery
11
CHAPTER ONE
It was only a dream. Eddie Taylor would like
to have finished it, but the bar of morning sunlight
poking in under the window shade pried
his eyes open. The dream fled. Eddie kicked
off the sheet, swung his feet to the floor, and
groped under the bed for his tennis shoes.
He heard his father’s heavy footsteps in the
hallway. They stopped outside of his bedroom
door.
“You awake, Eddie?”
“I’m awake, Dad,” Eddie answered.
“Breakfast’s ready. Get washed and
dressed.”
12
“Be right there,” Eddie said. Then, remembering
the dream, he added, “Oh, Dad, is it
all right if I use the Geiger counter today?”
Mr. Taylor opened the door. He was a big
man, broad-shouldered and still thin-waisted.
Eddie found it easy to believe the stories he
had heard about his father being an outstanding
football player in his time. Even his glasses
and the gray hair at his temples didn’t add
much age, although Eddie knew it had been
eighteen years since his father had played his
last game of college football.
“You may use the Geiger counter any time
you want, Eddie,” Mr. Taylor said, “as long as
you take good care of it. You figured out where
you can find some uranium ore?”
Eddie smiled sheepishly. “I—I had a
dream,” he said. “Plain as day. It was out on
Cedar Point. I was walking along over some
rocks. Suddenly the Geiger counter began
clicking like everything.”
13
“Cedar Point?” his father asked. “I’ve
never been out there. But, from what I hear,
there are plenty of rock formations. Might
be worth a try, at that. You never can tell
where you might strike some radioactivity.”
“Do you believe in dreams, Dad?”
“Well, now, that’s a tough question, son.
I can’t say that I really do. Still, one clue is
as good as another when it comes to hunting
uranium ore, I guess. But right now we’d
better get out to breakfast before your mother
scalps us. Hurry it up.” His father turned
and went back down the hallway toward the
kitchen.
Eddie pulled on his trousers and T shirt
and went into the bathroom. He washed hurriedly,
knowing that even if he missed a spot
or two, he was fairly safe. During the summer
months his freckles got so thick and dark that
it would take a magnifying glass to detect any
small smudges of dirt hiding among them. He
plastered some water on his dark-red hair,
pushed a comb through it, and shrugged as it
snapped back almost to its original position.
Oh, well, he had tried.
14
He grinned into the mirror, reached a
finger into his mouth, and unhooked the
small rubber bands from his tooth braces.
He dropped them into the waste basket. He’d
put fresh ones in after breakfast.
He brushed his teeth carefully, taking particular
pains around the metal braces. The
tooth-straightening orthodontist had warned
him about letting food gather around the
metal clamps. It could start cavities.
Finished, Eddie went out to breakfast.
“Good morning, dear,” his mother greeted
him, handing him a plate of eggs.
“Hi, Mom,” Eddie said. “Gotta hurry. Big
day today.”
“So your father says. But I’m afraid your
big day will have to start with sorting out and
tying up those newspapers and magazines that
have been collecting in the garage.”
“Aw, Mom—”
“Eddie, I asked you to do it three days ago.
Remember? And the Goodwill truck comes
around today.”
“But, Mom—”
15
“No arguments, son,” his father put in
calmly but firmly. “School vacation doesn’t
mean that your chores around here are on
vacation, too. Get at it right away, and you’ll
still have time to hunt your uranium.
“Well,” Mr. Taylor added, excusing himself
from the table, “I’d better be getting over
to school. I’m expecting to receive shipment
of a new radioisotope today.”
The very word excited Eddie. In fact, anything
having to do with atomic science
excited him. He knew something about
isotopes—pronounced
eye-suh-tope
. You
couldn’t have a father who was head of the
atomic-science department at Oceanview
College without picking up a little knowledge
along the way. Eddie knew that a radioisotope
was a material which had been “cooked” in an
atomic reactor until it was “hot” with radioactivity.
When carefully controlled, the radiation
stored up in such isotopes was used in
many beneficial ways.
16
“Why don’t college professors get summer
vacations, too?” Eddie asked. One reason for
asking that particular question was to keep
from prying deeper into the subject of the
radioisotope. Much of his father’s work at
Oceanview College was of a secret nature.
Eddie had learned not to ask questions about
it. His father usually volunteered any information
he wanted known, so Eddie stuck to
questions which could and would be answered.
“We get vacations,” his father said. “But—well,
my work is a little different, you know.
At the speed atomic science is moving today,
we simply can’t afford to waste time. But don’t
worry. We’ll take a week or so off before school
starts in the fall. Maybe head for the mountains
with our tent and sleeping bags.”
“And Geiger counter?” Eddie asked
eagerly.
“Wouldn’t think of leaving it home,” his
father said, smiling. “By the way, I put new
batteries in it the other day. Take it easy on
them. Remember to switch it off when you’re
not actually using it.”
“I will,” Eddie promised. He had forgotten
several times before, weakening the batteries.
17
It took Eddie over an hour to sort out the
newspapers and magazines in the garage, tie
them in neat bundles, and place them out on
the front curb for the Goodwill pickup. By
that time the sun was high overhead. It had
driven off the coolness which the ocean air
had provided during the earlier hours.
“Anything else, Mom?” he asked, returning
to the house and getting the Geiger counter
out of the closet. He edged toward the back
door before his mother had much time to
think of something more for him to do.
“I guess not, dear,” Mrs. Taylor said, smiling
over his hasty retreat. “What are you going
to do?”
“Think I’ll do a little prospecting,” Eddie
said.
“Where?”
“Probably in the hills beyond the college,”
Eddie said. The more he thought about it, the
more he realized it was a little late in the day
to go to Cedar Point. The best way to get
there was by rowboat across Moon Bay, and
that was too long a row to be starting now.
Besides, there were plenty of other places
around the outskirts of Oceanview where
likely looking rock formations invited search
with a Geiger counter.
18
“Are you going alone?” his mother asked.
“Oh, guess I’ll stop by and see if Teena
wants to go,” Eddie answered casually. He
tried to make it sound as though he would
be doing Teena Ross a big favor. After all,
she was only a girl. Eddie didn’t figure a girl
would make a very good uranium prospecting
partner, but most of the fellows he knew were
away at camp, or vacationing with their folks,
or something like that.
“She’ll enjoy it, I’m sure,” his mother said.
“I’ll take Sandy, too,” Eddie said. “He needs
the exercise.”
“That’s a good idea, dear. Be back in time
for an early dinner.”
Eddie let Sandy off his chain. The taffy-colored
cocker spaniel yipped wildly over his
freedom, racing back and forth as Eddie
started down the street.
19
Christina Ross—whom everybody called
Teena—lived at the far end of the block.
Eddie went around to the side door of the
light-green stucco house and knocked.
“Oh, hi, Eddie,” Teena greeted him, appearing
at the screen door. “I was hoping
you’d come over.”
“Well, I—I just happened to be going by,”
Eddie said. “Thought you might want to
watch me do a little prospecting with the Geiger
counter. But maybe you’re too busy.”
That’s how to handle it, Eddie thought.
Don’t act anxious. Let Teena be anxious.
Then maybe she’ll even offer to bring along
a couple of sandwiches or some fruit.
“Oh, I’d love to go,” Teena said eagerly,
“but I’m just finishing the dishes. Come on
in.”
“I’m in kind of a hurry.”
“I’ll only be a minute.” She pushed the
screen door open for him. “I’ll make us some
sandwiches.”
“Stay here, Sandy,” Eddie said. “Sit.” The
dog minded, although he looked a bit rebellious.
20
Eddie went inside and followed Teena to
the kitchen. He felt triumphant about the
sandwiches.
Teena tossed him a dish towel. “You dry
them,” she said.
“Who, me?”
“Why not? You’re in a hurry, aren’t you?
I can make the sandwiches while you dry the
silverware.” She smiled, putting tiny crinkles
in her small, slightly upturned nose. She wore
her hair in a pony tail. Even though her hair
was blond all year long, it seemed even
lighter in the summer. Eddie couldn’t tell
whether the sun had faded it, or whether her
deep summer tan simply made her hair look
lighter by contrast. Maybe both.
“Hello, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross said, coming into
the kitchen. “Looks like Teena put you to
work.”
“She always does, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie said,
pretending great injury. “Don’t know why I
keep coming over here.”
“I know,” Teena spoke up quickly. “It’s
because we’re friends, that’s why.”
21
Eddie knew she was right. They were
friends—good friends. They had been ever
since Eddie’s family had moved to Oceanview
and his father had become head of the college’s
atomic-science department. In fact, their
parents were close friends, also. Teena’s father
was chief engineer for the Acme Aviation
Company, one of the coast town’s largest
manufacturing concerns.
“Well, I’ll be glad to finish them, Eddie,”
Mrs. Ross offered. “I know how boys detest
doing dishes.”
“Oh, I don’t really mind, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie
said. “Besides, Teena’s making sandwiches to
take with us.”
“Another prospecting trip?” Teena’s
mother glanced at the Geiger counter which
Eddie had set carefully on the dinette table.
“I still think there must be some uranium
around here,” Eddie insisted. “And we can
find it if anyone can.”
“I agree,” Mrs. Ross said. “But even if you
don’t find it, you both seem to enjoy your
hikes.”
22
“Oh, yes, it’s fun, Mother,” Teena replied,
wrapping wax paper around a sandwich.
“Guess I’m ready. I’ve got a bone for Sandy,
too.”
“Don’t go too far out from town,” Mrs.
Ross cautioned, as Eddie picked up the Geiger
counter. “And stick near the main roads.
You know the rules.”
“We sure do, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie assured
her. “And we’ll be back early.”
They walked past the college campus, and
toward the rocky foothills beyond. At various
rock mounds and outcroppings, Eddie
switched on the Geiger counter. The needle
of the dial on the black box wavered slightly.
A slow clicking came through the earphones,
but Eddie knew these indicated no more than
a normal background count. There were slight
traces of radioactivity in almost all earth or
rocks. It was in the air itself, caused by mysterious
and ever-present cosmic rays, so there
was always a mild background count when
the Geiger counter was turned on; but to
mean anything, the needle had to jump far
ahead on the gauge, and the clicking through
the earphones had to speed up until it sounded
almost like bacon frying in a hot skillet.
23
There was none of that today. After they
had hiked and searched most of the forenoon,
Eddie said, “We might as well call it a day,
Teena. Doesn’t seem to be anything out here.”
“It’s all right with me,” Teena agreed,
plucking foxtails from Sandy’s ears. “Pretty
hot, anyway. Let’s eat our sandwiches and go
back home.”
“All right,” Eddie said. “You know, one of
these days I’d like to go out to Cedar Point
and scout around. Maybe we’ll find something
there.” Then he told Teena about his dream.
Teena smiled. “A dream sure isn’t much to
go on,” she said, “but they say it’s pretty out on
Cedar Point. I’ll go any time you want to,
Eddie.” She handed him one of the sandwiches.
It was midafternoon by the time they arrived
back at Teena’s house. They worked a while
on a new jigsaw puzzle Teena had received
on a recent birthday. Then Eddie said good-by
and went on down the street toward his
own home.
24
After putting Sandy on his long chain and
filling his water dish, Eddie went in the back
door. He put the Geiger counter in the closet
and went into the kitchen.
“What’s for dinner, Mom?” he asked.
Mrs. Taylor turned from the sink. Eddie
knew at once, just seeing the expression on
his mother’s face, that something was wrong.
“Dinner?” his mother said absently. “It’s
not quite four o’clock yet, Eddie. Besides,
dinner may be a little late today.”
“But this morning you said it would be
early,” Eddie reminded her, puzzled.
“This morning I didn’t know what might
happen.”
25
Then Eddie heard the sound of his father’s
voice coming from the den. There was a
strange urgent tone in it. The door to the den
was open. Eddie went through the dining
room and glanced into the den. His father
sat stiffly behind his homemade desk, talking
rapidly into the telephone. Eddie caught only
the last few sketchy words. Then his father
placed the telephone in its cradle, glanced up,
and saw Eddie.
If there had been even the slightest doubt
in Eddie’s mind about something being
wrong, it vanished now. Mr. Taylor looked
years older than he had that very morning.
Worry lay deep in his eyes. He fumbled
thoughtfully with a pencil, turning it end over
end on his desk.
“Hello, son,” he said. He didn’t even ask
whether Eddie had discovered any uranium
ore that day. Always before, he had shown
genuine interest in Eddie’s prospecting trips.
“Dad,” Eddie said anxiously, “what—what’s
the matter?”
“It shows that much, does it, son?” his
father said tiredly.
“What’s wrong, Dad?” Eddie prompted.
“Or can’t you tell me?”
Mr. Taylor leaned back. “Quite a bit’s
wrong, Eddie,” he said, “and I guess there’s
no reason why I shouldn’t tell you. It’ll be in
the evening papers, anyway.”
26
“Evening papers?”
“Eddie, you remember me mentioning this
morning about that radioisotope shipment I
was expecting today?”
“I remember,” Eddie said. “Did it come?”
“It did—and it didn’t,” his father said.
“What does that mean, Dad?” Eddie asked,
puzzled.
“The delivery truck arrived at the school
with it,” his father explained, “but while the
driver was inquiring where to put it, the container
disappeared.”
“Disappeared?”
“The radioisotope was stolen, Eddie,” his
father said slowly. “Stolen right out from
under our noses!”
27
CHAPTER TWO
At the moment, Eddie didn’t pry for further
information on the theft of the valuable radioactive
isotope. His father had plenty on his
mind, as it was. The main information was in
the evening
Globe
, which Eddie rushed out
to get as soon as he heard it plop onto the
front porch.
He took the newspaper to his father to read
first. After having finished, Mr. Taylor handed
the paper to Eddie and leaned back thoughtfully
in his chair.
28
“They’ve got it pretty straight, at that,” Mr.
Taylor said, “but I’m afraid this is going to
stir up quite a bit of trouble.”
“It wasn’t your fault, was it, Dad?” Eddie
defended.
“It was as much mine as anybody’s, son,”
his father said. “Probably more so. After all,
I am head of the department. I knew about
the shipment. That should make it my responsibility
to see that it was properly received
and placed in our atomic-materials storage
vault. But there is little point in trying to
place the blame on anyone. I’m willing to accept
that part of it. The important thing is
that we recover that radioisotope. Not only is
it of a secret nature, but it is also dangerously
radioactive if improperly handled.”
“But—but wasn’t it in a safe container?”
Eddie asked.
29
“Of course,” his father said. “There were
only two ounces of it in a fifty-pound lead
capsule. As long as it remains in that capsule
it’s safe. As you know, the lead prevents any
radiation from escaping. Out of that capsule,
however, those two ounces of radioisotope can
be very dangerous.”
“Fifty pounds,” Eddie said thoughtfully.
“That’s a pretty big thing to steal, isn’t it?”
“Not when it’s lead, son,” his father replied.
“Not much bigger than a two-quart
milk bottle, in fact.”
“Even at that, no kid could have taken it,”
Eddie said.
“Kid?” His father smiled thinly. “We don’t
think it was any kid, Eddie. Not by a long
shot. The whole thing was carefully planned
and carefully carried out. It was not the work
of amateurs.”
Eddie read the newspaper account. The
small truck from Drake Ridge, where one of
the country’s newest atomic reactors was
located, had arrived earlier than expected at
Oceanview College. It had backed up to the
receiving dock where all of the college supplies
were delivered. Since deliveries during vacation
months were few, there was no one on the
dock when the truck arrived. A half hour later,
when the delivery was expected, there would
have been. The truck’s early arrival had
caught them unprepared.
30
The driver had left the truck and had gone
around the building to the front office. It had
taken him less than five minutes to locate the
receiving-dock foreman. Together, they had
returned through the small warehouse and
opened the rear door onto the dock.
During that short time someone had pried
open the heavy padlock on the delivery truck’s
rear door and had stolen the fifty-pound lead
capsule containing the radioisotope.
Dusty footprints on the pavement around
the rear of the truck indicated that two men
had carried out the theft. A heavy iron pry bar
had been dropped at the rear of the truck after
the lock was sprung. It was a common type
used by carpenters. There were no fingerprints
or other identifying marks on it. The footprints
were barely visible and of no help other
than to indicate that two men were involved
in the crime.
31
“Dad,” Eddie asked, looking up from the
paper, “how could anyone carry away something
weighing fifty pounds without being noticed?”
“Chances are they had their car parked
nearby,” his father said. “As you know, there
are no fences or gates around Oceanview College.
People come and go as they please. As a
matter of fact, there are always quite a few
automobiles parked around the shipping and
receiving building, and parking space is scarce
even during summer sessions. Anyone could
park and wait there unnoticed. Or they could
walk around without attracting any undue attention.”
“But, Dad,” Eddie continued, “how would
the men know that the delivery truck would
arrive a half hour early?”
“They wouldn’t,” his father said. “They
may have had another plan. The way things
worked out, they didn’t need to use it. The
early delivery and the business of leaving the
truck unguarded for a few minutes probably
gave them a better opportunity than they had
expected. At least, they took quick advantage
of it.”
32
“I don’t see what anyone would want with
a radioisotope,” Eddie said. “Maybe they figured
there was something else inside of that
lead capsule.”
“That’s unlikely, son,” Mr. Taylor said.
“Believe me, it was no common theft. Nor
were the thieves ordinary thieves. That isotope
was a new one. A very secret one. Our job at
the college was to conduct various tests with it
in order to find out exactly how it could best
be put to use as a cure for disease, or for sterilizing
food, or even as a source of power.”
“Power?” Eddie said. “Boy, it must have
been a strong isotope.” He knew that the
strength of radioisotopes could be controlled
largely by the length of time they were allowed
to “cook” in an atomic reactor and soak up
radioactivity.
33
“We weren’t planning to run a submarine
with it,” his father said. “It wasn’t that strong.
Still, it doesn’t take so very much radioactivity
to make two ounces of an isotope quite powerful—and
quite deadly. I only hope whoever
stole it knows what he’s doing. However, I’m
sure he does.”
“You mean he must have been an atomic
scientist himself?” Eddie asked.
“Let’s just say he—or both of them—have
enough training in the subject to know how to
handle that isotope safely,” Mr. Taylor said.
“But, Dad,” Eddie wondered, “what could
they do with it?”
“They could study it,” his father explained.
“At least, they could send it somewhere to be
broken down and studied. Being a new isotope,
the formula is of great value.”
“What do you mean, send it somewhere?”
Eddie asked.
“Perhaps to some other country.”
“Then—then you mean whoever stole it
were spies!” Eddie exclaimed breathlessly.
“That’s entirely possible,” his father said.
“In fact, it’s the only logical explanation I can
think of. People simply don’t go around stealing
radioactive isotopes without a mighty important
reason.”
34
“Dinner’s ready,” Eddie’s mother called
from the kitchen.
During dinner Eddie wasn’t sure just what
he was eating. The idea of spies stealing atomic
materials kept building up in his mind. By the
time dessert was finished, he was anxious to
talk with someone, yet he knew he shouldn’t
bother his father with any more questions. He
asked if he could go over and visit with Teena
for a while.
“Well, you were together most of the day,”
his mother said, “but I guess it’s all right. Be
back in about an hour, though.”
It was a balmy evening. On such evenings,
he and Teena sometimes walked along the
beach barefoot, collecting sea shells. Today
Eddie had no desire to do that. He ran down
the block.
Teena answered his knock.
“Come on in, Eddie,” she invited, seeming
surprised to see him. “Mother and I are just
finishing dinner.”
“Oh, I figured you’d be through by now,”
Eddie apologized, following her inside.
35
“Hello, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross said, but she
didn’t seem as cheerful as usual.
“Good evening, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie said. “I—I
hope I’m not making a pest of myself.” He
looked around for Mr. Ross, but Teena’s
father apparently hadn’t arrived home from
Acme Aircraft yet. There wasn’t a place set for
him at the table, either.
“You’re never a pest, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross assured
him. “I was going to call your mother in
a little while about that newspaper write-up.”
“Oh, you read it?” Eddie said.
“How could anyone miss it?” Teena said.
“Right on the front page.”
“I suppose your father is quite concerned
over it,” Teena’s mother said.
“Oh, yes,” Eddie affirmed. “He was the one
who ordered the isotope.”
“What’s an isotope?” Teena asked.
“I’m not sure I know, either,” Mrs. Ross
said. “Maybe we could understand more of
what it’s all about if you could explain what a
radioisotope is, Eddie.”
36
“Well,” Eddie said slowly, “it’s not easy to
explain, but I’ll try. You know how rare
uranium is. There’s not nearly enough of it to
fill all the needs for radioactive materials. Besides,
pure uranium is so powerful and expensive
and dangerous to handle that it’s not
a very good idea to try using it in its true form.
So they build an atomic reactor like the one at
Drake Ridge.”
“We’ve driven by it,” Mrs. Ross said. “My,
it’s a big place.”
“I’ll say,” Eddie agreed. “Of course, only
one building holds the reactor itself. It’s the
biggest building near the center.”
“I remember it,” Teena said.
“Well, the reactor is about four stories
high,” Eddie went on. “They call it a uranium
‘pile.’ It’s made up of hundreds and hundreds
of graphite bricks. That’s where they get the
name ‘pile’—from brick pile. Anyway, scattered
around in between the bricks are small
bits of uranium. Uranium atoms are radioactive.
That is, they keep splitting up and sending
out rays.”
“Why do they do that?” Teena asked.
37
“It’s just the way nature made uranium, I
guess,” Eddie said. “Most atoms stay in one
piece, although they move around lickety-split
all of the time. Uranium atoms not only move
around, but they break apart. They shoot out
little particles called neutrons. These neutrons
hit other atoms and split them apart, sending
out more neutrons. It’s a regular chain reaction.”
“I’ve heard of chain reactions,” Mrs. Ross
said.
“Well, with all of the splitting up and moving
around of the uranium atoms,” Eddie went
on, “an awful lot of heat builds up. If they
don’t control it—well, you’ve seen pictures of
atomic-bomb explosions. That’s a chain reaction
out of control.”
“Out of control is right,” Teena said.
38
“But the atomic piles control the reaction,”
Eddie said. “The graphite bricks keep the
splitting-up atoms apart so one neutron won’t
go smashing into other atoms unless they want
it to. They have ways of controlling it so that
only as much radiation builds up as they want.
You can even hear the reactor hum as the radioactive
rays go tearing through it. But by
careful tending, the scientists keep the atomic
collisions far enough apart so the thing doesn’t
blow up.”
“Boy, that sounds dangerous,” Teena said.
“Well, they know just how to do it,” Eddie
replied.
“Aren’t the rays dangerous?” Mrs. Ross
asked.
“I’ll say they’re dangerous,” Eddie said.
“But the whole pile is covered by a shield of
concrete about eight feet thick. That keeps the
rays from getting out and injuring the workmen.”
“Goodness. Eight feet is a lot of cement.”
“It takes a lot to stop radioactive atomic
particles,” Eddie explained. “Especially the
gamma rays. They’re the fastest and most dangerous,
and the hardest to stop. Alpha and beta
rays are fairly easy to stop. But the gamma
rays are regular high-velocity invisible bullets.
They’ll go right through a stone wall unless
it’s plenty thick. Of course, you can’t see them.
Not with even the most powerful microscope
in the world.”
39
“I wouldn’t want to work around a place
where I might get shot at by—by dangerous
rays you can’t even see,” Teena said.
“I would,” Eddie said. “Everyone is carefully
protected. They see to that. Well, anyway,
if all of those uranium atoms were shooting
radioactive rays around inside of that pile
and doing nothing, there would be an awful
lot of energy going to waste. So the atomic
scientists take certain elements which aren’t
radioactive, but can be made radioactive, and
shove small pieces of them into holes drilled
in the pile.”
“Isn’t that dangerous?” Teena asked.
“They don’t shove them in with their bare
hands,” Eddie said, trying not to show exasperation.
“They use long holders to push the
small chunks of material into the holes in the
reactor. Then, as those uranium atoms keep
splitting up and shooting particles around inside
of the pile, some of them smack into the
chunks of material, and stick there. Most elements
will soak up radiation, just like a sponge
soaks up water.”
40
“My, that’s interesting, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross
said.
“I’ve seen them do it,” Eddie said proudly,
then added, “from behind a protective shield,
of course. When the material has soaked up
enough radiation, they pull it back out. They
say it’s ‘cooked.’”
“You mean it’s hot?” Teena asked.
“It’s hot,” Eddie said, “but not like if it
came out of a stove. By hot, they mean it’s
radioactive. If you touched it, or even got near
it, you would get burned, but you probably
wouldn’t even know it for a while. It would be
a radiation burn. That’s a kind of burn you
don’t feel, but it destroys your blood cells and
tissues, and—well, you’ve had it.”
“So that’s what a radioisotope is,” Mrs. Ross
said. “It’s like a sponge. Only instead of soaking
up water, it soaks up radiation.”
41
“That’s about it,” Eddie said. “My dad says
that as more is learned about the ways to use
isotopes, the whole world is going to be improved.
You’ve heard of radiocobalt for curing
cancer. Well, that’s an isotope. They make it
by cooking cobalt in an atomic reactor. Oh,
there are hundreds of different isotopes. Like
I said, isotopes can be made of most of the
elements. And there are over a hundred elements.
Some soak up a lot of radioactivity, and
are strong and dangerous. Others absorb only
a little and are pretty safe to use. Depends, too,
on how long they let them cook in the reactor.”
“What kind was the one stolen from the
college today?” Teena asked.
“Dad didn’t say exactly,” Eddie answered,
“except he did say that if whoever took it
didn’t know what he was doing and opened up
the lead capsule, it could kill him. Of course,
even the mild isotopes are deadly if they’re not
handled right.”
“My goodness, it is a serious matter, isn’t
it?” Mrs. Ross said.
42
Eddie nodded. It was even more serious
than its threat of danger to anyone who
handled it carelessly. It was a new isotope—a
secret isotope. His father hadn’t said whether
it had been developed for curing things or for
destroying things. But many radioisotopes
could do either; it depended on how they were
used. Eddie assumed that anyone who would
stoop to stealing isotopes more than likely
would be interested in their ability to destroy
rather than their ability to benefit mankind.
“Well, I certainly do hope everything works
out all right,” Teena’s mother said.
“So do I,” Teena agreed.
Eddie glanced at the kitchen clock. “Oh,
boy,” he said, “I’d better be heading back
home. I didn’t mean to come over here and
talk so long.”
“Oh, we’re glad you did, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross
said. “I’m afraid too few of us know anything
about this atom business.”
43
“That’s right, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie agreed.
“People should talk more and read more about
it. After all, this is an atomic age. We might as
well face it. My father says that in horse-and-buggy
days everyone knew how to feed a horse
and grease a wagon wheel. They knew what was
needed to get the work done. But now that
atoms are being harnessed to do the work, not
many people even bother to find out what an
atom is.”
Mrs. Ross smiled. “I guess you’re right,
Eddie,” she said, “but I wouldn’t quite know
how to go about feeding an atom.”
“Or greasing one,” Teena added.
Eddie laughed. “I sure wouldn’t want the
job of trying to feed a herd of them the size of
a period,” he said. “Did you know that there
are about three million billion atoms of carbon
in a single period printed at the end of a
sentence. That’s how small atoms are.”
“Three million billion is a lot of something,”
a man’s voice spoke behind him.
“What are we talking about, Eddie?”
“Oh, hello, Mr. Ross,” Eddie said, turning
around and standing up. “I didn’t hear you
come in.”
44
Teena’s father was a medium-sized man
with light-brown hair which was getting somewhat
thin on top. He was usually quite cheerful
and full of fun, but tonight his face seemed
unusually drawn and sober. He stepped to the
table, leaned over, and gave both Teena and
Mrs. Ross a kiss on the cheek.
“Eddie was telling us about atoms,” Teena’s
mother said. “Did you know there were three
million billion of them in a period?”
“How many in a comma?” Mr. Ross said to
Eddie, then added quickly, “forget it, Eddie.
It wasn’t very funny. I—I’m afraid I don’t feel
very funny tonight.”
“Sit down, dear,” Mrs. Ross said. “I’ll warm
your dinner. You didn’t sound very cheerful
when you called to say you would be late. How
did everything go at the plant today?”
“Not so good,” Teena’s father said tiredly.
“In fact, not good at all.”
Problems. It seemed that everyone had
problems, Eddie thought, as he started to
leave.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/5/3/2/6/53269//53269-h//53269-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | What dream does Eddie have and why is it significant?
| 53269_4YLGV4PU_4 | [
"Eddie has a dream about prospecting with his father at Cedar point. This dream is what inspires him to find out what happened to the missing isotope by searching the hills behind the college. \n",
"Eddie has a dream about prospecting with his father’s Geiger counter. The dream is what inspires his hike to Cedar Point. \n",
"Eddie has a dream about prospecting with his father’s Geiger counter. The dream is what inspires Eddie to go over to Teena’s house and teach her about isotopes. \n",
"Eddie has a dream about prospecting with his father’s Geiger counter. The dream is what inspires the hike he has with Teena. \n"
] | 4 | 4 | [
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53,269 | 53269_4YLGV4PU | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Atom Mystery [Young Atom Detective] | 1954.0 | Coombs, Charles Ira | Mystery and detective stories; Nuclear physics -- Juvenile fiction; Scientists -- Juvenile fiction; PZ | YOUNG READERS
Atom Mystery
11
CHAPTER ONE
It was only a dream. Eddie Taylor would like
to have finished it, but the bar of morning sunlight
poking in under the window shade pried
his eyes open. The dream fled. Eddie kicked
off the sheet, swung his feet to the floor, and
groped under the bed for his tennis shoes.
He heard his father’s heavy footsteps in the
hallway. They stopped outside of his bedroom
door.
“You awake, Eddie?”
“I’m awake, Dad,” Eddie answered.
“Breakfast’s ready. Get washed and
dressed.”
12
“Be right there,” Eddie said. Then, remembering
the dream, he added, “Oh, Dad, is it
all right if I use the Geiger counter today?”
Mr. Taylor opened the door. He was a big
man, broad-shouldered and still thin-waisted.
Eddie found it easy to believe the stories he
had heard about his father being an outstanding
football player in his time. Even his glasses
and the gray hair at his temples didn’t add
much age, although Eddie knew it had been
eighteen years since his father had played his
last game of college football.
“You may use the Geiger counter any time
you want, Eddie,” Mr. Taylor said, “as long as
you take good care of it. You figured out where
you can find some uranium ore?”
Eddie smiled sheepishly. “I—I had a
dream,” he said. “Plain as day. It was out on
Cedar Point. I was walking along over some
rocks. Suddenly the Geiger counter began
clicking like everything.”
13
“Cedar Point?” his father asked. “I’ve
never been out there. But, from what I hear,
there are plenty of rock formations. Might
be worth a try, at that. You never can tell
where you might strike some radioactivity.”
“Do you believe in dreams, Dad?”
“Well, now, that’s a tough question, son.
I can’t say that I really do. Still, one clue is
as good as another when it comes to hunting
uranium ore, I guess. But right now we’d
better get out to breakfast before your mother
scalps us. Hurry it up.” His father turned
and went back down the hallway toward the
kitchen.
Eddie pulled on his trousers and T shirt
and went into the bathroom. He washed hurriedly,
knowing that even if he missed a spot
or two, he was fairly safe. During the summer
months his freckles got so thick and dark that
it would take a magnifying glass to detect any
small smudges of dirt hiding among them. He
plastered some water on his dark-red hair,
pushed a comb through it, and shrugged as it
snapped back almost to its original position.
Oh, well, he had tried.
14
He grinned into the mirror, reached a
finger into his mouth, and unhooked the
small rubber bands from his tooth braces.
He dropped them into the waste basket. He’d
put fresh ones in after breakfast.
He brushed his teeth carefully, taking particular
pains around the metal braces. The
tooth-straightening orthodontist had warned
him about letting food gather around the
metal clamps. It could start cavities.
Finished, Eddie went out to breakfast.
“Good morning, dear,” his mother greeted
him, handing him a plate of eggs.
“Hi, Mom,” Eddie said. “Gotta hurry. Big
day today.”
“So your father says. But I’m afraid your
big day will have to start with sorting out and
tying up those newspapers and magazines that
have been collecting in the garage.”
“Aw, Mom—”
“Eddie, I asked you to do it three days ago.
Remember? And the Goodwill truck comes
around today.”
“But, Mom—”
15
“No arguments, son,” his father put in
calmly but firmly. “School vacation doesn’t
mean that your chores around here are on
vacation, too. Get at it right away, and you’ll
still have time to hunt your uranium.
“Well,” Mr. Taylor added, excusing himself
from the table, “I’d better be getting over
to school. I’m expecting to receive shipment
of a new radioisotope today.”
The very word excited Eddie. In fact, anything
having to do with atomic science
excited him. He knew something about
isotopes—pronounced
eye-suh-tope
. You
couldn’t have a father who was head of the
atomic-science department at Oceanview
College without picking up a little knowledge
along the way. Eddie knew that a radioisotope
was a material which had been “cooked” in an
atomic reactor until it was “hot” with radioactivity.
When carefully controlled, the radiation
stored up in such isotopes was used in
many beneficial ways.
16
“Why don’t college professors get summer
vacations, too?” Eddie asked. One reason for
asking that particular question was to keep
from prying deeper into the subject of the
radioisotope. Much of his father’s work at
Oceanview College was of a secret nature.
Eddie had learned not to ask questions about
it. His father usually volunteered any information
he wanted known, so Eddie stuck to
questions which could and would be answered.
“We get vacations,” his father said. “But—well,
my work is a little different, you know.
At the speed atomic science is moving today,
we simply can’t afford to waste time. But don’t
worry. We’ll take a week or so off before school
starts in the fall. Maybe head for the mountains
with our tent and sleeping bags.”
“And Geiger counter?” Eddie asked
eagerly.
“Wouldn’t think of leaving it home,” his
father said, smiling. “By the way, I put new
batteries in it the other day. Take it easy on
them. Remember to switch it off when you’re
not actually using it.”
“I will,” Eddie promised. He had forgotten
several times before, weakening the batteries.
17
It took Eddie over an hour to sort out the
newspapers and magazines in the garage, tie
them in neat bundles, and place them out on
the front curb for the Goodwill pickup. By
that time the sun was high overhead. It had
driven off the coolness which the ocean air
had provided during the earlier hours.
“Anything else, Mom?” he asked, returning
to the house and getting the Geiger counter
out of the closet. He edged toward the back
door before his mother had much time to
think of something more for him to do.
“I guess not, dear,” Mrs. Taylor said, smiling
over his hasty retreat. “What are you going
to do?”
“Think I’ll do a little prospecting,” Eddie
said.
“Where?”
“Probably in the hills beyond the college,”
Eddie said. The more he thought about it, the
more he realized it was a little late in the day
to go to Cedar Point. The best way to get
there was by rowboat across Moon Bay, and
that was too long a row to be starting now.
Besides, there were plenty of other places
around the outskirts of Oceanview where
likely looking rock formations invited search
with a Geiger counter.
18
“Are you going alone?” his mother asked.
“Oh, guess I’ll stop by and see if Teena
wants to go,” Eddie answered casually. He
tried to make it sound as though he would
be doing Teena Ross a big favor. After all,
she was only a girl. Eddie didn’t figure a girl
would make a very good uranium prospecting
partner, but most of the fellows he knew were
away at camp, or vacationing with their folks,
or something like that.
“She’ll enjoy it, I’m sure,” his mother said.
“I’ll take Sandy, too,” Eddie said. “He needs
the exercise.”
“That’s a good idea, dear. Be back in time
for an early dinner.”
Eddie let Sandy off his chain. The taffy-colored
cocker spaniel yipped wildly over his
freedom, racing back and forth as Eddie
started down the street.
19
Christina Ross—whom everybody called
Teena—lived at the far end of the block.
Eddie went around to the side door of the
light-green stucco house and knocked.
“Oh, hi, Eddie,” Teena greeted him, appearing
at the screen door. “I was hoping
you’d come over.”
“Well, I—I just happened to be going by,”
Eddie said. “Thought you might want to
watch me do a little prospecting with the Geiger
counter. But maybe you’re too busy.”
That’s how to handle it, Eddie thought.
Don’t act anxious. Let Teena be anxious.
Then maybe she’ll even offer to bring along
a couple of sandwiches or some fruit.
“Oh, I’d love to go,” Teena said eagerly,
“but I’m just finishing the dishes. Come on
in.”
“I’m in kind of a hurry.”
“I’ll only be a minute.” She pushed the
screen door open for him. “I’ll make us some
sandwiches.”
“Stay here, Sandy,” Eddie said. “Sit.” The
dog minded, although he looked a bit rebellious.
20
Eddie went inside and followed Teena to
the kitchen. He felt triumphant about the
sandwiches.
Teena tossed him a dish towel. “You dry
them,” she said.
“Who, me?”
“Why not? You’re in a hurry, aren’t you?
I can make the sandwiches while you dry the
silverware.” She smiled, putting tiny crinkles
in her small, slightly upturned nose. She wore
her hair in a pony tail. Even though her hair
was blond all year long, it seemed even
lighter in the summer. Eddie couldn’t tell
whether the sun had faded it, or whether her
deep summer tan simply made her hair look
lighter by contrast. Maybe both.
“Hello, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross said, coming into
the kitchen. “Looks like Teena put you to
work.”
“She always does, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie said,
pretending great injury. “Don’t know why I
keep coming over here.”
“I know,” Teena spoke up quickly. “It’s
because we’re friends, that’s why.”
21
Eddie knew she was right. They were
friends—good friends. They had been ever
since Eddie’s family had moved to Oceanview
and his father had become head of the college’s
atomic-science department. In fact, their
parents were close friends, also. Teena’s father
was chief engineer for the Acme Aviation
Company, one of the coast town’s largest
manufacturing concerns.
“Well, I’ll be glad to finish them, Eddie,”
Mrs. Ross offered. “I know how boys detest
doing dishes.”
“Oh, I don’t really mind, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie
said. “Besides, Teena’s making sandwiches to
take with us.”
“Another prospecting trip?” Teena’s
mother glanced at the Geiger counter which
Eddie had set carefully on the dinette table.
“I still think there must be some uranium
around here,” Eddie insisted. “And we can
find it if anyone can.”
“I agree,” Mrs. Ross said. “But even if you
don’t find it, you both seem to enjoy your
hikes.”
22
“Oh, yes, it’s fun, Mother,” Teena replied,
wrapping wax paper around a sandwich.
“Guess I’m ready. I’ve got a bone for Sandy,
too.”
“Don’t go too far out from town,” Mrs.
Ross cautioned, as Eddie picked up the Geiger
counter. “And stick near the main roads.
You know the rules.”
“We sure do, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie assured
her. “And we’ll be back early.”
They walked past the college campus, and
toward the rocky foothills beyond. At various
rock mounds and outcroppings, Eddie
switched on the Geiger counter. The needle
of the dial on the black box wavered slightly.
A slow clicking came through the earphones,
but Eddie knew these indicated no more than
a normal background count. There were slight
traces of radioactivity in almost all earth or
rocks. It was in the air itself, caused by mysterious
and ever-present cosmic rays, so there
was always a mild background count when
the Geiger counter was turned on; but to
mean anything, the needle had to jump far
ahead on the gauge, and the clicking through
the earphones had to speed up until it sounded
almost like bacon frying in a hot skillet.
23
There was none of that today. After they
had hiked and searched most of the forenoon,
Eddie said, “We might as well call it a day,
Teena. Doesn’t seem to be anything out here.”
“It’s all right with me,” Teena agreed,
plucking foxtails from Sandy’s ears. “Pretty
hot, anyway. Let’s eat our sandwiches and go
back home.”
“All right,” Eddie said. “You know, one of
these days I’d like to go out to Cedar Point
and scout around. Maybe we’ll find something
there.” Then he told Teena about his dream.
Teena smiled. “A dream sure isn’t much to
go on,” she said, “but they say it’s pretty out on
Cedar Point. I’ll go any time you want to,
Eddie.” She handed him one of the sandwiches.
It was midafternoon by the time they arrived
back at Teena’s house. They worked a while
on a new jigsaw puzzle Teena had received
on a recent birthday. Then Eddie said good-by
and went on down the street toward his
own home.
24
After putting Sandy on his long chain and
filling his water dish, Eddie went in the back
door. He put the Geiger counter in the closet
and went into the kitchen.
“What’s for dinner, Mom?” he asked.
Mrs. Taylor turned from the sink. Eddie
knew at once, just seeing the expression on
his mother’s face, that something was wrong.
“Dinner?” his mother said absently. “It’s
not quite four o’clock yet, Eddie. Besides,
dinner may be a little late today.”
“But this morning you said it would be
early,” Eddie reminded her, puzzled.
“This morning I didn’t know what might
happen.”
25
Then Eddie heard the sound of his father’s
voice coming from the den. There was a
strange urgent tone in it. The door to the den
was open. Eddie went through the dining
room and glanced into the den. His father
sat stiffly behind his homemade desk, talking
rapidly into the telephone. Eddie caught only
the last few sketchy words. Then his father
placed the telephone in its cradle, glanced up,
and saw Eddie.
If there had been even the slightest doubt
in Eddie’s mind about something being
wrong, it vanished now. Mr. Taylor looked
years older than he had that very morning.
Worry lay deep in his eyes. He fumbled
thoughtfully with a pencil, turning it end over
end on his desk.
“Hello, son,” he said. He didn’t even ask
whether Eddie had discovered any uranium
ore that day. Always before, he had shown
genuine interest in Eddie’s prospecting trips.
“Dad,” Eddie said anxiously, “what—what’s
the matter?”
“It shows that much, does it, son?” his
father said tiredly.
“What’s wrong, Dad?” Eddie prompted.
“Or can’t you tell me?”
Mr. Taylor leaned back. “Quite a bit’s
wrong, Eddie,” he said, “and I guess there’s
no reason why I shouldn’t tell you. It’ll be in
the evening papers, anyway.”
26
“Evening papers?”
“Eddie, you remember me mentioning this
morning about that radioisotope shipment I
was expecting today?”
“I remember,” Eddie said. “Did it come?”
“It did—and it didn’t,” his father said.
“What does that mean, Dad?” Eddie asked,
puzzled.
“The delivery truck arrived at the school
with it,” his father explained, “but while the
driver was inquiring where to put it, the container
disappeared.”
“Disappeared?”
“The radioisotope was stolen, Eddie,” his
father said slowly. “Stolen right out from
under our noses!”
27
CHAPTER TWO
At the moment, Eddie didn’t pry for further
information on the theft of the valuable radioactive
isotope. His father had plenty on his
mind, as it was. The main information was in
the evening
Globe
, which Eddie rushed out
to get as soon as he heard it plop onto the
front porch.
He took the newspaper to his father to read
first. After having finished, Mr. Taylor handed
the paper to Eddie and leaned back thoughtfully
in his chair.
28
“They’ve got it pretty straight, at that,” Mr.
Taylor said, “but I’m afraid this is going to
stir up quite a bit of trouble.”
“It wasn’t your fault, was it, Dad?” Eddie
defended.
“It was as much mine as anybody’s, son,”
his father said. “Probably more so. After all,
I am head of the department. I knew about
the shipment. That should make it my responsibility
to see that it was properly received
and placed in our atomic-materials storage
vault. But there is little point in trying to
place the blame on anyone. I’m willing to accept
that part of it. The important thing is
that we recover that radioisotope. Not only is
it of a secret nature, but it is also dangerously
radioactive if improperly handled.”
“But—but wasn’t it in a safe container?”
Eddie asked.
29
“Of course,” his father said. “There were
only two ounces of it in a fifty-pound lead
capsule. As long as it remains in that capsule
it’s safe. As you know, the lead prevents any
radiation from escaping. Out of that capsule,
however, those two ounces of radioisotope can
be very dangerous.”
“Fifty pounds,” Eddie said thoughtfully.
“That’s a pretty big thing to steal, isn’t it?”
“Not when it’s lead, son,” his father replied.
“Not much bigger than a two-quart
milk bottle, in fact.”
“Even at that, no kid could have taken it,”
Eddie said.
“Kid?” His father smiled thinly. “We don’t
think it was any kid, Eddie. Not by a long
shot. The whole thing was carefully planned
and carefully carried out. It was not the work
of amateurs.”
Eddie read the newspaper account. The
small truck from Drake Ridge, where one of
the country’s newest atomic reactors was
located, had arrived earlier than expected at
Oceanview College. It had backed up to the
receiving dock where all of the college supplies
were delivered. Since deliveries during vacation
months were few, there was no one on the
dock when the truck arrived. A half hour later,
when the delivery was expected, there would
have been. The truck’s early arrival had
caught them unprepared.
30
The driver had left the truck and had gone
around the building to the front office. It had
taken him less than five minutes to locate the
receiving-dock foreman. Together, they had
returned through the small warehouse and
opened the rear door onto the dock.
During that short time someone had pried
open the heavy padlock on the delivery truck’s
rear door and had stolen the fifty-pound lead
capsule containing the radioisotope.
Dusty footprints on the pavement around
the rear of the truck indicated that two men
had carried out the theft. A heavy iron pry bar
had been dropped at the rear of the truck after
the lock was sprung. It was a common type
used by carpenters. There were no fingerprints
or other identifying marks on it. The footprints
were barely visible and of no help other
than to indicate that two men were involved
in the crime.
31
“Dad,” Eddie asked, looking up from the
paper, “how could anyone carry away something
weighing fifty pounds without being noticed?”
“Chances are they had their car parked
nearby,” his father said. “As you know, there
are no fences or gates around Oceanview College.
People come and go as they please. As a
matter of fact, there are always quite a few
automobiles parked around the shipping and
receiving building, and parking space is scarce
even during summer sessions. Anyone could
park and wait there unnoticed. Or they could
walk around without attracting any undue attention.”
“But, Dad,” Eddie continued, “how would
the men know that the delivery truck would
arrive a half hour early?”
“They wouldn’t,” his father said. “They
may have had another plan. The way things
worked out, they didn’t need to use it. The
early delivery and the business of leaving the
truck unguarded for a few minutes probably
gave them a better opportunity than they had
expected. At least, they took quick advantage
of it.”
32
“I don’t see what anyone would want with
a radioisotope,” Eddie said. “Maybe they figured
there was something else inside of that
lead capsule.”
“That’s unlikely, son,” Mr. Taylor said.
“Believe me, it was no common theft. Nor
were the thieves ordinary thieves. That isotope
was a new one. A very secret one. Our job at
the college was to conduct various tests with it
in order to find out exactly how it could best
be put to use as a cure for disease, or for sterilizing
food, or even as a source of power.”
“Power?” Eddie said. “Boy, it must have
been a strong isotope.” He knew that the
strength of radioisotopes could be controlled
largely by the length of time they were allowed
to “cook” in an atomic reactor and soak up
radioactivity.
33
“We weren’t planning to run a submarine
with it,” his father said. “It wasn’t that strong.
Still, it doesn’t take so very much radioactivity
to make two ounces of an isotope quite powerful—and
quite deadly. I only hope whoever
stole it knows what he’s doing. However, I’m
sure he does.”
“You mean he must have been an atomic
scientist himself?” Eddie asked.
“Let’s just say he—or both of them—have
enough training in the subject to know how to
handle that isotope safely,” Mr. Taylor said.
“But, Dad,” Eddie wondered, “what could
they do with it?”
“They could study it,” his father explained.
“At least, they could send it somewhere to be
broken down and studied. Being a new isotope,
the formula is of great value.”
“What do you mean, send it somewhere?”
Eddie asked.
“Perhaps to some other country.”
“Then—then you mean whoever stole it
were spies!” Eddie exclaimed breathlessly.
“That’s entirely possible,” his father said.
“In fact, it’s the only logical explanation I can
think of. People simply don’t go around stealing
radioactive isotopes without a mighty important
reason.”
34
“Dinner’s ready,” Eddie’s mother called
from the kitchen.
During dinner Eddie wasn’t sure just what
he was eating. The idea of spies stealing atomic
materials kept building up in his mind. By the
time dessert was finished, he was anxious to
talk with someone, yet he knew he shouldn’t
bother his father with any more questions. He
asked if he could go over and visit with Teena
for a while.
“Well, you were together most of the day,”
his mother said, “but I guess it’s all right. Be
back in about an hour, though.”
It was a balmy evening. On such evenings,
he and Teena sometimes walked along the
beach barefoot, collecting sea shells. Today
Eddie had no desire to do that. He ran down
the block.
Teena answered his knock.
“Come on in, Eddie,” she invited, seeming
surprised to see him. “Mother and I are just
finishing dinner.”
“Oh, I figured you’d be through by now,”
Eddie apologized, following her inside.
35
“Hello, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross said, but she
didn’t seem as cheerful as usual.
“Good evening, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie said. “I—I
hope I’m not making a pest of myself.” He
looked around for Mr. Ross, but Teena’s
father apparently hadn’t arrived home from
Acme Aircraft yet. There wasn’t a place set for
him at the table, either.
“You’re never a pest, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross assured
him. “I was going to call your mother in
a little while about that newspaper write-up.”
“Oh, you read it?” Eddie said.
“How could anyone miss it?” Teena said.
“Right on the front page.”
“I suppose your father is quite concerned
over it,” Teena’s mother said.
“Oh, yes,” Eddie affirmed. “He was the one
who ordered the isotope.”
“What’s an isotope?” Teena asked.
“I’m not sure I know, either,” Mrs. Ross
said. “Maybe we could understand more of
what it’s all about if you could explain what a
radioisotope is, Eddie.”
36
“Well,” Eddie said slowly, “it’s not easy to
explain, but I’ll try. You know how rare
uranium is. There’s not nearly enough of it to
fill all the needs for radioactive materials. Besides,
pure uranium is so powerful and expensive
and dangerous to handle that it’s not
a very good idea to try using it in its true form.
So they build an atomic reactor like the one at
Drake Ridge.”
“We’ve driven by it,” Mrs. Ross said. “My,
it’s a big place.”
“I’ll say,” Eddie agreed. “Of course, only
one building holds the reactor itself. It’s the
biggest building near the center.”
“I remember it,” Teena said.
“Well, the reactor is about four stories
high,” Eddie went on. “They call it a uranium
‘pile.’ It’s made up of hundreds and hundreds
of graphite bricks. That’s where they get the
name ‘pile’—from brick pile. Anyway, scattered
around in between the bricks are small
bits of uranium. Uranium atoms are radioactive.
That is, they keep splitting up and sending
out rays.”
“Why do they do that?” Teena asked.
37
“It’s just the way nature made uranium, I
guess,” Eddie said. “Most atoms stay in one
piece, although they move around lickety-split
all of the time. Uranium atoms not only move
around, but they break apart. They shoot out
little particles called neutrons. These neutrons
hit other atoms and split them apart, sending
out more neutrons. It’s a regular chain reaction.”
“I’ve heard of chain reactions,” Mrs. Ross
said.
“Well, with all of the splitting up and moving
around of the uranium atoms,” Eddie went
on, “an awful lot of heat builds up. If they
don’t control it—well, you’ve seen pictures of
atomic-bomb explosions. That’s a chain reaction
out of control.”
“Out of control is right,” Teena said.
38
“But the atomic piles control the reaction,”
Eddie said. “The graphite bricks keep the
splitting-up atoms apart so one neutron won’t
go smashing into other atoms unless they want
it to. They have ways of controlling it so that
only as much radiation builds up as they want.
You can even hear the reactor hum as the radioactive
rays go tearing through it. But by
careful tending, the scientists keep the atomic
collisions far enough apart so the thing doesn’t
blow up.”
“Boy, that sounds dangerous,” Teena said.
“Well, they know just how to do it,” Eddie
replied.
“Aren’t the rays dangerous?” Mrs. Ross
asked.
“I’ll say they’re dangerous,” Eddie said.
“But the whole pile is covered by a shield of
concrete about eight feet thick. That keeps the
rays from getting out and injuring the workmen.”
“Goodness. Eight feet is a lot of cement.”
“It takes a lot to stop radioactive atomic
particles,” Eddie explained. “Especially the
gamma rays. They’re the fastest and most dangerous,
and the hardest to stop. Alpha and beta
rays are fairly easy to stop. But the gamma
rays are regular high-velocity invisible bullets.
They’ll go right through a stone wall unless
it’s plenty thick. Of course, you can’t see them.
Not with even the most powerful microscope
in the world.”
39
“I wouldn’t want to work around a place
where I might get shot at by—by dangerous
rays you can’t even see,” Teena said.
“I would,” Eddie said. “Everyone is carefully
protected. They see to that. Well, anyway,
if all of those uranium atoms were shooting
radioactive rays around inside of that pile
and doing nothing, there would be an awful
lot of energy going to waste. So the atomic
scientists take certain elements which aren’t
radioactive, but can be made radioactive, and
shove small pieces of them into holes drilled
in the pile.”
“Isn’t that dangerous?” Teena asked.
“They don’t shove them in with their bare
hands,” Eddie said, trying not to show exasperation.
“They use long holders to push the
small chunks of material into the holes in the
reactor. Then, as those uranium atoms keep
splitting up and shooting particles around inside
of the pile, some of them smack into the
chunks of material, and stick there. Most elements
will soak up radiation, just like a sponge
soaks up water.”
40
“My, that’s interesting, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross
said.
“I’ve seen them do it,” Eddie said proudly,
then added, “from behind a protective shield,
of course. When the material has soaked up
enough radiation, they pull it back out. They
say it’s ‘cooked.’”
“You mean it’s hot?” Teena asked.
“It’s hot,” Eddie said, “but not like if it
came out of a stove. By hot, they mean it’s
radioactive. If you touched it, or even got near
it, you would get burned, but you probably
wouldn’t even know it for a while. It would be
a radiation burn. That’s a kind of burn you
don’t feel, but it destroys your blood cells and
tissues, and—well, you’ve had it.”
“So that’s what a radioisotope is,” Mrs. Ross
said. “It’s like a sponge. Only instead of soaking
up water, it soaks up radiation.”
41
“That’s about it,” Eddie said. “My dad says
that as more is learned about the ways to use
isotopes, the whole world is going to be improved.
You’ve heard of radiocobalt for curing
cancer. Well, that’s an isotope. They make it
by cooking cobalt in an atomic reactor. Oh,
there are hundreds of different isotopes. Like
I said, isotopes can be made of most of the
elements. And there are over a hundred elements.
Some soak up a lot of radioactivity, and
are strong and dangerous. Others absorb only
a little and are pretty safe to use. Depends, too,
on how long they let them cook in the reactor.”
“What kind was the one stolen from the
college today?” Teena asked.
“Dad didn’t say exactly,” Eddie answered,
“except he did say that if whoever took it
didn’t know what he was doing and opened up
the lead capsule, it could kill him. Of course,
even the mild isotopes are deadly if they’re not
handled right.”
“My goodness, it is a serious matter, isn’t
it?” Mrs. Ross said.
42
Eddie nodded. It was even more serious
than its threat of danger to anyone who
handled it carelessly. It was a new isotope—a
secret isotope. His father hadn’t said whether
it had been developed for curing things or for
destroying things. But many radioisotopes
could do either; it depended on how they were
used. Eddie assumed that anyone who would
stoop to stealing isotopes more than likely
would be interested in their ability to destroy
rather than their ability to benefit mankind.
“Well, I certainly do hope everything works
out all right,” Teena’s mother said.
“So do I,” Teena agreed.
Eddie glanced at the kitchen clock. “Oh,
boy,” he said, “I’d better be heading back
home. I didn’t mean to come over here and
talk so long.”
“Oh, we’re glad you did, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross
said. “I’m afraid too few of us know anything
about this atom business.”
43
“That’s right, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie agreed.
“People should talk more and read more about
it. After all, this is an atomic age. We might as
well face it. My father says that in horse-and-buggy
days everyone knew how to feed a horse
and grease a wagon wheel. They knew what was
needed to get the work done. But now that
atoms are being harnessed to do the work, not
many people even bother to find out what an
atom is.”
Mrs. Ross smiled. “I guess you’re right,
Eddie,” she said, “but I wouldn’t quite know
how to go about feeding an atom.”
“Or greasing one,” Teena added.
Eddie laughed. “I sure wouldn’t want the
job of trying to feed a herd of them the size of
a period,” he said. “Did you know that there
are about three million billion atoms of carbon
in a single period printed at the end of a
sentence. That’s how small atoms are.”
“Three million billion is a lot of something,”
a man’s voice spoke behind him.
“What are we talking about, Eddie?”
“Oh, hello, Mr. Ross,” Eddie said, turning
around and standing up. “I didn’t hear you
come in.”
44
Teena’s father was a medium-sized man
with light-brown hair which was getting somewhat
thin on top. He was usually quite cheerful
and full of fun, but tonight his face seemed
unusually drawn and sober. He stepped to the
table, leaned over, and gave both Teena and
Mrs. Ross a kiss on the cheek.
“Eddie was telling us about atoms,” Teena’s
mother said. “Did you know there were three
million billion of them in a period?”
“How many in a comma?” Mr. Ross said to
Eddie, then added quickly, “forget it, Eddie.
It wasn’t very funny. I—I’m afraid I don’t feel
very funny tonight.”
“Sit down, dear,” Mrs. Ross said. “I’ll warm
your dinner. You didn’t sound very cheerful
when you called to say you would be late. How
did everything go at the plant today?”
“Not so good,” Teena’s father said tiredly.
“In fact, not good at all.”
Problems. It seemed that everyone had
problems, Eddie thought, as he started to
leave.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/5/3/2/6/53269//53269-h//53269-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | How does Eddie’s interest in radioactivity affect the story’s plot?
| 53269_4YLGV4PU_5 | [
"It causes major holes for the reader when Eddie doesn’t explain his scientific jargon. \n",
"It provides a basic subject matter for Eddie to use to get closer to Teena. \n",
"It provides basic subject matter for the story and informs the brunt of Eddie’s characterization. \n",
"It is used as a way of putting Eddie in contact with the story’s antagonist: Mr. Ross\n"
] | 3 | 3 | [
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53,269 | 53269_4YLGV4PU | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Atom Mystery [Young Atom Detective] | 1954.0 | Coombs, Charles Ira | Mystery and detective stories; Nuclear physics -- Juvenile fiction; Scientists -- Juvenile fiction; PZ | YOUNG READERS
Atom Mystery
11
CHAPTER ONE
It was only a dream. Eddie Taylor would like
to have finished it, but the bar of morning sunlight
poking in under the window shade pried
his eyes open. The dream fled. Eddie kicked
off the sheet, swung his feet to the floor, and
groped under the bed for his tennis shoes.
He heard his father’s heavy footsteps in the
hallway. They stopped outside of his bedroom
door.
“You awake, Eddie?”
“I’m awake, Dad,” Eddie answered.
“Breakfast’s ready. Get washed and
dressed.”
12
“Be right there,” Eddie said. Then, remembering
the dream, he added, “Oh, Dad, is it
all right if I use the Geiger counter today?”
Mr. Taylor opened the door. He was a big
man, broad-shouldered and still thin-waisted.
Eddie found it easy to believe the stories he
had heard about his father being an outstanding
football player in his time. Even his glasses
and the gray hair at his temples didn’t add
much age, although Eddie knew it had been
eighteen years since his father had played his
last game of college football.
“You may use the Geiger counter any time
you want, Eddie,” Mr. Taylor said, “as long as
you take good care of it. You figured out where
you can find some uranium ore?”
Eddie smiled sheepishly. “I—I had a
dream,” he said. “Plain as day. It was out on
Cedar Point. I was walking along over some
rocks. Suddenly the Geiger counter began
clicking like everything.”
13
“Cedar Point?” his father asked. “I’ve
never been out there. But, from what I hear,
there are plenty of rock formations. Might
be worth a try, at that. You never can tell
where you might strike some radioactivity.”
“Do you believe in dreams, Dad?”
“Well, now, that’s a tough question, son.
I can’t say that I really do. Still, one clue is
as good as another when it comes to hunting
uranium ore, I guess. But right now we’d
better get out to breakfast before your mother
scalps us. Hurry it up.” His father turned
and went back down the hallway toward the
kitchen.
Eddie pulled on his trousers and T shirt
and went into the bathroom. He washed hurriedly,
knowing that even if he missed a spot
or two, he was fairly safe. During the summer
months his freckles got so thick and dark that
it would take a magnifying glass to detect any
small smudges of dirt hiding among them. He
plastered some water on his dark-red hair,
pushed a comb through it, and shrugged as it
snapped back almost to its original position.
Oh, well, he had tried.
14
He grinned into the mirror, reached a
finger into his mouth, and unhooked the
small rubber bands from his tooth braces.
He dropped them into the waste basket. He’d
put fresh ones in after breakfast.
He brushed his teeth carefully, taking particular
pains around the metal braces. The
tooth-straightening orthodontist had warned
him about letting food gather around the
metal clamps. It could start cavities.
Finished, Eddie went out to breakfast.
“Good morning, dear,” his mother greeted
him, handing him a plate of eggs.
“Hi, Mom,” Eddie said. “Gotta hurry. Big
day today.”
“So your father says. But I’m afraid your
big day will have to start with sorting out and
tying up those newspapers and magazines that
have been collecting in the garage.”
“Aw, Mom—”
“Eddie, I asked you to do it three days ago.
Remember? And the Goodwill truck comes
around today.”
“But, Mom—”
15
“No arguments, son,” his father put in
calmly but firmly. “School vacation doesn’t
mean that your chores around here are on
vacation, too. Get at it right away, and you’ll
still have time to hunt your uranium.
“Well,” Mr. Taylor added, excusing himself
from the table, “I’d better be getting over
to school. I’m expecting to receive shipment
of a new radioisotope today.”
The very word excited Eddie. In fact, anything
having to do with atomic science
excited him. He knew something about
isotopes—pronounced
eye-suh-tope
. You
couldn’t have a father who was head of the
atomic-science department at Oceanview
College without picking up a little knowledge
along the way. Eddie knew that a radioisotope
was a material which had been “cooked” in an
atomic reactor until it was “hot” with radioactivity.
When carefully controlled, the radiation
stored up in such isotopes was used in
many beneficial ways.
16
“Why don’t college professors get summer
vacations, too?” Eddie asked. One reason for
asking that particular question was to keep
from prying deeper into the subject of the
radioisotope. Much of his father’s work at
Oceanview College was of a secret nature.
Eddie had learned not to ask questions about
it. His father usually volunteered any information
he wanted known, so Eddie stuck to
questions which could and would be answered.
“We get vacations,” his father said. “But—well,
my work is a little different, you know.
At the speed atomic science is moving today,
we simply can’t afford to waste time. But don’t
worry. We’ll take a week or so off before school
starts in the fall. Maybe head for the mountains
with our tent and sleeping bags.”
“And Geiger counter?” Eddie asked
eagerly.
“Wouldn’t think of leaving it home,” his
father said, smiling. “By the way, I put new
batteries in it the other day. Take it easy on
them. Remember to switch it off when you’re
not actually using it.”
“I will,” Eddie promised. He had forgotten
several times before, weakening the batteries.
17
It took Eddie over an hour to sort out the
newspapers and magazines in the garage, tie
them in neat bundles, and place them out on
the front curb for the Goodwill pickup. By
that time the sun was high overhead. It had
driven off the coolness which the ocean air
had provided during the earlier hours.
“Anything else, Mom?” he asked, returning
to the house and getting the Geiger counter
out of the closet. He edged toward the back
door before his mother had much time to
think of something more for him to do.
“I guess not, dear,” Mrs. Taylor said, smiling
over his hasty retreat. “What are you going
to do?”
“Think I’ll do a little prospecting,” Eddie
said.
“Where?”
“Probably in the hills beyond the college,”
Eddie said. The more he thought about it, the
more he realized it was a little late in the day
to go to Cedar Point. The best way to get
there was by rowboat across Moon Bay, and
that was too long a row to be starting now.
Besides, there were plenty of other places
around the outskirts of Oceanview where
likely looking rock formations invited search
with a Geiger counter.
18
“Are you going alone?” his mother asked.
“Oh, guess I’ll stop by and see if Teena
wants to go,” Eddie answered casually. He
tried to make it sound as though he would
be doing Teena Ross a big favor. After all,
she was only a girl. Eddie didn’t figure a girl
would make a very good uranium prospecting
partner, but most of the fellows he knew were
away at camp, or vacationing with their folks,
or something like that.
“She’ll enjoy it, I’m sure,” his mother said.
“I’ll take Sandy, too,” Eddie said. “He needs
the exercise.”
“That’s a good idea, dear. Be back in time
for an early dinner.”
Eddie let Sandy off his chain. The taffy-colored
cocker spaniel yipped wildly over his
freedom, racing back and forth as Eddie
started down the street.
19
Christina Ross—whom everybody called
Teena—lived at the far end of the block.
Eddie went around to the side door of the
light-green stucco house and knocked.
“Oh, hi, Eddie,” Teena greeted him, appearing
at the screen door. “I was hoping
you’d come over.”
“Well, I—I just happened to be going by,”
Eddie said. “Thought you might want to
watch me do a little prospecting with the Geiger
counter. But maybe you’re too busy.”
That’s how to handle it, Eddie thought.
Don’t act anxious. Let Teena be anxious.
Then maybe she’ll even offer to bring along
a couple of sandwiches or some fruit.
“Oh, I’d love to go,” Teena said eagerly,
“but I’m just finishing the dishes. Come on
in.”
“I’m in kind of a hurry.”
“I’ll only be a minute.” She pushed the
screen door open for him. “I’ll make us some
sandwiches.”
“Stay here, Sandy,” Eddie said. “Sit.” The
dog minded, although he looked a bit rebellious.
20
Eddie went inside and followed Teena to
the kitchen. He felt triumphant about the
sandwiches.
Teena tossed him a dish towel. “You dry
them,” she said.
“Who, me?”
“Why not? You’re in a hurry, aren’t you?
I can make the sandwiches while you dry the
silverware.” She smiled, putting tiny crinkles
in her small, slightly upturned nose. She wore
her hair in a pony tail. Even though her hair
was blond all year long, it seemed even
lighter in the summer. Eddie couldn’t tell
whether the sun had faded it, or whether her
deep summer tan simply made her hair look
lighter by contrast. Maybe both.
“Hello, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross said, coming into
the kitchen. “Looks like Teena put you to
work.”
“She always does, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie said,
pretending great injury. “Don’t know why I
keep coming over here.”
“I know,” Teena spoke up quickly. “It’s
because we’re friends, that’s why.”
21
Eddie knew she was right. They were
friends—good friends. They had been ever
since Eddie’s family had moved to Oceanview
and his father had become head of the college’s
atomic-science department. In fact, their
parents were close friends, also. Teena’s father
was chief engineer for the Acme Aviation
Company, one of the coast town’s largest
manufacturing concerns.
“Well, I’ll be glad to finish them, Eddie,”
Mrs. Ross offered. “I know how boys detest
doing dishes.”
“Oh, I don’t really mind, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie
said. “Besides, Teena’s making sandwiches to
take with us.”
“Another prospecting trip?” Teena’s
mother glanced at the Geiger counter which
Eddie had set carefully on the dinette table.
“I still think there must be some uranium
around here,” Eddie insisted. “And we can
find it if anyone can.”
“I agree,” Mrs. Ross said. “But even if you
don’t find it, you both seem to enjoy your
hikes.”
22
“Oh, yes, it’s fun, Mother,” Teena replied,
wrapping wax paper around a sandwich.
“Guess I’m ready. I’ve got a bone for Sandy,
too.”
“Don’t go too far out from town,” Mrs.
Ross cautioned, as Eddie picked up the Geiger
counter. “And stick near the main roads.
You know the rules.”
“We sure do, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie assured
her. “And we’ll be back early.”
They walked past the college campus, and
toward the rocky foothills beyond. At various
rock mounds and outcroppings, Eddie
switched on the Geiger counter. The needle
of the dial on the black box wavered slightly.
A slow clicking came through the earphones,
but Eddie knew these indicated no more than
a normal background count. There were slight
traces of radioactivity in almost all earth or
rocks. It was in the air itself, caused by mysterious
and ever-present cosmic rays, so there
was always a mild background count when
the Geiger counter was turned on; but to
mean anything, the needle had to jump far
ahead on the gauge, and the clicking through
the earphones had to speed up until it sounded
almost like bacon frying in a hot skillet.
23
There was none of that today. After they
had hiked and searched most of the forenoon,
Eddie said, “We might as well call it a day,
Teena. Doesn’t seem to be anything out here.”
“It’s all right with me,” Teena agreed,
plucking foxtails from Sandy’s ears. “Pretty
hot, anyway. Let’s eat our sandwiches and go
back home.”
“All right,” Eddie said. “You know, one of
these days I’d like to go out to Cedar Point
and scout around. Maybe we’ll find something
there.” Then he told Teena about his dream.
Teena smiled. “A dream sure isn’t much to
go on,” she said, “but they say it’s pretty out on
Cedar Point. I’ll go any time you want to,
Eddie.” She handed him one of the sandwiches.
It was midafternoon by the time they arrived
back at Teena’s house. They worked a while
on a new jigsaw puzzle Teena had received
on a recent birthday. Then Eddie said good-by
and went on down the street toward his
own home.
24
After putting Sandy on his long chain and
filling his water dish, Eddie went in the back
door. He put the Geiger counter in the closet
and went into the kitchen.
“What’s for dinner, Mom?” he asked.
Mrs. Taylor turned from the sink. Eddie
knew at once, just seeing the expression on
his mother’s face, that something was wrong.
“Dinner?” his mother said absently. “It’s
not quite four o’clock yet, Eddie. Besides,
dinner may be a little late today.”
“But this morning you said it would be
early,” Eddie reminded her, puzzled.
“This morning I didn’t know what might
happen.”
25
Then Eddie heard the sound of his father’s
voice coming from the den. There was a
strange urgent tone in it. The door to the den
was open. Eddie went through the dining
room and glanced into the den. His father
sat stiffly behind his homemade desk, talking
rapidly into the telephone. Eddie caught only
the last few sketchy words. Then his father
placed the telephone in its cradle, glanced up,
and saw Eddie.
If there had been even the slightest doubt
in Eddie’s mind about something being
wrong, it vanished now. Mr. Taylor looked
years older than he had that very morning.
Worry lay deep in his eyes. He fumbled
thoughtfully with a pencil, turning it end over
end on his desk.
“Hello, son,” he said. He didn’t even ask
whether Eddie had discovered any uranium
ore that day. Always before, he had shown
genuine interest in Eddie’s prospecting trips.
“Dad,” Eddie said anxiously, “what—what’s
the matter?”
“It shows that much, does it, son?” his
father said tiredly.
“What’s wrong, Dad?” Eddie prompted.
“Or can’t you tell me?”
Mr. Taylor leaned back. “Quite a bit’s
wrong, Eddie,” he said, “and I guess there’s
no reason why I shouldn’t tell you. It’ll be in
the evening papers, anyway.”
26
“Evening papers?”
“Eddie, you remember me mentioning this
morning about that radioisotope shipment I
was expecting today?”
“I remember,” Eddie said. “Did it come?”
“It did—and it didn’t,” his father said.
“What does that mean, Dad?” Eddie asked,
puzzled.
“The delivery truck arrived at the school
with it,” his father explained, “but while the
driver was inquiring where to put it, the container
disappeared.”
“Disappeared?”
“The radioisotope was stolen, Eddie,” his
father said slowly. “Stolen right out from
under our noses!”
27
CHAPTER TWO
At the moment, Eddie didn’t pry for further
information on the theft of the valuable radioactive
isotope. His father had plenty on his
mind, as it was. The main information was in
the evening
Globe
, which Eddie rushed out
to get as soon as he heard it plop onto the
front porch.
He took the newspaper to his father to read
first. After having finished, Mr. Taylor handed
the paper to Eddie and leaned back thoughtfully
in his chair.
28
“They’ve got it pretty straight, at that,” Mr.
Taylor said, “but I’m afraid this is going to
stir up quite a bit of trouble.”
“It wasn’t your fault, was it, Dad?” Eddie
defended.
“It was as much mine as anybody’s, son,”
his father said. “Probably more so. After all,
I am head of the department. I knew about
the shipment. That should make it my responsibility
to see that it was properly received
and placed in our atomic-materials storage
vault. But there is little point in trying to
place the blame on anyone. I’m willing to accept
that part of it. The important thing is
that we recover that radioisotope. Not only is
it of a secret nature, but it is also dangerously
radioactive if improperly handled.”
“But—but wasn’t it in a safe container?”
Eddie asked.
29
“Of course,” his father said. “There were
only two ounces of it in a fifty-pound lead
capsule. As long as it remains in that capsule
it’s safe. As you know, the lead prevents any
radiation from escaping. Out of that capsule,
however, those two ounces of radioisotope can
be very dangerous.”
“Fifty pounds,” Eddie said thoughtfully.
“That’s a pretty big thing to steal, isn’t it?”
“Not when it’s lead, son,” his father replied.
“Not much bigger than a two-quart
milk bottle, in fact.”
“Even at that, no kid could have taken it,”
Eddie said.
“Kid?” His father smiled thinly. “We don’t
think it was any kid, Eddie. Not by a long
shot. The whole thing was carefully planned
and carefully carried out. It was not the work
of amateurs.”
Eddie read the newspaper account. The
small truck from Drake Ridge, where one of
the country’s newest atomic reactors was
located, had arrived earlier than expected at
Oceanview College. It had backed up to the
receiving dock where all of the college supplies
were delivered. Since deliveries during vacation
months were few, there was no one on the
dock when the truck arrived. A half hour later,
when the delivery was expected, there would
have been. The truck’s early arrival had
caught them unprepared.
30
The driver had left the truck and had gone
around the building to the front office. It had
taken him less than five minutes to locate the
receiving-dock foreman. Together, they had
returned through the small warehouse and
opened the rear door onto the dock.
During that short time someone had pried
open the heavy padlock on the delivery truck’s
rear door and had stolen the fifty-pound lead
capsule containing the radioisotope.
Dusty footprints on the pavement around
the rear of the truck indicated that two men
had carried out the theft. A heavy iron pry bar
had been dropped at the rear of the truck after
the lock was sprung. It was a common type
used by carpenters. There were no fingerprints
or other identifying marks on it. The footprints
were barely visible and of no help other
than to indicate that two men were involved
in the crime.
31
“Dad,” Eddie asked, looking up from the
paper, “how could anyone carry away something
weighing fifty pounds without being noticed?”
“Chances are they had their car parked
nearby,” his father said. “As you know, there
are no fences or gates around Oceanview College.
People come and go as they please. As a
matter of fact, there are always quite a few
automobiles parked around the shipping and
receiving building, and parking space is scarce
even during summer sessions. Anyone could
park and wait there unnoticed. Or they could
walk around without attracting any undue attention.”
“But, Dad,” Eddie continued, “how would
the men know that the delivery truck would
arrive a half hour early?”
“They wouldn’t,” his father said. “They
may have had another plan. The way things
worked out, they didn’t need to use it. The
early delivery and the business of leaving the
truck unguarded for a few minutes probably
gave them a better opportunity than they had
expected. At least, they took quick advantage
of it.”
32
“I don’t see what anyone would want with
a radioisotope,” Eddie said. “Maybe they figured
there was something else inside of that
lead capsule.”
“That’s unlikely, son,” Mr. Taylor said.
“Believe me, it was no common theft. Nor
were the thieves ordinary thieves. That isotope
was a new one. A very secret one. Our job at
the college was to conduct various tests with it
in order to find out exactly how it could best
be put to use as a cure for disease, or for sterilizing
food, or even as a source of power.”
“Power?” Eddie said. “Boy, it must have
been a strong isotope.” He knew that the
strength of radioisotopes could be controlled
largely by the length of time they were allowed
to “cook” in an atomic reactor and soak up
radioactivity.
33
“We weren’t planning to run a submarine
with it,” his father said. “It wasn’t that strong.
Still, it doesn’t take so very much radioactivity
to make two ounces of an isotope quite powerful—and
quite deadly. I only hope whoever
stole it knows what he’s doing. However, I’m
sure he does.”
“You mean he must have been an atomic
scientist himself?” Eddie asked.
“Let’s just say he—or both of them—have
enough training in the subject to know how to
handle that isotope safely,” Mr. Taylor said.
“But, Dad,” Eddie wondered, “what could
they do with it?”
“They could study it,” his father explained.
“At least, they could send it somewhere to be
broken down and studied. Being a new isotope,
the formula is of great value.”
“What do you mean, send it somewhere?”
Eddie asked.
“Perhaps to some other country.”
“Then—then you mean whoever stole it
were spies!” Eddie exclaimed breathlessly.
“That’s entirely possible,” his father said.
“In fact, it’s the only logical explanation I can
think of. People simply don’t go around stealing
radioactive isotopes without a mighty important
reason.”
34
“Dinner’s ready,” Eddie’s mother called
from the kitchen.
During dinner Eddie wasn’t sure just what
he was eating. The idea of spies stealing atomic
materials kept building up in his mind. By the
time dessert was finished, he was anxious to
talk with someone, yet he knew he shouldn’t
bother his father with any more questions. He
asked if he could go over and visit with Teena
for a while.
“Well, you were together most of the day,”
his mother said, “but I guess it’s all right. Be
back in about an hour, though.”
It was a balmy evening. On such evenings,
he and Teena sometimes walked along the
beach barefoot, collecting sea shells. Today
Eddie had no desire to do that. He ran down
the block.
Teena answered his knock.
“Come on in, Eddie,” she invited, seeming
surprised to see him. “Mother and I are just
finishing dinner.”
“Oh, I figured you’d be through by now,”
Eddie apologized, following her inside.
35
“Hello, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross said, but she
didn’t seem as cheerful as usual.
“Good evening, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie said. “I—I
hope I’m not making a pest of myself.” He
looked around for Mr. Ross, but Teena’s
father apparently hadn’t arrived home from
Acme Aircraft yet. There wasn’t a place set for
him at the table, either.
“You’re never a pest, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross assured
him. “I was going to call your mother in
a little while about that newspaper write-up.”
“Oh, you read it?” Eddie said.
“How could anyone miss it?” Teena said.
“Right on the front page.”
“I suppose your father is quite concerned
over it,” Teena’s mother said.
“Oh, yes,” Eddie affirmed. “He was the one
who ordered the isotope.”
“What’s an isotope?” Teena asked.
“I’m not sure I know, either,” Mrs. Ross
said. “Maybe we could understand more of
what it’s all about if you could explain what a
radioisotope is, Eddie.”
36
“Well,” Eddie said slowly, “it’s not easy to
explain, but I’ll try. You know how rare
uranium is. There’s not nearly enough of it to
fill all the needs for radioactive materials. Besides,
pure uranium is so powerful and expensive
and dangerous to handle that it’s not
a very good idea to try using it in its true form.
So they build an atomic reactor like the one at
Drake Ridge.”
“We’ve driven by it,” Mrs. Ross said. “My,
it’s a big place.”
“I’ll say,” Eddie agreed. “Of course, only
one building holds the reactor itself. It’s the
biggest building near the center.”
“I remember it,” Teena said.
“Well, the reactor is about four stories
high,” Eddie went on. “They call it a uranium
‘pile.’ It’s made up of hundreds and hundreds
of graphite bricks. That’s where they get the
name ‘pile’—from brick pile. Anyway, scattered
around in between the bricks are small
bits of uranium. Uranium atoms are radioactive.
That is, they keep splitting up and sending
out rays.”
“Why do they do that?” Teena asked.
37
“It’s just the way nature made uranium, I
guess,” Eddie said. “Most atoms stay in one
piece, although they move around lickety-split
all of the time. Uranium atoms not only move
around, but they break apart. They shoot out
little particles called neutrons. These neutrons
hit other atoms and split them apart, sending
out more neutrons. It’s a regular chain reaction.”
“I’ve heard of chain reactions,” Mrs. Ross
said.
“Well, with all of the splitting up and moving
around of the uranium atoms,” Eddie went
on, “an awful lot of heat builds up. If they
don’t control it—well, you’ve seen pictures of
atomic-bomb explosions. That’s a chain reaction
out of control.”
“Out of control is right,” Teena said.
38
“But the atomic piles control the reaction,”
Eddie said. “The graphite bricks keep the
splitting-up atoms apart so one neutron won’t
go smashing into other atoms unless they want
it to. They have ways of controlling it so that
only as much radiation builds up as they want.
You can even hear the reactor hum as the radioactive
rays go tearing through it. But by
careful tending, the scientists keep the atomic
collisions far enough apart so the thing doesn’t
blow up.”
“Boy, that sounds dangerous,” Teena said.
“Well, they know just how to do it,” Eddie
replied.
“Aren’t the rays dangerous?” Mrs. Ross
asked.
“I’ll say they’re dangerous,” Eddie said.
“But the whole pile is covered by a shield of
concrete about eight feet thick. That keeps the
rays from getting out and injuring the workmen.”
“Goodness. Eight feet is a lot of cement.”
“It takes a lot to stop radioactive atomic
particles,” Eddie explained. “Especially the
gamma rays. They’re the fastest and most dangerous,
and the hardest to stop. Alpha and beta
rays are fairly easy to stop. But the gamma
rays are regular high-velocity invisible bullets.
They’ll go right through a stone wall unless
it’s plenty thick. Of course, you can’t see them.
Not with even the most powerful microscope
in the world.”
39
“I wouldn’t want to work around a place
where I might get shot at by—by dangerous
rays you can’t even see,” Teena said.
“I would,” Eddie said. “Everyone is carefully
protected. They see to that. Well, anyway,
if all of those uranium atoms were shooting
radioactive rays around inside of that pile
and doing nothing, there would be an awful
lot of energy going to waste. So the atomic
scientists take certain elements which aren’t
radioactive, but can be made radioactive, and
shove small pieces of them into holes drilled
in the pile.”
“Isn’t that dangerous?” Teena asked.
“They don’t shove them in with their bare
hands,” Eddie said, trying not to show exasperation.
“They use long holders to push the
small chunks of material into the holes in the
reactor. Then, as those uranium atoms keep
splitting up and shooting particles around inside
of the pile, some of them smack into the
chunks of material, and stick there. Most elements
will soak up radiation, just like a sponge
soaks up water.”
40
“My, that’s interesting, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross
said.
“I’ve seen them do it,” Eddie said proudly,
then added, “from behind a protective shield,
of course. When the material has soaked up
enough radiation, they pull it back out. They
say it’s ‘cooked.’”
“You mean it’s hot?” Teena asked.
“It’s hot,” Eddie said, “but not like if it
came out of a stove. By hot, they mean it’s
radioactive. If you touched it, or even got near
it, you would get burned, but you probably
wouldn’t even know it for a while. It would be
a radiation burn. That’s a kind of burn you
don’t feel, but it destroys your blood cells and
tissues, and—well, you’ve had it.”
“So that’s what a radioisotope is,” Mrs. Ross
said. “It’s like a sponge. Only instead of soaking
up water, it soaks up radiation.”
41
“That’s about it,” Eddie said. “My dad says
that as more is learned about the ways to use
isotopes, the whole world is going to be improved.
You’ve heard of radiocobalt for curing
cancer. Well, that’s an isotope. They make it
by cooking cobalt in an atomic reactor. Oh,
there are hundreds of different isotopes. Like
I said, isotopes can be made of most of the
elements. And there are over a hundred elements.
Some soak up a lot of radioactivity, and
are strong and dangerous. Others absorb only
a little and are pretty safe to use. Depends, too,
on how long they let them cook in the reactor.”
“What kind was the one stolen from the
college today?” Teena asked.
“Dad didn’t say exactly,” Eddie answered,
“except he did say that if whoever took it
didn’t know what he was doing and opened up
the lead capsule, it could kill him. Of course,
even the mild isotopes are deadly if they’re not
handled right.”
“My goodness, it is a serious matter, isn’t
it?” Mrs. Ross said.
42
Eddie nodded. It was even more serious
than its threat of danger to anyone who
handled it carelessly. It was a new isotope—a
secret isotope. His father hadn’t said whether
it had been developed for curing things or for
destroying things. But many radioisotopes
could do either; it depended on how they were
used. Eddie assumed that anyone who would
stoop to stealing isotopes more than likely
would be interested in their ability to destroy
rather than their ability to benefit mankind.
“Well, I certainly do hope everything works
out all right,” Teena’s mother said.
“So do I,” Teena agreed.
Eddie glanced at the kitchen clock. “Oh,
boy,” he said, “I’d better be heading back
home. I didn’t mean to come over here and
talk so long.”
“Oh, we’re glad you did, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross
said. “I’m afraid too few of us know anything
about this atom business.”
43
“That’s right, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie agreed.
“People should talk more and read more about
it. After all, this is an atomic age. We might as
well face it. My father says that in horse-and-buggy
days everyone knew how to feed a horse
and grease a wagon wheel. They knew what was
needed to get the work done. But now that
atoms are being harnessed to do the work, not
many people even bother to find out what an
atom is.”
Mrs. Ross smiled. “I guess you’re right,
Eddie,” she said, “but I wouldn’t quite know
how to go about feeding an atom.”
“Or greasing one,” Teena added.
Eddie laughed. “I sure wouldn’t want the
job of trying to feed a herd of them the size of
a period,” he said. “Did you know that there
are about three million billion atoms of carbon
in a single period printed at the end of a
sentence. That’s how small atoms are.”
“Three million billion is a lot of something,”
a man’s voice spoke behind him.
“What are we talking about, Eddie?”
“Oh, hello, Mr. Ross,” Eddie said, turning
around and standing up. “I didn’t hear you
come in.”
44
Teena’s father was a medium-sized man
with light-brown hair which was getting somewhat
thin on top. He was usually quite cheerful
and full of fun, but tonight his face seemed
unusually drawn and sober. He stepped to the
table, leaned over, and gave both Teena and
Mrs. Ross a kiss on the cheek.
“Eddie was telling us about atoms,” Teena’s
mother said. “Did you know there were three
million billion of them in a period?”
“How many in a comma?” Mr. Ross said to
Eddie, then added quickly, “forget it, Eddie.
It wasn’t very funny. I—I’m afraid I don’t feel
very funny tonight.”
“Sit down, dear,” Mrs. Ross said. “I’ll warm
your dinner. You didn’t sound very cheerful
when you called to say you would be late. How
did everything go at the plant today?”
“Not so good,” Teena’s father said tiredly.
“In fact, not good at all.”
Problems. It seemed that everyone had
problems, Eddie thought, as he started to
leave.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/5/3/2/6/53269//53269-h//53269-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | Why doesn’t Eddie act excited about Teena going prospecting with him?
| 53269_4YLGV4PU_6 | [
"Eddie doesn’t want Teena to come because there isn’t much time left in the day for prospecting Cedar Point. \n",
"Eddie has a crush on Teena, and therefore doesn’t want to act too eager and uncool.\n",
"Eddie doesn’t want Teena to feel like she is obligated to help him fulfill his dream of finding radioactivity at Cedar Point.\n",
"It is implied that Eddie doesn’t want Teena to feel like he knows a lot more science than she does. Eddie feels this will make Teena not like him. \n"
] | 2 | 2 | [
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53,269 | 53269_4YLGV4PU | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Atom Mystery [Young Atom Detective] | 1954.0 | Coombs, Charles Ira | Mystery and detective stories; Nuclear physics -- Juvenile fiction; Scientists -- Juvenile fiction; PZ | YOUNG READERS
Atom Mystery
11
CHAPTER ONE
It was only a dream. Eddie Taylor would like
to have finished it, but the bar of morning sunlight
poking in under the window shade pried
his eyes open. The dream fled. Eddie kicked
off the sheet, swung his feet to the floor, and
groped under the bed for his tennis shoes.
He heard his father’s heavy footsteps in the
hallway. They stopped outside of his bedroom
door.
“You awake, Eddie?”
“I’m awake, Dad,” Eddie answered.
“Breakfast’s ready. Get washed and
dressed.”
12
“Be right there,” Eddie said. Then, remembering
the dream, he added, “Oh, Dad, is it
all right if I use the Geiger counter today?”
Mr. Taylor opened the door. He was a big
man, broad-shouldered and still thin-waisted.
Eddie found it easy to believe the stories he
had heard about his father being an outstanding
football player in his time. Even his glasses
and the gray hair at his temples didn’t add
much age, although Eddie knew it had been
eighteen years since his father had played his
last game of college football.
“You may use the Geiger counter any time
you want, Eddie,” Mr. Taylor said, “as long as
you take good care of it. You figured out where
you can find some uranium ore?”
Eddie smiled sheepishly. “I—I had a
dream,” he said. “Plain as day. It was out on
Cedar Point. I was walking along over some
rocks. Suddenly the Geiger counter began
clicking like everything.”
13
“Cedar Point?” his father asked. “I’ve
never been out there. But, from what I hear,
there are plenty of rock formations. Might
be worth a try, at that. You never can tell
where you might strike some radioactivity.”
“Do you believe in dreams, Dad?”
“Well, now, that’s a tough question, son.
I can’t say that I really do. Still, one clue is
as good as another when it comes to hunting
uranium ore, I guess. But right now we’d
better get out to breakfast before your mother
scalps us. Hurry it up.” His father turned
and went back down the hallway toward the
kitchen.
Eddie pulled on his trousers and T shirt
and went into the bathroom. He washed hurriedly,
knowing that even if he missed a spot
or two, he was fairly safe. During the summer
months his freckles got so thick and dark that
it would take a magnifying glass to detect any
small smudges of dirt hiding among them. He
plastered some water on his dark-red hair,
pushed a comb through it, and shrugged as it
snapped back almost to its original position.
Oh, well, he had tried.
14
He grinned into the mirror, reached a
finger into his mouth, and unhooked the
small rubber bands from his tooth braces.
He dropped them into the waste basket. He’d
put fresh ones in after breakfast.
He brushed his teeth carefully, taking particular
pains around the metal braces. The
tooth-straightening orthodontist had warned
him about letting food gather around the
metal clamps. It could start cavities.
Finished, Eddie went out to breakfast.
“Good morning, dear,” his mother greeted
him, handing him a plate of eggs.
“Hi, Mom,” Eddie said. “Gotta hurry. Big
day today.”
“So your father says. But I’m afraid your
big day will have to start with sorting out and
tying up those newspapers and magazines that
have been collecting in the garage.”
“Aw, Mom—”
“Eddie, I asked you to do it three days ago.
Remember? And the Goodwill truck comes
around today.”
“But, Mom—”
15
“No arguments, son,” his father put in
calmly but firmly. “School vacation doesn’t
mean that your chores around here are on
vacation, too. Get at it right away, and you’ll
still have time to hunt your uranium.
“Well,” Mr. Taylor added, excusing himself
from the table, “I’d better be getting over
to school. I’m expecting to receive shipment
of a new radioisotope today.”
The very word excited Eddie. In fact, anything
having to do with atomic science
excited him. He knew something about
isotopes—pronounced
eye-suh-tope
. You
couldn’t have a father who was head of the
atomic-science department at Oceanview
College without picking up a little knowledge
along the way. Eddie knew that a radioisotope
was a material which had been “cooked” in an
atomic reactor until it was “hot” with radioactivity.
When carefully controlled, the radiation
stored up in such isotopes was used in
many beneficial ways.
16
“Why don’t college professors get summer
vacations, too?” Eddie asked. One reason for
asking that particular question was to keep
from prying deeper into the subject of the
radioisotope. Much of his father’s work at
Oceanview College was of a secret nature.
Eddie had learned not to ask questions about
it. His father usually volunteered any information
he wanted known, so Eddie stuck to
questions which could and would be answered.
“We get vacations,” his father said. “But—well,
my work is a little different, you know.
At the speed atomic science is moving today,
we simply can’t afford to waste time. But don’t
worry. We’ll take a week or so off before school
starts in the fall. Maybe head for the mountains
with our tent and sleeping bags.”
“And Geiger counter?” Eddie asked
eagerly.
“Wouldn’t think of leaving it home,” his
father said, smiling. “By the way, I put new
batteries in it the other day. Take it easy on
them. Remember to switch it off when you’re
not actually using it.”
“I will,” Eddie promised. He had forgotten
several times before, weakening the batteries.
17
It took Eddie over an hour to sort out the
newspapers and magazines in the garage, tie
them in neat bundles, and place them out on
the front curb for the Goodwill pickup. By
that time the sun was high overhead. It had
driven off the coolness which the ocean air
had provided during the earlier hours.
“Anything else, Mom?” he asked, returning
to the house and getting the Geiger counter
out of the closet. He edged toward the back
door before his mother had much time to
think of something more for him to do.
“I guess not, dear,” Mrs. Taylor said, smiling
over his hasty retreat. “What are you going
to do?”
“Think I’ll do a little prospecting,” Eddie
said.
“Where?”
“Probably in the hills beyond the college,”
Eddie said. The more he thought about it, the
more he realized it was a little late in the day
to go to Cedar Point. The best way to get
there was by rowboat across Moon Bay, and
that was too long a row to be starting now.
Besides, there were plenty of other places
around the outskirts of Oceanview where
likely looking rock formations invited search
with a Geiger counter.
18
“Are you going alone?” his mother asked.
“Oh, guess I’ll stop by and see if Teena
wants to go,” Eddie answered casually. He
tried to make it sound as though he would
be doing Teena Ross a big favor. After all,
she was only a girl. Eddie didn’t figure a girl
would make a very good uranium prospecting
partner, but most of the fellows he knew were
away at camp, or vacationing with their folks,
or something like that.
“She’ll enjoy it, I’m sure,” his mother said.
“I’ll take Sandy, too,” Eddie said. “He needs
the exercise.”
“That’s a good idea, dear. Be back in time
for an early dinner.”
Eddie let Sandy off his chain. The taffy-colored
cocker spaniel yipped wildly over his
freedom, racing back and forth as Eddie
started down the street.
19
Christina Ross—whom everybody called
Teena—lived at the far end of the block.
Eddie went around to the side door of the
light-green stucco house and knocked.
“Oh, hi, Eddie,” Teena greeted him, appearing
at the screen door. “I was hoping
you’d come over.”
“Well, I—I just happened to be going by,”
Eddie said. “Thought you might want to
watch me do a little prospecting with the Geiger
counter. But maybe you’re too busy.”
That’s how to handle it, Eddie thought.
Don’t act anxious. Let Teena be anxious.
Then maybe she’ll even offer to bring along
a couple of sandwiches or some fruit.
“Oh, I’d love to go,” Teena said eagerly,
“but I’m just finishing the dishes. Come on
in.”
“I’m in kind of a hurry.”
“I’ll only be a minute.” She pushed the
screen door open for him. “I’ll make us some
sandwiches.”
“Stay here, Sandy,” Eddie said. “Sit.” The
dog minded, although he looked a bit rebellious.
20
Eddie went inside and followed Teena to
the kitchen. He felt triumphant about the
sandwiches.
Teena tossed him a dish towel. “You dry
them,” she said.
“Who, me?”
“Why not? You’re in a hurry, aren’t you?
I can make the sandwiches while you dry the
silverware.” She smiled, putting tiny crinkles
in her small, slightly upturned nose. She wore
her hair in a pony tail. Even though her hair
was blond all year long, it seemed even
lighter in the summer. Eddie couldn’t tell
whether the sun had faded it, or whether her
deep summer tan simply made her hair look
lighter by contrast. Maybe both.
“Hello, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross said, coming into
the kitchen. “Looks like Teena put you to
work.”
“She always does, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie said,
pretending great injury. “Don’t know why I
keep coming over here.”
“I know,” Teena spoke up quickly. “It’s
because we’re friends, that’s why.”
21
Eddie knew she was right. They were
friends—good friends. They had been ever
since Eddie’s family had moved to Oceanview
and his father had become head of the college’s
atomic-science department. In fact, their
parents were close friends, also. Teena’s father
was chief engineer for the Acme Aviation
Company, one of the coast town’s largest
manufacturing concerns.
“Well, I’ll be glad to finish them, Eddie,”
Mrs. Ross offered. “I know how boys detest
doing dishes.”
“Oh, I don’t really mind, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie
said. “Besides, Teena’s making sandwiches to
take with us.”
“Another prospecting trip?” Teena’s
mother glanced at the Geiger counter which
Eddie had set carefully on the dinette table.
“I still think there must be some uranium
around here,” Eddie insisted. “And we can
find it if anyone can.”
“I agree,” Mrs. Ross said. “But even if you
don’t find it, you both seem to enjoy your
hikes.”
22
“Oh, yes, it’s fun, Mother,” Teena replied,
wrapping wax paper around a sandwich.
“Guess I’m ready. I’ve got a bone for Sandy,
too.”
“Don’t go too far out from town,” Mrs.
Ross cautioned, as Eddie picked up the Geiger
counter. “And stick near the main roads.
You know the rules.”
“We sure do, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie assured
her. “And we’ll be back early.”
They walked past the college campus, and
toward the rocky foothills beyond. At various
rock mounds and outcroppings, Eddie
switched on the Geiger counter. The needle
of the dial on the black box wavered slightly.
A slow clicking came through the earphones,
but Eddie knew these indicated no more than
a normal background count. There were slight
traces of radioactivity in almost all earth or
rocks. It was in the air itself, caused by mysterious
and ever-present cosmic rays, so there
was always a mild background count when
the Geiger counter was turned on; but to
mean anything, the needle had to jump far
ahead on the gauge, and the clicking through
the earphones had to speed up until it sounded
almost like bacon frying in a hot skillet.
23
There was none of that today. After they
had hiked and searched most of the forenoon,
Eddie said, “We might as well call it a day,
Teena. Doesn’t seem to be anything out here.”
“It’s all right with me,” Teena agreed,
plucking foxtails from Sandy’s ears. “Pretty
hot, anyway. Let’s eat our sandwiches and go
back home.”
“All right,” Eddie said. “You know, one of
these days I’d like to go out to Cedar Point
and scout around. Maybe we’ll find something
there.” Then he told Teena about his dream.
Teena smiled. “A dream sure isn’t much to
go on,” she said, “but they say it’s pretty out on
Cedar Point. I’ll go any time you want to,
Eddie.” She handed him one of the sandwiches.
It was midafternoon by the time they arrived
back at Teena’s house. They worked a while
on a new jigsaw puzzle Teena had received
on a recent birthday. Then Eddie said good-by
and went on down the street toward his
own home.
24
After putting Sandy on his long chain and
filling his water dish, Eddie went in the back
door. He put the Geiger counter in the closet
and went into the kitchen.
“What’s for dinner, Mom?” he asked.
Mrs. Taylor turned from the sink. Eddie
knew at once, just seeing the expression on
his mother’s face, that something was wrong.
“Dinner?” his mother said absently. “It’s
not quite four o’clock yet, Eddie. Besides,
dinner may be a little late today.”
“But this morning you said it would be
early,” Eddie reminded her, puzzled.
“This morning I didn’t know what might
happen.”
25
Then Eddie heard the sound of his father’s
voice coming from the den. There was a
strange urgent tone in it. The door to the den
was open. Eddie went through the dining
room and glanced into the den. His father
sat stiffly behind his homemade desk, talking
rapidly into the telephone. Eddie caught only
the last few sketchy words. Then his father
placed the telephone in its cradle, glanced up,
and saw Eddie.
If there had been even the slightest doubt
in Eddie’s mind about something being
wrong, it vanished now. Mr. Taylor looked
years older than he had that very morning.
Worry lay deep in his eyes. He fumbled
thoughtfully with a pencil, turning it end over
end on his desk.
“Hello, son,” he said. He didn’t even ask
whether Eddie had discovered any uranium
ore that day. Always before, he had shown
genuine interest in Eddie’s prospecting trips.
“Dad,” Eddie said anxiously, “what—what’s
the matter?”
“It shows that much, does it, son?” his
father said tiredly.
“What’s wrong, Dad?” Eddie prompted.
“Or can’t you tell me?”
Mr. Taylor leaned back. “Quite a bit’s
wrong, Eddie,” he said, “and I guess there’s
no reason why I shouldn’t tell you. It’ll be in
the evening papers, anyway.”
26
“Evening papers?”
“Eddie, you remember me mentioning this
morning about that radioisotope shipment I
was expecting today?”
“I remember,” Eddie said. “Did it come?”
“It did—and it didn’t,” his father said.
“What does that mean, Dad?” Eddie asked,
puzzled.
“The delivery truck arrived at the school
with it,” his father explained, “but while the
driver was inquiring where to put it, the container
disappeared.”
“Disappeared?”
“The radioisotope was stolen, Eddie,” his
father said slowly. “Stolen right out from
under our noses!”
27
CHAPTER TWO
At the moment, Eddie didn’t pry for further
information on the theft of the valuable radioactive
isotope. His father had plenty on his
mind, as it was. The main information was in
the evening
Globe
, which Eddie rushed out
to get as soon as he heard it plop onto the
front porch.
He took the newspaper to his father to read
first. After having finished, Mr. Taylor handed
the paper to Eddie and leaned back thoughtfully
in his chair.
28
“They’ve got it pretty straight, at that,” Mr.
Taylor said, “but I’m afraid this is going to
stir up quite a bit of trouble.”
“It wasn’t your fault, was it, Dad?” Eddie
defended.
“It was as much mine as anybody’s, son,”
his father said. “Probably more so. After all,
I am head of the department. I knew about
the shipment. That should make it my responsibility
to see that it was properly received
and placed in our atomic-materials storage
vault. But there is little point in trying to
place the blame on anyone. I’m willing to accept
that part of it. The important thing is
that we recover that radioisotope. Not only is
it of a secret nature, but it is also dangerously
radioactive if improperly handled.”
“But—but wasn’t it in a safe container?”
Eddie asked.
29
“Of course,” his father said. “There were
only two ounces of it in a fifty-pound lead
capsule. As long as it remains in that capsule
it’s safe. As you know, the lead prevents any
radiation from escaping. Out of that capsule,
however, those two ounces of radioisotope can
be very dangerous.”
“Fifty pounds,” Eddie said thoughtfully.
“That’s a pretty big thing to steal, isn’t it?”
“Not when it’s lead, son,” his father replied.
“Not much bigger than a two-quart
milk bottle, in fact.”
“Even at that, no kid could have taken it,”
Eddie said.
“Kid?” His father smiled thinly. “We don’t
think it was any kid, Eddie. Not by a long
shot. The whole thing was carefully planned
and carefully carried out. It was not the work
of amateurs.”
Eddie read the newspaper account. The
small truck from Drake Ridge, where one of
the country’s newest atomic reactors was
located, had arrived earlier than expected at
Oceanview College. It had backed up to the
receiving dock where all of the college supplies
were delivered. Since deliveries during vacation
months were few, there was no one on the
dock when the truck arrived. A half hour later,
when the delivery was expected, there would
have been. The truck’s early arrival had
caught them unprepared.
30
The driver had left the truck and had gone
around the building to the front office. It had
taken him less than five minutes to locate the
receiving-dock foreman. Together, they had
returned through the small warehouse and
opened the rear door onto the dock.
During that short time someone had pried
open the heavy padlock on the delivery truck’s
rear door and had stolen the fifty-pound lead
capsule containing the radioisotope.
Dusty footprints on the pavement around
the rear of the truck indicated that two men
had carried out the theft. A heavy iron pry bar
had been dropped at the rear of the truck after
the lock was sprung. It was a common type
used by carpenters. There were no fingerprints
or other identifying marks on it. The footprints
were barely visible and of no help other
than to indicate that two men were involved
in the crime.
31
“Dad,” Eddie asked, looking up from the
paper, “how could anyone carry away something
weighing fifty pounds without being noticed?”
“Chances are they had their car parked
nearby,” his father said. “As you know, there
are no fences or gates around Oceanview College.
People come and go as they please. As a
matter of fact, there are always quite a few
automobiles parked around the shipping and
receiving building, and parking space is scarce
even during summer sessions. Anyone could
park and wait there unnoticed. Or they could
walk around without attracting any undue attention.”
“But, Dad,” Eddie continued, “how would
the men know that the delivery truck would
arrive a half hour early?”
“They wouldn’t,” his father said. “They
may have had another plan. The way things
worked out, they didn’t need to use it. The
early delivery and the business of leaving the
truck unguarded for a few minutes probably
gave them a better opportunity than they had
expected. At least, they took quick advantage
of it.”
32
“I don’t see what anyone would want with
a radioisotope,” Eddie said. “Maybe they figured
there was something else inside of that
lead capsule.”
“That’s unlikely, son,” Mr. Taylor said.
“Believe me, it was no common theft. Nor
were the thieves ordinary thieves. That isotope
was a new one. A very secret one. Our job at
the college was to conduct various tests with it
in order to find out exactly how it could best
be put to use as a cure for disease, or for sterilizing
food, or even as a source of power.”
“Power?” Eddie said. “Boy, it must have
been a strong isotope.” He knew that the
strength of radioisotopes could be controlled
largely by the length of time they were allowed
to “cook” in an atomic reactor and soak up
radioactivity.
33
“We weren’t planning to run a submarine
with it,” his father said. “It wasn’t that strong.
Still, it doesn’t take so very much radioactivity
to make two ounces of an isotope quite powerful—and
quite deadly. I only hope whoever
stole it knows what he’s doing. However, I’m
sure he does.”
“You mean he must have been an atomic
scientist himself?” Eddie asked.
“Let’s just say he—or both of them—have
enough training in the subject to know how to
handle that isotope safely,” Mr. Taylor said.
“But, Dad,” Eddie wondered, “what could
they do with it?”
“They could study it,” his father explained.
“At least, they could send it somewhere to be
broken down and studied. Being a new isotope,
the formula is of great value.”
“What do you mean, send it somewhere?”
Eddie asked.
“Perhaps to some other country.”
“Then—then you mean whoever stole it
were spies!” Eddie exclaimed breathlessly.
“That’s entirely possible,” his father said.
“In fact, it’s the only logical explanation I can
think of. People simply don’t go around stealing
radioactive isotopes without a mighty important
reason.”
34
“Dinner’s ready,” Eddie’s mother called
from the kitchen.
During dinner Eddie wasn’t sure just what
he was eating. The idea of spies stealing atomic
materials kept building up in his mind. By the
time dessert was finished, he was anxious to
talk with someone, yet he knew he shouldn’t
bother his father with any more questions. He
asked if he could go over and visit with Teena
for a while.
“Well, you were together most of the day,”
his mother said, “but I guess it’s all right. Be
back in about an hour, though.”
It was a balmy evening. On such evenings,
he and Teena sometimes walked along the
beach barefoot, collecting sea shells. Today
Eddie had no desire to do that. He ran down
the block.
Teena answered his knock.
“Come on in, Eddie,” she invited, seeming
surprised to see him. “Mother and I are just
finishing dinner.”
“Oh, I figured you’d be through by now,”
Eddie apologized, following her inside.
35
“Hello, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross said, but she
didn’t seem as cheerful as usual.
“Good evening, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie said. “I—I
hope I’m not making a pest of myself.” He
looked around for Mr. Ross, but Teena’s
father apparently hadn’t arrived home from
Acme Aircraft yet. There wasn’t a place set for
him at the table, either.
“You’re never a pest, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross assured
him. “I was going to call your mother in
a little while about that newspaper write-up.”
“Oh, you read it?” Eddie said.
“How could anyone miss it?” Teena said.
“Right on the front page.”
“I suppose your father is quite concerned
over it,” Teena’s mother said.
“Oh, yes,” Eddie affirmed. “He was the one
who ordered the isotope.”
“What’s an isotope?” Teena asked.
“I’m not sure I know, either,” Mrs. Ross
said. “Maybe we could understand more of
what it’s all about if you could explain what a
radioisotope is, Eddie.”
36
“Well,” Eddie said slowly, “it’s not easy to
explain, but I’ll try. You know how rare
uranium is. There’s not nearly enough of it to
fill all the needs for radioactive materials. Besides,
pure uranium is so powerful and expensive
and dangerous to handle that it’s not
a very good idea to try using it in its true form.
So they build an atomic reactor like the one at
Drake Ridge.”
“We’ve driven by it,” Mrs. Ross said. “My,
it’s a big place.”
“I’ll say,” Eddie agreed. “Of course, only
one building holds the reactor itself. It’s the
biggest building near the center.”
“I remember it,” Teena said.
“Well, the reactor is about four stories
high,” Eddie went on. “They call it a uranium
‘pile.’ It’s made up of hundreds and hundreds
of graphite bricks. That’s where they get the
name ‘pile’—from brick pile. Anyway, scattered
around in between the bricks are small
bits of uranium. Uranium atoms are radioactive.
That is, they keep splitting up and sending
out rays.”
“Why do they do that?” Teena asked.
37
“It’s just the way nature made uranium, I
guess,” Eddie said. “Most atoms stay in one
piece, although they move around lickety-split
all of the time. Uranium atoms not only move
around, but they break apart. They shoot out
little particles called neutrons. These neutrons
hit other atoms and split them apart, sending
out more neutrons. It’s a regular chain reaction.”
“I’ve heard of chain reactions,” Mrs. Ross
said.
“Well, with all of the splitting up and moving
around of the uranium atoms,” Eddie went
on, “an awful lot of heat builds up. If they
don’t control it—well, you’ve seen pictures of
atomic-bomb explosions. That’s a chain reaction
out of control.”
“Out of control is right,” Teena said.
38
“But the atomic piles control the reaction,”
Eddie said. “The graphite bricks keep the
splitting-up atoms apart so one neutron won’t
go smashing into other atoms unless they want
it to. They have ways of controlling it so that
only as much radiation builds up as they want.
You can even hear the reactor hum as the radioactive
rays go tearing through it. But by
careful tending, the scientists keep the atomic
collisions far enough apart so the thing doesn’t
blow up.”
“Boy, that sounds dangerous,” Teena said.
“Well, they know just how to do it,” Eddie
replied.
“Aren’t the rays dangerous?” Mrs. Ross
asked.
“I’ll say they’re dangerous,” Eddie said.
“But the whole pile is covered by a shield of
concrete about eight feet thick. That keeps the
rays from getting out and injuring the workmen.”
“Goodness. Eight feet is a lot of cement.”
“It takes a lot to stop radioactive atomic
particles,” Eddie explained. “Especially the
gamma rays. They’re the fastest and most dangerous,
and the hardest to stop. Alpha and beta
rays are fairly easy to stop. But the gamma
rays are regular high-velocity invisible bullets.
They’ll go right through a stone wall unless
it’s plenty thick. Of course, you can’t see them.
Not with even the most powerful microscope
in the world.”
39
“I wouldn’t want to work around a place
where I might get shot at by—by dangerous
rays you can’t even see,” Teena said.
“I would,” Eddie said. “Everyone is carefully
protected. They see to that. Well, anyway,
if all of those uranium atoms were shooting
radioactive rays around inside of that pile
and doing nothing, there would be an awful
lot of energy going to waste. So the atomic
scientists take certain elements which aren’t
radioactive, but can be made radioactive, and
shove small pieces of them into holes drilled
in the pile.”
“Isn’t that dangerous?” Teena asked.
“They don’t shove them in with their bare
hands,” Eddie said, trying not to show exasperation.
“They use long holders to push the
small chunks of material into the holes in the
reactor. Then, as those uranium atoms keep
splitting up and shooting particles around inside
of the pile, some of them smack into the
chunks of material, and stick there. Most elements
will soak up radiation, just like a sponge
soaks up water.”
40
“My, that’s interesting, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross
said.
“I’ve seen them do it,” Eddie said proudly,
then added, “from behind a protective shield,
of course. When the material has soaked up
enough radiation, they pull it back out. They
say it’s ‘cooked.’”
“You mean it’s hot?” Teena asked.
“It’s hot,” Eddie said, “but not like if it
came out of a stove. By hot, they mean it’s
radioactive. If you touched it, or even got near
it, you would get burned, but you probably
wouldn’t even know it for a while. It would be
a radiation burn. That’s a kind of burn you
don’t feel, but it destroys your blood cells and
tissues, and—well, you’ve had it.”
“So that’s what a radioisotope is,” Mrs. Ross
said. “It’s like a sponge. Only instead of soaking
up water, it soaks up radiation.”
41
“That’s about it,” Eddie said. “My dad says
that as more is learned about the ways to use
isotopes, the whole world is going to be improved.
You’ve heard of radiocobalt for curing
cancer. Well, that’s an isotope. They make it
by cooking cobalt in an atomic reactor. Oh,
there are hundreds of different isotopes. Like
I said, isotopes can be made of most of the
elements. And there are over a hundred elements.
Some soak up a lot of radioactivity, and
are strong and dangerous. Others absorb only
a little and are pretty safe to use. Depends, too,
on how long they let them cook in the reactor.”
“What kind was the one stolen from the
college today?” Teena asked.
“Dad didn’t say exactly,” Eddie answered,
“except he did say that if whoever took it
didn’t know what he was doing and opened up
the lead capsule, it could kill him. Of course,
even the mild isotopes are deadly if they’re not
handled right.”
“My goodness, it is a serious matter, isn’t
it?” Mrs. Ross said.
42
Eddie nodded. It was even more serious
than its threat of danger to anyone who
handled it carelessly. It was a new isotope—a
secret isotope. His father hadn’t said whether
it had been developed for curing things or for
destroying things. But many radioisotopes
could do either; it depended on how they were
used. Eddie assumed that anyone who would
stoop to stealing isotopes more than likely
would be interested in their ability to destroy
rather than their ability to benefit mankind.
“Well, I certainly do hope everything works
out all right,” Teena’s mother said.
“So do I,” Teena agreed.
Eddie glanced at the kitchen clock. “Oh,
boy,” he said, “I’d better be heading back
home. I didn’t mean to come over here and
talk so long.”
“Oh, we’re glad you did, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross
said. “I’m afraid too few of us know anything
about this atom business.”
43
“That’s right, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie agreed.
“People should talk more and read more about
it. After all, this is an atomic age. We might as
well face it. My father says that in horse-and-buggy
days everyone knew how to feed a horse
and grease a wagon wheel. They knew what was
needed to get the work done. But now that
atoms are being harnessed to do the work, not
many people even bother to find out what an
atom is.”
Mrs. Ross smiled. “I guess you’re right,
Eddie,” she said, “but I wouldn’t quite know
how to go about feeding an atom.”
“Or greasing one,” Teena added.
Eddie laughed. “I sure wouldn’t want the
job of trying to feed a herd of them the size of
a period,” he said. “Did you know that there
are about three million billion atoms of carbon
in a single period printed at the end of a
sentence. That’s how small atoms are.”
“Three million billion is a lot of something,”
a man’s voice spoke behind him.
“What are we talking about, Eddie?”
“Oh, hello, Mr. Ross,” Eddie said, turning
around and standing up. “I didn’t hear you
come in.”
44
Teena’s father was a medium-sized man
with light-brown hair which was getting somewhat
thin on top. He was usually quite cheerful
and full of fun, but tonight his face seemed
unusually drawn and sober. He stepped to the
table, leaned over, and gave both Teena and
Mrs. Ross a kiss on the cheek.
“Eddie was telling us about atoms,” Teena’s
mother said. “Did you know there were three
million billion of them in a period?”
“How many in a comma?” Mr. Ross said to
Eddie, then added quickly, “forget it, Eddie.
It wasn’t very funny. I—I’m afraid I don’t feel
very funny tonight.”
“Sit down, dear,” Mrs. Ross said. “I’ll warm
your dinner. You didn’t sound very cheerful
when you called to say you would be late. How
did everything go at the plant today?”
“Not so good,” Teena’s father said tiredly.
“In fact, not good at all.”
Problems. It seemed that everyone had
problems, Eddie thought, as he started to
leave.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/5/3/2/6/53269//53269-h//53269-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | Why did Eddie’s mother forget to make dinner?
| 53269_4YLGV4PU_7 | [
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53,269 | 53269_4YLGV4PU | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Atom Mystery [Young Atom Detective] | 1954.0 | Coombs, Charles Ira | Mystery and detective stories; Nuclear physics -- Juvenile fiction; Scientists -- Juvenile fiction; PZ | YOUNG READERS
Atom Mystery
11
CHAPTER ONE
It was only a dream. Eddie Taylor would like
to have finished it, but the bar of morning sunlight
poking in under the window shade pried
his eyes open. The dream fled. Eddie kicked
off the sheet, swung his feet to the floor, and
groped under the bed for his tennis shoes.
He heard his father’s heavy footsteps in the
hallway. They stopped outside of his bedroom
door.
“You awake, Eddie?”
“I’m awake, Dad,” Eddie answered.
“Breakfast’s ready. Get washed and
dressed.”
12
“Be right there,” Eddie said. Then, remembering
the dream, he added, “Oh, Dad, is it
all right if I use the Geiger counter today?”
Mr. Taylor opened the door. He was a big
man, broad-shouldered and still thin-waisted.
Eddie found it easy to believe the stories he
had heard about his father being an outstanding
football player in his time. Even his glasses
and the gray hair at his temples didn’t add
much age, although Eddie knew it had been
eighteen years since his father had played his
last game of college football.
“You may use the Geiger counter any time
you want, Eddie,” Mr. Taylor said, “as long as
you take good care of it. You figured out where
you can find some uranium ore?”
Eddie smiled sheepishly. “I—I had a
dream,” he said. “Plain as day. It was out on
Cedar Point. I was walking along over some
rocks. Suddenly the Geiger counter began
clicking like everything.”
13
“Cedar Point?” his father asked. “I’ve
never been out there. But, from what I hear,
there are plenty of rock formations. Might
be worth a try, at that. You never can tell
where you might strike some radioactivity.”
“Do you believe in dreams, Dad?”
“Well, now, that’s a tough question, son.
I can’t say that I really do. Still, one clue is
as good as another when it comes to hunting
uranium ore, I guess. But right now we’d
better get out to breakfast before your mother
scalps us. Hurry it up.” His father turned
and went back down the hallway toward the
kitchen.
Eddie pulled on his trousers and T shirt
and went into the bathroom. He washed hurriedly,
knowing that even if he missed a spot
or two, he was fairly safe. During the summer
months his freckles got so thick and dark that
it would take a magnifying glass to detect any
small smudges of dirt hiding among them. He
plastered some water on his dark-red hair,
pushed a comb through it, and shrugged as it
snapped back almost to its original position.
Oh, well, he had tried.
14
He grinned into the mirror, reached a
finger into his mouth, and unhooked the
small rubber bands from his tooth braces.
He dropped them into the waste basket. He’d
put fresh ones in after breakfast.
He brushed his teeth carefully, taking particular
pains around the metal braces. The
tooth-straightening orthodontist had warned
him about letting food gather around the
metal clamps. It could start cavities.
Finished, Eddie went out to breakfast.
“Good morning, dear,” his mother greeted
him, handing him a plate of eggs.
“Hi, Mom,” Eddie said. “Gotta hurry. Big
day today.”
“So your father says. But I’m afraid your
big day will have to start with sorting out and
tying up those newspapers and magazines that
have been collecting in the garage.”
“Aw, Mom—”
“Eddie, I asked you to do it three days ago.
Remember? And the Goodwill truck comes
around today.”
“But, Mom—”
15
“No arguments, son,” his father put in
calmly but firmly. “School vacation doesn’t
mean that your chores around here are on
vacation, too. Get at it right away, and you’ll
still have time to hunt your uranium.
“Well,” Mr. Taylor added, excusing himself
from the table, “I’d better be getting over
to school. I’m expecting to receive shipment
of a new radioisotope today.”
The very word excited Eddie. In fact, anything
having to do with atomic science
excited him. He knew something about
isotopes—pronounced
eye-suh-tope
. You
couldn’t have a father who was head of the
atomic-science department at Oceanview
College without picking up a little knowledge
along the way. Eddie knew that a radioisotope
was a material which had been “cooked” in an
atomic reactor until it was “hot” with radioactivity.
When carefully controlled, the radiation
stored up in such isotopes was used in
many beneficial ways.
16
“Why don’t college professors get summer
vacations, too?” Eddie asked. One reason for
asking that particular question was to keep
from prying deeper into the subject of the
radioisotope. Much of his father’s work at
Oceanview College was of a secret nature.
Eddie had learned not to ask questions about
it. His father usually volunteered any information
he wanted known, so Eddie stuck to
questions which could and would be answered.
“We get vacations,” his father said. “But—well,
my work is a little different, you know.
At the speed atomic science is moving today,
we simply can’t afford to waste time. But don’t
worry. We’ll take a week or so off before school
starts in the fall. Maybe head for the mountains
with our tent and sleeping bags.”
“And Geiger counter?” Eddie asked
eagerly.
“Wouldn’t think of leaving it home,” his
father said, smiling. “By the way, I put new
batteries in it the other day. Take it easy on
them. Remember to switch it off when you’re
not actually using it.”
“I will,” Eddie promised. He had forgotten
several times before, weakening the batteries.
17
It took Eddie over an hour to sort out the
newspapers and magazines in the garage, tie
them in neat bundles, and place them out on
the front curb for the Goodwill pickup. By
that time the sun was high overhead. It had
driven off the coolness which the ocean air
had provided during the earlier hours.
“Anything else, Mom?” he asked, returning
to the house and getting the Geiger counter
out of the closet. He edged toward the back
door before his mother had much time to
think of something more for him to do.
“I guess not, dear,” Mrs. Taylor said, smiling
over his hasty retreat. “What are you going
to do?”
“Think I’ll do a little prospecting,” Eddie
said.
“Where?”
“Probably in the hills beyond the college,”
Eddie said. The more he thought about it, the
more he realized it was a little late in the day
to go to Cedar Point. The best way to get
there was by rowboat across Moon Bay, and
that was too long a row to be starting now.
Besides, there were plenty of other places
around the outskirts of Oceanview where
likely looking rock formations invited search
with a Geiger counter.
18
“Are you going alone?” his mother asked.
“Oh, guess I’ll stop by and see if Teena
wants to go,” Eddie answered casually. He
tried to make it sound as though he would
be doing Teena Ross a big favor. After all,
she was only a girl. Eddie didn’t figure a girl
would make a very good uranium prospecting
partner, but most of the fellows he knew were
away at camp, or vacationing with their folks,
or something like that.
“She’ll enjoy it, I’m sure,” his mother said.
“I’ll take Sandy, too,” Eddie said. “He needs
the exercise.”
“That’s a good idea, dear. Be back in time
for an early dinner.”
Eddie let Sandy off his chain. The taffy-colored
cocker spaniel yipped wildly over his
freedom, racing back and forth as Eddie
started down the street.
19
Christina Ross—whom everybody called
Teena—lived at the far end of the block.
Eddie went around to the side door of the
light-green stucco house and knocked.
“Oh, hi, Eddie,” Teena greeted him, appearing
at the screen door. “I was hoping
you’d come over.”
“Well, I—I just happened to be going by,”
Eddie said. “Thought you might want to
watch me do a little prospecting with the Geiger
counter. But maybe you’re too busy.”
That’s how to handle it, Eddie thought.
Don’t act anxious. Let Teena be anxious.
Then maybe she’ll even offer to bring along
a couple of sandwiches or some fruit.
“Oh, I’d love to go,” Teena said eagerly,
“but I’m just finishing the dishes. Come on
in.”
“I’m in kind of a hurry.”
“I’ll only be a minute.” She pushed the
screen door open for him. “I’ll make us some
sandwiches.”
“Stay here, Sandy,” Eddie said. “Sit.” The
dog minded, although he looked a bit rebellious.
20
Eddie went inside and followed Teena to
the kitchen. He felt triumphant about the
sandwiches.
Teena tossed him a dish towel. “You dry
them,” she said.
“Who, me?”
“Why not? You’re in a hurry, aren’t you?
I can make the sandwiches while you dry the
silverware.” She smiled, putting tiny crinkles
in her small, slightly upturned nose. She wore
her hair in a pony tail. Even though her hair
was blond all year long, it seemed even
lighter in the summer. Eddie couldn’t tell
whether the sun had faded it, or whether her
deep summer tan simply made her hair look
lighter by contrast. Maybe both.
“Hello, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross said, coming into
the kitchen. “Looks like Teena put you to
work.”
“She always does, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie said,
pretending great injury. “Don’t know why I
keep coming over here.”
“I know,” Teena spoke up quickly. “It’s
because we’re friends, that’s why.”
21
Eddie knew she was right. They were
friends—good friends. They had been ever
since Eddie’s family had moved to Oceanview
and his father had become head of the college’s
atomic-science department. In fact, their
parents were close friends, also. Teena’s father
was chief engineer for the Acme Aviation
Company, one of the coast town’s largest
manufacturing concerns.
“Well, I’ll be glad to finish them, Eddie,”
Mrs. Ross offered. “I know how boys detest
doing dishes.”
“Oh, I don’t really mind, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie
said. “Besides, Teena’s making sandwiches to
take with us.”
“Another prospecting trip?” Teena’s
mother glanced at the Geiger counter which
Eddie had set carefully on the dinette table.
“I still think there must be some uranium
around here,” Eddie insisted. “And we can
find it if anyone can.”
“I agree,” Mrs. Ross said. “But even if you
don’t find it, you both seem to enjoy your
hikes.”
22
“Oh, yes, it’s fun, Mother,” Teena replied,
wrapping wax paper around a sandwich.
“Guess I’m ready. I’ve got a bone for Sandy,
too.”
“Don’t go too far out from town,” Mrs.
Ross cautioned, as Eddie picked up the Geiger
counter. “And stick near the main roads.
You know the rules.”
“We sure do, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie assured
her. “And we’ll be back early.”
They walked past the college campus, and
toward the rocky foothills beyond. At various
rock mounds and outcroppings, Eddie
switched on the Geiger counter. The needle
of the dial on the black box wavered slightly.
A slow clicking came through the earphones,
but Eddie knew these indicated no more than
a normal background count. There were slight
traces of radioactivity in almost all earth or
rocks. It was in the air itself, caused by mysterious
and ever-present cosmic rays, so there
was always a mild background count when
the Geiger counter was turned on; but to
mean anything, the needle had to jump far
ahead on the gauge, and the clicking through
the earphones had to speed up until it sounded
almost like bacon frying in a hot skillet.
23
There was none of that today. After they
had hiked and searched most of the forenoon,
Eddie said, “We might as well call it a day,
Teena. Doesn’t seem to be anything out here.”
“It’s all right with me,” Teena agreed,
plucking foxtails from Sandy’s ears. “Pretty
hot, anyway. Let’s eat our sandwiches and go
back home.”
“All right,” Eddie said. “You know, one of
these days I’d like to go out to Cedar Point
and scout around. Maybe we’ll find something
there.” Then he told Teena about his dream.
Teena smiled. “A dream sure isn’t much to
go on,” she said, “but they say it’s pretty out on
Cedar Point. I’ll go any time you want to,
Eddie.” She handed him one of the sandwiches.
It was midafternoon by the time they arrived
back at Teena’s house. They worked a while
on a new jigsaw puzzle Teena had received
on a recent birthday. Then Eddie said good-by
and went on down the street toward his
own home.
24
After putting Sandy on his long chain and
filling his water dish, Eddie went in the back
door. He put the Geiger counter in the closet
and went into the kitchen.
“What’s for dinner, Mom?” he asked.
Mrs. Taylor turned from the sink. Eddie
knew at once, just seeing the expression on
his mother’s face, that something was wrong.
“Dinner?” his mother said absently. “It’s
not quite four o’clock yet, Eddie. Besides,
dinner may be a little late today.”
“But this morning you said it would be
early,” Eddie reminded her, puzzled.
“This morning I didn’t know what might
happen.”
25
Then Eddie heard the sound of his father’s
voice coming from the den. There was a
strange urgent tone in it. The door to the den
was open. Eddie went through the dining
room and glanced into the den. His father
sat stiffly behind his homemade desk, talking
rapidly into the telephone. Eddie caught only
the last few sketchy words. Then his father
placed the telephone in its cradle, glanced up,
and saw Eddie.
If there had been even the slightest doubt
in Eddie’s mind about something being
wrong, it vanished now. Mr. Taylor looked
years older than he had that very morning.
Worry lay deep in his eyes. He fumbled
thoughtfully with a pencil, turning it end over
end on his desk.
“Hello, son,” he said. He didn’t even ask
whether Eddie had discovered any uranium
ore that day. Always before, he had shown
genuine interest in Eddie’s prospecting trips.
“Dad,” Eddie said anxiously, “what—what’s
the matter?”
“It shows that much, does it, son?” his
father said tiredly.
“What’s wrong, Dad?” Eddie prompted.
“Or can’t you tell me?”
Mr. Taylor leaned back. “Quite a bit’s
wrong, Eddie,” he said, “and I guess there’s
no reason why I shouldn’t tell you. It’ll be in
the evening papers, anyway.”
26
“Evening papers?”
“Eddie, you remember me mentioning this
morning about that radioisotope shipment I
was expecting today?”
“I remember,” Eddie said. “Did it come?”
“It did—and it didn’t,” his father said.
“What does that mean, Dad?” Eddie asked,
puzzled.
“The delivery truck arrived at the school
with it,” his father explained, “but while the
driver was inquiring where to put it, the container
disappeared.”
“Disappeared?”
“The radioisotope was stolen, Eddie,” his
father said slowly. “Stolen right out from
under our noses!”
27
CHAPTER TWO
At the moment, Eddie didn’t pry for further
information on the theft of the valuable radioactive
isotope. His father had plenty on his
mind, as it was. The main information was in
the evening
Globe
, which Eddie rushed out
to get as soon as he heard it plop onto the
front porch.
He took the newspaper to his father to read
first. After having finished, Mr. Taylor handed
the paper to Eddie and leaned back thoughtfully
in his chair.
28
“They’ve got it pretty straight, at that,” Mr.
Taylor said, “but I’m afraid this is going to
stir up quite a bit of trouble.”
“It wasn’t your fault, was it, Dad?” Eddie
defended.
“It was as much mine as anybody’s, son,”
his father said. “Probably more so. After all,
I am head of the department. I knew about
the shipment. That should make it my responsibility
to see that it was properly received
and placed in our atomic-materials storage
vault. But there is little point in trying to
place the blame on anyone. I’m willing to accept
that part of it. The important thing is
that we recover that radioisotope. Not only is
it of a secret nature, but it is also dangerously
radioactive if improperly handled.”
“But—but wasn’t it in a safe container?”
Eddie asked.
29
“Of course,” his father said. “There were
only two ounces of it in a fifty-pound lead
capsule. As long as it remains in that capsule
it’s safe. As you know, the lead prevents any
radiation from escaping. Out of that capsule,
however, those two ounces of radioisotope can
be very dangerous.”
“Fifty pounds,” Eddie said thoughtfully.
“That’s a pretty big thing to steal, isn’t it?”
“Not when it’s lead, son,” his father replied.
“Not much bigger than a two-quart
milk bottle, in fact.”
“Even at that, no kid could have taken it,”
Eddie said.
“Kid?” His father smiled thinly. “We don’t
think it was any kid, Eddie. Not by a long
shot. The whole thing was carefully planned
and carefully carried out. It was not the work
of amateurs.”
Eddie read the newspaper account. The
small truck from Drake Ridge, where one of
the country’s newest atomic reactors was
located, had arrived earlier than expected at
Oceanview College. It had backed up to the
receiving dock where all of the college supplies
were delivered. Since deliveries during vacation
months were few, there was no one on the
dock when the truck arrived. A half hour later,
when the delivery was expected, there would
have been. The truck’s early arrival had
caught them unprepared.
30
The driver had left the truck and had gone
around the building to the front office. It had
taken him less than five minutes to locate the
receiving-dock foreman. Together, they had
returned through the small warehouse and
opened the rear door onto the dock.
During that short time someone had pried
open the heavy padlock on the delivery truck’s
rear door and had stolen the fifty-pound lead
capsule containing the radioisotope.
Dusty footprints on the pavement around
the rear of the truck indicated that two men
had carried out the theft. A heavy iron pry bar
had been dropped at the rear of the truck after
the lock was sprung. It was a common type
used by carpenters. There were no fingerprints
or other identifying marks on it. The footprints
were barely visible and of no help other
than to indicate that two men were involved
in the crime.
31
“Dad,” Eddie asked, looking up from the
paper, “how could anyone carry away something
weighing fifty pounds without being noticed?”
“Chances are they had their car parked
nearby,” his father said. “As you know, there
are no fences or gates around Oceanview College.
People come and go as they please. As a
matter of fact, there are always quite a few
automobiles parked around the shipping and
receiving building, and parking space is scarce
even during summer sessions. Anyone could
park and wait there unnoticed. Or they could
walk around without attracting any undue attention.”
“But, Dad,” Eddie continued, “how would
the men know that the delivery truck would
arrive a half hour early?”
“They wouldn’t,” his father said. “They
may have had another plan. The way things
worked out, they didn’t need to use it. The
early delivery and the business of leaving the
truck unguarded for a few minutes probably
gave them a better opportunity than they had
expected. At least, they took quick advantage
of it.”
32
“I don’t see what anyone would want with
a radioisotope,” Eddie said. “Maybe they figured
there was something else inside of that
lead capsule.”
“That’s unlikely, son,” Mr. Taylor said.
“Believe me, it was no common theft. Nor
were the thieves ordinary thieves. That isotope
was a new one. A very secret one. Our job at
the college was to conduct various tests with it
in order to find out exactly how it could best
be put to use as a cure for disease, or for sterilizing
food, or even as a source of power.”
“Power?” Eddie said. “Boy, it must have
been a strong isotope.” He knew that the
strength of radioisotopes could be controlled
largely by the length of time they were allowed
to “cook” in an atomic reactor and soak up
radioactivity.
33
“We weren’t planning to run a submarine
with it,” his father said. “It wasn’t that strong.
Still, it doesn’t take so very much radioactivity
to make two ounces of an isotope quite powerful—and
quite deadly. I only hope whoever
stole it knows what he’s doing. However, I’m
sure he does.”
“You mean he must have been an atomic
scientist himself?” Eddie asked.
“Let’s just say he—or both of them—have
enough training in the subject to know how to
handle that isotope safely,” Mr. Taylor said.
“But, Dad,” Eddie wondered, “what could
they do with it?”
“They could study it,” his father explained.
“At least, they could send it somewhere to be
broken down and studied. Being a new isotope,
the formula is of great value.”
“What do you mean, send it somewhere?”
Eddie asked.
“Perhaps to some other country.”
“Then—then you mean whoever stole it
were spies!” Eddie exclaimed breathlessly.
“That’s entirely possible,” his father said.
“In fact, it’s the only logical explanation I can
think of. People simply don’t go around stealing
radioactive isotopes without a mighty important
reason.”
34
“Dinner’s ready,” Eddie’s mother called
from the kitchen.
During dinner Eddie wasn’t sure just what
he was eating. The idea of spies stealing atomic
materials kept building up in his mind. By the
time dessert was finished, he was anxious to
talk with someone, yet he knew he shouldn’t
bother his father with any more questions. He
asked if he could go over and visit with Teena
for a while.
“Well, you were together most of the day,”
his mother said, “but I guess it’s all right. Be
back in about an hour, though.”
It was a balmy evening. On such evenings,
he and Teena sometimes walked along the
beach barefoot, collecting sea shells. Today
Eddie had no desire to do that. He ran down
the block.
Teena answered his knock.
“Come on in, Eddie,” she invited, seeming
surprised to see him. “Mother and I are just
finishing dinner.”
“Oh, I figured you’d be through by now,”
Eddie apologized, following her inside.
35
“Hello, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross said, but she
didn’t seem as cheerful as usual.
“Good evening, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie said. “I—I
hope I’m not making a pest of myself.” He
looked around for Mr. Ross, but Teena’s
father apparently hadn’t arrived home from
Acme Aircraft yet. There wasn’t a place set for
him at the table, either.
“You’re never a pest, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross assured
him. “I was going to call your mother in
a little while about that newspaper write-up.”
“Oh, you read it?” Eddie said.
“How could anyone miss it?” Teena said.
“Right on the front page.”
“I suppose your father is quite concerned
over it,” Teena’s mother said.
“Oh, yes,” Eddie affirmed. “He was the one
who ordered the isotope.”
“What’s an isotope?” Teena asked.
“I’m not sure I know, either,” Mrs. Ross
said. “Maybe we could understand more of
what it’s all about if you could explain what a
radioisotope is, Eddie.”
36
“Well,” Eddie said slowly, “it’s not easy to
explain, but I’ll try. You know how rare
uranium is. There’s not nearly enough of it to
fill all the needs for radioactive materials. Besides,
pure uranium is so powerful and expensive
and dangerous to handle that it’s not
a very good idea to try using it in its true form.
So they build an atomic reactor like the one at
Drake Ridge.”
“We’ve driven by it,” Mrs. Ross said. “My,
it’s a big place.”
“I’ll say,” Eddie agreed. “Of course, only
one building holds the reactor itself. It’s the
biggest building near the center.”
“I remember it,” Teena said.
“Well, the reactor is about four stories
high,” Eddie went on. “They call it a uranium
‘pile.’ It’s made up of hundreds and hundreds
of graphite bricks. That’s where they get the
name ‘pile’—from brick pile. Anyway, scattered
around in between the bricks are small
bits of uranium. Uranium atoms are radioactive.
That is, they keep splitting up and sending
out rays.”
“Why do they do that?” Teena asked.
37
“It’s just the way nature made uranium, I
guess,” Eddie said. “Most atoms stay in one
piece, although they move around lickety-split
all of the time. Uranium atoms not only move
around, but they break apart. They shoot out
little particles called neutrons. These neutrons
hit other atoms and split them apart, sending
out more neutrons. It’s a regular chain reaction.”
“I’ve heard of chain reactions,” Mrs. Ross
said.
“Well, with all of the splitting up and moving
around of the uranium atoms,” Eddie went
on, “an awful lot of heat builds up. If they
don’t control it—well, you’ve seen pictures of
atomic-bomb explosions. That’s a chain reaction
out of control.”
“Out of control is right,” Teena said.
38
“But the atomic piles control the reaction,”
Eddie said. “The graphite bricks keep the
splitting-up atoms apart so one neutron won’t
go smashing into other atoms unless they want
it to. They have ways of controlling it so that
only as much radiation builds up as they want.
You can even hear the reactor hum as the radioactive
rays go tearing through it. But by
careful tending, the scientists keep the atomic
collisions far enough apart so the thing doesn’t
blow up.”
“Boy, that sounds dangerous,” Teena said.
“Well, they know just how to do it,” Eddie
replied.
“Aren’t the rays dangerous?” Mrs. Ross
asked.
“I’ll say they’re dangerous,” Eddie said.
“But the whole pile is covered by a shield of
concrete about eight feet thick. That keeps the
rays from getting out and injuring the workmen.”
“Goodness. Eight feet is a lot of cement.”
“It takes a lot to stop radioactive atomic
particles,” Eddie explained. “Especially the
gamma rays. They’re the fastest and most dangerous,
and the hardest to stop. Alpha and beta
rays are fairly easy to stop. But the gamma
rays are regular high-velocity invisible bullets.
They’ll go right through a stone wall unless
it’s plenty thick. Of course, you can’t see them.
Not with even the most powerful microscope
in the world.”
39
“I wouldn’t want to work around a place
where I might get shot at by—by dangerous
rays you can’t even see,” Teena said.
“I would,” Eddie said. “Everyone is carefully
protected. They see to that. Well, anyway,
if all of those uranium atoms were shooting
radioactive rays around inside of that pile
and doing nothing, there would be an awful
lot of energy going to waste. So the atomic
scientists take certain elements which aren’t
radioactive, but can be made radioactive, and
shove small pieces of them into holes drilled
in the pile.”
“Isn’t that dangerous?” Teena asked.
“They don’t shove them in with their bare
hands,” Eddie said, trying not to show exasperation.
“They use long holders to push the
small chunks of material into the holes in the
reactor. Then, as those uranium atoms keep
splitting up and shooting particles around inside
of the pile, some of them smack into the
chunks of material, and stick there. Most elements
will soak up radiation, just like a sponge
soaks up water.”
40
“My, that’s interesting, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross
said.
“I’ve seen them do it,” Eddie said proudly,
then added, “from behind a protective shield,
of course. When the material has soaked up
enough radiation, they pull it back out. They
say it’s ‘cooked.’”
“You mean it’s hot?” Teena asked.
“It’s hot,” Eddie said, “but not like if it
came out of a stove. By hot, they mean it’s
radioactive. If you touched it, or even got near
it, you would get burned, but you probably
wouldn’t even know it for a while. It would be
a radiation burn. That’s a kind of burn you
don’t feel, but it destroys your blood cells and
tissues, and—well, you’ve had it.”
“So that’s what a radioisotope is,” Mrs. Ross
said. “It’s like a sponge. Only instead of soaking
up water, it soaks up radiation.”
41
“That’s about it,” Eddie said. “My dad says
that as more is learned about the ways to use
isotopes, the whole world is going to be improved.
You’ve heard of radiocobalt for curing
cancer. Well, that’s an isotope. They make it
by cooking cobalt in an atomic reactor. Oh,
there are hundreds of different isotopes. Like
I said, isotopes can be made of most of the
elements. And there are over a hundred elements.
Some soak up a lot of radioactivity, and
are strong and dangerous. Others absorb only
a little and are pretty safe to use. Depends, too,
on how long they let them cook in the reactor.”
“What kind was the one stolen from the
college today?” Teena asked.
“Dad didn’t say exactly,” Eddie answered,
“except he did say that if whoever took it
didn’t know what he was doing and opened up
the lead capsule, it could kill him. Of course,
even the mild isotopes are deadly if they’re not
handled right.”
“My goodness, it is a serious matter, isn’t
it?” Mrs. Ross said.
42
Eddie nodded. It was even more serious
than its threat of danger to anyone who
handled it carelessly. It was a new isotope—a
secret isotope. His father hadn’t said whether
it had been developed for curing things or for
destroying things. But many radioisotopes
could do either; it depended on how they were
used. Eddie assumed that anyone who would
stoop to stealing isotopes more than likely
would be interested in their ability to destroy
rather than their ability to benefit mankind.
“Well, I certainly do hope everything works
out all right,” Teena’s mother said.
“So do I,” Teena agreed.
Eddie glanced at the kitchen clock. “Oh,
boy,” he said, “I’d better be heading back
home. I didn’t mean to come over here and
talk so long.”
“Oh, we’re glad you did, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross
said. “I’m afraid too few of us know anything
about this atom business.”
43
“That’s right, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie agreed.
“People should talk more and read more about
it. After all, this is an atomic age. We might as
well face it. My father says that in horse-and-buggy
days everyone knew how to feed a horse
and grease a wagon wheel. They knew what was
needed to get the work done. But now that
atoms are being harnessed to do the work, not
many people even bother to find out what an
atom is.”
Mrs. Ross smiled. “I guess you’re right,
Eddie,” she said, “but I wouldn’t quite know
how to go about feeding an atom.”
“Or greasing one,” Teena added.
Eddie laughed. “I sure wouldn’t want the
job of trying to feed a herd of them the size of
a period,” he said. “Did you know that there
are about three million billion atoms of carbon
in a single period printed at the end of a
sentence. That’s how small atoms are.”
“Three million billion is a lot of something,”
a man’s voice spoke behind him.
“What are we talking about, Eddie?”
“Oh, hello, Mr. Ross,” Eddie said, turning
around and standing up. “I didn’t hear you
come in.”
44
Teena’s father was a medium-sized man
with light-brown hair which was getting somewhat
thin on top. He was usually quite cheerful
and full of fun, but tonight his face seemed
unusually drawn and sober. He stepped to the
table, leaned over, and gave both Teena and
Mrs. Ross a kiss on the cheek.
“Eddie was telling us about atoms,” Teena’s
mother said. “Did you know there were three
million billion of them in a period?”
“How many in a comma?” Mr. Ross said to
Eddie, then added quickly, “forget it, Eddie.
It wasn’t very funny. I—I’m afraid I don’t feel
very funny tonight.”
“Sit down, dear,” Mrs. Ross said. “I’ll warm
your dinner. You didn’t sound very cheerful
when you called to say you would be late. How
did everything go at the plant today?”
“Not so good,” Teena’s father said tiredly.
“In fact, not good at all.”
Problems. It seemed that everyone had
problems, Eddie thought, as he started to
leave.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/5/3/2/6/53269//53269-h//53269-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | What is the significance of describing Mr. Ross as a funny person?
| 53269_4YLGV4PU_8 | [
"It provides a stark contrast to the stressed Mr. Ross we meet in Chapter Two. It shows the reader that something has gone horribly wrong at Mr. Ross’s job.\n",
"It demonstrates to the reader that Eddie will be able to get along with him, and therefore share what he knows about radiation. \n",
"It throws Eddie off the scent of Mr. Ross being a culprit responsible for Mr. Taylor’s missing isotope. \n",
"It provides a comparison to Mr. Taylor, who is more successful than Mr. Ross and therefore doesn’t have to rely on humor. \n"
] | 1 | 1 | [
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53,269 | 53269_4YLGV4PU | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Atom Mystery [Young Atom Detective] | 1954.0 | Coombs, Charles Ira | Mystery and detective stories; Nuclear physics -- Juvenile fiction; Scientists -- Juvenile fiction; PZ | YOUNG READERS
Atom Mystery
11
CHAPTER ONE
It was only a dream. Eddie Taylor would like
to have finished it, but the bar of morning sunlight
poking in under the window shade pried
his eyes open. The dream fled. Eddie kicked
off the sheet, swung his feet to the floor, and
groped under the bed for his tennis shoes.
He heard his father’s heavy footsteps in the
hallway. They stopped outside of his bedroom
door.
“You awake, Eddie?”
“I’m awake, Dad,” Eddie answered.
“Breakfast’s ready. Get washed and
dressed.”
12
“Be right there,” Eddie said. Then, remembering
the dream, he added, “Oh, Dad, is it
all right if I use the Geiger counter today?”
Mr. Taylor opened the door. He was a big
man, broad-shouldered and still thin-waisted.
Eddie found it easy to believe the stories he
had heard about his father being an outstanding
football player in his time. Even his glasses
and the gray hair at his temples didn’t add
much age, although Eddie knew it had been
eighteen years since his father had played his
last game of college football.
“You may use the Geiger counter any time
you want, Eddie,” Mr. Taylor said, “as long as
you take good care of it. You figured out where
you can find some uranium ore?”
Eddie smiled sheepishly. “I—I had a
dream,” he said. “Plain as day. It was out on
Cedar Point. I was walking along over some
rocks. Suddenly the Geiger counter began
clicking like everything.”
13
“Cedar Point?” his father asked. “I’ve
never been out there. But, from what I hear,
there are plenty of rock formations. Might
be worth a try, at that. You never can tell
where you might strike some radioactivity.”
“Do you believe in dreams, Dad?”
“Well, now, that’s a tough question, son.
I can’t say that I really do. Still, one clue is
as good as another when it comes to hunting
uranium ore, I guess. But right now we’d
better get out to breakfast before your mother
scalps us. Hurry it up.” His father turned
and went back down the hallway toward the
kitchen.
Eddie pulled on his trousers and T shirt
and went into the bathroom. He washed hurriedly,
knowing that even if he missed a spot
or two, he was fairly safe. During the summer
months his freckles got so thick and dark that
it would take a magnifying glass to detect any
small smudges of dirt hiding among them. He
plastered some water on his dark-red hair,
pushed a comb through it, and shrugged as it
snapped back almost to its original position.
Oh, well, he had tried.
14
He grinned into the mirror, reached a
finger into his mouth, and unhooked the
small rubber bands from his tooth braces.
He dropped them into the waste basket. He’d
put fresh ones in after breakfast.
He brushed his teeth carefully, taking particular
pains around the metal braces. The
tooth-straightening orthodontist had warned
him about letting food gather around the
metal clamps. It could start cavities.
Finished, Eddie went out to breakfast.
“Good morning, dear,” his mother greeted
him, handing him a plate of eggs.
“Hi, Mom,” Eddie said. “Gotta hurry. Big
day today.”
“So your father says. But I’m afraid your
big day will have to start with sorting out and
tying up those newspapers and magazines that
have been collecting in the garage.”
“Aw, Mom—”
“Eddie, I asked you to do it three days ago.
Remember? And the Goodwill truck comes
around today.”
“But, Mom—”
15
“No arguments, son,” his father put in
calmly but firmly. “School vacation doesn’t
mean that your chores around here are on
vacation, too. Get at it right away, and you’ll
still have time to hunt your uranium.
“Well,” Mr. Taylor added, excusing himself
from the table, “I’d better be getting over
to school. I’m expecting to receive shipment
of a new radioisotope today.”
The very word excited Eddie. In fact, anything
having to do with atomic science
excited him. He knew something about
isotopes—pronounced
eye-suh-tope
. You
couldn’t have a father who was head of the
atomic-science department at Oceanview
College without picking up a little knowledge
along the way. Eddie knew that a radioisotope
was a material which had been “cooked” in an
atomic reactor until it was “hot” with radioactivity.
When carefully controlled, the radiation
stored up in such isotopes was used in
many beneficial ways.
16
“Why don’t college professors get summer
vacations, too?” Eddie asked. One reason for
asking that particular question was to keep
from prying deeper into the subject of the
radioisotope. Much of his father’s work at
Oceanview College was of a secret nature.
Eddie had learned not to ask questions about
it. His father usually volunteered any information
he wanted known, so Eddie stuck to
questions which could and would be answered.
“We get vacations,” his father said. “But—well,
my work is a little different, you know.
At the speed atomic science is moving today,
we simply can’t afford to waste time. But don’t
worry. We’ll take a week or so off before school
starts in the fall. Maybe head for the mountains
with our tent and sleeping bags.”
“And Geiger counter?” Eddie asked
eagerly.
“Wouldn’t think of leaving it home,” his
father said, smiling. “By the way, I put new
batteries in it the other day. Take it easy on
them. Remember to switch it off when you’re
not actually using it.”
“I will,” Eddie promised. He had forgotten
several times before, weakening the batteries.
17
It took Eddie over an hour to sort out the
newspapers and magazines in the garage, tie
them in neat bundles, and place them out on
the front curb for the Goodwill pickup. By
that time the sun was high overhead. It had
driven off the coolness which the ocean air
had provided during the earlier hours.
“Anything else, Mom?” he asked, returning
to the house and getting the Geiger counter
out of the closet. He edged toward the back
door before his mother had much time to
think of something more for him to do.
“I guess not, dear,” Mrs. Taylor said, smiling
over his hasty retreat. “What are you going
to do?”
“Think I’ll do a little prospecting,” Eddie
said.
“Where?”
“Probably in the hills beyond the college,”
Eddie said. The more he thought about it, the
more he realized it was a little late in the day
to go to Cedar Point. The best way to get
there was by rowboat across Moon Bay, and
that was too long a row to be starting now.
Besides, there were plenty of other places
around the outskirts of Oceanview where
likely looking rock formations invited search
with a Geiger counter.
18
“Are you going alone?” his mother asked.
“Oh, guess I’ll stop by and see if Teena
wants to go,” Eddie answered casually. He
tried to make it sound as though he would
be doing Teena Ross a big favor. After all,
she was only a girl. Eddie didn’t figure a girl
would make a very good uranium prospecting
partner, but most of the fellows he knew were
away at camp, or vacationing with their folks,
or something like that.
“She’ll enjoy it, I’m sure,” his mother said.
“I’ll take Sandy, too,” Eddie said. “He needs
the exercise.”
“That’s a good idea, dear. Be back in time
for an early dinner.”
Eddie let Sandy off his chain. The taffy-colored
cocker spaniel yipped wildly over his
freedom, racing back and forth as Eddie
started down the street.
19
Christina Ross—whom everybody called
Teena—lived at the far end of the block.
Eddie went around to the side door of the
light-green stucco house and knocked.
“Oh, hi, Eddie,” Teena greeted him, appearing
at the screen door. “I was hoping
you’d come over.”
“Well, I—I just happened to be going by,”
Eddie said. “Thought you might want to
watch me do a little prospecting with the Geiger
counter. But maybe you’re too busy.”
That’s how to handle it, Eddie thought.
Don’t act anxious. Let Teena be anxious.
Then maybe she’ll even offer to bring along
a couple of sandwiches or some fruit.
“Oh, I’d love to go,” Teena said eagerly,
“but I’m just finishing the dishes. Come on
in.”
“I’m in kind of a hurry.”
“I’ll only be a minute.” She pushed the
screen door open for him. “I’ll make us some
sandwiches.”
“Stay here, Sandy,” Eddie said. “Sit.” The
dog minded, although he looked a bit rebellious.
20
Eddie went inside and followed Teena to
the kitchen. He felt triumphant about the
sandwiches.
Teena tossed him a dish towel. “You dry
them,” she said.
“Who, me?”
“Why not? You’re in a hurry, aren’t you?
I can make the sandwiches while you dry the
silverware.” She smiled, putting tiny crinkles
in her small, slightly upturned nose. She wore
her hair in a pony tail. Even though her hair
was blond all year long, it seemed even
lighter in the summer. Eddie couldn’t tell
whether the sun had faded it, or whether her
deep summer tan simply made her hair look
lighter by contrast. Maybe both.
“Hello, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross said, coming into
the kitchen. “Looks like Teena put you to
work.”
“She always does, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie said,
pretending great injury. “Don’t know why I
keep coming over here.”
“I know,” Teena spoke up quickly. “It’s
because we’re friends, that’s why.”
21
Eddie knew she was right. They were
friends—good friends. They had been ever
since Eddie’s family had moved to Oceanview
and his father had become head of the college’s
atomic-science department. In fact, their
parents were close friends, also. Teena’s father
was chief engineer for the Acme Aviation
Company, one of the coast town’s largest
manufacturing concerns.
“Well, I’ll be glad to finish them, Eddie,”
Mrs. Ross offered. “I know how boys detest
doing dishes.”
“Oh, I don’t really mind, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie
said. “Besides, Teena’s making sandwiches to
take with us.”
“Another prospecting trip?” Teena’s
mother glanced at the Geiger counter which
Eddie had set carefully on the dinette table.
“I still think there must be some uranium
around here,” Eddie insisted. “And we can
find it if anyone can.”
“I agree,” Mrs. Ross said. “But even if you
don’t find it, you both seem to enjoy your
hikes.”
22
“Oh, yes, it’s fun, Mother,” Teena replied,
wrapping wax paper around a sandwich.
“Guess I’m ready. I’ve got a bone for Sandy,
too.”
“Don’t go too far out from town,” Mrs.
Ross cautioned, as Eddie picked up the Geiger
counter. “And stick near the main roads.
You know the rules.”
“We sure do, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie assured
her. “And we’ll be back early.”
They walked past the college campus, and
toward the rocky foothills beyond. At various
rock mounds and outcroppings, Eddie
switched on the Geiger counter. The needle
of the dial on the black box wavered slightly.
A slow clicking came through the earphones,
but Eddie knew these indicated no more than
a normal background count. There were slight
traces of radioactivity in almost all earth or
rocks. It was in the air itself, caused by mysterious
and ever-present cosmic rays, so there
was always a mild background count when
the Geiger counter was turned on; but to
mean anything, the needle had to jump far
ahead on the gauge, and the clicking through
the earphones had to speed up until it sounded
almost like bacon frying in a hot skillet.
23
There was none of that today. After they
had hiked and searched most of the forenoon,
Eddie said, “We might as well call it a day,
Teena. Doesn’t seem to be anything out here.”
“It’s all right with me,” Teena agreed,
plucking foxtails from Sandy’s ears. “Pretty
hot, anyway. Let’s eat our sandwiches and go
back home.”
“All right,” Eddie said. “You know, one of
these days I’d like to go out to Cedar Point
and scout around. Maybe we’ll find something
there.” Then he told Teena about his dream.
Teena smiled. “A dream sure isn’t much to
go on,” she said, “but they say it’s pretty out on
Cedar Point. I’ll go any time you want to,
Eddie.” She handed him one of the sandwiches.
It was midafternoon by the time they arrived
back at Teena’s house. They worked a while
on a new jigsaw puzzle Teena had received
on a recent birthday. Then Eddie said good-by
and went on down the street toward his
own home.
24
After putting Sandy on his long chain and
filling his water dish, Eddie went in the back
door. He put the Geiger counter in the closet
and went into the kitchen.
“What’s for dinner, Mom?” he asked.
Mrs. Taylor turned from the sink. Eddie
knew at once, just seeing the expression on
his mother’s face, that something was wrong.
“Dinner?” his mother said absently. “It’s
not quite four o’clock yet, Eddie. Besides,
dinner may be a little late today.”
“But this morning you said it would be
early,” Eddie reminded her, puzzled.
“This morning I didn’t know what might
happen.”
25
Then Eddie heard the sound of his father’s
voice coming from the den. There was a
strange urgent tone in it. The door to the den
was open. Eddie went through the dining
room and glanced into the den. His father
sat stiffly behind his homemade desk, talking
rapidly into the telephone. Eddie caught only
the last few sketchy words. Then his father
placed the telephone in its cradle, glanced up,
and saw Eddie.
If there had been even the slightest doubt
in Eddie’s mind about something being
wrong, it vanished now. Mr. Taylor looked
years older than he had that very morning.
Worry lay deep in his eyes. He fumbled
thoughtfully with a pencil, turning it end over
end on his desk.
“Hello, son,” he said. He didn’t even ask
whether Eddie had discovered any uranium
ore that day. Always before, he had shown
genuine interest in Eddie’s prospecting trips.
“Dad,” Eddie said anxiously, “what—what’s
the matter?”
“It shows that much, does it, son?” his
father said tiredly.
“What’s wrong, Dad?” Eddie prompted.
“Or can’t you tell me?”
Mr. Taylor leaned back. “Quite a bit’s
wrong, Eddie,” he said, “and I guess there’s
no reason why I shouldn’t tell you. It’ll be in
the evening papers, anyway.”
26
“Evening papers?”
“Eddie, you remember me mentioning this
morning about that radioisotope shipment I
was expecting today?”
“I remember,” Eddie said. “Did it come?”
“It did—and it didn’t,” his father said.
“What does that mean, Dad?” Eddie asked,
puzzled.
“The delivery truck arrived at the school
with it,” his father explained, “but while the
driver was inquiring where to put it, the container
disappeared.”
“Disappeared?”
“The radioisotope was stolen, Eddie,” his
father said slowly. “Stolen right out from
under our noses!”
27
CHAPTER TWO
At the moment, Eddie didn’t pry for further
information on the theft of the valuable radioactive
isotope. His father had plenty on his
mind, as it was. The main information was in
the evening
Globe
, which Eddie rushed out
to get as soon as he heard it plop onto the
front porch.
He took the newspaper to his father to read
first. After having finished, Mr. Taylor handed
the paper to Eddie and leaned back thoughtfully
in his chair.
28
“They’ve got it pretty straight, at that,” Mr.
Taylor said, “but I’m afraid this is going to
stir up quite a bit of trouble.”
“It wasn’t your fault, was it, Dad?” Eddie
defended.
“It was as much mine as anybody’s, son,”
his father said. “Probably more so. After all,
I am head of the department. I knew about
the shipment. That should make it my responsibility
to see that it was properly received
and placed in our atomic-materials storage
vault. But there is little point in trying to
place the blame on anyone. I’m willing to accept
that part of it. The important thing is
that we recover that radioisotope. Not only is
it of a secret nature, but it is also dangerously
radioactive if improperly handled.”
“But—but wasn’t it in a safe container?”
Eddie asked.
29
“Of course,” his father said. “There were
only two ounces of it in a fifty-pound lead
capsule. As long as it remains in that capsule
it’s safe. As you know, the lead prevents any
radiation from escaping. Out of that capsule,
however, those two ounces of radioisotope can
be very dangerous.”
“Fifty pounds,” Eddie said thoughtfully.
“That’s a pretty big thing to steal, isn’t it?”
“Not when it’s lead, son,” his father replied.
“Not much bigger than a two-quart
milk bottle, in fact.”
“Even at that, no kid could have taken it,”
Eddie said.
“Kid?” His father smiled thinly. “We don’t
think it was any kid, Eddie. Not by a long
shot. The whole thing was carefully planned
and carefully carried out. It was not the work
of amateurs.”
Eddie read the newspaper account. The
small truck from Drake Ridge, where one of
the country’s newest atomic reactors was
located, had arrived earlier than expected at
Oceanview College. It had backed up to the
receiving dock where all of the college supplies
were delivered. Since deliveries during vacation
months were few, there was no one on the
dock when the truck arrived. A half hour later,
when the delivery was expected, there would
have been. The truck’s early arrival had
caught them unprepared.
30
The driver had left the truck and had gone
around the building to the front office. It had
taken him less than five minutes to locate the
receiving-dock foreman. Together, they had
returned through the small warehouse and
opened the rear door onto the dock.
During that short time someone had pried
open the heavy padlock on the delivery truck’s
rear door and had stolen the fifty-pound lead
capsule containing the radioisotope.
Dusty footprints on the pavement around
the rear of the truck indicated that two men
had carried out the theft. A heavy iron pry bar
had been dropped at the rear of the truck after
the lock was sprung. It was a common type
used by carpenters. There were no fingerprints
or other identifying marks on it. The footprints
were barely visible and of no help other
than to indicate that two men were involved
in the crime.
31
“Dad,” Eddie asked, looking up from the
paper, “how could anyone carry away something
weighing fifty pounds without being noticed?”
“Chances are they had their car parked
nearby,” his father said. “As you know, there
are no fences or gates around Oceanview College.
People come and go as they please. As a
matter of fact, there are always quite a few
automobiles parked around the shipping and
receiving building, and parking space is scarce
even during summer sessions. Anyone could
park and wait there unnoticed. Or they could
walk around without attracting any undue attention.”
“But, Dad,” Eddie continued, “how would
the men know that the delivery truck would
arrive a half hour early?”
“They wouldn’t,” his father said. “They
may have had another plan. The way things
worked out, they didn’t need to use it. The
early delivery and the business of leaving the
truck unguarded for a few minutes probably
gave them a better opportunity than they had
expected. At least, they took quick advantage
of it.”
32
“I don’t see what anyone would want with
a radioisotope,” Eddie said. “Maybe they figured
there was something else inside of that
lead capsule.”
“That’s unlikely, son,” Mr. Taylor said.
“Believe me, it was no common theft. Nor
were the thieves ordinary thieves. That isotope
was a new one. A very secret one. Our job at
the college was to conduct various tests with it
in order to find out exactly how it could best
be put to use as a cure for disease, or for sterilizing
food, or even as a source of power.”
“Power?” Eddie said. “Boy, it must have
been a strong isotope.” He knew that the
strength of radioisotopes could be controlled
largely by the length of time they were allowed
to “cook” in an atomic reactor and soak up
radioactivity.
33
“We weren’t planning to run a submarine
with it,” his father said. “It wasn’t that strong.
Still, it doesn’t take so very much radioactivity
to make two ounces of an isotope quite powerful—and
quite deadly. I only hope whoever
stole it knows what he’s doing. However, I’m
sure he does.”
“You mean he must have been an atomic
scientist himself?” Eddie asked.
“Let’s just say he—or both of them—have
enough training in the subject to know how to
handle that isotope safely,” Mr. Taylor said.
“But, Dad,” Eddie wondered, “what could
they do with it?”
“They could study it,” his father explained.
“At least, they could send it somewhere to be
broken down and studied. Being a new isotope,
the formula is of great value.”
“What do you mean, send it somewhere?”
Eddie asked.
“Perhaps to some other country.”
“Then—then you mean whoever stole it
were spies!” Eddie exclaimed breathlessly.
“That’s entirely possible,” his father said.
“In fact, it’s the only logical explanation I can
think of. People simply don’t go around stealing
radioactive isotopes without a mighty important
reason.”
34
“Dinner’s ready,” Eddie’s mother called
from the kitchen.
During dinner Eddie wasn’t sure just what
he was eating. The idea of spies stealing atomic
materials kept building up in his mind. By the
time dessert was finished, he was anxious to
talk with someone, yet he knew he shouldn’t
bother his father with any more questions. He
asked if he could go over and visit with Teena
for a while.
“Well, you were together most of the day,”
his mother said, “but I guess it’s all right. Be
back in about an hour, though.”
It was a balmy evening. On such evenings,
he and Teena sometimes walked along the
beach barefoot, collecting sea shells. Today
Eddie had no desire to do that. He ran down
the block.
Teena answered his knock.
“Come on in, Eddie,” she invited, seeming
surprised to see him. “Mother and I are just
finishing dinner.”
“Oh, I figured you’d be through by now,”
Eddie apologized, following her inside.
35
“Hello, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross said, but she
didn’t seem as cheerful as usual.
“Good evening, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie said. “I—I
hope I’m not making a pest of myself.” He
looked around for Mr. Ross, but Teena’s
father apparently hadn’t arrived home from
Acme Aircraft yet. There wasn’t a place set for
him at the table, either.
“You’re never a pest, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross assured
him. “I was going to call your mother in
a little while about that newspaper write-up.”
“Oh, you read it?” Eddie said.
“How could anyone miss it?” Teena said.
“Right on the front page.”
“I suppose your father is quite concerned
over it,” Teena’s mother said.
“Oh, yes,” Eddie affirmed. “He was the one
who ordered the isotope.”
“What’s an isotope?” Teena asked.
“I’m not sure I know, either,” Mrs. Ross
said. “Maybe we could understand more of
what it’s all about if you could explain what a
radioisotope is, Eddie.”
36
“Well,” Eddie said slowly, “it’s not easy to
explain, but I’ll try. You know how rare
uranium is. There’s not nearly enough of it to
fill all the needs for radioactive materials. Besides,
pure uranium is so powerful and expensive
and dangerous to handle that it’s not
a very good idea to try using it in its true form.
So they build an atomic reactor like the one at
Drake Ridge.”
“We’ve driven by it,” Mrs. Ross said. “My,
it’s a big place.”
“I’ll say,” Eddie agreed. “Of course, only
one building holds the reactor itself. It’s the
biggest building near the center.”
“I remember it,” Teena said.
“Well, the reactor is about four stories
high,” Eddie went on. “They call it a uranium
‘pile.’ It’s made up of hundreds and hundreds
of graphite bricks. That’s where they get the
name ‘pile’—from brick pile. Anyway, scattered
around in between the bricks are small
bits of uranium. Uranium atoms are radioactive.
That is, they keep splitting up and sending
out rays.”
“Why do they do that?” Teena asked.
37
“It’s just the way nature made uranium, I
guess,” Eddie said. “Most atoms stay in one
piece, although they move around lickety-split
all of the time. Uranium atoms not only move
around, but they break apart. They shoot out
little particles called neutrons. These neutrons
hit other atoms and split them apart, sending
out more neutrons. It’s a regular chain reaction.”
“I’ve heard of chain reactions,” Mrs. Ross
said.
“Well, with all of the splitting up and moving
around of the uranium atoms,” Eddie went
on, “an awful lot of heat builds up. If they
don’t control it—well, you’ve seen pictures of
atomic-bomb explosions. That’s a chain reaction
out of control.”
“Out of control is right,” Teena said.
38
“But the atomic piles control the reaction,”
Eddie said. “The graphite bricks keep the
splitting-up atoms apart so one neutron won’t
go smashing into other atoms unless they want
it to. They have ways of controlling it so that
only as much radiation builds up as they want.
You can even hear the reactor hum as the radioactive
rays go tearing through it. But by
careful tending, the scientists keep the atomic
collisions far enough apart so the thing doesn’t
blow up.”
“Boy, that sounds dangerous,” Teena said.
“Well, they know just how to do it,” Eddie
replied.
“Aren’t the rays dangerous?” Mrs. Ross
asked.
“I’ll say they’re dangerous,” Eddie said.
“But the whole pile is covered by a shield of
concrete about eight feet thick. That keeps the
rays from getting out and injuring the workmen.”
“Goodness. Eight feet is a lot of cement.”
“It takes a lot to stop radioactive atomic
particles,” Eddie explained. “Especially the
gamma rays. They’re the fastest and most dangerous,
and the hardest to stop. Alpha and beta
rays are fairly easy to stop. But the gamma
rays are regular high-velocity invisible bullets.
They’ll go right through a stone wall unless
it’s plenty thick. Of course, you can’t see them.
Not with even the most powerful microscope
in the world.”
39
“I wouldn’t want to work around a place
where I might get shot at by—by dangerous
rays you can’t even see,” Teena said.
“I would,” Eddie said. “Everyone is carefully
protected. They see to that. Well, anyway,
if all of those uranium atoms were shooting
radioactive rays around inside of that pile
and doing nothing, there would be an awful
lot of energy going to waste. So the atomic
scientists take certain elements which aren’t
radioactive, but can be made radioactive, and
shove small pieces of them into holes drilled
in the pile.”
“Isn’t that dangerous?” Teena asked.
“They don’t shove them in with their bare
hands,” Eddie said, trying not to show exasperation.
“They use long holders to push the
small chunks of material into the holes in the
reactor. Then, as those uranium atoms keep
splitting up and shooting particles around inside
of the pile, some of them smack into the
chunks of material, and stick there. Most elements
will soak up radiation, just like a sponge
soaks up water.”
40
“My, that’s interesting, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross
said.
“I’ve seen them do it,” Eddie said proudly,
then added, “from behind a protective shield,
of course. When the material has soaked up
enough radiation, they pull it back out. They
say it’s ‘cooked.’”
“You mean it’s hot?” Teena asked.
“It’s hot,” Eddie said, “but not like if it
came out of a stove. By hot, they mean it’s
radioactive. If you touched it, or even got near
it, you would get burned, but you probably
wouldn’t even know it for a while. It would be
a radiation burn. That’s a kind of burn you
don’t feel, but it destroys your blood cells and
tissues, and—well, you’ve had it.”
“So that’s what a radioisotope is,” Mrs. Ross
said. “It’s like a sponge. Only instead of soaking
up water, it soaks up radiation.”
41
“That’s about it,” Eddie said. “My dad says
that as more is learned about the ways to use
isotopes, the whole world is going to be improved.
You’ve heard of radiocobalt for curing
cancer. Well, that’s an isotope. They make it
by cooking cobalt in an atomic reactor. Oh,
there are hundreds of different isotopes. Like
I said, isotopes can be made of most of the
elements. And there are over a hundred elements.
Some soak up a lot of radioactivity, and
are strong and dangerous. Others absorb only
a little and are pretty safe to use. Depends, too,
on how long they let them cook in the reactor.”
“What kind was the one stolen from the
college today?” Teena asked.
“Dad didn’t say exactly,” Eddie answered,
“except he did say that if whoever took it
didn’t know what he was doing and opened up
the lead capsule, it could kill him. Of course,
even the mild isotopes are deadly if they’re not
handled right.”
“My goodness, it is a serious matter, isn’t
it?” Mrs. Ross said.
42
Eddie nodded. It was even more serious
than its threat of danger to anyone who
handled it carelessly. It was a new isotope—a
secret isotope. His father hadn’t said whether
it had been developed for curing things or for
destroying things. But many radioisotopes
could do either; it depended on how they were
used. Eddie assumed that anyone who would
stoop to stealing isotopes more than likely
would be interested in their ability to destroy
rather than their ability to benefit mankind.
“Well, I certainly do hope everything works
out all right,” Teena’s mother said.
“So do I,” Teena agreed.
Eddie glanced at the kitchen clock. “Oh,
boy,” he said, “I’d better be heading back
home. I didn’t mean to come over here and
talk so long.”
“Oh, we’re glad you did, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross
said. “I’m afraid too few of us know anything
about this atom business.”
43
“That’s right, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie agreed.
“People should talk more and read more about
it. After all, this is an atomic age. We might as
well face it. My father says that in horse-and-buggy
days everyone knew how to feed a horse
and grease a wagon wheel. They knew what was
needed to get the work done. But now that
atoms are being harnessed to do the work, not
many people even bother to find out what an
atom is.”
Mrs. Ross smiled. “I guess you’re right,
Eddie,” she said, “but I wouldn’t quite know
how to go about feeding an atom.”
“Or greasing one,” Teena added.
Eddie laughed. “I sure wouldn’t want the
job of trying to feed a herd of them the size of
a period,” he said. “Did you know that there
are about three million billion atoms of carbon
in a single period printed at the end of a
sentence. That’s how small atoms are.”
“Three million billion is a lot of something,”
a man’s voice spoke behind him.
“What are we talking about, Eddie?”
“Oh, hello, Mr. Ross,” Eddie said, turning
around and standing up. “I didn’t hear you
come in.”
44
Teena’s father was a medium-sized man
with light-brown hair which was getting somewhat
thin on top. He was usually quite cheerful
and full of fun, but tonight his face seemed
unusually drawn and sober. He stepped to the
table, leaned over, and gave both Teena and
Mrs. Ross a kiss on the cheek.
“Eddie was telling us about atoms,” Teena’s
mother said. “Did you know there were three
million billion of them in a period?”
“How many in a comma?” Mr. Ross said to
Eddie, then added quickly, “forget it, Eddie.
It wasn’t very funny. I—I’m afraid I don’t feel
very funny tonight.”
“Sit down, dear,” Mrs. Ross said. “I’ll warm
your dinner. You didn’t sound very cheerful
when you called to say you would be late. How
did everything go at the plant today?”
“Not so good,” Teena’s father said tiredly.
“In fact, not good at all.”
Problems. It seemed that everyone had
problems, Eddie thought, as he started to
leave.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/5/3/2/6/53269//53269-h//53269-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | How many times does Eddie go over to Teena’s house? What is the common thread, or reason, for Eddie going over there?
| 53269_4YLGV4PU_9 | [
"Three times. Each time concern Eddie’s infatuation with Teena, which is why he makes up excuses like going prospecting at Cedar point. \n",
"Twice. Both times concern Eddie’s infatuation with Teena, which is why he makes up excuses like going prospecting for uranium. \n",
"Twice. Both times concern something to do with Eddie’s interest in radioactivity. \n",
"Three times. Each time concern something to do with Eddie’s interest in radioactivity.\n"
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53,269 | 53269_4YLGV4PU | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Atom Mystery [Young Atom Detective] | 1954.0 | Coombs, Charles Ira | Mystery and detective stories; Nuclear physics -- Juvenile fiction; Scientists -- Juvenile fiction; PZ | YOUNG READERS
Atom Mystery
11
CHAPTER ONE
It was only a dream. Eddie Taylor would like
to have finished it, but the bar of morning sunlight
poking in under the window shade pried
his eyes open. The dream fled. Eddie kicked
off the sheet, swung his feet to the floor, and
groped under the bed for his tennis shoes.
He heard his father’s heavy footsteps in the
hallway. They stopped outside of his bedroom
door.
“You awake, Eddie?”
“I’m awake, Dad,” Eddie answered.
“Breakfast’s ready. Get washed and
dressed.”
12
“Be right there,” Eddie said. Then, remembering
the dream, he added, “Oh, Dad, is it
all right if I use the Geiger counter today?”
Mr. Taylor opened the door. He was a big
man, broad-shouldered and still thin-waisted.
Eddie found it easy to believe the stories he
had heard about his father being an outstanding
football player in his time. Even his glasses
and the gray hair at his temples didn’t add
much age, although Eddie knew it had been
eighteen years since his father had played his
last game of college football.
“You may use the Geiger counter any time
you want, Eddie,” Mr. Taylor said, “as long as
you take good care of it. You figured out where
you can find some uranium ore?”
Eddie smiled sheepishly. “I—I had a
dream,” he said. “Plain as day. It was out on
Cedar Point. I was walking along over some
rocks. Suddenly the Geiger counter began
clicking like everything.”
13
“Cedar Point?” his father asked. “I’ve
never been out there. But, from what I hear,
there are plenty of rock formations. Might
be worth a try, at that. You never can tell
where you might strike some radioactivity.”
“Do you believe in dreams, Dad?”
“Well, now, that’s a tough question, son.
I can’t say that I really do. Still, one clue is
as good as another when it comes to hunting
uranium ore, I guess. But right now we’d
better get out to breakfast before your mother
scalps us. Hurry it up.” His father turned
and went back down the hallway toward the
kitchen.
Eddie pulled on his trousers and T shirt
and went into the bathroom. He washed hurriedly,
knowing that even if he missed a spot
or two, he was fairly safe. During the summer
months his freckles got so thick and dark that
it would take a magnifying glass to detect any
small smudges of dirt hiding among them. He
plastered some water on his dark-red hair,
pushed a comb through it, and shrugged as it
snapped back almost to its original position.
Oh, well, he had tried.
14
He grinned into the mirror, reached a
finger into his mouth, and unhooked the
small rubber bands from his tooth braces.
He dropped them into the waste basket. He’d
put fresh ones in after breakfast.
He brushed his teeth carefully, taking particular
pains around the metal braces. The
tooth-straightening orthodontist had warned
him about letting food gather around the
metal clamps. It could start cavities.
Finished, Eddie went out to breakfast.
“Good morning, dear,” his mother greeted
him, handing him a plate of eggs.
“Hi, Mom,” Eddie said. “Gotta hurry. Big
day today.”
“So your father says. But I’m afraid your
big day will have to start with sorting out and
tying up those newspapers and magazines that
have been collecting in the garage.”
“Aw, Mom—”
“Eddie, I asked you to do it three days ago.
Remember? And the Goodwill truck comes
around today.”
“But, Mom—”
15
“No arguments, son,” his father put in
calmly but firmly. “School vacation doesn’t
mean that your chores around here are on
vacation, too. Get at it right away, and you’ll
still have time to hunt your uranium.
“Well,” Mr. Taylor added, excusing himself
from the table, “I’d better be getting over
to school. I’m expecting to receive shipment
of a new radioisotope today.”
The very word excited Eddie. In fact, anything
having to do with atomic science
excited him. He knew something about
isotopes—pronounced
eye-suh-tope
. You
couldn’t have a father who was head of the
atomic-science department at Oceanview
College without picking up a little knowledge
along the way. Eddie knew that a radioisotope
was a material which had been “cooked” in an
atomic reactor until it was “hot” with radioactivity.
When carefully controlled, the radiation
stored up in such isotopes was used in
many beneficial ways.
16
“Why don’t college professors get summer
vacations, too?” Eddie asked. One reason for
asking that particular question was to keep
from prying deeper into the subject of the
radioisotope. Much of his father’s work at
Oceanview College was of a secret nature.
Eddie had learned not to ask questions about
it. His father usually volunteered any information
he wanted known, so Eddie stuck to
questions which could and would be answered.
“We get vacations,” his father said. “But—well,
my work is a little different, you know.
At the speed atomic science is moving today,
we simply can’t afford to waste time. But don’t
worry. We’ll take a week or so off before school
starts in the fall. Maybe head for the mountains
with our tent and sleeping bags.”
“And Geiger counter?” Eddie asked
eagerly.
“Wouldn’t think of leaving it home,” his
father said, smiling. “By the way, I put new
batteries in it the other day. Take it easy on
them. Remember to switch it off when you’re
not actually using it.”
“I will,” Eddie promised. He had forgotten
several times before, weakening the batteries.
17
It took Eddie over an hour to sort out the
newspapers and magazines in the garage, tie
them in neat bundles, and place them out on
the front curb for the Goodwill pickup. By
that time the sun was high overhead. It had
driven off the coolness which the ocean air
had provided during the earlier hours.
“Anything else, Mom?” he asked, returning
to the house and getting the Geiger counter
out of the closet. He edged toward the back
door before his mother had much time to
think of something more for him to do.
“I guess not, dear,” Mrs. Taylor said, smiling
over his hasty retreat. “What are you going
to do?”
“Think I’ll do a little prospecting,” Eddie
said.
“Where?”
“Probably in the hills beyond the college,”
Eddie said. The more he thought about it, the
more he realized it was a little late in the day
to go to Cedar Point. The best way to get
there was by rowboat across Moon Bay, and
that was too long a row to be starting now.
Besides, there were plenty of other places
around the outskirts of Oceanview where
likely looking rock formations invited search
with a Geiger counter.
18
“Are you going alone?” his mother asked.
“Oh, guess I’ll stop by and see if Teena
wants to go,” Eddie answered casually. He
tried to make it sound as though he would
be doing Teena Ross a big favor. After all,
she was only a girl. Eddie didn’t figure a girl
would make a very good uranium prospecting
partner, but most of the fellows he knew were
away at camp, or vacationing with their folks,
or something like that.
“She’ll enjoy it, I’m sure,” his mother said.
“I’ll take Sandy, too,” Eddie said. “He needs
the exercise.”
“That’s a good idea, dear. Be back in time
for an early dinner.”
Eddie let Sandy off his chain. The taffy-colored
cocker spaniel yipped wildly over his
freedom, racing back and forth as Eddie
started down the street.
19
Christina Ross—whom everybody called
Teena—lived at the far end of the block.
Eddie went around to the side door of the
light-green stucco house and knocked.
“Oh, hi, Eddie,” Teena greeted him, appearing
at the screen door. “I was hoping
you’d come over.”
“Well, I—I just happened to be going by,”
Eddie said. “Thought you might want to
watch me do a little prospecting with the Geiger
counter. But maybe you’re too busy.”
That’s how to handle it, Eddie thought.
Don’t act anxious. Let Teena be anxious.
Then maybe she’ll even offer to bring along
a couple of sandwiches or some fruit.
“Oh, I’d love to go,” Teena said eagerly,
“but I’m just finishing the dishes. Come on
in.”
“I’m in kind of a hurry.”
“I’ll only be a minute.” She pushed the
screen door open for him. “I’ll make us some
sandwiches.”
“Stay here, Sandy,” Eddie said. “Sit.” The
dog minded, although he looked a bit rebellious.
20
Eddie went inside and followed Teena to
the kitchen. He felt triumphant about the
sandwiches.
Teena tossed him a dish towel. “You dry
them,” she said.
“Who, me?”
“Why not? You’re in a hurry, aren’t you?
I can make the sandwiches while you dry the
silverware.” She smiled, putting tiny crinkles
in her small, slightly upturned nose. She wore
her hair in a pony tail. Even though her hair
was blond all year long, it seemed even
lighter in the summer. Eddie couldn’t tell
whether the sun had faded it, or whether her
deep summer tan simply made her hair look
lighter by contrast. Maybe both.
“Hello, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross said, coming into
the kitchen. “Looks like Teena put you to
work.”
“She always does, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie said,
pretending great injury. “Don’t know why I
keep coming over here.”
“I know,” Teena spoke up quickly. “It’s
because we’re friends, that’s why.”
21
Eddie knew she was right. They were
friends—good friends. They had been ever
since Eddie’s family had moved to Oceanview
and his father had become head of the college’s
atomic-science department. In fact, their
parents were close friends, also. Teena’s father
was chief engineer for the Acme Aviation
Company, one of the coast town’s largest
manufacturing concerns.
“Well, I’ll be glad to finish them, Eddie,”
Mrs. Ross offered. “I know how boys detest
doing dishes.”
“Oh, I don’t really mind, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie
said. “Besides, Teena’s making sandwiches to
take with us.”
“Another prospecting trip?” Teena’s
mother glanced at the Geiger counter which
Eddie had set carefully on the dinette table.
“I still think there must be some uranium
around here,” Eddie insisted. “And we can
find it if anyone can.”
“I agree,” Mrs. Ross said. “But even if you
don’t find it, you both seem to enjoy your
hikes.”
22
“Oh, yes, it’s fun, Mother,” Teena replied,
wrapping wax paper around a sandwich.
“Guess I’m ready. I’ve got a bone for Sandy,
too.”
“Don’t go too far out from town,” Mrs.
Ross cautioned, as Eddie picked up the Geiger
counter. “And stick near the main roads.
You know the rules.”
“We sure do, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie assured
her. “And we’ll be back early.”
They walked past the college campus, and
toward the rocky foothills beyond. At various
rock mounds and outcroppings, Eddie
switched on the Geiger counter. The needle
of the dial on the black box wavered slightly.
A slow clicking came through the earphones,
but Eddie knew these indicated no more than
a normal background count. There were slight
traces of radioactivity in almost all earth or
rocks. It was in the air itself, caused by mysterious
and ever-present cosmic rays, so there
was always a mild background count when
the Geiger counter was turned on; but to
mean anything, the needle had to jump far
ahead on the gauge, and the clicking through
the earphones had to speed up until it sounded
almost like bacon frying in a hot skillet.
23
There was none of that today. After they
had hiked and searched most of the forenoon,
Eddie said, “We might as well call it a day,
Teena. Doesn’t seem to be anything out here.”
“It’s all right with me,” Teena agreed,
plucking foxtails from Sandy’s ears. “Pretty
hot, anyway. Let’s eat our sandwiches and go
back home.”
“All right,” Eddie said. “You know, one of
these days I’d like to go out to Cedar Point
and scout around. Maybe we’ll find something
there.” Then he told Teena about his dream.
Teena smiled. “A dream sure isn’t much to
go on,” she said, “but they say it’s pretty out on
Cedar Point. I’ll go any time you want to,
Eddie.” She handed him one of the sandwiches.
It was midafternoon by the time they arrived
back at Teena’s house. They worked a while
on a new jigsaw puzzle Teena had received
on a recent birthday. Then Eddie said good-by
and went on down the street toward his
own home.
24
After putting Sandy on his long chain and
filling his water dish, Eddie went in the back
door. He put the Geiger counter in the closet
and went into the kitchen.
“What’s for dinner, Mom?” he asked.
Mrs. Taylor turned from the sink. Eddie
knew at once, just seeing the expression on
his mother’s face, that something was wrong.
“Dinner?” his mother said absently. “It’s
not quite four o’clock yet, Eddie. Besides,
dinner may be a little late today.”
“But this morning you said it would be
early,” Eddie reminded her, puzzled.
“This morning I didn’t know what might
happen.”
25
Then Eddie heard the sound of his father’s
voice coming from the den. There was a
strange urgent tone in it. The door to the den
was open. Eddie went through the dining
room and glanced into the den. His father
sat stiffly behind his homemade desk, talking
rapidly into the telephone. Eddie caught only
the last few sketchy words. Then his father
placed the telephone in its cradle, glanced up,
and saw Eddie.
If there had been even the slightest doubt
in Eddie’s mind about something being
wrong, it vanished now. Mr. Taylor looked
years older than he had that very morning.
Worry lay deep in his eyes. He fumbled
thoughtfully with a pencil, turning it end over
end on his desk.
“Hello, son,” he said. He didn’t even ask
whether Eddie had discovered any uranium
ore that day. Always before, he had shown
genuine interest in Eddie’s prospecting trips.
“Dad,” Eddie said anxiously, “what—what’s
the matter?”
“It shows that much, does it, son?” his
father said tiredly.
“What’s wrong, Dad?” Eddie prompted.
“Or can’t you tell me?”
Mr. Taylor leaned back. “Quite a bit’s
wrong, Eddie,” he said, “and I guess there’s
no reason why I shouldn’t tell you. It’ll be in
the evening papers, anyway.”
26
“Evening papers?”
“Eddie, you remember me mentioning this
morning about that radioisotope shipment I
was expecting today?”
“I remember,” Eddie said. “Did it come?”
“It did—and it didn’t,” his father said.
“What does that mean, Dad?” Eddie asked,
puzzled.
“The delivery truck arrived at the school
with it,” his father explained, “but while the
driver was inquiring where to put it, the container
disappeared.”
“Disappeared?”
“The radioisotope was stolen, Eddie,” his
father said slowly. “Stolen right out from
under our noses!”
27
CHAPTER TWO
At the moment, Eddie didn’t pry for further
information on the theft of the valuable radioactive
isotope. His father had plenty on his
mind, as it was. The main information was in
the evening
Globe
, which Eddie rushed out
to get as soon as he heard it plop onto the
front porch.
He took the newspaper to his father to read
first. After having finished, Mr. Taylor handed
the paper to Eddie and leaned back thoughtfully
in his chair.
28
“They’ve got it pretty straight, at that,” Mr.
Taylor said, “but I’m afraid this is going to
stir up quite a bit of trouble.”
“It wasn’t your fault, was it, Dad?” Eddie
defended.
“It was as much mine as anybody’s, son,”
his father said. “Probably more so. After all,
I am head of the department. I knew about
the shipment. That should make it my responsibility
to see that it was properly received
and placed in our atomic-materials storage
vault. But there is little point in trying to
place the blame on anyone. I’m willing to accept
that part of it. The important thing is
that we recover that radioisotope. Not only is
it of a secret nature, but it is also dangerously
radioactive if improperly handled.”
“But—but wasn’t it in a safe container?”
Eddie asked.
29
“Of course,” his father said. “There were
only two ounces of it in a fifty-pound lead
capsule. As long as it remains in that capsule
it’s safe. As you know, the lead prevents any
radiation from escaping. Out of that capsule,
however, those two ounces of radioisotope can
be very dangerous.”
“Fifty pounds,” Eddie said thoughtfully.
“That’s a pretty big thing to steal, isn’t it?”
“Not when it’s lead, son,” his father replied.
“Not much bigger than a two-quart
milk bottle, in fact.”
“Even at that, no kid could have taken it,”
Eddie said.
“Kid?” His father smiled thinly. “We don’t
think it was any kid, Eddie. Not by a long
shot. The whole thing was carefully planned
and carefully carried out. It was not the work
of amateurs.”
Eddie read the newspaper account. The
small truck from Drake Ridge, where one of
the country’s newest atomic reactors was
located, had arrived earlier than expected at
Oceanview College. It had backed up to the
receiving dock where all of the college supplies
were delivered. Since deliveries during vacation
months were few, there was no one on the
dock when the truck arrived. A half hour later,
when the delivery was expected, there would
have been. The truck’s early arrival had
caught them unprepared.
30
The driver had left the truck and had gone
around the building to the front office. It had
taken him less than five minutes to locate the
receiving-dock foreman. Together, they had
returned through the small warehouse and
opened the rear door onto the dock.
During that short time someone had pried
open the heavy padlock on the delivery truck’s
rear door and had stolen the fifty-pound lead
capsule containing the radioisotope.
Dusty footprints on the pavement around
the rear of the truck indicated that two men
had carried out the theft. A heavy iron pry bar
had been dropped at the rear of the truck after
the lock was sprung. It was a common type
used by carpenters. There were no fingerprints
or other identifying marks on it. The footprints
were barely visible and of no help other
than to indicate that two men were involved
in the crime.
31
“Dad,” Eddie asked, looking up from the
paper, “how could anyone carry away something
weighing fifty pounds without being noticed?”
“Chances are they had their car parked
nearby,” his father said. “As you know, there
are no fences or gates around Oceanview College.
People come and go as they please. As a
matter of fact, there are always quite a few
automobiles parked around the shipping and
receiving building, and parking space is scarce
even during summer sessions. Anyone could
park and wait there unnoticed. Or they could
walk around without attracting any undue attention.”
“But, Dad,” Eddie continued, “how would
the men know that the delivery truck would
arrive a half hour early?”
“They wouldn’t,” his father said. “They
may have had another plan. The way things
worked out, they didn’t need to use it. The
early delivery and the business of leaving the
truck unguarded for a few minutes probably
gave them a better opportunity than they had
expected. At least, they took quick advantage
of it.”
32
“I don’t see what anyone would want with
a radioisotope,” Eddie said. “Maybe they figured
there was something else inside of that
lead capsule.”
“That’s unlikely, son,” Mr. Taylor said.
“Believe me, it was no common theft. Nor
were the thieves ordinary thieves. That isotope
was a new one. A very secret one. Our job at
the college was to conduct various tests with it
in order to find out exactly how it could best
be put to use as a cure for disease, or for sterilizing
food, or even as a source of power.”
“Power?” Eddie said. “Boy, it must have
been a strong isotope.” He knew that the
strength of radioisotopes could be controlled
largely by the length of time they were allowed
to “cook” in an atomic reactor and soak up
radioactivity.
33
“We weren’t planning to run a submarine
with it,” his father said. “It wasn’t that strong.
Still, it doesn’t take so very much radioactivity
to make two ounces of an isotope quite powerful—and
quite deadly. I only hope whoever
stole it knows what he’s doing. However, I’m
sure he does.”
“You mean he must have been an atomic
scientist himself?” Eddie asked.
“Let’s just say he—or both of them—have
enough training in the subject to know how to
handle that isotope safely,” Mr. Taylor said.
“But, Dad,” Eddie wondered, “what could
they do with it?”
“They could study it,” his father explained.
“At least, they could send it somewhere to be
broken down and studied. Being a new isotope,
the formula is of great value.”
“What do you mean, send it somewhere?”
Eddie asked.
“Perhaps to some other country.”
“Then—then you mean whoever stole it
were spies!” Eddie exclaimed breathlessly.
“That’s entirely possible,” his father said.
“In fact, it’s the only logical explanation I can
think of. People simply don’t go around stealing
radioactive isotopes without a mighty important
reason.”
34
“Dinner’s ready,” Eddie’s mother called
from the kitchen.
During dinner Eddie wasn’t sure just what
he was eating. The idea of spies stealing atomic
materials kept building up in his mind. By the
time dessert was finished, he was anxious to
talk with someone, yet he knew he shouldn’t
bother his father with any more questions. He
asked if he could go over and visit with Teena
for a while.
“Well, you were together most of the day,”
his mother said, “but I guess it’s all right. Be
back in about an hour, though.”
It was a balmy evening. On such evenings,
he and Teena sometimes walked along the
beach barefoot, collecting sea shells. Today
Eddie had no desire to do that. He ran down
the block.
Teena answered his knock.
“Come on in, Eddie,” she invited, seeming
surprised to see him. “Mother and I are just
finishing dinner.”
“Oh, I figured you’d be through by now,”
Eddie apologized, following her inside.
35
“Hello, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross said, but she
didn’t seem as cheerful as usual.
“Good evening, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie said. “I—I
hope I’m not making a pest of myself.” He
looked around for Mr. Ross, but Teena’s
father apparently hadn’t arrived home from
Acme Aircraft yet. There wasn’t a place set for
him at the table, either.
“You’re never a pest, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross assured
him. “I was going to call your mother in
a little while about that newspaper write-up.”
“Oh, you read it?” Eddie said.
“How could anyone miss it?” Teena said.
“Right on the front page.”
“I suppose your father is quite concerned
over it,” Teena’s mother said.
“Oh, yes,” Eddie affirmed. “He was the one
who ordered the isotope.”
“What’s an isotope?” Teena asked.
“I’m not sure I know, either,” Mrs. Ross
said. “Maybe we could understand more of
what it’s all about if you could explain what a
radioisotope is, Eddie.”
36
“Well,” Eddie said slowly, “it’s not easy to
explain, but I’ll try. You know how rare
uranium is. There’s not nearly enough of it to
fill all the needs for radioactive materials. Besides,
pure uranium is so powerful and expensive
and dangerous to handle that it’s not
a very good idea to try using it in its true form.
So they build an atomic reactor like the one at
Drake Ridge.”
“We’ve driven by it,” Mrs. Ross said. “My,
it’s a big place.”
“I’ll say,” Eddie agreed. “Of course, only
one building holds the reactor itself. It’s the
biggest building near the center.”
“I remember it,” Teena said.
“Well, the reactor is about four stories
high,” Eddie went on. “They call it a uranium
‘pile.’ It’s made up of hundreds and hundreds
of graphite bricks. That’s where they get the
name ‘pile’—from brick pile. Anyway, scattered
around in between the bricks are small
bits of uranium. Uranium atoms are radioactive.
That is, they keep splitting up and sending
out rays.”
“Why do they do that?” Teena asked.
37
“It’s just the way nature made uranium, I
guess,” Eddie said. “Most atoms stay in one
piece, although they move around lickety-split
all of the time. Uranium atoms not only move
around, but they break apart. They shoot out
little particles called neutrons. These neutrons
hit other atoms and split them apart, sending
out more neutrons. It’s a regular chain reaction.”
“I’ve heard of chain reactions,” Mrs. Ross
said.
“Well, with all of the splitting up and moving
around of the uranium atoms,” Eddie went
on, “an awful lot of heat builds up. If they
don’t control it—well, you’ve seen pictures of
atomic-bomb explosions. That’s a chain reaction
out of control.”
“Out of control is right,” Teena said.
38
“But the atomic piles control the reaction,”
Eddie said. “The graphite bricks keep the
splitting-up atoms apart so one neutron won’t
go smashing into other atoms unless they want
it to. They have ways of controlling it so that
only as much radiation builds up as they want.
You can even hear the reactor hum as the radioactive
rays go tearing through it. But by
careful tending, the scientists keep the atomic
collisions far enough apart so the thing doesn’t
blow up.”
“Boy, that sounds dangerous,” Teena said.
“Well, they know just how to do it,” Eddie
replied.
“Aren’t the rays dangerous?” Mrs. Ross
asked.
“I’ll say they’re dangerous,” Eddie said.
“But the whole pile is covered by a shield of
concrete about eight feet thick. That keeps the
rays from getting out and injuring the workmen.”
“Goodness. Eight feet is a lot of cement.”
“It takes a lot to stop radioactive atomic
particles,” Eddie explained. “Especially the
gamma rays. They’re the fastest and most dangerous,
and the hardest to stop. Alpha and beta
rays are fairly easy to stop. But the gamma
rays are regular high-velocity invisible bullets.
They’ll go right through a stone wall unless
it’s plenty thick. Of course, you can’t see them.
Not with even the most powerful microscope
in the world.”
39
“I wouldn’t want to work around a place
where I might get shot at by—by dangerous
rays you can’t even see,” Teena said.
“I would,” Eddie said. “Everyone is carefully
protected. They see to that. Well, anyway,
if all of those uranium atoms were shooting
radioactive rays around inside of that pile
and doing nothing, there would be an awful
lot of energy going to waste. So the atomic
scientists take certain elements which aren’t
radioactive, but can be made radioactive, and
shove small pieces of them into holes drilled
in the pile.”
“Isn’t that dangerous?” Teena asked.
“They don’t shove them in with their bare
hands,” Eddie said, trying not to show exasperation.
“They use long holders to push the
small chunks of material into the holes in the
reactor. Then, as those uranium atoms keep
splitting up and shooting particles around inside
of the pile, some of them smack into the
chunks of material, and stick there. Most elements
will soak up radiation, just like a sponge
soaks up water.”
40
“My, that’s interesting, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross
said.
“I’ve seen them do it,” Eddie said proudly,
then added, “from behind a protective shield,
of course. When the material has soaked up
enough radiation, they pull it back out. They
say it’s ‘cooked.’”
“You mean it’s hot?” Teena asked.
“It’s hot,” Eddie said, “but not like if it
came out of a stove. By hot, they mean it’s
radioactive. If you touched it, or even got near
it, you would get burned, but you probably
wouldn’t even know it for a while. It would be
a radiation burn. That’s a kind of burn you
don’t feel, but it destroys your blood cells and
tissues, and—well, you’ve had it.”
“So that’s what a radioisotope is,” Mrs. Ross
said. “It’s like a sponge. Only instead of soaking
up water, it soaks up radiation.”
41
“That’s about it,” Eddie said. “My dad says
that as more is learned about the ways to use
isotopes, the whole world is going to be improved.
You’ve heard of radiocobalt for curing
cancer. Well, that’s an isotope. They make it
by cooking cobalt in an atomic reactor. Oh,
there are hundreds of different isotopes. Like
I said, isotopes can be made of most of the
elements. And there are over a hundred elements.
Some soak up a lot of radioactivity, and
are strong and dangerous. Others absorb only
a little and are pretty safe to use. Depends, too,
on how long they let them cook in the reactor.”
“What kind was the one stolen from the
college today?” Teena asked.
“Dad didn’t say exactly,” Eddie answered,
“except he did say that if whoever took it
didn’t know what he was doing and opened up
the lead capsule, it could kill him. Of course,
even the mild isotopes are deadly if they’re not
handled right.”
“My goodness, it is a serious matter, isn’t
it?” Mrs. Ross said.
42
Eddie nodded. It was even more serious
than its threat of danger to anyone who
handled it carelessly. It was a new isotope—a
secret isotope. His father hadn’t said whether
it had been developed for curing things or for
destroying things. But many radioisotopes
could do either; it depended on how they were
used. Eddie assumed that anyone who would
stoop to stealing isotopes more than likely
would be interested in their ability to destroy
rather than their ability to benefit mankind.
“Well, I certainly do hope everything works
out all right,” Teena’s mother said.
“So do I,” Teena agreed.
Eddie glanced at the kitchen clock. “Oh,
boy,” he said, “I’d better be heading back
home. I didn’t mean to come over here and
talk so long.”
“Oh, we’re glad you did, Eddie,” Mrs. Ross
said. “I’m afraid too few of us know anything
about this atom business.”
43
“That’s right, Mrs. Ross,” Eddie agreed.
“People should talk more and read more about
it. After all, this is an atomic age. We might as
well face it. My father says that in horse-and-buggy
days everyone knew how to feed a horse
and grease a wagon wheel. They knew what was
needed to get the work done. But now that
atoms are being harnessed to do the work, not
many people even bother to find out what an
atom is.”
Mrs. Ross smiled. “I guess you’re right,
Eddie,” she said, “but I wouldn’t quite know
how to go about feeding an atom.”
“Or greasing one,” Teena added.
Eddie laughed. “I sure wouldn’t want the
job of trying to feed a herd of them the size of
a period,” he said. “Did you know that there
are about three million billion atoms of carbon
in a single period printed at the end of a
sentence. That’s how small atoms are.”
“Three million billion is a lot of something,”
a man’s voice spoke behind him.
“What are we talking about, Eddie?”
“Oh, hello, Mr. Ross,” Eddie said, turning
around and standing up. “I didn’t hear you
come in.”
44
Teena’s father was a medium-sized man
with light-brown hair which was getting somewhat
thin on top. He was usually quite cheerful
and full of fun, but tonight his face seemed
unusually drawn and sober. He stepped to the
table, leaned over, and gave both Teena and
Mrs. Ross a kiss on the cheek.
“Eddie was telling us about atoms,” Teena’s
mother said. “Did you know there were three
million billion of them in a period?”
“How many in a comma?” Mr. Ross said to
Eddie, then added quickly, “forget it, Eddie.
It wasn’t very funny. I—I’m afraid I don’t feel
very funny tonight.”
“Sit down, dear,” Mrs. Ross said. “I’ll warm
your dinner. You didn’t sound very cheerful
when you called to say you would be late. How
did everything go at the plant today?”
“Not so good,” Teena’s father said tiredly.
“In fact, not good at all.”
Problems. It seemed that everyone had
problems, Eddie thought, as he started to
leave.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/5/3/2/6/53269//53269-h//53269-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | How does Teena find out about radioactivity?
| 53269_4YLGV4PU_10 | [
"Eddie teaches her about radioactivity during their hike to Cedar Point.\n",
"Eddie teaches her about radioactivity while he helps her finish doing the dishes.\n",
"Eddie teaches her about radioactivity when he is explaining the dream he had about Cedar Point.\n",
"Eddie teaches Teena and her mother about about radioactivity after the news gets out about Mr. Taylor’s isotope being stolen. \n"
] | 4 | 4 | [
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61,481 | 61481_LZNKW9Z1 | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Silence is—Deadly | 1950.0 | Shurtleff, Bertrand | United States. Navy -- Fiction; PS; Science fiction; Inventors -- Fiction; World War, 1939-1945 -- Naval operations -- Fiction; Radio -- Fiction | SILENCE IS—DEADLY
By Bertrand L. Shurtleff
Radio is an absolute necessity in modern
organization—and particularly in modern
naval organization. If you could silence all
radio—silence of that sort would be deadly!
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Astounding Science-Fiction April 1942.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
The hurried
rat-a-tat
of knuckles hammered on the cabin door.
Commander Bob Curtis roused himself from his doze, got up from his
chair, stretched himself to his full, lanky height and yawned. That
would be Nelson, his navigating officer. Nelson always knocked that
way—like a man in an external state of jitters over nothing at all.
Curtis didn't hurry. It pleased him to let Nelson wait. He moved slowly
to the door, paused there, and flung a backward glance at the man in
the cabin with him—Zukor Androka, the elderly Czech scientist, a guest
of the United States navy, here aboard the cruiser
Comerford
.
The wizened face of the older man was molded in intent lines of
concentration, as his bushy gray head bent over his drawing board.
Curtis got a glimpse of the design on which he was working, and his
lips relaxed in a faint smile.
Androka had arrived on board the
Comerford
the day before she sailed
from Norfolk. With him came a boatload of scientific apparatus and
equipment, including a number of things that looked like oxygen tanks,
which were now stored in the forward hold. Androka had watched over
his treasures with the jealous care of a mother hen, and spent hours
daily in the room in the superstructure that had been assigned as his
laboratory.
Sometimes, Curtis thought old Androka was a bit wacky—a scientist
whose mind had been turned by the horror that had come to his country
under the domination of the Nazi
gestapo
. At other times, the man
seemed a genius. Perhaps that was the answer—a mad genius!
Curtis opened the door and looked out. Rain whipped against his face
like a stinging wet lash. Overhead, the sky was a storm-racked mass of
clouds, broken in one spot by a tiny patch of starlit blue.
His eyes rested inquiringly on the face of the man who stood before
him. It
was
Nelson, his shaggy blond brows drawn scowlingly down
over his pale eyes; his thin face a mass of tense lines; his big hands
fumbling at the neck of his slicker. Rain was coursing down his white
cheeks, streaking them with glistening furrows.
The fellow was a headache to Curtis. He was overfriendly with a
black-browed bos'n's mate named Joe Bradford—the worst trouble maker
on board. But there was no question of his ability. He was a good
navigating officer—dependable, accurate, conscientious. Nevertheless,
his taut face, restless, searching eyes, and eternally nervous manner
got Curtis' goat.
"Come in, Nelson!" he said.
Nelson shouldered his way inside, and stood there in his dripping
oilskins, blinking his eyes against the yellow light.
Curtis closed the door and nodded toward the bent form of Zukor
Androka, with a quizzical grin. "Old Czech-and-Double-Czech is working
hard on his latest invention to pull Hitler's teeth and re-establish
the Czech Republic!"
Nelson had no answering smile, although there had been a great deal
of good-natured joking aboard the
Comerford
ever since the navy
department had sent the scientist on board the cruiser to carry on his
experiments.
"I'm worried, sir!" Nelson said. "I'm not sure about my dead reckoning.
This storm—"
Curtis threw his arm around Nelson's dripping shoulders. "Forget it!
Don't let a little error get you down!"
"But this storm, sir!" Nelson avoided Curtis' friendly eyes and slipped
out from under his arm. "It's got me worried. Quartering wind of
undetermined force, variable and gusty. There's a chop to the sea—as
if from unestimated currents among the islets. No chance to check by
observation, and now there is a chance—look at me!"
He held out his hands. They were shaking as if he had the chills.
"You say there is a chance?" Curtis asked. "Stars out?"
"As if by providence, sir, there's a clear patch. I'm wondering—" His
voice trailed off, but his eyes swung toward the gleaming sextant on
the rack.
Commander Curtis shrugged good-naturedly and reached for the
instrument. "Not that I've lost confidence in you, Nels, but just
because you asked for it!"
Curtis donned his slicker and went outside, sextant in hand. In a few
minutes he returned and handed Nelson a sheet of paper with figures
underlined heavily.
"Here's what I make it," the commander told his navigating officer.
"Bet you're not off appreciably."
Nelson stared at the computations with shaking head. Then he mutely
held up his own.
Curtis stared, frowned, grabbed his own sheet again. "Any time I'm
that far off old Figure-'em Nelson's estimate, I'm checking back," he
declared, frowning at the two papers and hastily rechecking his own
figures.
"Call up to the bridge to stop her," he told Nelson. "We can't afford
to move in these waters with such a possibility of error!"
Nelson complied, and the throbbing drive of the engines lessened
at once. Nelson said: "I've been wondering, sir, if it wouldn't be
advisable to try getting a radio cross-bearing. With all these rocks
and islets—"
"Radio?" repeated the little Czech, thrusting his face between the
other two, in his independent fashion that ignored ship's discipline.
"You're using your radio?" He broke into a knowing chuckle, his keen
old eyes twinkling behind their thick lenses. "Go ahead and try it. See
how much you can get! It will be no more than Hitler can get when Zukor
Androka decrees silence over the German airways! Try it! Try it, I say!"
Bob Curtis stared at him, as if questioning his sanity. Then he
hastened to the radio room, with Nelson at his heels, and the Czech
trotting along behind.
The door burst open as they neared it. A frightened operator came out,
still wearing his earphones, and stood staring upward incredulously at
the aërial.
"Get us a radio cross-bearing for location at once," Curtis said
sharply, for the operator seemed in a daze.
"Bearing, sir?" The man brought his eyes down with difficulty, as if
still dissatisfied. "I'm sorry, sir, but the outfit's dead. Went out on
me about five minutes ago. I was taking the weather report when the set
conked. I was trying to see if something's wrong."
The Czech inventor giggled. Curtis gave him another curious look and
thrust himself into the radio room.
"Try again!" he told the operator. "See what you can get!"
The radio man leaped to his seat and tried frantically. Again and
again, he sent off a request for a cross-bearing from shore stations
that had recently been established to insure safety to naval vessels,
but there was no answer on any of the bands—not even the blare of a
high-powered commercial program in the higher reach, nor the chatter of
ships or amateurs on the shorter.
"Dead!" Androka muttered, with a bitter laugh. "Yet not dead,
gentlemen! The set is uninjured. The waves are what have been upset. I
have shattered them around your ship, just as I can eventually shatter
them all over Central Europe! For the next two hours, no radio messages
can enter or leave my zone of radio silence—of refracted radio waves,
set up by my little station on one of the neighboring islets!"
There was a long pause, while commander and navigator stared at him.
Curtis was the first to speak.
"Your secrecy might well cost the United States navy one of its best
light cruisers—and us our lives!" he said angrily. "We need that check
by radio at once! If you're not talking nonsense, call off your dogs
till we learn just where we are!"
Androka held out his palms helplessly. "I can do nothing. I have given
orders to my assistant that he must keep two hours of radio silence! I
can get no message to him, for our radio is dead!"
As if to mock him, the ship's radio began to answer:
"Station 297 calling U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
. Station 297 calling U.
S. Cruiser
Comerford
—"
"U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
calling Station 297!" the operator intoned,
winking at the two officers over Androka's discomfiture, and asked for
the bearings.
The answer came back: "Bearings north east by a quarter east, U. S.
Cruiser
Comerford
!"
Curtis sighed with relief. He saw that Nelson was staring fiercely
at the radio operator, as the man went on calling: "U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
calling Station 364. U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
calling
Station 364—"
Then the instrument rasped again: "Station 364 calling U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
. Bearings north west by three west. Bearings north west by
three west, U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
from Cay 364."
Commander and navigator had both scribbled verifications of the
numbers. Ignoring the gibbering Androka, who was wailing his
disappointment that messages had penetrated his veil of silence, they
raced for the chart room.
Quickly the parallels stepped off the bearing from the designated
points. Light intersecting lines proclaimed a check on their position.
Curtis frowned and shook his head. Slowly he forced a reluctant grin as
he stuck out his hand.
"Shake, Nels," he said. "It's my turn to eat crow. You and the radio
must be right. Continue as you were!"
"I'm relieved, sir, just the same," Nelson admitted, "to have the radio
bearings. We'd have piled up sure if you'd been right."
They went on through the night. The starlit gap in the clouds had
closed. The sky was again a blanket of darkness pouring sheets of rain
at them.
Nelson went back to the bridge, and Androka returned to the commander's
cabin. Curtis lingered in the wireless room with the radio operator.
"It's a funny thing," the latter said, still dialing and grousing, "how
I got that cross-bearing through and can't get another squeak out of
her. I'm wondering if that old goat really
has
done something to the
ether. The set seems O. K."
He lingered over the apparatus, checking and rechecking. Tubes lighted;
wires were alive to the touch and set him to shaking his head at the
tingle they sent through his inquiring fingers.
Curtis left him at it, and went to rejoin Androka in the cabin. He
found the little inventor pacing up and down, shaking his fists in the
air; pausing every now and then to run his bony fingers through his
tangled mop of gray hair, or to claw nervously at his beard.
"You have seen a miracle, commander!" he shouted at Curtis. "
My
miracle! My invention has shattered the ether waves hereabouts
hopelessly."
"Seems to me," Curtis said dryly, "this invention can harm your friends
as much as your enemies."
The scientist drew himself up to his full height—which was only a
little over five feet. His voice grew shrill. "Wait! Just wait! There
are other inventions to supplement this one. Put them together, and
they will defeat the Nazi hordes which have ravaged my country!"
Curtis was a little shocked by the hatred that gleamed in Androka's
eyes, under their bushy brows. There was something of the wild animal
in the man's expression, as his lips drew back from his yellowed teeth.
"Those tanks you have below," Curtis said, "have they some connection
with this radio silence?"
A far-away look came into Androka's eyes. He did not seem to hear
the question. He lowered his voice: "My daughter is still in Prague.
So are my sister and her husband, and
their
two daughters. If the
gestapo
knew what I am doing, all of them would be better dead. You
understand—better dead?"
Curtis said: "I understand."
"And if the Nazi agents in America knew of the islet from which my zone
of silence is projected—" Androka paused, his head tilted to one side,
as if he were listening to something—
On deck, there was shouting and commotion. Curtis rushed out, pulling
on his slicker as he went. The shout from the watch forward had been
picked up, and was being relayed all over the ship. The words struck on
Curtis' ears with a note of impending tragedy.
"Breakers ahead!"
He was beside Navigating Officer Nelson on the bridge, and saw the
helmsman climbing the rapidly spinning wheel like a monkey as he put it
hard aport.
Then the ship struck. Everything movable shot ahead until it brought up
at the end of a swing or smacked against something solid.
Curtis felt Nelson's hand grip his shoulder, as he put his lips close
to his ear and shouted: "You must have been right, sir, and the radio
bearings and my reckoning wrong. We've hit that reef a terrific smack.
I'm afraid we're gored!"
"Get out the collision mat!" Curtis ordered. "We ought to be able to
keep her up!"
And then he became aware of a deadly stillness. A vast wall of silence
enveloped the entire cruiser. Looking over the side, he could no longer
see the waves that a few minutes before had beaten savagely against the
ship.
The
Comerford
was shrouded in a huge pall of yellowish-gray mist, and
more of it was coming up from below—from ventilators and hatchways and
skylights—as if the whole ship were flooded with some evil vapor.
Somehow, Curtis' mind flashed to the stories he'd heard of the forts of
the Maginot Line, and of other forts in Holland and Belgium that had
fallen before the early Nazi blitzkrieg, when their defenders found
themselves struck numb and helpless by a gas that had been flooded into
the inner compartments of their strongholds.
There were those who said it was the work of sappers who had tunneled
under the foundations, while others laid the induction of the gas to
Fifth Column traitors. There were a hundred more or less plausible
explanations—
The vapor clouds that enveloped the
Comerford
were becoming thicker.
All about the deck lay the forms of unconscious seamen, suddenly
stricken helpless. And then Curtis saw other forms flitting about the
deck—forms that looked like creatures from another world, but he
recognized them for what they were—men wearing gas masks.
Nelson was nowhere in sight. The steersman lay in a limp heap beside
the swinging wheel. Then a gas-masked figure appeared through the
shroud of mist and steadied it, so that the cruiser would not be
completely at the mercy of the wind and the waves.
Curtis heard the anchor let down, as if by invisible hands, the chain
screaming and flailing its clanking way through the hawse hole. Then he
was completely walled in by the yellowish-gray mist. He felt his senses
swimming.
Voices droned all around him in mumbling confusion—guttural voices
that ebbed and flowed in a tide of excited talk. He caught a word of
English now and then, mixed in with a flood of Teuton phonetics.
Two words, in particular, registered clearly on his mind. One was
"
Carethusia
"; the other was "convoy." But gradually his eardrums
began to throb, as if someone were pounding on them from the inside. He
couldn't get his breath; a cloud seemed to be mounting within him until
it swept over his brain—
He felt something strike the side of his head, and realized that he had
fallen in a heap on the bridge. And after that, he wasn't conscious of
anything—
The rain had abated to a foggy drizzle. The wash of the surf swung the
Comerford
in a lazy, rolling motion, as she lay with her bow nosing
into the sandbar at the entrance of the inlet.
From her bridge, Navigating Officer Nelson watched the gas-masked
figures moving about the decks, descending companionways—like goblins
from an ancient fairy tale or a modern horror story. Nelson looked like
a goblin himself, with his face covered by a respirator. At his side,
stood his fellow conspirator Bos'n's Mate Joe Bradford, also wearing a
gas mask.
Nelson spoke in a low tone, his lips close to Bradford's ear. "It
worked, Joe!"
"Yeah!" Bradford agreed. "It worked—fine!"
The limp bodies of the
Comerford's
crew were being carried to the
lowered accommodation ladder and transferred into waiting lifeboats.
Nelson swore under his breath. "Reckon it'll take a couple of hours
before the ship's rid of that damn gas!"
Bradford shook his head in disagreement. "The old geezer claims he's
got a neutralizing chemical in one of them tanks of his that'll clear
everything up inside half an hour."
"I'd rather get along without Androka, if we could!" Nelson muttered.
"He's nothing but a crackpot!"
"It was a crackpot who invented the gas we used to break up the
Maginot Line," Bradford reminded him. "It saved a lot of lives for the
Fuehrer
—lives that'd have been lost if the forts had to be taken by
our storm troopers!"
Nelson grunted and turned away. A short, thick-set figure in the
uniform of a German naval commander had ascended the accommodation
ladder and was mounting to the bridge. He, too, was equipped with a
respirator.
He came up to Nelson, saluted, and held out his hand, introducing
himself as Herr Kommander Brandt. He began to speak in German, but
Nelson stopped him.
"I don't speak any German," he explained. "I was born and educated in
the United States—of German parents, who had been ruined in the First
World War. My mother committed suicide when she learned that we were
penniless. My father—" He paused and cleared his throat.
"
Ja!
Your father?" the German officer prompted, dropping into
accented English. "Your father?"
"My father dedicated me to a career of revenge—to wipe out his
wrongs," Nelson continued. "If America hadn't gone into the First
World War, he wouldn't have lost his business; my mother would still
be living. When he joined the Nazi party, the way became clear to use
me—to educate me in a military prep school, then send me to Annapolis,
for a career in the United States navy—and no one suspected me. No
one—"
"Sometimes," Bradford put in, "I think Curtis suspected you."
"Maybe Curtis'll find out his suspicions were justified," Nelson said
bitterly. "But it won't do Curtis any good—a commander who's lost
his ship." He turned to Brandt. "You have plenty of men to work the
Comerford
?"
Brandt nodded his square head. "We have a full crew—two hundred
men—officers, seamen, mechanics, radio men, technical experts, all
German naval reservists living in the United States, who've been sent
here secretly, a few at a time, during the past six weeks!"
The three—Brandt, Nelson and Bradford—stood on the bridge and talked,
while the efficient stretcher-bearers worked industriously to remove
the limp bodies of the
Comerford's
unconscious crew and row them
ashore.
And when that task was completed, lifeboats began to come alongside
with strange-looking radio equipment, and more gas tanks like those
Androka had brought aboard the
Comerford
with him, and dynamos and
batteries that looked like something out of a scientific nightmare.
And bustling all over the place, barking excited commands in German,
pushing and pulling and pointing to emphasize his directions, was the
strange figure of Professor Zukor Androka!
"The professor's in his glory!" Nelson remarked to Kommander Brandt.
"Funny thing about him," Bradford put in, "is that his inventions work.
That zone of silence cut us off completely."
Kommander Brandt nodded. "Goodt! But you got your message giving your
bearings—the wrong ones?"
"Yes," Nelson said. "That came through all right. And won't Curtis have
a time explaining it!"
"Hereafter," Brandt said solemnly, "the zone of silence vill be
projected from the
Comerford
; and ve have another invention of
Androka's vich vill be even more useful vhen ve come to cut the
Carethusia
out of her convoy."
"The
Carethusia
?" Nelson asked, in a puzzled tone.
Brandt said: "She's a freighter in a convoy out of St. Johns—twelve
thousand tons. The orders are to take her; not sink her."
"What's the idea?"
"Her cargo," Brandt explained. "It iss more precious than rubies. It
includes a large shipment of boarts."
"Boarts?" Nelson repeated. "What are they?"
"Boarts," Brandt told him, "are industrial diamonds—black,
imperfectly crystallized stones, but far more valuable to us than
flawless diamonds from Tiffany's on Fift' Avenue. They are needed for
making machine tools. They come from northern Brazil—and our supply is
low."
"I should think we could get a shipment of these boarts direct from
Brazil—through the blockade," Nelson said, "without taking the risk of
capturing a United States navy cruiser."
"There are other things Germany needs desperately on board the
Carethusia
," Brandt explained. "Vanadium and nickel and hundreds of
barrels of lard oil for machine-tool lubrication. Our agents have been
watching the convoys closely for weeks for just such a cargo as the
Carethusia
is taking over."
"Can we trust Androka?" Nelson asked, with a sudden note of suspicion
in his voice.
"Yes," Brandt assured him. "Of all men—we can trust Androka!"
"But he's a Czech," Nelson argued.
"The
gestapo
takes care of Czechs and Poles and Frenchmen and other
foreigners whom it chooses as its agents," Brandt pointed out. "Androka
has a daughter and other relations in Prague. He knows that if anything
misfires, if there is the slightest suspicion of treachery on his part,
his daughter and the others will suffer. Androka's loyalty is assured!"
Nelson turned to watch the forward fighting top of the
Comerford
.
The masked German seamen were installing some sort of apparatus
up there—a strange-looking object that looked something like an
old-fashioned trench mortar, and which connected with cables to the
room that served as Androka's laboratory and workshop.
Another crew was installing radio apparatus in the mizzentop turret.
Descending a companionway to see what was going on below, Nelson found
that portholes were being opened, and men were spraying chemical around
to rid the below-decks atmosphere of the lethal gas that had overcome
the
Comerford's
American crew.
Returning to the bridge, he found that the tide in the inlet had risen
considerably, and that the cruiser was riding more easily at her anchor.
Then, at Brandt's orders, the anchor was hauled in, and lifeboats and a
motor launch were used as tugs to work the vessel entirely free of the
sand bar. This was accomplished without difficulty.
Brandt came over to where Nelson was standing on the bridge and held
out his hand.
"Congratulations, Herr Kommander Nelson!" he said. "Ve have stolen one
of the United States navy's newest and fastest cruisers!" He made a
gesture as if raising a beer stein to drink a toast. "
Prosit!
" he
added.
"
Prosit!
" Nelson repeated, and the two grinned at each other.
Stars were twinkling in a patch of black-blue sky, and broken mountains
of gray cloud were skudding before the east wind. Commander Bob Curtis
found himself lying in wet sand, on a beach, somewhere, with the
rain—now a light, driving mist—beating on his face. He was chilled;
his limbs were stiff and numb. His nose and throat felt parched inside,
as if a wave of searing heat had scorched them.
According to his last calculations, the
Comerford
had been cruising
off the Maine coast. This probably was one of the islets of that
region, or it might be the mainland.
It was hard work getting to his feet, and when he did manage to stand,
he could only plant his heels in the sand and sway to and fro for fully
a minute, like a child learning to walk.
All around him in the nearly total darkness, he could make out the dim
forms of men sprawled on the beach; and of other men moving about,
exploring. He heard the murmur of voices and saw the glow of lighted
cigarettes.
A man with a flashlight was approaching him. Its white glare shone for
a moment in Curtis' face, and the familiar voice of Ensign Jack Dillon
spoke: "Commander Curtis! Are you O. K., sir?"
"I think so!" Curtis' heart warmed at the eager expression in Dillon's
face; at the heartfelt concern in his friendly brown eyes. The young
ensign was red-headed, impetuous, thoroughly genuine in his emotions.
"How about yourself, Jack?" Curtis added.
"A bit of a headache from the gas, but that's all. Any orders, sir?"
Curtis thought for a moment. "Muster the crew, as best you can. We'll
try to make a roll call. Is there any sign of the ship?"
There was a solemn note in Dillon's voice. "No, sir. She's been worked
off the sandbar and put to sea!"
The words struck Curtis with the numbing shock of a blow on some nerve
center. For the first time, he realized fully the tragedy that had
swept down on him. He had lost his ship—one of the United States
navy's fastest and newest small light cruisers—under circumstances
which smelled strongly of treachery and sabotage.
As he thought back, he realized that he
might
have prevented the
loss, if he had been more alert, more suspicious. For it was clear to
him now that the
Comerford
had been deliberately steered to this
place; that the men who had seized her had been waiting here for that
very purpose.
The pieces of the picture fitted together like a jigsaw
puzzle—Androka's zone of silence; the bearings given by radio;
Navigating Officer Nelson's queer conduct. They were all part of a
carefully laid plan!
All the suspicious circumstances surrounding Nelson came flooding into
Curtis' mind. He had never liked the man; never trusted him. Nelson
always acted as if he had some secret, something to hide.
Curtis recalled that Nelson and Androka had long conversations
together—conversations which they would end abruptly when anyone else
came within earshot. And Nelson had always been chummy with the worst
trouble maker in the crew—Bos'n's Mate Bradford.
Curtis went around, finding the officers, issuing orders. There were
still some unconscious men to be revived. In a sheltered cove among
the rocks, an exploring group had found enough dry driftwood to make a
fire—
In another hour, the skies had cleared, and white moonlight flooded
the scene with a ghostly radiance. The men of the
Comerford
had
all regained consciousness and were drying out in front of the big
driftwood bonfires in the cove.
Curtis ordered a beacon kept burning on a high promontory. Then he got
the men lined up, according to their respective classifications, for a
check-up on the missing.
When this was completed, it was found that the
Comerford's
entire
complement of two hundred and twenty men were present—except
Navigating Officer Nelson, and Bos'n's Mate Bradford! And Zukor Androka
was also missing!
With the coming of dawn, a little exploration revealed that the
Comerford's
crew was marooned on an islet, about a square mile in
area; that they had been put ashore without food or extra clothing or
equipment of any kind, and that no boats had been left for them.
One searching party reported finding the remains of what had been a
radio station on a high promontory on the north shore of the islet.
Another had found the remains of tents and log cabins, recently
demolished, in a small, timbered hollow—a well-hidden spot invisible
from the air, unless one were flying very low; a place where two
hundred or more men could have camped.
There was a good water supply—a small creek fed by springs—but
nothing in the way of food. Evidently food was a precious commodity
which the recent inhabitants of the islet couldn't afford to leave
behind.
Curtis was studying the wreckage of the wireless station, wondering
if this might have been the source of Androka's zone of silence, when
Ensign Jack Dillon came up to him.
"There's a coast-guard cutter heading for the island, sir," he
announced.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/1/4/8/61481//61481-h//61481-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | What is Androka trying to make?
| 61481_LZNKW9Z1_1 | [
"A zone of silence that is intended to stop Axis economic flow. \n",
"A zone of silence that is deadly to all who pass through it. \n",
"A zone of silence that will stop Americans from being able to radio Europe. \n",
"A zone of silence that stops all radio signals that attempt to penetrate it. \n"
] | 4 | 4 | [
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61,481 | 61481_LZNKW9Z1 | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Silence is—Deadly | 1950.0 | Shurtleff, Bertrand | United States. Navy -- Fiction; PS; Science fiction; Inventors -- Fiction; World War, 1939-1945 -- Naval operations -- Fiction; Radio -- Fiction | SILENCE IS—DEADLY
By Bertrand L. Shurtleff
Radio is an absolute necessity in modern
organization—and particularly in modern
naval organization. If you could silence all
radio—silence of that sort would be deadly!
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Astounding Science-Fiction April 1942.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
The hurried
rat-a-tat
of knuckles hammered on the cabin door.
Commander Bob Curtis roused himself from his doze, got up from his
chair, stretched himself to his full, lanky height and yawned. That
would be Nelson, his navigating officer. Nelson always knocked that
way—like a man in an external state of jitters over nothing at all.
Curtis didn't hurry. It pleased him to let Nelson wait. He moved slowly
to the door, paused there, and flung a backward glance at the man in
the cabin with him—Zukor Androka, the elderly Czech scientist, a guest
of the United States navy, here aboard the cruiser
Comerford
.
The wizened face of the older man was molded in intent lines of
concentration, as his bushy gray head bent over his drawing board.
Curtis got a glimpse of the design on which he was working, and his
lips relaxed in a faint smile.
Androka had arrived on board the
Comerford
the day before she sailed
from Norfolk. With him came a boatload of scientific apparatus and
equipment, including a number of things that looked like oxygen tanks,
which were now stored in the forward hold. Androka had watched over
his treasures with the jealous care of a mother hen, and spent hours
daily in the room in the superstructure that had been assigned as his
laboratory.
Sometimes, Curtis thought old Androka was a bit wacky—a scientist
whose mind had been turned by the horror that had come to his country
under the domination of the Nazi
gestapo
. At other times, the man
seemed a genius. Perhaps that was the answer—a mad genius!
Curtis opened the door and looked out. Rain whipped against his face
like a stinging wet lash. Overhead, the sky was a storm-racked mass of
clouds, broken in one spot by a tiny patch of starlit blue.
His eyes rested inquiringly on the face of the man who stood before
him. It
was
Nelson, his shaggy blond brows drawn scowlingly down
over his pale eyes; his thin face a mass of tense lines; his big hands
fumbling at the neck of his slicker. Rain was coursing down his white
cheeks, streaking them with glistening furrows.
The fellow was a headache to Curtis. He was overfriendly with a
black-browed bos'n's mate named Joe Bradford—the worst trouble maker
on board. But there was no question of his ability. He was a good
navigating officer—dependable, accurate, conscientious. Nevertheless,
his taut face, restless, searching eyes, and eternally nervous manner
got Curtis' goat.
"Come in, Nelson!" he said.
Nelson shouldered his way inside, and stood there in his dripping
oilskins, blinking his eyes against the yellow light.
Curtis closed the door and nodded toward the bent form of Zukor
Androka, with a quizzical grin. "Old Czech-and-Double-Czech is working
hard on his latest invention to pull Hitler's teeth and re-establish
the Czech Republic!"
Nelson had no answering smile, although there had been a great deal
of good-natured joking aboard the
Comerford
ever since the navy
department had sent the scientist on board the cruiser to carry on his
experiments.
"I'm worried, sir!" Nelson said. "I'm not sure about my dead reckoning.
This storm—"
Curtis threw his arm around Nelson's dripping shoulders. "Forget it!
Don't let a little error get you down!"
"But this storm, sir!" Nelson avoided Curtis' friendly eyes and slipped
out from under his arm. "It's got me worried. Quartering wind of
undetermined force, variable and gusty. There's a chop to the sea—as
if from unestimated currents among the islets. No chance to check by
observation, and now there is a chance—look at me!"
He held out his hands. They were shaking as if he had the chills.
"You say there is a chance?" Curtis asked. "Stars out?"
"As if by providence, sir, there's a clear patch. I'm wondering—" His
voice trailed off, but his eyes swung toward the gleaming sextant on
the rack.
Commander Curtis shrugged good-naturedly and reached for the
instrument. "Not that I've lost confidence in you, Nels, but just
because you asked for it!"
Curtis donned his slicker and went outside, sextant in hand. In a few
minutes he returned and handed Nelson a sheet of paper with figures
underlined heavily.
"Here's what I make it," the commander told his navigating officer.
"Bet you're not off appreciably."
Nelson stared at the computations with shaking head. Then he mutely
held up his own.
Curtis stared, frowned, grabbed his own sheet again. "Any time I'm
that far off old Figure-'em Nelson's estimate, I'm checking back," he
declared, frowning at the two papers and hastily rechecking his own
figures.
"Call up to the bridge to stop her," he told Nelson. "We can't afford
to move in these waters with such a possibility of error!"
Nelson complied, and the throbbing drive of the engines lessened
at once. Nelson said: "I've been wondering, sir, if it wouldn't be
advisable to try getting a radio cross-bearing. With all these rocks
and islets—"
"Radio?" repeated the little Czech, thrusting his face between the
other two, in his independent fashion that ignored ship's discipline.
"You're using your radio?" He broke into a knowing chuckle, his keen
old eyes twinkling behind their thick lenses. "Go ahead and try it. See
how much you can get! It will be no more than Hitler can get when Zukor
Androka decrees silence over the German airways! Try it! Try it, I say!"
Bob Curtis stared at him, as if questioning his sanity. Then he
hastened to the radio room, with Nelson at his heels, and the Czech
trotting along behind.
The door burst open as they neared it. A frightened operator came out,
still wearing his earphones, and stood staring upward incredulously at
the aërial.
"Get us a radio cross-bearing for location at once," Curtis said
sharply, for the operator seemed in a daze.
"Bearing, sir?" The man brought his eyes down with difficulty, as if
still dissatisfied. "I'm sorry, sir, but the outfit's dead. Went out on
me about five minutes ago. I was taking the weather report when the set
conked. I was trying to see if something's wrong."
The Czech inventor giggled. Curtis gave him another curious look and
thrust himself into the radio room.
"Try again!" he told the operator. "See what you can get!"
The radio man leaped to his seat and tried frantically. Again and
again, he sent off a request for a cross-bearing from shore stations
that had recently been established to insure safety to naval vessels,
but there was no answer on any of the bands—not even the blare of a
high-powered commercial program in the higher reach, nor the chatter of
ships or amateurs on the shorter.
"Dead!" Androka muttered, with a bitter laugh. "Yet not dead,
gentlemen! The set is uninjured. The waves are what have been upset. I
have shattered them around your ship, just as I can eventually shatter
them all over Central Europe! For the next two hours, no radio messages
can enter or leave my zone of radio silence—of refracted radio waves,
set up by my little station on one of the neighboring islets!"
There was a long pause, while commander and navigator stared at him.
Curtis was the first to speak.
"Your secrecy might well cost the United States navy one of its best
light cruisers—and us our lives!" he said angrily. "We need that check
by radio at once! If you're not talking nonsense, call off your dogs
till we learn just where we are!"
Androka held out his palms helplessly. "I can do nothing. I have given
orders to my assistant that he must keep two hours of radio silence! I
can get no message to him, for our radio is dead!"
As if to mock him, the ship's radio began to answer:
"Station 297 calling U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
. Station 297 calling U.
S. Cruiser
Comerford
—"
"U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
calling Station 297!" the operator intoned,
winking at the two officers over Androka's discomfiture, and asked for
the bearings.
The answer came back: "Bearings north east by a quarter east, U. S.
Cruiser
Comerford
!"
Curtis sighed with relief. He saw that Nelson was staring fiercely
at the radio operator, as the man went on calling: "U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
calling Station 364. U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
calling
Station 364—"
Then the instrument rasped again: "Station 364 calling U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
. Bearings north west by three west. Bearings north west by
three west, U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
from Cay 364."
Commander and navigator had both scribbled verifications of the
numbers. Ignoring the gibbering Androka, who was wailing his
disappointment that messages had penetrated his veil of silence, they
raced for the chart room.
Quickly the parallels stepped off the bearing from the designated
points. Light intersecting lines proclaimed a check on their position.
Curtis frowned and shook his head. Slowly he forced a reluctant grin as
he stuck out his hand.
"Shake, Nels," he said. "It's my turn to eat crow. You and the radio
must be right. Continue as you were!"
"I'm relieved, sir, just the same," Nelson admitted, "to have the radio
bearings. We'd have piled up sure if you'd been right."
They went on through the night. The starlit gap in the clouds had
closed. The sky was again a blanket of darkness pouring sheets of rain
at them.
Nelson went back to the bridge, and Androka returned to the commander's
cabin. Curtis lingered in the wireless room with the radio operator.
"It's a funny thing," the latter said, still dialing and grousing, "how
I got that cross-bearing through and can't get another squeak out of
her. I'm wondering if that old goat really
has
done something to the
ether. The set seems O. K."
He lingered over the apparatus, checking and rechecking. Tubes lighted;
wires were alive to the touch and set him to shaking his head at the
tingle they sent through his inquiring fingers.
Curtis left him at it, and went to rejoin Androka in the cabin. He
found the little inventor pacing up and down, shaking his fists in the
air; pausing every now and then to run his bony fingers through his
tangled mop of gray hair, or to claw nervously at his beard.
"You have seen a miracle, commander!" he shouted at Curtis. "
My
miracle! My invention has shattered the ether waves hereabouts
hopelessly."
"Seems to me," Curtis said dryly, "this invention can harm your friends
as much as your enemies."
The scientist drew himself up to his full height—which was only a
little over five feet. His voice grew shrill. "Wait! Just wait! There
are other inventions to supplement this one. Put them together, and
they will defeat the Nazi hordes which have ravaged my country!"
Curtis was a little shocked by the hatred that gleamed in Androka's
eyes, under their bushy brows. There was something of the wild animal
in the man's expression, as his lips drew back from his yellowed teeth.
"Those tanks you have below," Curtis said, "have they some connection
with this radio silence?"
A far-away look came into Androka's eyes. He did not seem to hear
the question. He lowered his voice: "My daughter is still in Prague.
So are my sister and her husband, and
their
two daughters. If the
gestapo
knew what I am doing, all of them would be better dead. You
understand—better dead?"
Curtis said: "I understand."
"And if the Nazi agents in America knew of the islet from which my zone
of silence is projected—" Androka paused, his head tilted to one side,
as if he were listening to something—
On deck, there was shouting and commotion. Curtis rushed out, pulling
on his slicker as he went. The shout from the watch forward had been
picked up, and was being relayed all over the ship. The words struck on
Curtis' ears with a note of impending tragedy.
"Breakers ahead!"
He was beside Navigating Officer Nelson on the bridge, and saw the
helmsman climbing the rapidly spinning wheel like a monkey as he put it
hard aport.
Then the ship struck. Everything movable shot ahead until it brought up
at the end of a swing or smacked against something solid.
Curtis felt Nelson's hand grip his shoulder, as he put his lips close
to his ear and shouted: "You must have been right, sir, and the radio
bearings and my reckoning wrong. We've hit that reef a terrific smack.
I'm afraid we're gored!"
"Get out the collision mat!" Curtis ordered. "We ought to be able to
keep her up!"
And then he became aware of a deadly stillness. A vast wall of silence
enveloped the entire cruiser. Looking over the side, he could no longer
see the waves that a few minutes before had beaten savagely against the
ship.
The
Comerford
was shrouded in a huge pall of yellowish-gray mist, and
more of it was coming up from below—from ventilators and hatchways and
skylights—as if the whole ship were flooded with some evil vapor.
Somehow, Curtis' mind flashed to the stories he'd heard of the forts of
the Maginot Line, and of other forts in Holland and Belgium that had
fallen before the early Nazi blitzkrieg, when their defenders found
themselves struck numb and helpless by a gas that had been flooded into
the inner compartments of their strongholds.
There were those who said it was the work of sappers who had tunneled
under the foundations, while others laid the induction of the gas to
Fifth Column traitors. There were a hundred more or less plausible
explanations—
The vapor clouds that enveloped the
Comerford
were becoming thicker.
All about the deck lay the forms of unconscious seamen, suddenly
stricken helpless. And then Curtis saw other forms flitting about the
deck—forms that looked like creatures from another world, but he
recognized them for what they were—men wearing gas masks.
Nelson was nowhere in sight. The steersman lay in a limp heap beside
the swinging wheel. Then a gas-masked figure appeared through the
shroud of mist and steadied it, so that the cruiser would not be
completely at the mercy of the wind and the waves.
Curtis heard the anchor let down, as if by invisible hands, the chain
screaming and flailing its clanking way through the hawse hole. Then he
was completely walled in by the yellowish-gray mist. He felt his senses
swimming.
Voices droned all around him in mumbling confusion—guttural voices
that ebbed and flowed in a tide of excited talk. He caught a word of
English now and then, mixed in with a flood of Teuton phonetics.
Two words, in particular, registered clearly on his mind. One was
"
Carethusia
"; the other was "convoy." But gradually his eardrums
began to throb, as if someone were pounding on them from the inside. He
couldn't get his breath; a cloud seemed to be mounting within him until
it swept over his brain—
He felt something strike the side of his head, and realized that he had
fallen in a heap on the bridge. And after that, he wasn't conscious of
anything—
The rain had abated to a foggy drizzle. The wash of the surf swung the
Comerford
in a lazy, rolling motion, as she lay with her bow nosing
into the sandbar at the entrance of the inlet.
From her bridge, Navigating Officer Nelson watched the gas-masked
figures moving about the decks, descending companionways—like goblins
from an ancient fairy tale or a modern horror story. Nelson looked like
a goblin himself, with his face covered by a respirator. At his side,
stood his fellow conspirator Bos'n's Mate Joe Bradford, also wearing a
gas mask.
Nelson spoke in a low tone, his lips close to Bradford's ear. "It
worked, Joe!"
"Yeah!" Bradford agreed. "It worked—fine!"
The limp bodies of the
Comerford's
crew were being carried to the
lowered accommodation ladder and transferred into waiting lifeboats.
Nelson swore under his breath. "Reckon it'll take a couple of hours
before the ship's rid of that damn gas!"
Bradford shook his head in disagreement. "The old geezer claims he's
got a neutralizing chemical in one of them tanks of his that'll clear
everything up inside half an hour."
"I'd rather get along without Androka, if we could!" Nelson muttered.
"He's nothing but a crackpot!"
"It was a crackpot who invented the gas we used to break up the
Maginot Line," Bradford reminded him. "It saved a lot of lives for the
Fuehrer
—lives that'd have been lost if the forts had to be taken by
our storm troopers!"
Nelson grunted and turned away. A short, thick-set figure in the
uniform of a German naval commander had ascended the accommodation
ladder and was mounting to the bridge. He, too, was equipped with a
respirator.
He came up to Nelson, saluted, and held out his hand, introducing
himself as Herr Kommander Brandt. He began to speak in German, but
Nelson stopped him.
"I don't speak any German," he explained. "I was born and educated in
the United States—of German parents, who had been ruined in the First
World War. My mother committed suicide when she learned that we were
penniless. My father—" He paused and cleared his throat.
"
Ja!
Your father?" the German officer prompted, dropping into
accented English. "Your father?"
"My father dedicated me to a career of revenge—to wipe out his
wrongs," Nelson continued. "If America hadn't gone into the First
World War, he wouldn't have lost his business; my mother would still
be living. When he joined the Nazi party, the way became clear to use
me—to educate me in a military prep school, then send me to Annapolis,
for a career in the United States navy—and no one suspected me. No
one—"
"Sometimes," Bradford put in, "I think Curtis suspected you."
"Maybe Curtis'll find out his suspicions were justified," Nelson said
bitterly. "But it won't do Curtis any good—a commander who's lost
his ship." He turned to Brandt. "You have plenty of men to work the
Comerford
?"
Brandt nodded his square head. "We have a full crew—two hundred
men—officers, seamen, mechanics, radio men, technical experts, all
German naval reservists living in the United States, who've been sent
here secretly, a few at a time, during the past six weeks!"
The three—Brandt, Nelson and Bradford—stood on the bridge and talked,
while the efficient stretcher-bearers worked industriously to remove
the limp bodies of the
Comerford's
unconscious crew and row them
ashore.
And when that task was completed, lifeboats began to come alongside
with strange-looking radio equipment, and more gas tanks like those
Androka had brought aboard the
Comerford
with him, and dynamos and
batteries that looked like something out of a scientific nightmare.
And bustling all over the place, barking excited commands in German,
pushing and pulling and pointing to emphasize his directions, was the
strange figure of Professor Zukor Androka!
"The professor's in his glory!" Nelson remarked to Kommander Brandt.
"Funny thing about him," Bradford put in, "is that his inventions work.
That zone of silence cut us off completely."
Kommander Brandt nodded. "Goodt! But you got your message giving your
bearings—the wrong ones?"
"Yes," Nelson said. "That came through all right. And won't Curtis have
a time explaining it!"
"Hereafter," Brandt said solemnly, "the zone of silence vill be
projected from the
Comerford
; and ve have another invention of
Androka's vich vill be even more useful vhen ve come to cut the
Carethusia
out of her convoy."
"The
Carethusia
?" Nelson asked, in a puzzled tone.
Brandt said: "She's a freighter in a convoy out of St. Johns—twelve
thousand tons. The orders are to take her; not sink her."
"What's the idea?"
"Her cargo," Brandt explained. "It iss more precious than rubies. It
includes a large shipment of boarts."
"Boarts?" Nelson repeated. "What are they?"
"Boarts," Brandt told him, "are industrial diamonds—black,
imperfectly crystallized stones, but far more valuable to us than
flawless diamonds from Tiffany's on Fift' Avenue. They are needed for
making machine tools. They come from northern Brazil—and our supply is
low."
"I should think we could get a shipment of these boarts direct from
Brazil—through the blockade," Nelson said, "without taking the risk of
capturing a United States navy cruiser."
"There are other things Germany needs desperately on board the
Carethusia
," Brandt explained. "Vanadium and nickel and hundreds of
barrels of lard oil for machine-tool lubrication. Our agents have been
watching the convoys closely for weeks for just such a cargo as the
Carethusia
is taking over."
"Can we trust Androka?" Nelson asked, with a sudden note of suspicion
in his voice.
"Yes," Brandt assured him. "Of all men—we can trust Androka!"
"But he's a Czech," Nelson argued.
"The
gestapo
takes care of Czechs and Poles and Frenchmen and other
foreigners whom it chooses as its agents," Brandt pointed out. "Androka
has a daughter and other relations in Prague. He knows that if anything
misfires, if there is the slightest suspicion of treachery on his part,
his daughter and the others will suffer. Androka's loyalty is assured!"
Nelson turned to watch the forward fighting top of the
Comerford
.
The masked German seamen were installing some sort of apparatus
up there—a strange-looking object that looked something like an
old-fashioned trench mortar, and which connected with cables to the
room that served as Androka's laboratory and workshop.
Another crew was installing radio apparatus in the mizzentop turret.
Descending a companionway to see what was going on below, Nelson found
that portholes were being opened, and men were spraying chemical around
to rid the below-decks atmosphere of the lethal gas that had overcome
the
Comerford's
American crew.
Returning to the bridge, he found that the tide in the inlet had risen
considerably, and that the cruiser was riding more easily at her anchor.
Then, at Brandt's orders, the anchor was hauled in, and lifeboats and a
motor launch were used as tugs to work the vessel entirely free of the
sand bar. This was accomplished without difficulty.
Brandt came over to where Nelson was standing on the bridge and held
out his hand.
"Congratulations, Herr Kommander Nelson!" he said. "Ve have stolen one
of the United States navy's newest and fastest cruisers!" He made a
gesture as if raising a beer stein to drink a toast. "
Prosit!
" he
added.
"
Prosit!
" Nelson repeated, and the two grinned at each other.
Stars were twinkling in a patch of black-blue sky, and broken mountains
of gray cloud were skudding before the east wind. Commander Bob Curtis
found himself lying in wet sand, on a beach, somewhere, with the
rain—now a light, driving mist—beating on his face. He was chilled;
his limbs were stiff and numb. His nose and throat felt parched inside,
as if a wave of searing heat had scorched them.
According to his last calculations, the
Comerford
had been cruising
off the Maine coast. This probably was one of the islets of that
region, or it might be the mainland.
It was hard work getting to his feet, and when he did manage to stand,
he could only plant his heels in the sand and sway to and fro for fully
a minute, like a child learning to walk.
All around him in the nearly total darkness, he could make out the dim
forms of men sprawled on the beach; and of other men moving about,
exploring. He heard the murmur of voices and saw the glow of lighted
cigarettes.
A man with a flashlight was approaching him. Its white glare shone for
a moment in Curtis' face, and the familiar voice of Ensign Jack Dillon
spoke: "Commander Curtis! Are you O. K., sir?"
"I think so!" Curtis' heart warmed at the eager expression in Dillon's
face; at the heartfelt concern in his friendly brown eyes. The young
ensign was red-headed, impetuous, thoroughly genuine in his emotions.
"How about yourself, Jack?" Curtis added.
"A bit of a headache from the gas, but that's all. Any orders, sir?"
Curtis thought for a moment. "Muster the crew, as best you can. We'll
try to make a roll call. Is there any sign of the ship?"
There was a solemn note in Dillon's voice. "No, sir. She's been worked
off the sandbar and put to sea!"
The words struck Curtis with the numbing shock of a blow on some nerve
center. For the first time, he realized fully the tragedy that had
swept down on him. He had lost his ship—one of the United States
navy's fastest and newest small light cruisers—under circumstances
which smelled strongly of treachery and sabotage.
As he thought back, he realized that he
might
have prevented the
loss, if he had been more alert, more suspicious. For it was clear to
him now that the
Comerford
had been deliberately steered to this
place; that the men who had seized her had been waiting here for that
very purpose.
The pieces of the picture fitted together like a jigsaw
puzzle—Androka's zone of silence; the bearings given by radio;
Navigating Officer Nelson's queer conduct. They were all part of a
carefully laid plan!
All the suspicious circumstances surrounding Nelson came flooding into
Curtis' mind. He had never liked the man; never trusted him. Nelson
always acted as if he had some secret, something to hide.
Curtis recalled that Nelson and Androka had long conversations
together—conversations which they would end abruptly when anyone else
came within earshot. And Nelson had always been chummy with the worst
trouble maker in the crew—Bos'n's Mate Bradford.
Curtis went around, finding the officers, issuing orders. There were
still some unconscious men to be revived. In a sheltered cove among
the rocks, an exploring group had found enough dry driftwood to make a
fire—
In another hour, the skies had cleared, and white moonlight flooded
the scene with a ghostly radiance. The men of the
Comerford
had
all regained consciousness and were drying out in front of the big
driftwood bonfires in the cove.
Curtis ordered a beacon kept burning on a high promontory. Then he got
the men lined up, according to their respective classifications, for a
check-up on the missing.
When this was completed, it was found that the
Comerford's
entire
complement of two hundred and twenty men were present—except
Navigating Officer Nelson, and Bos'n's Mate Bradford! And Zukor Androka
was also missing!
With the coming of dawn, a little exploration revealed that the
Comerford's
crew was marooned on an islet, about a square mile in
area; that they had been put ashore without food or extra clothing or
equipment of any kind, and that no boats had been left for them.
One searching party reported finding the remains of what had been a
radio station on a high promontory on the north shore of the islet.
Another had found the remains of tents and log cabins, recently
demolished, in a small, timbered hollow—a well-hidden spot invisible
from the air, unless one were flying very low; a place where two
hundred or more men could have camped.
There was a good water supply—a small creek fed by springs—but
nothing in the way of food. Evidently food was a precious commodity
which the recent inhabitants of the islet couldn't afford to leave
behind.
Curtis was studying the wreckage of the wireless station, wondering
if this might have been the source of Androka's zone of silence, when
Ensign Jack Dillon came up to him.
"There's a coast-guard cutter heading for the island, sir," he
announced.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/1/4/8/61481//61481-h//61481-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | What is implied when the narrator describes Nelson’s light colored hair?
| 61481_LZNKW9Z1_2 | [
"Nelson is German by ancestry, raised sympathetic to Germany’s cause. \n",
"Nelson is German by ancestry, but was raised on the side of the American effort. \n",
"Curtis is prejudiced against people with light hair. \n",
"Nelson is Czech\n"
] | 1 | 1 | [
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61,481 | 61481_LZNKW9Z1 | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Silence is—Deadly | 1950.0 | Shurtleff, Bertrand | United States. Navy -- Fiction; PS; Science fiction; Inventors -- Fiction; World War, 1939-1945 -- Naval operations -- Fiction; Radio -- Fiction | SILENCE IS—DEADLY
By Bertrand L. Shurtleff
Radio is an absolute necessity in modern
organization—and particularly in modern
naval organization. If you could silence all
radio—silence of that sort would be deadly!
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Astounding Science-Fiction April 1942.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
The hurried
rat-a-tat
of knuckles hammered on the cabin door.
Commander Bob Curtis roused himself from his doze, got up from his
chair, stretched himself to his full, lanky height and yawned. That
would be Nelson, his navigating officer. Nelson always knocked that
way—like a man in an external state of jitters over nothing at all.
Curtis didn't hurry. It pleased him to let Nelson wait. He moved slowly
to the door, paused there, and flung a backward glance at the man in
the cabin with him—Zukor Androka, the elderly Czech scientist, a guest
of the United States navy, here aboard the cruiser
Comerford
.
The wizened face of the older man was molded in intent lines of
concentration, as his bushy gray head bent over his drawing board.
Curtis got a glimpse of the design on which he was working, and his
lips relaxed in a faint smile.
Androka had arrived on board the
Comerford
the day before she sailed
from Norfolk. With him came a boatload of scientific apparatus and
equipment, including a number of things that looked like oxygen tanks,
which were now stored in the forward hold. Androka had watched over
his treasures with the jealous care of a mother hen, and spent hours
daily in the room in the superstructure that had been assigned as his
laboratory.
Sometimes, Curtis thought old Androka was a bit wacky—a scientist
whose mind had been turned by the horror that had come to his country
under the domination of the Nazi
gestapo
. At other times, the man
seemed a genius. Perhaps that was the answer—a mad genius!
Curtis opened the door and looked out. Rain whipped against his face
like a stinging wet lash. Overhead, the sky was a storm-racked mass of
clouds, broken in one spot by a tiny patch of starlit blue.
His eyes rested inquiringly on the face of the man who stood before
him. It
was
Nelson, his shaggy blond brows drawn scowlingly down
over his pale eyes; his thin face a mass of tense lines; his big hands
fumbling at the neck of his slicker. Rain was coursing down his white
cheeks, streaking them with glistening furrows.
The fellow was a headache to Curtis. He was overfriendly with a
black-browed bos'n's mate named Joe Bradford—the worst trouble maker
on board. But there was no question of his ability. He was a good
navigating officer—dependable, accurate, conscientious. Nevertheless,
his taut face, restless, searching eyes, and eternally nervous manner
got Curtis' goat.
"Come in, Nelson!" he said.
Nelson shouldered his way inside, and stood there in his dripping
oilskins, blinking his eyes against the yellow light.
Curtis closed the door and nodded toward the bent form of Zukor
Androka, with a quizzical grin. "Old Czech-and-Double-Czech is working
hard on his latest invention to pull Hitler's teeth and re-establish
the Czech Republic!"
Nelson had no answering smile, although there had been a great deal
of good-natured joking aboard the
Comerford
ever since the navy
department had sent the scientist on board the cruiser to carry on his
experiments.
"I'm worried, sir!" Nelson said. "I'm not sure about my dead reckoning.
This storm—"
Curtis threw his arm around Nelson's dripping shoulders. "Forget it!
Don't let a little error get you down!"
"But this storm, sir!" Nelson avoided Curtis' friendly eyes and slipped
out from under his arm. "It's got me worried. Quartering wind of
undetermined force, variable and gusty. There's a chop to the sea—as
if from unestimated currents among the islets. No chance to check by
observation, and now there is a chance—look at me!"
He held out his hands. They were shaking as if he had the chills.
"You say there is a chance?" Curtis asked. "Stars out?"
"As if by providence, sir, there's a clear patch. I'm wondering—" His
voice trailed off, but his eyes swung toward the gleaming sextant on
the rack.
Commander Curtis shrugged good-naturedly and reached for the
instrument. "Not that I've lost confidence in you, Nels, but just
because you asked for it!"
Curtis donned his slicker and went outside, sextant in hand. In a few
minutes he returned and handed Nelson a sheet of paper with figures
underlined heavily.
"Here's what I make it," the commander told his navigating officer.
"Bet you're not off appreciably."
Nelson stared at the computations with shaking head. Then he mutely
held up his own.
Curtis stared, frowned, grabbed his own sheet again. "Any time I'm
that far off old Figure-'em Nelson's estimate, I'm checking back," he
declared, frowning at the two papers and hastily rechecking his own
figures.
"Call up to the bridge to stop her," he told Nelson. "We can't afford
to move in these waters with such a possibility of error!"
Nelson complied, and the throbbing drive of the engines lessened
at once. Nelson said: "I've been wondering, sir, if it wouldn't be
advisable to try getting a radio cross-bearing. With all these rocks
and islets—"
"Radio?" repeated the little Czech, thrusting his face between the
other two, in his independent fashion that ignored ship's discipline.
"You're using your radio?" He broke into a knowing chuckle, his keen
old eyes twinkling behind their thick lenses. "Go ahead and try it. See
how much you can get! It will be no more than Hitler can get when Zukor
Androka decrees silence over the German airways! Try it! Try it, I say!"
Bob Curtis stared at him, as if questioning his sanity. Then he
hastened to the radio room, with Nelson at his heels, and the Czech
trotting along behind.
The door burst open as they neared it. A frightened operator came out,
still wearing his earphones, and stood staring upward incredulously at
the aërial.
"Get us a radio cross-bearing for location at once," Curtis said
sharply, for the operator seemed in a daze.
"Bearing, sir?" The man brought his eyes down with difficulty, as if
still dissatisfied. "I'm sorry, sir, but the outfit's dead. Went out on
me about five minutes ago. I was taking the weather report when the set
conked. I was trying to see if something's wrong."
The Czech inventor giggled. Curtis gave him another curious look and
thrust himself into the radio room.
"Try again!" he told the operator. "See what you can get!"
The radio man leaped to his seat and tried frantically. Again and
again, he sent off a request for a cross-bearing from shore stations
that had recently been established to insure safety to naval vessels,
but there was no answer on any of the bands—not even the blare of a
high-powered commercial program in the higher reach, nor the chatter of
ships or amateurs on the shorter.
"Dead!" Androka muttered, with a bitter laugh. "Yet not dead,
gentlemen! The set is uninjured. The waves are what have been upset. I
have shattered them around your ship, just as I can eventually shatter
them all over Central Europe! For the next two hours, no radio messages
can enter or leave my zone of radio silence—of refracted radio waves,
set up by my little station on one of the neighboring islets!"
There was a long pause, while commander and navigator stared at him.
Curtis was the first to speak.
"Your secrecy might well cost the United States navy one of its best
light cruisers—and us our lives!" he said angrily. "We need that check
by radio at once! If you're not talking nonsense, call off your dogs
till we learn just where we are!"
Androka held out his palms helplessly. "I can do nothing. I have given
orders to my assistant that he must keep two hours of radio silence! I
can get no message to him, for our radio is dead!"
As if to mock him, the ship's radio began to answer:
"Station 297 calling U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
. Station 297 calling U.
S. Cruiser
Comerford
—"
"U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
calling Station 297!" the operator intoned,
winking at the two officers over Androka's discomfiture, and asked for
the bearings.
The answer came back: "Bearings north east by a quarter east, U. S.
Cruiser
Comerford
!"
Curtis sighed with relief. He saw that Nelson was staring fiercely
at the radio operator, as the man went on calling: "U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
calling Station 364. U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
calling
Station 364—"
Then the instrument rasped again: "Station 364 calling U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
. Bearings north west by three west. Bearings north west by
three west, U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
from Cay 364."
Commander and navigator had both scribbled verifications of the
numbers. Ignoring the gibbering Androka, who was wailing his
disappointment that messages had penetrated his veil of silence, they
raced for the chart room.
Quickly the parallels stepped off the bearing from the designated
points. Light intersecting lines proclaimed a check on their position.
Curtis frowned and shook his head. Slowly he forced a reluctant grin as
he stuck out his hand.
"Shake, Nels," he said. "It's my turn to eat crow. You and the radio
must be right. Continue as you were!"
"I'm relieved, sir, just the same," Nelson admitted, "to have the radio
bearings. We'd have piled up sure if you'd been right."
They went on through the night. The starlit gap in the clouds had
closed. The sky was again a blanket of darkness pouring sheets of rain
at them.
Nelson went back to the bridge, and Androka returned to the commander's
cabin. Curtis lingered in the wireless room with the radio operator.
"It's a funny thing," the latter said, still dialing and grousing, "how
I got that cross-bearing through and can't get another squeak out of
her. I'm wondering if that old goat really
has
done something to the
ether. The set seems O. K."
He lingered over the apparatus, checking and rechecking. Tubes lighted;
wires were alive to the touch and set him to shaking his head at the
tingle they sent through his inquiring fingers.
Curtis left him at it, and went to rejoin Androka in the cabin. He
found the little inventor pacing up and down, shaking his fists in the
air; pausing every now and then to run his bony fingers through his
tangled mop of gray hair, or to claw nervously at his beard.
"You have seen a miracle, commander!" he shouted at Curtis. "
My
miracle! My invention has shattered the ether waves hereabouts
hopelessly."
"Seems to me," Curtis said dryly, "this invention can harm your friends
as much as your enemies."
The scientist drew himself up to his full height—which was only a
little over five feet. His voice grew shrill. "Wait! Just wait! There
are other inventions to supplement this one. Put them together, and
they will defeat the Nazi hordes which have ravaged my country!"
Curtis was a little shocked by the hatred that gleamed in Androka's
eyes, under their bushy brows. There was something of the wild animal
in the man's expression, as his lips drew back from his yellowed teeth.
"Those tanks you have below," Curtis said, "have they some connection
with this radio silence?"
A far-away look came into Androka's eyes. He did not seem to hear
the question. He lowered his voice: "My daughter is still in Prague.
So are my sister and her husband, and
their
two daughters. If the
gestapo
knew what I am doing, all of them would be better dead. You
understand—better dead?"
Curtis said: "I understand."
"And if the Nazi agents in America knew of the islet from which my zone
of silence is projected—" Androka paused, his head tilted to one side,
as if he were listening to something—
On deck, there was shouting and commotion. Curtis rushed out, pulling
on his slicker as he went. The shout from the watch forward had been
picked up, and was being relayed all over the ship. The words struck on
Curtis' ears with a note of impending tragedy.
"Breakers ahead!"
He was beside Navigating Officer Nelson on the bridge, and saw the
helmsman climbing the rapidly spinning wheel like a monkey as he put it
hard aport.
Then the ship struck. Everything movable shot ahead until it brought up
at the end of a swing or smacked against something solid.
Curtis felt Nelson's hand grip his shoulder, as he put his lips close
to his ear and shouted: "You must have been right, sir, and the radio
bearings and my reckoning wrong. We've hit that reef a terrific smack.
I'm afraid we're gored!"
"Get out the collision mat!" Curtis ordered. "We ought to be able to
keep her up!"
And then he became aware of a deadly stillness. A vast wall of silence
enveloped the entire cruiser. Looking over the side, he could no longer
see the waves that a few minutes before had beaten savagely against the
ship.
The
Comerford
was shrouded in a huge pall of yellowish-gray mist, and
more of it was coming up from below—from ventilators and hatchways and
skylights—as if the whole ship were flooded with some evil vapor.
Somehow, Curtis' mind flashed to the stories he'd heard of the forts of
the Maginot Line, and of other forts in Holland and Belgium that had
fallen before the early Nazi blitzkrieg, when their defenders found
themselves struck numb and helpless by a gas that had been flooded into
the inner compartments of their strongholds.
There were those who said it was the work of sappers who had tunneled
under the foundations, while others laid the induction of the gas to
Fifth Column traitors. There were a hundred more or less plausible
explanations—
The vapor clouds that enveloped the
Comerford
were becoming thicker.
All about the deck lay the forms of unconscious seamen, suddenly
stricken helpless. And then Curtis saw other forms flitting about the
deck—forms that looked like creatures from another world, but he
recognized them for what they were—men wearing gas masks.
Nelson was nowhere in sight. The steersman lay in a limp heap beside
the swinging wheel. Then a gas-masked figure appeared through the
shroud of mist and steadied it, so that the cruiser would not be
completely at the mercy of the wind and the waves.
Curtis heard the anchor let down, as if by invisible hands, the chain
screaming and flailing its clanking way through the hawse hole. Then he
was completely walled in by the yellowish-gray mist. He felt his senses
swimming.
Voices droned all around him in mumbling confusion—guttural voices
that ebbed and flowed in a tide of excited talk. He caught a word of
English now and then, mixed in with a flood of Teuton phonetics.
Two words, in particular, registered clearly on his mind. One was
"
Carethusia
"; the other was "convoy." But gradually his eardrums
began to throb, as if someone were pounding on them from the inside. He
couldn't get his breath; a cloud seemed to be mounting within him until
it swept over his brain—
He felt something strike the side of his head, and realized that he had
fallen in a heap on the bridge. And after that, he wasn't conscious of
anything—
The rain had abated to a foggy drizzle. The wash of the surf swung the
Comerford
in a lazy, rolling motion, as she lay with her bow nosing
into the sandbar at the entrance of the inlet.
From her bridge, Navigating Officer Nelson watched the gas-masked
figures moving about the decks, descending companionways—like goblins
from an ancient fairy tale or a modern horror story. Nelson looked like
a goblin himself, with his face covered by a respirator. At his side,
stood his fellow conspirator Bos'n's Mate Joe Bradford, also wearing a
gas mask.
Nelson spoke in a low tone, his lips close to Bradford's ear. "It
worked, Joe!"
"Yeah!" Bradford agreed. "It worked—fine!"
The limp bodies of the
Comerford's
crew were being carried to the
lowered accommodation ladder and transferred into waiting lifeboats.
Nelson swore under his breath. "Reckon it'll take a couple of hours
before the ship's rid of that damn gas!"
Bradford shook his head in disagreement. "The old geezer claims he's
got a neutralizing chemical in one of them tanks of his that'll clear
everything up inside half an hour."
"I'd rather get along without Androka, if we could!" Nelson muttered.
"He's nothing but a crackpot!"
"It was a crackpot who invented the gas we used to break up the
Maginot Line," Bradford reminded him. "It saved a lot of lives for the
Fuehrer
—lives that'd have been lost if the forts had to be taken by
our storm troopers!"
Nelson grunted and turned away. A short, thick-set figure in the
uniform of a German naval commander had ascended the accommodation
ladder and was mounting to the bridge. He, too, was equipped with a
respirator.
He came up to Nelson, saluted, and held out his hand, introducing
himself as Herr Kommander Brandt. He began to speak in German, but
Nelson stopped him.
"I don't speak any German," he explained. "I was born and educated in
the United States—of German parents, who had been ruined in the First
World War. My mother committed suicide when she learned that we were
penniless. My father—" He paused and cleared his throat.
"
Ja!
Your father?" the German officer prompted, dropping into
accented English. "Your father?"
"My father dedicated me to a career of revenge—to wipe out his
wrongs," Nelson continued. "If America hadn't gone into the First
World War, he wouldn't have lost his business; my mother would still
be living. When he joined the Nazi party, the way became clear to use
me—to educate me in a military prep school, then send me to Annapolis,
for a career in the United States navy—and no one suspected me. No
one—"
"Sometimes," Bradford put in, "I think Curtis suspected you."
"Maybe Curtis'll find out his suspicions were justified," Nelson said
bitterly. "But it won't do Curtis any good—a commander who's lost
his ship." He turned to Brandt. "You have plenty of men to work the
Comerford
?"
Brandt nodded his square head. "We have a full crew—two hundred
men—officers, seamen, mechanics, radio men, technical experts, all
German naval reservists living in the United States, who've been sent
here secretly, a few at a time, during the past six weeks!"
The three—Brandt, Nelson and Bradford—stood on the bridge and talked,
while the efficient stretcher-bearers worked industriously to remove
the limp bodies of the
Comerford's
unconscious crew and row them
ashore.
And when that task was completed, lifeboats began to come alongside
with strange-looking radio equipment, and more gas tanks like those
Androka had brought aboard the
Comerford
with him, and dynamos and
batteries that looked like something out of a scientific nightmare.
And bustling all over the place, barking excited commands in German,
pushing and pulling and pointing to emphasize his directions, was the
strange figure of Professor Zukor Androka!
"The professor's in his glory!" Nelson remarked to Kommander Brandt.
"Funny thing about him," Bradford put in, "is that his inventions work.
That zone of silence cut us off completely."
Kommander Brandt nodded. "Goodt! But you got your message giving your
bearings—the wrong ones?"
"Yes," Nelson said. "That came through all right. And won't Curtis have
a time explaining it!"
"Hereafter," Brandt said solemnly, "the zone of silence vill be
projected from the
Comerford
; and ve have another invention of
Androka's vich vill be even more useful vhen ve come to cut the
Carethusia
out of her convoy."
"The
Carethusia
?" Nelson asked, in a puzzled tone.
Brandt said: "She's a freighter in a convoy out of St. Johns—twelve
thousand tons. The orders are to take her; not sink her."
"What's the idea?"
"Her cargo," Brandt explained. "It iss more precious than rubies. It
includes a large shipment of boarts."
"Boarts?" Nelson repeated. "What are they?"
"Boarts," Brandt told him, "are industrial diamonds—black,
imperfectly crystallized stones, but far more valuable to us than
flawless diamonds from Tiffany's on Fift' Avenue. They are needed for
making machine tools. They come from northern Brazil—and our supply is
low."
"I should think we could get a shipment of these boarts direct from
Brazil—through the blockade," Nelson said, "without taking the risk of
capturing a United States navy cruiser."
"There are other things Germany needs desperately on board the
Carethusia
," Brandt explained. "Vanadium and nickel and hundreds of
barrels of lard oil for machine-tool lubrication. Our agents have been
watching the convoys closely for weeks for just such a cargo as the
Carethusia
is taking over."
"Can we trust Androka?" Nelson asked, with a sudden note of suspicion
in his voice.
"Yes," Brandt assured him. "Of all men—we can trust Androka!"
"But he's a Czech," Nelson argued.
"The
gestapo
takes care of Czechs and Poles and Frenchmen and other
foreigners whom it chooses as its agents," Brandt pointed out. "Androka
has a daughter and other relations in Prague. He knows that if anything
misfires, if there is the slightest suspicion of treachery on his part,
his daughter and the others will suffer. Androka's loyalty is assured!"
Nelson turned to watch the forward fighting top of the
Comerford
.
The masked German seamen were installing some sort of apparatus
up there—a strange-looking object that looked something like an
old-fashioned trench mortar, and which connected with cables to the
room that served as Androka's laboratory and workshop.
Another crew was installing radio apparatus in the mizzentop turret.
Descending a companionway to see what was going on below, Nelson found
that portholes were being opened, and men were spraying chemical around
to rid the below-decks atmosphere of the lethal gas that had overcome
the
Comerford's
American crew.
Returning to the bridge, he found that the tide in the inlet had risen
considerably, and that the cruiser was riding more easily at her anchor.
Then, at Brandt's orders, the anchor was hauled in, and lifeboats and a
motor launch were used as tugs to work the vessel entirely free of the
sand bar. This was accomplished without difficulty.
Brandt came over to where Nelson was standing on the bridge and held
out his hand.
"Congratulations, Herr Kommander Nelson!" he said. "Ve have stolen one
of the United States navy's newest and fastest cruisers!" He made a
gesture as if raising a beer stein to drink a toast. "
Prosit!
" he
added.
"
Prosit!
" Nelson repeated, and the two grinned at each other.
Stars were twinkling in a patch of black-blue sky, and broken mountains
of gray cloud were skudding before the east wind. Commander Bob Curtis
found himself lying in wet sand, on a beach, somewhere, with the
rain—now a light, driving mist—beating on his face. He was chilled;
his limbs were stiff and numb. His nose and throat felt parched inside,
as if a wave of searing heat had scorched them.
According to his last calculations, the
Comerford
had been cruising
off the Maine coast. This probably was one of the islets of that
region, or it might be the mainland.
It was hard work getting to his feet, and when he did manage to stand,
he could only plant his heels in the sand and sway to and fro for fully
a minute, like a child learning to walk.
All around him in the nearly total darkness, he could make out the dim
forms of men sprawled on the beach; and of other men moving about,
exploring. He heard the murmur of voices and saw the glow of lighted
cigarettes.
A man with a flashlight was approaching him. Its white glare shone for
a moment in Curtis' face, and the familiar voice of Ensign Jack Dillon
spoke: "Commander Curtis! Are you O. K., sir?"
"I think so!" Curtis' heart warmed at the eager expression in Dillon's
face; at the heartfelt concern in his friendly brown eyes. The young
ensign was red-headed, impetuous, thoroughly genuine in his emotions.
"How about yourself, Jack?" Curtis added.
"A bit of a headache from the gas, but that's all. Any orders, sir?"
Curtis thought for a moment. "Muster the crew, as best you can. We'll
try to make a roll call. Is there any sign of the ship?"
There was a solemn note in Dillon's voice. "No, sir. She's been worked
off the sandbar and put to sea!"
The words struck Curtis with the numbing shock of a blow on some nerve
center. For the first time, he realized fully the tragedy that had
swept down on him. He had lost his ship—one of the United States
navy's fastest and newest small light cruisers—under circumstances
which smelled strongly of treachery and sabotage.
As he thought back, he realized that he
might
have prevented the
loss, if he had been more alert, more suspicious. For it was clear to
him now that the
Comerford
had been deliberately steered to this
place; that the men who had seized her had been waiting here for that
very purpose.
The pieces of the picture fitted together like a jigsaw
puzzle—Androka's zone of silence; the bearings given by radio;
Navigating Officer Nelson's queer conduct. They were all part of a
carefully laid plan!
All the suspicious circumstances surrounding Nelson came flooding into
Curtis' mind. He had never liked the man; never trusted him. Nelson
always acted as if he had some secret, something to hide.
Curtis recalled that Nelson and Androka had long conversations
together—conversations which they would end abruptly when anyone else
came within earshot. And Nelson had always been chummy with the worst
trouble maker in the crew—Bos'n's Mate Bradford.
Curtis went around, finding the officers, issuing orders. There were
still some unconscious men to be revived. In a sheltered cove among
the rocks, an exploring group had found enough dry driftwood to make a
fire—
In another hour, the skies had cleared, and white moonlight flooded
the scene with a ghostly radiance. The men of the
Comerford
had
all regained consciousness and were drying out in front of the big
driftwood bonfires in the cove.
Curtis ordered a beacon kept burning on a high promontory. Then he got
the men lined up, according to their respective classifications, for a
check-up on the missing.
When this was completed, it was found that the
Comerford's
entire
complement of two hundred and twenty men were present—except
Navigating Officer Nelson, and Bos'n's Mate Bradford! And Zukor Androka
was also missing!
With the coming of dawn, a little exploration revealed that the
Comerford's
crew was marooned on an islet, about a square mile in
area; that they had been put ashore without food or extra clothing or
equipment of any kind, and that no boats had been left for them.
One searching party reported finding the remains of what had been a
radio station on a high promontory on the north shore of the islet.
Another had found the remains of tents and log cabins, recently
demolished, in a small, timbered hollow—a well-hidden spot invisible
from the air, unless one were flying very low; a place where two
hundred or more men could have camped.
There was a good water supply—a small creek fed by springs—but
nothing in the way of food. Evidently food was a precious commodity
which the recent inhabitants of the islet couldn't afford to leave
behind.
Curtis was studying the wreckage of the wireless station, wondering
if this might have been the source of Androka's zone of silence, when
Ensign Jack Dillon came up to him.
"There's a coast-guard cutter heading for the island, sir," he
announced.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/1/4/8/61481//61481-h//61481-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | Where do the creatures from another world come from?
| 61481_LZNKW9Z1_3 | [
"The Carethusia \n",
"The Sea \n",
"Germany",
"An alien world\n"
] | 3 | 3 | [
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61,481 | 61481_LZNKW9Z1 | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Silence is—Deadly | 1950.0 | Shurtleff, Bertrand | United States. Navy -- Fiction; PS; Science fiction; Inventors -- Fiction; World War, 1939-1945 -- Naval operations -- Fiction; Radio -- Fiction | SILENCE IS—DEADLY
By Bertrand L. Shurtleff
Radio is an absolute necessity in modern
organization—and particularly in modern
naval organization. If you could silence all
radio—silence of that sort would be deadly!
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Astounding Science-Fiction April 1942.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
The hurried
rat-a-tat
of knuckles hammered on the cabin door.
Commander Bob Curtis roused himself from his doze, got up from his
chair, stretched himself to his full, lanky height and yawned. That
would be Nelson, his navigating officer. Nelson always knocked that
way—like a man in an external state of jitters over nothing at all.
Curtis didn't hurry. It pleased him to let Nelson wait. He moved slowly
to the door, paused there, and flung a backward glance at the man in
the cabin with him—Zukor Androka, the elderly Czech scientist, a guest
of the United States navy, here aboard the cruiser
Comerford
.
The wizened face of the older man was molded in intent lines of
concentration, as his bushy gray head bent over his drawing board.
Curtis got a glimpse of the design on which he was working, and his
lips relaxed in a faint smile.
Androka had arrived on board the
Comerford
the day before she sailed
from Norfolk. With him came a boatload of scientific apparatus and
equipment, including a number of things that looked like oxygen tanks,
which were now stored in the forward hold. Androka had watched over
his treasures with the jealous care of a mother hen, and spent hours
daily in the room in the superstructure that had been assigned as his
laboratory.
Sometimes, Curtis thought old Androka was a bit wacky—a scientist
whose mind had been turned by the horror that had come to his country
under the domination of the Nazi
gestapo
. At other times, the man
seemed a genius. Perhaps that was the answer—a mad genius!
Curtis opened the door and looked out. Rain whipped against his face
like a stinging wet lash. Overhead, the sky was a storm-racked mass of
clouds, broken in one spot by a tiny patch of starlit blue.
His eyes rested inquiringly on the face of the man who stood before
him. It
was
Nelson, his shaggy blond brows drawn scowlingly down
over his pale eyes; his thin face a mass of tense lines; his big hands
fumbling at the neck of his slicker. Rain was coursing down his white
cheeks, streaking them with glistening furrows.
The fellow was a headache to Curtis. He was overfriendly with a
black-browed bos'n's mate named Joe Bradford—the worst trouble maker
on board. But there was no question of his ability. He was a good
navigating officer—dependable, accurate, conscientious. Nevertheless,
his taut face, restless, searching eyes, and eternally nervous manner
got Curtis' goat.
"Come in, Nelson!" he said.
Nelson shouldered his way inside, and stood there in his dripping
oilskins, blinking his eyes against the yellow light.
Curtis closed the door and nodded toward the bent form of Zukor
Androka, with a quizzical grin. "Old Czech-and-Double-Czech is working
hard on his latest invention to pull Hitler's teeth and re-establish
the Czech Republic!"
Nelson had no answering smile, although there had been a great deal
of good-natured joking aboard the
Comerford
ever since the navy
department had sent the scientist on board the cruiser to carry on his
experiments.
"I'm worried, sir!" Nelson said. "I'm not sure about my dead reckoning.
This storm—"
Curtis threw his arm around Nelson's dripping shoulders. "Forget it!
Don't let a little error get you down!"
"But this storm, sir!" Nelson avoided Curtis' friendly eyes and slipped
out from under his arm. "It's got me worried. Quartering wind of
undetermined force, variable and gusty. There's a chop to the sea—as
if from unestimated currents among the islets. No chance to check by
observation, and now there is a chance—look at me!"
He held out his hands. They were shaking as if he had the chills.
"You say there is a chance?" Curtis asked. "Stars out?"
"As if by providence, sir, there's a clear patch. I'm wondering—" His
voice trailed off, but his eyes swung toward the gleaming sextant on
the rack.
Commander Curtis shrugged good-naturedly and reached for the
instrument. "Not that I've lost confidence in you, Nels, but just
because you asked for it!"
Curtis donned his slicker and went outside, sextant in hand. In a few
minutes he returned and handed Nelson a sheet of paper with figures
underlined heavily.
"Here's what I make it," the commander told his navigating officer.
"Bet you're not off appreciably."
Nelson stared at the computations with shaking head. Then he mutely
held up his own.
Curtis stared, frowned, grabbed his own sheet again. "Any time I'm
that far off old Figure-'em Nelson's estimate, I'm checking back," he
declared, frowning at the two papers and hastily rechecking his own
figures.
"Call up to the bridge to stop her," he told Nelson. "We can't afford
to move in these waters with such a possibility of error!"
Nelson complied, and the throbbing drive of the engines lessened
at once. Nelson said: "I've been wondering, sir, if it wouldn't be
advisable to try getting a radio cross-bearing. With all these rocks
and islets—"
"Radio?" repeated the little Czech, thrusting his face between the
other two, in his independent fashion that ignored ship's discipline.
"You're using your radio?" He broke into a knowing chuckle, his keen
old eyes twinkling behind their thick lenses. "Go ahead and try it. See
how much you can get! It will be no more than Hitler can get when Zukor
Androka decrees silence over the German airways! Try it! Try it, I say!"
Bob Curtis stared at him, as if questioning his sanity. Then he
hastened to the radio room, with Nelson at his heels, and the Czech
trotting along behind.
The door burst open as they neared it. A frightened operator came out,
still wearing his earphones, and stood staring upward incredulously at
the aërial.
"Get us a radio cross-bearing for location at once," Curtis said
sharply, for the operator seemed in a daze.
"Bearing, sir?" The man brought his eyes down with difficulty, as if
still dissatisfied. "I'm sorry, sir, but the outfit's dead. Went out on
me about five minutes ago. I was taking the weather report when the set
conked. I was trying to see if something's wrong."
The Czech inventor giggled. Curtis gave him another curious look and
thrust himself into the radio room.
"Try again!" he told the operator. "See what you can get!"
The radio man leaped to his seat and tried frantically. Again and
again, he sent off a request for a cross-bearing from shore stations
that had recently been established to insure safety to naval vessels,
but there was no answer on any of the bands—not even the blare of a
high-powered commercial program in the higher reach, nor the chatter of
ships or amateurs on the shorter.
"Dead!" Androka muttered, with a bitter laugh. "Yet not dead,
gentlemen! The set is uninjured. The waves are what have been upset. I
have shattered them around your ship, just as I can eventually shatter
them all over Central Europe! For the next two hours, no radio messages
can enter or leave my zone of radio silence—of refracted radio waves,
set up by my little station on one of the neighboring islets!"
There was a long pause, while commander and navigator stared at him.
Curtis was the first to speak.
"Your secrecy might well cost the United States navy one of its best
light cruisers—and us our lives!" he said angrily. "We need that check
by radio at once! If you're not talking nonsense, call off your dogs
till we learn just where we are!"
Androka held out his palms helplessly. "I can do nothing. I have given
orders to my assistant that he must keep two hours of radio silence! I
can get no message to him, for our radio is dead!"
As if to mock him, the ship's radio began to answer:
"Station 297 calling U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
. Station 297 calling U.
S. Cruiser
Comerford
—"
"U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
calling Station 297!" the operator intoned,
winking at the two officers over Androka's discomfiture, and asked for
the bearings.
The answer came back: "Bearings north east by a quarter east, U. S.
Cruiser
Comerford
!"
Curtis sighed with relief. He saw that Nelson was staring fiercely
at the radio operator, as the man went on calling: "U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
calling Station 364. U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
calling
Station 364—"
Then the instrument rasped again: "Station 364 calling U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
. Bearings north west by three west. Bearings north west by
three west, U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
from Cay 364."
Commander and navigator had both scribbled verifications of the
numbers. Ignoring the gibbering Androka, who was wailing his
disappointment that messages had penetrated his veil of silence, they
raced for the chart room.
Quickly the parallels stepped off the bearing from the designated
points. Light intersecting lines proclaimed a check on their position.
Curtis frowned and shook his head. Slowly he forced a reluctant grin as
he stuck out his hand.
"Shake, Nels," he said. "It's my turn to eat crow. You and the radio
must be right. Continue as you were!"
"I'm relieved, sir, just the same," Nelson admitted, "to have the radio
bearings. We'd have piled up sure if you'd been right."
They went on through the night. The starlit gap in the clouds had
closed. The sky was again a blanket of darkness pouring sheets of rain
at them.
Nelson went back to the bridge, and Androka returned to the commander's
cabin. Curtis lingered in the wireless room with the radio operator.
"It's a funny thing," the latter said, still dialing and grousing, "how
I got that cross-bearing through and can't get another squeak out of
her. I'm wondering if that old goat really
has
done something to the
ether. The set seems O. K."
He lingered over the apparatus, checking and rechecking. Tubes lighted;
wires were alive to the touch and set him to shaking his head at the
tingle they sent through his inquiring fingers.
Curtis left him at it, and went to rejoin Androka in the cabin. He
found the little inventor pacing up and down, shaking his fists in the
air; pausing every now and then to run his bony fingers through his
tangled mop of gray hair, or to claw nervously at his beard.
"You have seen a miracle, commander!" he shouted at Curtis. "
My
miracle! My invention has shattered the ether waves hereabouts
hopelessly."
"Seems to me," Curtis said dryly, "this invention can harm your friends
as much as your enemies."
The scientist drew himself up to his full height—which was only a
little over five feet. His voice grew shrill. "Wait! Just wait! There
are other inventions to supplement this one. Put them together, and
they will defeat the Nazi hordes which have ravaged my country!"
Curtis was a little shocked by the hatred that gleamed in Androka's
eyes, under their bushy brows. There was something of the wild animal
in the man's expression, as his lips drew back from his yellowed teeth.
"Those tanks you have below," Curtis said, "have they some connection
with this radio silence?"
A far-away look came into Androka's eyes. He did not seem to hear
the question. He lowered his voice: "My daughter is still in Prague.
So are my sister and her husband, and
their
two daughters. If the
gestapo
knew what I am doing, all of them would be better dead. You
understand—better dead?"
Curtis said: "I understand."
"And if the Nazi agents in America knew of the islet from which my zone
of silence is projected—" Androka paused, his head tilted to one side,
as if he were listening to something—
On deck, there was shouting and commotion. Curtis rushed out, pulling
on his slicker as he went. The shout from the watch forward had been
picked up, and was being relayed all over the ship. The words struck on
Curtis' ears with a note of impending tragedy.
"Breakers ahead!"
He was beside Navigating Officer Nelson on the bridge, and saw the
helmsman climbing the rapidly spinning wheel like a monkey as he put it
hard aport.
Then the ship struck. Everything movable shot ahead until it brought up
at the end of a swing or smacked against something solid.
Curtis felt Nelson's hand grip his shoulder, as he put his lips close
to his ear and shouted: "You must have been right, sir, and the radio
bearings and my reckoning wrong. We've hit that reef a terrific smack.
I'm afraid we're gored!"
"Get out the collision mat!" Curtis ordered. "We ought to be able to
keep her up!"
And then he became aware of a deadly stillness. A vast wall of silence
enveloped the entire cruiser. Looking over the side, he could no longer
see the waves that a few minutes before had beaten savagely against the
ship.
The
Comerford
was shrouded in a huge pall of yellowish-gray mist, and
more of it was coming up from below—from ventilators and hatchways and
skylights—as if the whole ship were flooded with some evil vapor.
Somehow, Curtis' mind flashed to the stories he'd heard of the forts of
the Maginot Line, and of other forts in Holland and Belgium that had
fallen before the early Nazi blitzkrieg, when their defenders found
themselves struck numb and helpless by a gas that had been flooded into
the inner compartments of their strongholds.
There were those who said it was the work of sappers who had tunneled
under the foundations, while others laid the induction of the gas to
Fifth Column traitors. There were a hundred more or less plausible
explanations—
The vapor clouds that enveloped the
Comerford
were becoming thicker.
All about the deck lay the forms of unconscious seamen, suddenly
stricken helpless. And then Curtis saw other forms flitting about the
deck—forms that looked like creatures from another world, but he
recognized them for what they were—men wearing gas masks.
Nelson was nowhere in sight. The steersman lay in a limp heap beside
the swinging wheel. Then a gas-masked figure appeared through the
shroud of mist and steadied it, so that the cruiser would not be
completely at the mercy of the wind and the waves.
Curtis heard the anchor let down, as if by invisible hands, the chain
screaming and flailing its clanking way through the hawse hole. Then he
was completely walled in by the yellowish-gray mist. He felt his senses
swimming.
Voices droned all around him in mumbling confusion—guttural voices
that ebbed and flowed in a tide of excited talk. He caught a word of
English now and then, mixed in with a flood of Teuton phonetics.
Two words, in particular, registered clearly on his mind. One was
"
Carethusia
"; the other was "convoy." But gradually his eardrums
began to throb, as if someone were pounding on them from the inside. He
couldn't get his breath; a cloud seemed to be mounting within him until
it swept over his brain—
He felt something strike the side of his head, and realized that he had
fallen in a heap on the bridge. And after that, he wasn't conscious of
anything—
The rain had abated to a foggy drizzle. The wash of the surf swung the
Comerford
in a lazy, rolling motion, as she lay with her bow nosing
into the sandbar at the entrance of the inlet.
From her bridge, Navigating Officer Nelson watched the gas-masked
figures moving about the decks, descending companionways—like goblins
from an ancient fairy tale or a modern horror story. Nelson looked like
a goblin himself, with his face covered by a respirator. At his side,
stood his fellow conspirator Bos'n's Mate Joe Bradford, also wearing a
gas mask.
Nelson spoke in a low tone, his lips close to Bradford's ear. "It
worked, Joe!"
"Yeah!" Bradford agreed. "It worked—fine!"
The limp bodies of the
Comerford's
crew were being carried to the
lowered accommodation ladder and transferred into waiting lifeboats.
Nelson swore under his breath. "Reckon it'll take a couple of hours
before the ship's rid of that damn gas!"
Bradford shook his head in disagreement. "The old geezer claims he's
got a neutralizing chemical in one of them tanks of his that'll clear
everything up inside half an hour."
"I'd rather get along without Androka, if we could!" Nelson muttered.
"He's nothing but a crackpot!"
"It was a crackpot who invented the gas we used to break up the
Maginot Line," Bradford reminded him. "It saved a lot of lives for the
Fuehrer
—lives that'd have been lost if the forts had to be taken by
our storm troopers!"
Nelson grunted and turned away. A short, thick-set figure in the
uniform of a German naval commander had ascended the accommodation
ladder and was mounting to the bridge. He, too, was equipped with a
respirator.
He came up to Nelson, saluted, and held out his hand, introducing
himself as Herr Kommander Brandt. He began to speak in German, but
Nelson stopped him.
"I don't speak any German," he explained. "I was born and educated in
the United States—of German parents, who had been ruined in the First
World War. My mother committed suicide when she learned that we were
penniless. My father—" He paused and cleared his throat.
"
Ja!
Your father?" the German officer prompted, dropping into
accented English. "Your father?"
"My father dedicated me to a career of revenge—to wipe out his
wrongs," Nelson continued. "If America hadn't gone into the First
World War, he wouldn't have lost his business; my mother would still
be living. When he joined the Nazi party, the way became clear to use
me—to educate me in a military prep school, then send me to Annapolis,
for a career in the United States navy—and no one suspected me. No
one—"
"Sometimes," Bradford put in, "I think Curtis suspected you."
"Maybe Curtis'll find out his suspicions were justified," Nelson said
bitterly. "But it won't do Curtis any good—a commander who's lost
his ship." He turned to Brandt. "You have plenty of men to work the
Comerford
?"
Brandt nodded his square head. "We have a full crew—two hundred
men—officers, seamen, mechanics, radio men, technical experts, all
German naval reservists living in the United States, who've been sent
here secretly, a few at a time, during the past six weeks!"
The three—Brandt, Nelson and Bradford—stood on the bridge and talked,
while the efficient stretcher-bearers worked industriously to remove
the limp bodies of the
Comerford's
unconscious crew and row them
ashore.
And when that task was completed, lifeboats began to come alongside
with strange-looking radio equipment, and more gas tanks like those
Androka had brought aboard the
Comerford
with him, and dynamos and
batteries that looked like something out of a scientific nightmare.
And bustling all over the place, barking excited commands in German,
pushing and pulling and pointing to emphasize his directions, was the
strange figure of Professor Zukor Androka!
"The professor's in his glory!" Nelson remarked to Kommander Brandt.
"Funny thing about him," Bradford put in, "is that his inventions work.
That zone of silence cut us off completely."
Kommander Brandt nodded. "Goodt! But you got your message giving your
bearings—the wrong ones?"
"Yes," Nelson said. "That came through all right. And won't Curtis have
a time explaining it!"
"Hereafter," Brandt said solemnly, "the zone of silence vill be
projected from the
Comerford
; and ve have another invention of
Androka's vich vill be even more useful vhen ve come to cut the
Carethusia
out of her convoy."
"The
Carethusia
?" Nelson asked, in a puzzled tone.
Brandt said: "She's a freighter in a convoy out of St. Johns—twelve
thousand tons. The orders are to take her; not sink her."
"What's the idea?"
"Her cargo," Brandt explained. "It iss more precious than rubies. It
includes a large shipment of boarts."
"Boarts?" Nelson repeated. "What are they?"
"Boarts," Brandt told him, "are industrial diamonds—black,
imperfectly crystallized stones, but far more valuable to us than
flawless diamonds from Tiffany's on Fift' Avenue. They are needed for
making machine tools. They come from northern Brazil—and our supply is
low."
"I should think we could get a shipment of these boarts direct from
Brazil—through the blockade," Nelson said, "without taking the risk of
capturing a United States navy cruiser."
"There are other things Germany needs desperately on board the
Carethusia
," Brandt explained. "Vanadium and nickel and hundreds of
barrels of lard oil for machine-tool lubrication. Our agents have been
watching the convoys closely for weeks for just such a cargo as the
Carethusia
is taking over."
"Can we trust Androka?" Nelson asked, with a sudden note of suspicion
in his voice.
"Yes," Brandt assured him. "Of all men—we can trust Androka!"
"But he's a Czech," Nelson argued.
"The
gestapo
takes care of Czechs and Poles and Frenchmen and other
foreigners whom it chooses as its agents," Brandt pointed out. "Androka
has a daughter and other relations in Prague. He knows that if anything
misfires, if there is the slightest suspicion of treachery on his part,
his daughter and the others will suffer. Androka's loyalty is assured!"
Nelson turned to watch the forward fighting top of the
Comerford
.
The masked German seamen were installing some sort of apparatus
up there—a strange-looking object that looked something like an
old-fashioned trench mortar, and which connected with cables to the
room that served as Androka's laboratory and workshop.
Another crew was installing radio apparatus in the mizzentop turret.
Descending a companionway to see what was going on below, Nelson found
that portholes were being opened, and men were spraying chemical around
to rid the below-decks atmosphere of the lethal gas that had overcome
the
Comerford's
American crew.
Returning to the bridge, he found that the tide in the inlet had risen
considerably, and that the cruiser was riding more easily at her anchor.
Then, at Brandt's orders, the anchor was hauled in, and lifeboats and a
motor launch were used as tugs to work the vessel entirely free of the
sand bar. This was accomplished without difficulty.
Brandt came over to where Nelson was standing on the bridge and held
out his hand.
"Congratulations, Herr Kommander Nelson!" he said. "Ve have stolen one
of the United States navy's newest and fastest cruisers!" He made a
gesture as if raising a beer stein to drink a toast. "
Prosit!
" he
added.
"
Prosit!
" Nelson repeated, and the two grinned at each other.
Stars were twinkling in a patch of black-blue sky, and broken mountains
of gray cloud were skudding before the east wind. Commander Bob Curtis
found himself lying in wet sand, on a beach, somewhere, with the
rain—now a light, driving mist—beating on his face. He was chilled;
his limbs were stiff and numb. His nose and throat felt parched inside,
as if a wave of searing heat had scorched them.
According to his last calculations, the
Comerford
had been cruising
off the Maine coast. This probably was one of the islets of that
region, or it might be the mainland.
It was hard work getting to his feet, and when he did manage to stand,
he could only plant his heels in the sand and sway to and fro for fully
a minute, like a child learning to walk.
All around him in the nearly total darkness, he could make out the dim
forms of men sprawled on the beach; and of other men moving about,
exploring. He heard the murmur of voices and saw the glow of lighted
cigarettes.
A man with a flashlight was approaching him. Its white glare shone for
a moment in Curtis' face, and the familiar voice of Ensign Jack Dillon
spoke: "Commander Curtis! Are you O. K., sir?"
"I think so!" Curtis' heart warmed at the eager expression in Dillon's
face; at the heartfelt concern in his friendly brown eyes. The young
ensign was red-headed, impetuous, thoroughly genuine in his emotions.
"How about yourself, Jack?" Curtis added.
"A bit of a headache from the gas, but that's all. Any orders, sir?"
Curtis thought for a moment. "Muster the crew, as best you can. We'll
try to make a roll call. Is there any sign of the ship?"
There was a solemn note in Dillon's voice. "No, sir. She's been worked
off the sandbar and put to sea!"
The words struck Curtis with the numbing shock of a blow on some nerve
center. For the first time, he realized fully the tragedy that had
swept down on him. He had lost his ship—one of the United States
navy's fastest and newest small light cruisers—under circumstances
which smelled strongly of treachery and sabotage.
As he thought back, he realized that he
might
have prevented the
loss, if he had been more alert, more suspicious. For it was clear to
him now that the
Comerford
had been deliberately steered to this
place; that the men who had seized her had been waiting here for that
very purpose.
The pieces of the picture fitted together like a jigsaw
puzzle—Androka's zone of silence; the bearings given by radio;
Navigating Officer Nelson's queer conduct. They were all part of a
carefully laid plan!
All the suspicious circumstances surrounding Nelson came flooding into
Curtis' mind. He had never liked the man; never trusted him. Nelson
always acted as if he had some secret, something to hide.
Curtis recalled that Nelson and Androka had long conversations
together—conversations which they would end abruptly when anyone else
came within earshot. And Nelson had always been chummy with the worst
trouble maker in the crew—Bos'n's Mate Bradford.
Curtis went around, finding the officers, issuing orders. There were
still some unconscious men to be revived. In a sheltered cove among
the rocks, an exploring group had found enough dry driftwood to make a
fire—
In another hour, the skies had cleared, and white moonlight flooded
the scene with a ghostly radiance. The men of the
Comerford
had
all regained consciousness and were drying out in front of the big
driftwood bonfires in the cove.
Curtis ordered a beacon kept burning on a high promontory. Then he got
the men lined up, according to their respective classifications, for a
check-up on the missing.
When this was completed, it was found that the
Comerford's
entire
complement of two hundred and twenty men were present—except
Navigating Officer Nelson, and Bos'n's Mate Bradford! And Zukor Androka
was also missing!
With the coming of dawn, a little exploration revealed that the
Comerford's
crew was marooned on an islet, about a square mile in
area; that they had been put ashore without food or extra clothing or
equipment of any kind, and that no boats had been left for them.
One searching party reported finding the remains of what had been a
radio station on a high promontory on the north shore of the islet.
Another had found the remains of tents and log cabins, recently
demolished, in a small, timbered hollow—a well-hidden spot invisible
from the air, unless one were flying very low; a place where two
hundred or more men could have camped.
There was a good water supply—a small creek fed by springs—but
nothing in the way of food. Evidently food was a precious commodity
which the recent inhabitants of the islet couldn't afford to leave
behind.
Curtis was studying the wreckage of the wireless station, wondering
if this might have been the source of Androka's zone of silence, when
Ensign Jack Dillon came up to him.
"There's a coast-guard cutter heading for the island, sir," he
announced.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/1/4/8/61481//61481-h//61481-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | What is Androka’s motivation for using the zone of silence?
| 61481_LZNKW9Z1_4 | [
"He is helping the Nazi war effort\n",
"He is helping the American Navy. \n",
"He is doing Bob Curtis a favor by helping his ship be the most successful in the Navy. \n",
"He is planning revenge against the Nazis for harming his family. \n"
] | 1 | 1 | [
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61,481 | 61481_LZNKW9Z1 | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Silence is—Deadly | 1950.0 | Shurtleff, Bertrand | United States. Navy -- Fiction; PS; Science fiction; Inventors -- Fiction; World War, 1939-1945 -- Naval operations -- Fiction; Radio -- Fiction | SILENCE IS—DEADLY
By Bertrand L. Shurtleff
Radio is an absolute necessity in modern
organization—and particularly in modern
naval organization. If you could silence all
radio—silence of that sort would be deadly!
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Astounding Science-Fiction April 1942.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
The hurried
rat-a-tat
of knuckles hammered on the cabin door.
Commander Bob Curtis roused himself from his doze, got up from his
chair, stretched himself to his full, lanky height and yawned. That
would be Nelson, his navigating officer. Nelson always knocked that
way—like a man in an external state of jitters over nothing at all.
Curtis didn't hurry. It pleased him to let Nelson wait. He moved slowly
to the door, paused there, and flung a backward glance at the man in
the cabin with him—Zukor Androka, the elderly Czech scientist, a guest
of the United States navy, here aboard the cruiser
Comerford
.
The wizened face of the older man was molded in intent lines of
concentration, as his bushy gray head bent over his drawing board.
Curtis got a glimpse of the design on which he was working, and his
lips relaxed in a faint smile.
Androka had arrived on board the
Comerford
the day before she sailed
from Norfolk. With him came a boatload of scientific apparatus and
equipment, including a number of things that looked like oxygen tanks,
which were now stored in the forward hold. Androka had watched over
his treasures with the jealous care of a mother hen, and spent hours
daily in the room in the superstructure that had been assigned as his
laboratory.
Sometimes, Curtis thought old Androka was a bit wacky—a scientist
whose mind had been turned by the horror that had come to his country
under the domination of the Nazi
gestapo
. At other times, the man
seemed a genius. Perhaps that was the answer—a mad genius!
Curtis opened the door and looked out. Rain whipped against his face
like a stinging wet lash. Overhead, the sky was a storm-racked mass of
clouds, broken in one spot by a tiny patch of starlit blue.
His eyes rested inquiringly on the face of the man who stood before
him. It
was
Nelson, his shaggy blond brows drawn scowlingly down
over his pale eyes; his thin face a mass of tense lines; his big hands
fumbling at the neck of his slicker. Rain was coursing down his white
cheeks, streaking them with glistening furrows.
The fellow was a headache to Curtis. He was overfriendly with a
black-browed bos'n's mate named Joe Bradford—the worst trouble maker
on board. But there was no question of his ability. He was a good
navigating officer—dependable, accurate, conscientious. Nevertheless,
his taut face, restless, searching eyes, and eternally nervous manner
got Curtis' goat.
"Come in, Nelson!" he said.
Nelson shouldered his way inside, and stood there in his dripping
oilskins, blinking his eyes against the yellow light.
Curtis closed the door and nodded toward the bent form of Zukor
Androka, with a quizzical grin. "Old Czech-and-Double-Czech is working
hard on his latest invention to pull Hitler's teeth and re-establish
the Czech Republic!"
Nelson had no answering smile, although there had been a great deal
of good-natured joking aboard the
Comerford
ever since the navy
department had sent the scientist on board the cruiser to carry on his
experiments.
"I'm worried, sir!" Nelson said. "I'm not sure about my dead reckoning.
This storm—"
Curtis threw his arm around Nelson's dripping shoulders. "Forget it!
Don't let a little error get you down!"
"But this storm, sir!" Nelson avoided Curtis' friendly eyes and slipped
out from under his arm. "It's got me worried. Quartering wind of
undetermined force, variable and gusty. There's a chop to the sea—as
if from unestimated currents among the islets. No chance to check by
observation, and now there is a chance—look at me!"
He held out his hands. They were shaking as if he had the chills.
"You say there is a chance?" Curtis asked. "Stars out?"
"As if by providence, sir, there's a clear patch. I'm wondering—" His
voice trailed off, but his eyes swung toward the gleaming sextant on
the rack.
Commander Curtis shrugged good-naturedly and reached for the
instrument. "Not that I've lost confidence in you, Nels, but just
because you asked for it!"
Curtis donned his slicker and went outside, sextant in hand. In a few
minutes he returned and handed Nelson a sheet of paper with figures
underlined heavily.
"Here's what I make it," the commander told his navigating officer.
"Bet you're not off appreciably."
Nelson stared at the computations with shaking head. Then he mutely
held up his own.
Curtis stared, frowned, grabbed his own sheet again. "Any time I'm
that far off old Figure-'em Nelson's estimate, I'm checking back," he
declared, frowning at the two papers and hastily rechecking his own
figures.
"Call up to the bridge to stop her," he told Nelson. "We can't afford
to move in these waters with such a possibility of error!"
Nelson complied, and the throbbing drive of the engines lessened
at once. Nelson said: "I've been wondering, sir, if it wouldn't be
advisable to try getting a radio cross-bearing. With all these rocks
and islets—"
"Radio?" repeated the little Czech, thrusting his face between the
other two, in his independent fashion that ignored ship's discipline.
"You're using your radio?" He broke into a knowing chuckle, his keen
old eyes twinkling behind their thick lenses. "Go ahead and try it. See
how much you can get! It will be no more than Hitler can get when Zukor
Androka decrees silence over the German airways! Try it! Try it, I say!"
Bob Curtis stared at him, as if questioning his sanity. Then he
hastened to the radio room, with Nelson at his heels, and the Czech
trotting along behind.
The door burst open as they neared it. A frightened operator came out,
still wearing his earphones, and stood staring upward incredulously at
the aërial.
"Get us a radio cross-bearing for location at once," Curtis said
sharply, for the operator seemed in a daze.
"Bearing, sir?" The man brought his eyes down with difficulty, as if
still dissatisfied. "I'm sorry, sir, but the outfit's dead. Went out on
me about five minutes ago. I was taking the weather report when the set
conked. I was trying to see if something's wrong."
The Czech inventor giggled. Curtis gave him another curious look and
thrust himself into the radio room.
"Try again!" he told the operator. "See what you can get!"
The radio man leaped to his seat and tried frantically. Again and
again, he sent off a request for a cross-bearing from shore stations
that had recently been established to insure safety to naval vessels,
but there was no answer on any of the bands—not even the blare of a
high-powered commercial program in the higher reach, nor the chatter of
ships or amateurs on the shorter.
"Dead!" Androka muttered, with a bitter laugh. "Yet not dead,
gentlemen! The set is uninjured. The waves are what have been upset. I
have shattered them around your ship, just as I can eventually shatter
them all over Central Europe! For the next two hours, no radio messages
can enter or leave my zone of radio silence—of refracted radio waves,
set up by my little station on one of the neighboring islets!"
There was a long pause, while commander and navigator stared at him.
Curtis was the first to speak.
"Your secrecy might well cost the United States navy one of its best
light cruisers—and us our lives!" he said angrily. "We need that check
by radio at once! If you're not talking nonsense, call off your dogs
till we learn just where we are!"
Androka held out his palms helplessly. "I can do nothing. I have given
orders to my assistant that he must keep two hours of radio silence! I
can get no message to him, for our radio is dead!"
As if to mock him, the ship's radio began to answer:
"Station 297 calling U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
. Station 297 calling U.
S. Cruiser
Comerford
—"
"U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
calling Station 297!" the operator intoned,
winking at the two officers over Androka's discomfiture, and asked for
the bearings.
The answer came back: "Bearings north east by a quarter east, U. S.
Cruiser
Comerford
!"
Curtis sighed with relief. He saw that Nelson was staring fiercely
at the radio operator, as the man went on calling: "U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
calling Station 364. U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
calling
Station 364—"
Then the instrument rasped again: "Station 364 calling U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
. Bearings north west by three west. Bearings north west by
three west, U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
from Cay 364."
Commander and navigator had both scribbled verifications of the
numbers. Ignoring the gibbering Androka, who was wailing his
disappointment that messages had penetrated his veil of silence, they
raced for the chart room.
Quickly the parallels stepped off the bearing from the designated
points. Light intersecting lines proclaimed a check on their position.
Curtis frowned and shook his head. Slowly he forced a reluctant grin as
he stuck out his hand.
"Shake, Nels," he said. "It's my turn to eat crow. You and the radio
must be right. Continue as you were!"
"I'm relieved, sir, just the same," Nelson admitted, "to have the radio
bearings. We'd have piled up sure if you'd been right."
They went on through the night. The starlit gap in the clouds had
closed. The sky was again a blanket of darkness pouring sheets of rain
at them.
Nelson went back to the bridge, and Androka returned to the commander's
cabin. Curtis lingered in the wireless room with the radio operator.
"It's a funny thing," the latter said, still dialing and grousing, "how
I got that cross-bearing through and can't get another squeak out of
her. I'm wondering if that old goat really
has
done something to the
ether. The set seems O. K."
He lingered over the apparatus, checking and rechecking. Tubes lighted;
wires were alive to the touch and set him to shaking his head at the
tingle they sent through his inquiring fingers.
Curtis left him at it, and went to rejoin Androka in the cabin. He
found the little inventor pacing up and down, shaking his fists in the
air; pausing every now and then to run his bony fingers through his
tangled mop of gray hair, or to claw nervously at his beard.
"You have seen a miracle, commander!" he shouted at Curtis. "
My
miracle! My invention has shattered the ether waves hereabouts
hopelessly."
"Seems to me," Curtis said dryly, "this invention can harm your friends
as much as your enemies."
The scientist drew himself up to his full height—which was only a
little over five feet. His voice grew shrill. "Wait! Just wait! There
are other inventions to supplement this one. Put them together, and
they will defeat the Nazi hordes which have ravaged my country!"
Curtis was a little shocked by the hatred that gleamed in Androka's
eyes, under their bushy brows. There was something of the wild animal
in the man's expression, as his lips drew back from his yellowed teeth.
"Those tanks you have below," Curtis said, "have they some connection
with this radio silence?"
A far-away look came into Androka's eyes. He did not seem to hear
the question. He lowered his voice: "My daughter is still in Prague.
So are my sister and her husband, and
their
two daughters. If the
gestapo
knew what I am doing, all of them would be better dead. You
understand—better dead?"
Curtis said: "I understand."
"And if the Nazi agents in America knew of the islet from which my zone
of silence is projected—" Androka paused, his head tilted to one side,
as if he were listening to something—
On deck, there was shouting and commotion. Curtis rushed out, pulling
on his slicker as he went. The shout from the watch forward had been
picked up, and was being relayed all over the ship. The words struck on
Curtis' ears with a note of impending tragedy.
"Breakers ahead!"
He was beside Navigating Officer Nelson on the bridge, and saw the
helmsman climbing the rapidly spinning wheel like a monkey as he put it
hard aport.
Then the ship struck. Everything movable shot ahead until it brought up
at the end of a swing or smacked against something solid.
Curtis felt Nelson's hand grip his shoulder, as he put his lips close
to his ear and shouted: "You must have been right, sir, and the radio
bearings and my reckoning wrong. We've hit that reef a terrific smack.
I'm afraid we're gored!"
"Get out the collision mat!" Curtis ordered. "We ought to be able to
keep her up!"
And then he became aware of a deadly stillness. A vast wall of silence
enveloped the entire cruiser. Looking over the side, he could no longer
see the waves that a few minutes before had beaten savagely against the
ship.
The
Comerford
was shrouded in a huge pall of yellowish-gray mist, and
more of it was coming up from below—from ventilators and hatchways and
skylights—as if the whole ship were flooded with some evil vapor.
Somehow, Curtis' mind flashed to the stories he'd heard of the forts of
the Maginot Line, and of other forts in Holland and Belgium that had
fallen before the early Nazi blitzkrieg, when their defenders found
themselves struck numb and helpless by a gas that had been flooded into
the inner compartments of their strongholds.
There were those who said it was the work of sappers who had tunneled
under the foundations, while others laid the induction of the gas to
Fifth Column traitors. There were a hundred more or less plausible
explanations—
The vapor clouds that enveloped the
Comerford
were becoming thicker.
All about the deck lay the forms of unconscious seamen, suddenly
stricken helpless. And then Curtis saw other forms flitting about the
deck—forms that looked like creatures from another world, but he
recognized them for what they were—men wearing gas masks.
Nelson was nowhere in sight. The steersman lay in a limp heap beside
the swinging wheel. Then a gas-masked figure appeared through the
shroud of mist and steadied it, so that the cruiser would not be
completely at the mercy of the wind and the waves.
Curtis heard the anchor let down, as if by invisible hands, the chain
screaming and flailing its clanking way through the hawse hole. Then he
was completely walled in by the yellowish-gray mist. He felt his senses
swimming.
Voices droned all around him in mumbling confusion—guttural voices
that ebbed and flowed in a tide of excited talk. He caught a word of
English now and then, mixed in with a flood of Teuton phonetics.
Two words, in particular, registered clearly on his mind. One was
"
Carethusia
"; the other was "convoy." But gradually his eardrums
began to throb, as if someone were pounding on them from the inside. He
couldn't get his breath; a cloud seemed to be mounting within him until
it swept over his brain—
He felt something strike the side of his head, and realized that he had
fallen in a heap on the bridge. And after that, he wasn't conscious of
anything—
The rain had abated to a foggy drizzle. The wash of the surf swung the
Comerford
in a lazy, rolling motion, as she lay with her bow nosing
into the sandbar at the entrance of the inlet.
From her bridge, Navigating Officer Nelson watched the gas-masked
figures moving about the decks, descending companionways—like goblins
from an ancient fairy tale or a modern horror story. Nelson looked like
a goblin himself, with his face covered by a respirator. At his side,
stood his fellow conspirator Bos'n's Mate Joe Bradford, also wearing a
gas mask.
Nelson spoke in a low tone, his lips close to Bradford's ear. "It
worked, Joe!"
"Yeah!" Bradford agreed. "It worked—fine!"
The limp bodies of the
Comerford's
crew were being carried to the
lowered accommodation ladder and transferred into waiting lifeboats.
Nelson swore under his breath. "Reckon it'll take a couple of hours
before the ship's rid of that damn gas!"
Bradford shook his head in disagreement. "The old geezer claims he's
got a neutralizing chemical in one of them tanks of his that'll clear
everything up inside half an hour."
"I'd rather get along without Androka, if we could!" Nelson muttered.
"He's nothing but a crackpot!"
"It was a crackpot who invented the gas we used to break up the
Maginot Line," Bradford reminded him. "It saved a lot of lives for the
Fuehrer
—lives that'd have been lost if the forts had to be taken by
our storm troopers!"
Nelson grunted and turned away. A short, thick-set figure in the
uniform of a German naval commander had ascended the accommodation
ladder and was mounting to the bridge. He, too, was equipped with a
respirator.
He came up to Nelson, saluted, and held out his hand, introducing
himself as Herr Kommander Brandt. He began to speak in German, but
Nelson stopped him.
"I don't speak any German," he explained. "I was born and educated in
the United States—of German parents, who had been ruined in the First
World War. My mother committed suicide when she learned that we were
penniless. My father—" He paused and cleared his throat.
"
Ja!
Your father?" the German officer prompted, dropping into
accented English. "Your father?"
"My father dedicated me to a career of revenge—to wipe out his
wrongs," Nelson continued. "If America hadn't gone into the First
World War, he wouldn't have lost his business; my mother would still
be living. When he joined the Nazi party, the way became clear to use
me—to educate me in a military prep school, then send me to Annapolis,
for a career in the United States navy—and no one suspected me. No
one—"
"Sometimes," Bradford put in, "I think Curtis suspected you."
"Maybe Curtis'll find out his suspicions were justified," Nelson said
bitterly. "But it won't do Curtis any good—a commander who's lost
his ship." He turned to Brandt. "You have plenty of men to work the
Comerford
?"
Brandt nodded his square head. "We have a full crew—two hundred
men—officers, seamen, mechanics, radio men, technical experts, all
German naval reservists living in the United States, who've been sent
here secretly, a few at a time, during the past six weeks!"
The three—Brandt, Nelson and Bradford—stood on the bridge and talked,
while the efficient stretcher-bearers worked industriously to remove
the limp bodies of the
Comerford's
unconscious crew and row them
ashore.
And when that task was completed, lifeboats began to come alongside
with strange-looking radio equipment, and more gas tanks like those
Androka had brought aboard the
Comerford
with him, and dynamos and
batteries that looked like something out of a scientific nightmare.
And bustling all over the place, barking excited commands in German,
pushing and pulling and pointing to emphasize his directions, was the
strange figure of Professor Zukor Androka!
"The professor's in his glory!" Nelson remarked to Kommander Brandt.
"Funny thing about him," Bradford put in, "is that his inventions work.
That zone of silence cut us off completely."
Kommander Brandt nodded. "Goodt! But you got your message giving your
bearings—the wrong ones?"
"Yes," Nelson said. "That came through all right. And won't Curtis have
a time explaining it!"
"Hereafter," Brandt said solemnly, "the zone of silence vill be
projected from the
Comerford
; and ve have another invention of
Androka's vich vill be even more useful vhen ve come to cut the
Carethusia
out of her convoy."
"The
Carethusia
?" Nelson asked, in a puzzled tone.
Brandt said: "She's a freighter in a convoy out of St. Johns—twelve
thousand tons. The orders are to take her; not sink her."
"What's the idea?"
"Her cargo," Brandt explained. "It iss more precious than rubies. It
includes a large shipment of boarts."
"Boarts?" Nelson repeated. "What are they?"
"Boarts," Brandt told him, "are industrial diamonds—black,
imperfectly crystallized stones, but far more valuable to us than
flawless diamonds from Tiffany's on Fift' Avenue. They are needed for
making machine tools. They come from northern Brazil—and our supply is
low."
"I should think we could get a shipment of these boarts direct from
Brazil—through the blockade," Nelson said, "without taking the risk of
capturing a United States navy cruiser."
"There are other things Germany needs desperately on board the
Carethusia
," Brandt explained. "Vanadium and nickel and hundreds of
barrels of lard oil for machine-tool lubrication. Our agents have been
watching the convoys closely for weeks for just such a cargo as the
Carethusia
is taking over."
"Can we trust Androka?" Nelson asked, with a sudden note of suspicion
in his voice.
"Yes," Brandt assured him. "Of all men—we can trust Androka!"
"But he's a Czech," Nelson argued.
"The
gestapo
takes care of Czechs and Poles and Frenchmen and other
foreigners whom it chooses as its agents," Brandt pointed out. "Androka
has a daughter and other relations in Prague. He knows that if anything
misfires, if there is the slightest suspicion of treachery on his part,
his daughter and the others will suffer. Androka's loyalty is assured!"
Nelson turned to watch the forward fighting top of the
Comerford
.
The masked German seamen were installing some sort of apparatus
up there—a strange-looking object that looked something like an
old-fashioned trench mortar, and which connected with cables to the
room that served as Androka's laboratory and workshop.
Another crew was installing radio apparatus in the mizzentop turret.
Descending a companionway to see what was going on below, Nelson found
that portholes were being opened, and men were spraying chemical around
to rid the below-decks atmosphere of the lethal gas that had overcome
the
Comerford's
American crew.
Returning to the bridge, he found that the tide in the inlet had risen
considerably, and that the cruiser was riding more easily at her anchor.
Then, at Brandt's orders, the anchor was hauled in, and lifeboats and a
motor launch were used as tugs to work the vessel entirely free of the
sand bar. This was accomplished without difficulty.
Brandt came over to where Nelson was standing on the bridge and held
out his hand.
"Congratulations, Herr Kommander Nelson!" he said. "Ve have stolen one
of the United States navy's newest and fastest cruisers!" He made a
gesture as if raising a beer stein to drink a toast. "
Prosit!
" he
added.
"
Prosit!
" Nelson repeated, and the two grinned at each other.
Stars were twinkling in a patch of black-blue sky, and broken mountains
of gray cloud were skudding before the east wind. Commander Bob Curtis
found himself lying in wet sand, on a beach, somewhere, with the
rain—now a light, driving mist—beating on his face. He was chilled;
his limbs were stiff and numb. His nose and throat felt parched inside,
as if a wave of searing heat had scorched them.
According to his last calculations, the
Comerford
had been cruising
off the Maine coast. This probably was one of the islets of that
region, or it might be the mainland.
It was hard work getting to his feet, and when he did manage to stand,
he could only plant his heels in the sand and sway to and fro for fully
a minute, like a child learning to walk.
All around him in the nearly total darkness, he could make out the dim
forms of men sprawled on the beach; and of other men moving about,
exploring. He heard the murmur of voices and saw the glow of lighted
cigarettes.
A man with a flashlight was approaching him. Its white glare shone for
a moment in Curtis' face, and the familiar voice of Ensign Jack Dillon
spoke: "Commander Curtis! Are you O. K., sir?"
"I think so!" Curtis' heart warmed at the eager expression in Dillon's
face; at the heartfelt concern in his friendly brown eyes. The young
ensign was red-headed, impetuous, thoroughly genuine in his emotions.
"How about yourself, Jack?" Curtis added.
"A bit of a headache from the gas, but that's all. Any orders, sir?"
Curtis thought for a moment. "Muster the crew, as best you can. We'll
try to make a roll call. Is there any sign of the ship?"
There was a solemn note in Dillon's voice. "No, sir. She's been worked
off the sandbar and put to sea!"
The words struck Curtis with the numbing shock of a blow on some nerve
center. For the first time, he realized fully the tragedy that had
swept down on him. He had lost his ship—one of the United States
navy's fastest and newest small light cruisers—under circumstances
which smelled strongly of treachery and sabotage.
As he thought back, he realized that he
might
have prevented the
loss, if he had been more alert, more suspicious. For it was clear to
him now that the
Comerford
had been deliberately steered to this
place; that the men who had seized her had been waiting here for that
very purpose.
The pieces of the picture fitted together like a jigsaw
puzzle—Androka's zone of silence; the bearings given by radio;
Navigating Officer Nelson's queer conduct. They were all part of a
carefully laid plan!
All the suspicious circumstances surrounding Nelson came flooding into
Curtis' mind. He had never liked the man; never trusted him. Nelson
always acted as if he had some secret, something to hide.
Curtis recalled that Nelson and Androka had long conversations
together—conversations which they would end abruptly when anyone else
came within earshot. And Nelson had always been chummy with the worst
trouble maker in the crew—Bos'n's Mate Bradford.
Curtis went around, finding the officers, issuing orders. There were
still some unconscious men to be revived. In a sheltered cove among
the rocks, an exploring group had found enough dry driftwood to make a
fire—
In another hour, the skies had cleared, and white moonlight flooded
the scene with a ghostly radiance. The men of the
Comerford
had
all regained consciousness and were drying out in front of the big
driftwood bonfires in the cove.
Curtis ordered a beacon kept burning on a high promontory. Then he got
the men lined up, according to their respective classifications, for a
check-up on the missing.
When this was completed, it was found that the
Comerford's
entire
complement of two hundred and twenty men were present—except
Navigating Officer Nelson, and Bos'n's Mate Bradford! And Zukor Androka
was also missing!
With the coming of dawn, a little exploration revealed that the
Comerford's
crew was marooned on an islet, about a square mile in
area; that they had been put ashore without food or extra clothing or
equipment of any kind, and that no boats had been left for them.
One searching party reported finding the remains of what had been a
radio station on a high promontory on the north shore of the islet.
Another had found the remains of tents and log cabins, recently
demolished, in a small, timbered hollow—a well-hidden spot invisible
from the air, unless one were flying very low; a place where two
hundred or more men could have camped.
There was a good water supply—a small creek fed by springs—but
nothing in the way of food. Evidently food was a precious commodity
which the recent inhabitants of the islet couldn't afford to leave
behind.
Curtis was studying the wreckage of the wireless station, wondering
if this might have been the source of Androka's zone of silence, when
Ensign Jack Dillon came up to him.
"There's a coast-guard cutter heading for the island, sir," he
announced.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/1/4/8/61481//61481-h//61481-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | What is the significance of the evidence of human lodging on the islet?
| 61481_LZNKW9Z1_5 | [
"Nazis were hiding out there.\n",
"It will give Curtis and his crew mates shelter while they a stranded. \n",
"The Americans have outposts everywhere. \n",
"The Islet is where the zone of silence is to be built. \n"
] | 1 | 1 | [
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61,481 | 61481_LZNKW9Z1 | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Silence is—Deadly | 1950.0 | Shurtleff, Bertrand | United States. Navy -- Fiction; PS; Science fiction; Inventors -- Fiction; World War, 1939-1945 -- Naval operations -- Fiction; Radio -- Fiction | SILENCE IS—DEADLY
By Bertrand L. Shurtleff
Radio is an absolute necessity in modern
organization—and particularly in modern
naval organization. If you could silence all
radio—silence of that sort would be deadly!
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Astounding Science-Fiction April 1942.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
The hurried
rat-a-tat
of knuckles hammered on the cabin door.
Commander Bob Curtis roused himself from his doze, got up from his
chair, stretched himself to his full, lanky height and yawned. That
would be Nelson, his navigating officer. Nelson always knocked that
way—like a man in an external state of jitters over nothing at all.
Curtis didn't hurry. It pleased him to let Nelson wait. He moved slowly
to the door, paused there, and flung a backward glance at the man in
the cabin with him—Zukor Androka, the elderly Czech scientist, a guest
of the United States navy, here aboard the cruiser
Comerford
.
The wizened face of the older man was molded in intent lines of
concentration, as his bushy gray head bent over his drawing board.
Curtis got a glimpse of the design on which he was working, and his
lips relaxed in a faint smile.
Androka had arrived on board the
Comerford
the day before she sailed
from Norfolk. With him came a boatload of scientific apparatus and
equipment, including a number of things that looked like oxygen tanks,
which were now stored in the forward hold. Androka had watched over
his treasures with the jealous care of a mother hen, and spent hours
daily in the room in the superstructure that had been assigned as his
laboratory.
Sometimes, Curtis thought old Androka was a bit wacky—a scientist
whose mind had been turned by the horror that had come to his country
under the domination of the Nazi
gestapo
. At other times, the man
seemed a genius. Perhaps that was the answer—a mad genius!
Curtis opened the door and looked out. Rain whipped against his face
like a stinging wet lash. Overhead, the sky was a storm-racked mass of
clouds, broken in one spot by a tiny patch of starlit blue.
His eyes rested inquiringly on the face of the man who stood before
him. It
was
Nelson, his shaggy blond brows drawn scowlingly down
over his pale eyes; his thin face a mass of tense lines; his big hands
fumbling at the neck of his slicker. Rain was coursing down his white
cheeks, streaking them with glistening furrows.
The fellow was a headache to Curtis. He was overfriendly with a
black-browed bos'n's mate named Joe Bradford—the worst trouble maker
on board. But there was no question of his ability. He was a good
navigating officer—dependable, accurate, conscientious. Nevertheless,
his taut face, restless, searching eyes, and eternally nervous manner
got Curtis' goat.
"Come in, Nelson!" he said.
Nelson shouldered his way inside, and stood there in his dripping
oilskins, blinking his eyes against the yellow light.
Curtis closed the door and nodded toward the bent form of Zukor
Androka, with a quizzical grin. "Old Czech-and-Double-Czech is working
hard on his latest invention to pull Hitler's teeth and re-establish
the Czech Republic!"
Nelson had no answering smile, although there had been a great deal
of good-natured joking aboard the
Comerford
ever since the navy
department had sent the scientist on board the cruiser to carry on his
experiments.
"I'm worried, sir!" Nelson said. "I'm not sure about my dead reckoning.
This storm—"
Curtis threw his arm around Nelson's dripping shoulders. "Forget it!
Don't let a little error get you down!"
"But this storm, sir!" Nelson avoided Curtis' friendly eyes and slipped
out from under his arm. "It's got me worried. Quartering wind of
undetermined force, variable and gusty. There's a chop to the sea—as
if from unestimated currents among the islets. No chance to check by
observation, and now there is a chance—look at me!"
He held out his hands. They were shaking as if he had the chills.
"You say there is a chance?" Curtis asked. "Stars out?"
"As if by providence, sir, there's a clear patch. I'm wondering—" His
voice trailed off, but his eyes swung toward the gleaming sextant on
the rack.
Commander Curtis shrugged good-naturedly and reached for the
instrument. "Not that I've lost confidence in you, Nels, but just
because you asked for it!"
Curtis donned his slicker and went outside, sextant in hand. In a few
minutes he returned and handed Nelson a sheet of paper with figures
underlined heavily.
"Here's what I make it," the commander told his navigating officer.
"Bet you're not off appreciably."
Nelson stared at the computations with shaking head. Then he mutely
held up his own.
Curtis stared, frowned, grabbed his own sheet again. "Any time I'm
that far off old Figure-'em Nelson's estimate, I'm checking back," he
declared, frowning at the two papers and hastily rechecking his own
figures.
"Call up to the bridge to stop her," he told Nelson. "We can't afford
to move in these waters with such a possibility of error!"
Nelson complied, and the throbbing drive of the engines lessened
at once. Nelson said: "I've been wondering, sir, if it wouldn't be
advisable to try getting a radio cross-bearing. With all these rocks
and islets—"
"Radio?" repeated the little Czech, thrusting his face between the
other two, in his independent fashion that ignored ship's discipline.
"You're using your radio?" He broke into a knowing chuckle, his keen
old eyes twinkling behind their thick lenses. "Go ahead and try it. See
how much you can get! It will be no more than Hitler can get when Zukor
Androka decrees silence over the German airways! Try it! Try it, I say!"
Bob Curtis stared at him, as if questioning his sanity. Then he
hastened to the radio room, with Nelson at his heels, and the Czech
trotting along behind.
The door burst open as they neared it. A frightened operator came out,
still wearing his earphones, and stood staring upward incredulously at
the aërial.
"Get us a radio cross-bearing for location at once," Curtis said
sharply, for the operator seemed in a daze.
"Bearing, sir?" The man brought his eyes down with difficulty, as if
still dissatisfied. "I'm sorry, sir, but the outfit's dead. Went out on
me about five minutes ago. I was taking the weather report when the set
conked. I was trying to see if something's wrong."
The Czech inventor giggled. Curtis gave him another curious look and
thrust himself into the radio room.
"Try again!" he told the operator. "See what you can get!"
The radio man leaped to his seat and tried frantically. Again and
again, he sent off a request for a cross-bearing from shore stations
that had recently been established to insure safety to naval vessels,
but there was no answer on any of the bands—not even the blare of a
high-powered commercial program in the higher reach, nor the chatter of
ships or amateurs on the shorter.
"Dead!" Androka muttered, with a bitter laugh. "Yet not dead,
gentlemen! The set is uninjured. The waves are what have been upset. I
have shattered them around your ship, just as I can eventually shatter
them all over Central Europe! For the next two hours, no radio messages
can enter or leave my zone of radio silence—of refracted radio waves,
set up by my little station on one of the neighboring islets!"
There was a long pause, while commander and navigator stared at him.
Curtis was the first to speak.
"Your secrecy might well cost the United States navy one of its best
light cruisers—and us our lives!" he said angrily. "We need that check
by radio at once! If you're not talking nonsense, call off your dogs
till we learn just where we are!"
Androka held out his palms helplessly. "I can do nothing. I have given
orders to my assistant that he must keep two hours of radio silence! I
can get no message to him, for our radio is dead!"
As if to mock him, the ship's radio began to answer:
"Station 297 calling U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
. Station 297 calling U.
S. Cruiser
Comerford
—"
"U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
calling Station 297!" the operator intoned,
winking at the two officers over Androka's discomfiture, and asked for
the bearings.
The answer came back: "Bearings north east by a quarter east, U. S.
Cruiser
Comerford
!"
Curtis sighed with relief. He saw that Nelson was staring fiercely
at the radio operator, as the man went on calling: "U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
calling Station 364. U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
calling
Station 364—"
Then the instrument rasped again: "Station 364 calling U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
. Bearings north west by three west. Bearings north west by
three west, U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
from Cay 364."
Commander and navigator had both scribbled verifications of the
numbers. Ignoring the gibbering Androka, who was wailing his
disappointment that messages had penetrated his veil of silence, they
raced for the chart room.
Quickly the parallels stepped off the bearing from the designated
points. Light intersecting lines proclaimed a check on their position.
Curtis frowned and shook his head. Slowly he forced a reluctant grin as
he stuck out his hand.
"Shake, Nels," he said. "It's my turn to eat crow. You and the radio
must be right. Continue as you were!"
"I'm relieved, sir, just the same," Nelson admitted, "to have the radio
bearings. We'd have piled up sure if you'd been right."
They went on through the night. The starlit gap in the clouds had
closed. The sky was again a blanket of darkness pouring sheets of rain
at them.
Nelson went back to the bridge, and Androka returned to the commander's
cabin. Curtis lingered in the wireless room with the radio operator.
"It's a funny thing," the latter said, still dialing and grousing, "how
I got that cross-bearing through and can't get another squeak out of
her. I'm wondering if that old goat really
has
done something to the
ether. The set seems O. K."
He lingered over the apparatus, checking and rechecking. Tubes lighted;
wires were alive to the touch and set him to shaking his head at the
tingle they sent through his inquiring fingers.
Curtis left him at it, and went to rejoin Androka in the cabin. He
found the little inventor pacing up and down, shaking his fists in the
air; pausing every now and then to run his bony fingers through his
tangled mop of gray hair, or to claw nervously at his beard.
"You have seen a miracle, commander!" he shouted at Curtis. "
My
miracle! My invention has shattered the ether waves hereabouts
hopelessly."
"Seems to me," Curtis said dryly, "this invention can harm your friends
as much as your enemies."
The scientist drew himself up to his full height—which was only a
little over five feet. His voice grew shrill. "Wait! Just wait! There
are other inventions to supplement this one. Put them together, and
they will defeat the Nazi hordes which have ravaged my country!"
Curtis was a little shocked by the hatred that gleamed in Androka's
eyes, under their bushy brows. There was something of the wild animal
in the man's expression, as his lips drew back from his yellowed teeth.
"Those tanks you have below," Curtis said, "have they some connection
with this radio silence?"
A far-away look came into Androka's eyes. He did not seem to hear
the question. He lowered his voice: "My daughter is still in Prague.
So are my sister and her husband, and
their
two daughters. If the
gestapo
knew what I am doing, all of them would be better dead. You
understand—better dead?"
Curtis said: "I understand."
"And if the Nazi agents in America knew of the islet from which my zone
of silence is projected—" Androka paused, his head tilted to one side,
as if he were listening to something—
On deck, there was shouting and commotion. Curtis rushed out, pulling
on his slicker as he went. The shout from the watch forward had been
picked up, and was being relayed all over the ship. The words struck on
Curtis' ears with a note of impending tragedy.
"Breakers ahead!"
He was beside Navigating Officer Nelson on the bridge, and saw the
helmsman climbing the rapidly spinning wheel like a monkey as he put it
hard aport.
Then the ship struck. Everything movable shot ahead until it brought up
at the end of a swing or smacked against something solid.
Curtis felt Nelson's hand grip his shoulder, as he put his lips close
to his ear and shouted: "You must have been right, sir, and the radio
bearings and my reckoning wrong. We've hit that reef a terrific smack.
I'm afraid we're gored!"
"Get out the collision mat!" Curtis ordered. "We ought to be able to
keep her up!"
And then he became aware of a deadly stillness. A vast wall of silence
enveloped the entire cruiser. Looking over the side, he could no longer
see the waves that a few minutes before had beaten savagely against the
ship.
The
Comerford
was shrouded in a huge pall of yellowish-gray mist, and
more of it was coming up from below—from ventilators and hatchways and
skylights—as if the whole ship were flooded with some evil vapor.
Somehow, Curtis' mind flashed to the stories he'd heard of the forts of
the Maginot Line, and of other forts in Holland and Belgium that had
fallen before the early Nazi blitzkrieg, when their defenders found
themselves struck numb and helpless by a gas that had been flooded into
the inner compartments of their strongholds.
There were those who said it was the work of sappers who had tunneled
under the foundations, while others laid the induction of the gas to
Fifth Column traitors. There were a hundred more or less plausible
explanations—
The vapor clouds that enveloped the
Comerford
were becoming thicker.
All about the deck lay the forms of unconscious seamen, suddenly
stricken helpless. And then Curtis saw other forms flitting about the
deck—forms that looked like creatures from another world, but he
recognized them for what they were—men wearing gas masks.
Nelson was nowhere in sight. The steersman lay in a limp heap beside
the swinging wheel. Then a gas-masked figure appeared through the
shroud of mist and steadied it, so that the cruiser would not be
completely at the mercy of the wind and the waves.
Curtis heard the anchor let down, as if by invisible hands, the chain
screaming and flailing its clanking way through the hawse hole. Then he
was completely walled in by the yellowish-gray mist. He felt his senses
swimming.
Voices droned all around him in mumbling confusion—guttural voices
that ebbed and flowed in a tide of excited talk. He caught a word of
English now and then, mixed in with a flood of Teuton phonetics.
Two words, in particular, registered clearly on his mind. One was
"
Carethusia
"; the other was "convoy." But gradually his eardrums
began to throb, as if someone were pounding on them from the inside. He
couldn't get his breath; a cloud seemed to be mounting within him until
it swept over his brain—
He felt something strike the side of his head, and realized that he had
fallen in a heap on the bridge. And after that, he wasn't conscious of
anything—
The rain had abated to a foggy drizzle. The wash of the surf swung the
Comerford
in a lazy, rolling motion, as she lay with her bow nosing
into the sandbar at the entrance of the inlet.
From her bridge, Navigating Officer Nelson watched the gas-masked
figures moving about the decks, descending companionways—like goblins
from an ancient fairy tale or a modern horror story. Nelson looked like
a goblin himself, with his face covered by a respirator. At his side,
stood his fellow conspirator Bos'n's Mate Joe Bradford, also wearing a
gas mask.
Nelson spoke in a low tone, his lips close to Bradford's ear. "It
worked, Joe!"
"Yeah!" Bradford agreed. "It worked—fine!"
The limp bodies of the
Comerford's
crew were being carried to the
lowered accommodation ladder and transferred into waiting lifeboats.
Nelson swore under his breath. "Reckon it'll take a couple of hours
before the ship's rid of that damn gas!"
Bradford shook his head in disagreement. "The old geezer claims he's
got a neutralizing chemical in one of them tanks of his that'll clear
everything up inside half an hour."
"I'd rather get along without Androka, if we could!" Nelson muttered.
"He's nothing but a crackpot!"
"It was a crackpot who invented the gas we used to break up the
Maginot Line," Bradford reminded him. "It saved a lot of lives for the
Fuehrer
—lives that'd have been lost if the forts had to be taken by
our storm troopers!"
Nelson grunted and turned away. A short, thick-set figure in the
uniform of a German naval commander had ascended the accommodation
ladder and was mounting to the bridge. He, too, was equipped with a
respirator.
He came up to Nelson, saluted, and held out his hand, introducing
himself as Herr Kommander Brandt. He began to speak in German, but
Nelson stopped him.
"I don't speak any German," he explained. "I was born and educated in
the United States—of German parents, who had been ruined in the First
World War. My mother committed suicide when she learned that we were
penniless. My father—" He paused and cleared his throat.
"
Ja!
Your father?" the German officer prompted, dropping into
accented English. "Your father?"
"My father dedicated me to a career of revenge—to wipe out his
wrongs," Nelson continued. "If America hadn't gone into the First
World War, he wouldn't have lost his business; my mother would still
be living. When he joined the Nazi party, the way became clear to use
me—to educate me in a military prep school, then send me to Annapolis,
for a career in the United States navy—and no one suspected me. No
one—"
"Sometimes," Bradford put in, "I think Curtis suspected you."
"Maybe Curtis'll find out his suspicions were justified," Nelson said
bitterly. "But it won't do Curtis any good—a commander who's lost
his ship." He turned to Brandt. "You have plenty of men to work the
Comerford
?"
Brandt nodded his square head. "We have a full crew—two hundred
men—officers, seamen, mechanics, radio men, technical experts, all
German naval reservists living in the United States, who've been sent
here secretly, a few at a time, during the past six weeks!"
The three—Brandt, Nelson and Bradford—stood on the bridge and talked,
while the efficient stretcher-bearers worked industriously to remove
the limp bodies of the
Comerford's
unconscious crew and row them
ashore.
And when that task was completed, lifeboats began to come alongside
with strange-looking radio equipment, and more gas tanks like those
Androka had brought aboard the
Comerford
with him, and dynamos and
batteries that looked like something out of a scientific nightmare.
And bustling all over the place, barking excited commands in German,
pushing and pulling and pointing to emphasize his directions, was the
strange figure of Professor Zukor Androka!
"The professor's in his glory!" Nelson remarked to Kommander Brandt.
"Funny thing about him," Bradford put in, "is that his inventions work.
That zone of silence cut us off completely."
Kommander Brandt nodded. "Goodt! But you got your message giving your
bearings—the wrong ones?"
"Yes," Nelson said. "That came through all right. And won't Curtis have
a time explaining it!"
"Hereafter," Brandt said solemnly, "the zone of silence vill be
projected from the
Comerford
; and ve have another invention of
Androka's vich vill be even more useful vhen ve come to cut the
Carethusia
out of her convoy."
"The
Carethusia
?" Nelson asked, in a puzzled tone.
Brandt said: "She's a freighter in a convoy out of St. Johns—twelve
thousand tons. The orders are to take her; not sink her."
"What's the idea?"
"Her cargo," Brandt explained. "It iss more precious than rubies. It
includes a large shipment of boarts."
"Boarts?" Nelson repeated. "What are they?"
"Boarts," Brandt told him, "are industrial diamonds—black,
imperfectly crystallized stones, but far more valuable to us than
flawless diamonds from Tiffany's on Fift' Avenue. They are needed for
making machine tools. They come from northern Brazil—and our supply is
low."
"I should think we could get a shipment of these boarts direct from
Brazil—through the blockade," Nelson said, "without taking the risk of
capturing a United States navy cruiser."
"There are other things Germany needs desperately on board the
Carethusia
," Brandt explained. "Vanadium and nickel and hundreds of
barrels of lard oil for machine-tool lubrication. Our agents have been
watching the convoys closely for weeks for just such a cargo as the
Carethusia
is taking over."
"Can we trust Androka?" Nelson asked, with a sudden note of suspicion
in his voice.
"Yes," Brandt assured him. "Of all men—we can trust Androka!"
"But he's a Czech," Nelson argued.
"The
gestapo
takes care of Czechs and Poles and Frenchmen and other
foreigners whom it chooses as its agents," Brandt pointed out. "Androka
has a daughter and other relations in Prague. He knows that if anything
misfires, if there is the slightest suspicion of treachery on his part,
his daughter and the others will suffer. Androka's loyalty is assured!"
Nelson turned to watch the forward fighting top of the
Comerford
.
The masked German seamen were installing some sort of apparatus
up there—a strange-looking object that looked something like an
old-fashioned trench mortar, and which connected with cables to the
room that served as Androka's laboratory and workshop.
Another crew was installing radio apparatus in the mizzentop turret.
Descending a companionway to see what was going on below, Nelson found
that portholes were being opened, and men were spraying chemical around
to rid the below-decks atmosphere of the lethal gas that had overcome
the
Comerford's
American crew.
Returning to the bridge, he found that the tide in the inlet had risen
considerably, and that the cruiser was riding more easily at her anchor.
Then, at Brandt's orders, the anchor was hauled in, and lifeboats and a
motor launch were used as tugs to work the vessel entirely free of the
sand bar. This was accomplished without difficulty.
Brandt came over to where Nelson was standing on the bridge and held
out his hand.
"Congratulations, Herr Kommander Nelson!" he said. "Ve have stolen one
of the United States navy's newest and fastest cruisers!" He made a
gesture as if raising a beer stein to drink a toast. "
Prosit!
" he
added.
"
Prosit!
" Nelson repeated, and the two grinned at each other.
Stars were twinkling in a patch of black-blue sky, and broken mountains
of gray cloud were skudding before the east wind. Commander Bob Curtis
found himself lying in wet sand, on a beach, somewhere, with the
rain—now a light, driving mist—beating on his face. He was chilled;
his limbs were stiff and numb. His nose and throat felt parched inside,
as if a wave of searing heat had scorched them.
According to his last calculations, the
Comerford
had been cruising
off the Maine coast. This probably was one of the islets of that
region, or it might be the mainland.
It was hard work getting to his feet, and when he did manage to stand,
he could only plant his heels in the sand and sway to and fro for fully
a minute, like a child learning to walk.
All around him in the nearly total darkness, he could make out the dim
forms of men sprawled on the beach; and of other men moving about,
exploring. He heard the murmur of voices and saw the glow of lighted
cigarettes.
A man with a flashlight was approaching him. Its white glare shone for
a moment in Curtis' face, and the familiar voice of Ensign Jack Dillon
spoke: "Commander Curtis! Are you O. K., sir?"
"I think so!" Curtis' heart warmed at the eager expression in Dillon's
face; at the heartfelt concern in his friendly brown eyes. The young
ensign was red-headed, impetuous, thoroughly genuine in his emotions.
"How about yourself, Jack?" Curtis added.
"A bit of a headache from the gas, but that's all. Any orders, sir?"
Curtis thought for a moment. "Muster the crew, as best you can. We'll
try to make a roll call. Is there any sign of the ship?"
There was a solemn note in Dillon's voice. "No, sir. She's been worked
off the sandbar and put to sea!"
The words struck Curtis with the numbing shock of a blow on some nerve
center. For the first time, he realized fully the tragedy that had
swept down on him. He had lost his ship—one of the United States
navy's fastest and newest small light cruisers—under circumstances
which smelled strongly of treachery and sabotage.
As he thought back, he realized that he
might
have prevented the
loss, if he had been more alert, more suspicious. For it was clear to
him now that the
Comerford
had been deliberately steered to this
place; that the men who had seized her had been waiting here for that
very purpose.
The pieces of the picture fitted together like a jigsaw
puzzle—Androka's zone of silence; the bearings given by radio;
Navigating Officer Nelson's queer conduct. They were all part of a
carefully laid plan!
All the suspicious circumstances surrounding Nelson came flooding into
Curtis' mind. He had never liked the man; never trusted him. Nelson
always acted as if he had some secret, something to hide.
Curtis recalled that Nelson and Androka had long conversations
together—conversations which they would end abruptly when anyone else
came within earshot. And Nelson had always been chummy with the worst
trouble maker in the crew—Bos'n's Mate Bradford.
Curtis went around, finding the officers, issuing orders. There were
still some unconscious men to be revived. In a sheltered cove among
the rocks, an exploring group had found enough dry driftwood to make a
fire—
In another hour, the skies had cleared, and white moonlight flooded
the scene with a ghostly radiance. The men of the
Comerford
had
all regained consciousness and were drying out in front of the big
driftwood bonfires in the cove.
Curtis ordered a beacon kept burning on a high promontory. Then he got
the men lined up, according to their respective classifications, for a
check-up on the missing.
When this was completed, it was found that the
Comerford's
entire
complement of two hundred and twenty men were present—except
Navigating Officer Nelson, and Bos'n's Mate Bradford! And Zukor Androka
was also missing!
With the coming of dawn, a little exploration revealed that the
Comerford's
crew was marooned on an islet, about a square mile in
area; that they had been put ashore without food or extra clothing or
equipment of any kind, and that no boats had been left for them.
One searching party reported finding the remains of what had been a
radio station on a high promontory on the north shore of the islet.
Another had found the remains of tents and log cabins, recently
demolished, in a small, timbered hollow—a well-hidden spot invisible
from the air, unless one were flying very low; a place where two
hundred or more men could have camped.
There was a good water supply—a small creek fed by springs—but
nothing in the way of food. Evidently food was a precious commodity
which the recent inhabitants of the islet couldn't afford to leave
behind.
Curtis was studying the wreckage of the wireless station, wondering
if this might have been the source of Androka's zone of silence, when
Ensign Jack Dillon came up to him.
"There's a coast-guard cutter heading for the island, sir," he
announced.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/1/4/8/61481//61481-h//61481-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | The yellow-gray mist indicates which of the following?
| 61481_LZNKW9Z1_6 | [
"A direct result of the zone of silence \n",
"Curtis will be killed. \n",
"The Holland blitzkrieg was a travesty \n",
"Nazis are on The Comerford. \n"
] | 4 | 4 | [
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61,481 | 61481_LZNKW9Z1 | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Silence is—Deadly | 1950.0 | Shurtleff, Bertrand | United States. Navy -- Fiction; PS; Science fiction; Inventors -- Fiction; World War, 1939-1945 -- Naval operations -- Fiction; Radio -- Fiction | SILENCE IS—DEADLY
By Bertrand L. Shurtleff
Radio is an absolute necessity in modern
organization—and particularly in modern
naval organization. If you could silence all
radio—silence of that sort would be deadly!
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Astounding Science-Fiction April 1942.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
The hurried
rat-a-tat
of knuckles hammered on the cabin door.
Commander Bob Curtis roused himself from his doze, got up from his
chair, stretched himself to his full, lanky height and yawned. That
would be Nelson, his navigating officer. Nelson always knocked that
way—like a man in an external state of jitters over nothing at all.
Curtis didn't hurry. It pleased him to let Nelson wait. He moved slowly
to the door, paused there, and flung a backward glance at the man in
the cabin with him—Zukor Androka, the elderly Czech scientist, a guest
of the United States navy, here aboard the cruiser
Comerford
.
The wizened face of the older man was molded in intent lines of
concentration, as his bushy gray head bent over his drawing board.
Curtis got a glimpse of the design on which he was working, and his
lips relaxed in a faint smile.
Androka had arrived on board the
Comerford
the day before she sailed
from Norfolk. With him came a boatload of scientific apparatus and
equipment, including a number of things that looked like oxygen tanks,
which were now stored in the forward hold. Androka had watched over
his treasures with the jealous care of a mother hen, and spent hours
daily in the room in the superstructure that had been assigned as his
laboratory.
Sometimes, Curtis thought old Androka was a bit wacky—a scientist
whose mind had been turned by the horror that had come to his country
under the domination of the Nazi
gestapo
. At other times, the man
seemed a genius. Perhaps that was the answer—a mad genius!
Curtis opened the door and looked out. Rain whipped against his face
like a stinging wet lash. Overhead, the sky was a storm-racked mass of
clouds, broken in one spot by a tiny patch of starlit blue.
His eyes rested inquiringly on the face of the man who stood before
him. It
was
Nelson, his shaggy blond brows drawn scowlingly down
over his pale eyes; his thin face a mass of tense lines; his big hands
fumbling at the neck of his slicker. Rain was coursing down his white
cheeks, streaking them with glistening furrows.
The fellow was a headache to Curtis. He was overfriendly with a
black-browed bos'n's mate named Joe Bradford—the worst trouble maker
on board. But there was no question of his ability. He was a good
navigating officer—dependable, accurate, conscientious. Nevertheless,
his taut face, restless, searching eyes, and eternally nervous manner
got Curtis' goat.
"Come in, Nelson!" he said.
Nelson shouldered his way inside, and stood there in his dripping
oilskins, blinking his eyes against the yellow light.
Curtis closed the door and nodded toward the bent form of Zukor
Androka, with a quizzical grin. "Old Czech-and-Double-Czech is working
hard on his latest invention to pull Hitler's teeth and re-establish
the Czech Republic!"
Nelson had no answering smile, although there had been a great deal
of good-natured joking aboard the
Comerford
ever since the navy
department had sent the scientist on board the cruiser to carry on his
experiments.
"I'm worried, sir!" Nelson said. "I'm not sure about my dead reckoning.
This storm—"
Curtis threw his arm around Nelson's dripping shoulders. "Forget it!
Don't let a little error get you down!"
"But this storm, sir!" Nelson avoided Curtis' friendly eyes and slipped
out from under his arm. "It's got me worried. Quartering wind of
undetermined force, variable and gusty. There's a chop to the sea—as
if from unestimated currents among the islets. No chance to check by
observation, and now there is a chance—look at me!"
He held out his hands. They were shaking as if he had the chills.
"You say there is a chance?" Curtis asked. "Stars out?"
"As if by providence, sir, there's a clear patch. I'm wondering—" His
voice trailed off, but his eyes swung toward the gleaming sextant on
the rack.
Commander Curtis shrugged good-naturedly and reached for the
instrument. "Not that I've lost confidence in you, Nels, but just
because you asked for it!"
Curtis donned his slicker and went outside, sextant in hand. In a few
minutes he returned and handed Nelson a sheet of paper with figures
underlined heavily.
"Here's what I make it," the commander told his navigating officer.
"Bet you're not off appreciably."
Nelson stared at the computations with shaking head. Then he mutely
held up his own.
Curtis stared, frowned, grabbed his own sheet again. "Any time I'm
that far off old Figure-'em Nelson's estimate, I'm checking back," he
declared, frowning at the two papers and hastily rechecking his own
figures.
"Call up to the bridge to stop her," he told Nelson. "We can't afford
to move in these waters with such a possibility of error!"
Nelson complied, and the throbbing drive of the engines lessened
at once. Nelson said: "I've been wondering, sir, if it wouldn't be
advisable to try getting a radio cross-bearing. With all these rocks
and islets—"
"Radio?" repeated the little Czech, thrusting his face between the
other two, in his independent fashion that ignored ship's discipline.
"You're using your radio?" He broke into a knowing chuckle, his keen
old eyes twinkling behind their thick lenses. "Go ahead and try it. See
how much you can get! It will be no more than Hitler can get when Zukor
Androka decrees silence over the German airways! Try it! Try it, I say!"
Bob Curtis stared at him, as if questioning his sanity. Then he
hastened to the radio room, with Nelson at his heels, and the Czech
trotting along behind.
The door burst open as they neared it. A frightened operator came out,
still wearing his earphones, and stood staring upward incredulously at
the aërial.
"Get us a radio cross-bearing for location at once," Curtis said
sharply, for the operator seemed in a daze.
"Bearing, sir?" The man brought his eyes down with difficulty, as if
still dissatisfied. "I'm sorry, sir, but the outfit's dead. Went out on
me about five minutes ago. I was taking the weather report when the set
conked. I was trying to see if something's wrong."
The Czech inventor giggled. Curtis gave him another curious look and
thrust himself into the radio room.
"Try again!" he told the operator. "See what you can get!"
The radio man leaped to his seat and tried frantically. Again and
again, he sent off a request for a cross-bearing from shore stations
that had recently been established to insure safety to naval vessels,
but there was no answer on any of the bands—not even the blare of a
high-powered commercial program in the higher reach, nor the chatter of
ships or amateurs on the shorter.
"Dead!" Androka muttered, with a bitter laugh. "Yet not dead,
gentlemen! The set is uninjured. The waves are what have been upset. I
have shattered them around your ship, just as I can eventually shatter
them all over Central Europe! For the next two hours, no radio messages
can enter or leave my zone of radio silence—of refracted radio waves,
set up by my little station on one of the neighboring islets!"
There was a long pause, while commander and navigator stared at him.
Curtis was the first to speak.
"Your secrecy might well cost the United States navy one of its best
light cruisers—and us our lives!" he said angrily. "We need that check
by radio at once! If you're not talking nonsense, call off your dogs
till we learn just where we are!"
Androka held out his palms helplessly. "I can do nothing. I have given
orders to my assistant that he must keep two hours of radio silence! I
can get no message to him, for our radio is dead!"
As if to mock him, the ship's radio began to answer:
"Station 297 calling U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
. Station 297 calling U.
S. Cruiser
Comerford
—"
"U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
calling Station 297!" the operator intoned,
winking at the two officers over Androka's discomfiture, and asked for
the bearings.
The answer came back: "Bearings north east by a quarter east, U. S.
Cruiser
Comerford
!"
Curtis sighed with relief. He saw that Nelson was staring fiercely
at the radio operator, as the man went on calling: "U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
calling Station 364. U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
calling
Station 364—"
Then the instrument rasped again: "Station 364 calling U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
. Bearings north west by three west. Bearings north west by
three west, U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
from Cay 364."
Commander and navigator had both scribbled verifications of the
numbers. Ignoring the gibbering Androka, who was wailing his
disappointment that messages had penetrated his veil of silence, they
raced for the chart room.
Quickly the parallels stepped off the bearing from the designated
points. Light intersecting lines proclaimed a check on their position.
Curtis frowned and shook his head. Slowly he forced a reluctant grin as
he stuck out his hand.
"Shake, Nels," he said. "It's my turn to eat crow. You and the radio
must be right. Continue as you were!"
"I'm relieved, sir, just the same," Nelson admitted, "to have the radio
bearings. We'd have piled up sure if you'd been right."
They went on through the night. The starlit gap in the clouds had
closed. The sky was again a blanket of darkness pouring sheets of rain
at them.
Nelson went back to the bridge, and Androka returned to the commander's
cabin. Curtis lingered in the wireless room with the radio operator.
"It's a funny thing," the latter said, still dialing and grousing, "how
I got that cross-bearing through and can't get another squeak out of
her. I'm wondering if that old goat really
has
done something to the
ether. The set seems O. K."
He lingered over the apparatus, checking and rechecking. Tubes lighted;
wires were alive to the touch and set him to shaking his head at the
tingle they sent through his inquiring fingers.
Curtis left him at it, and went to rejoin Androka in the cabin. He
found the little inventor pacing up and down, shaking his fists in the
air; pausing every now and then to run his bony fingers through his
tangled mop of gray hair, or to claw nervously at his beard.
"You have seen a miracle, commander!" he shouted at Curtis. "
My
miracle! My invention has shattered the ether waves hereabouts
hopelessly."
"Seems to me," Curtis said dryly, "this invention can harm your friends
as much as your enemies."
The scientist drew himself up to his full height—which was only a
little over five feet. His voice grew shrill. "Wait! Just wait! There
are other inventions to supplement this one. Put them together, and
they will defeat the Nazi hordes which have ravaged my country!"
Curtis was a little shocked by the hatred that gleamed in Androka's
eyes, under their bushy brows. There was something of the wild animal
in the man's expression, as his lips drew back from his yellowed teeth.
"Those tanks you have below," Curtis said, "have they some connection
with this radio silence?"
A far-away look came into Androka's eyes. He did not seem to hear
the question. He lowered his voice: "My daughter is still in Prague.
So are my sister and her husband, and
their
two daughters. If the
gestapo
knew what I am doing, all of them would be better dead. You
understand—better dead?"
Curtis said: "I understand."
"And if the Nazi agents in America knew of the islet from which my zone
of silence is projected—" Androka paused, his head tilted to one side,
as if he were listening to something—
On deck, there was shouting and commotion. Curtis rushed out, pulling
on his slicker as he went. The shout from the watch forward had been
picked up, and was being relayed all over the ship. The words struck on
Curtis' ears with a note of impending tragedy.
"Breakers ahead!"
He was beside Navigating Officer Nelson on the bridge, and saw the
helmsman climbing the rapidly spinning wheel like a monkey as he put it
hard aport.
Then the ship struck. Everything movable shot ahead until it brought up
at the end of a swing or smacked against something solid.
Curtis felt Nelson's hand grip his shoulder, as he put his lips close
to his ear and shouted: "You must have been right, sir, and the radio
bearings and my reckoning wrong. We've hit that reef a terrific smack.
I'm afraid we're gored!"
"Get out the collision mat!" Curtis ordered. "We ought to be able to
keep her up!"
And then he became aware of a deadly stillness. A vast wall of silence
enveloped the entire cruiser. Looking over the side, he could no longer
see the waves that a few minutes before had beaten savagely against the
ship.
The
Comerford
was shrouded in a huge pall of yellowish-gray mist, and
more of it was coming up from below—from ventilators and hatchways and
skylights—as if the whole ship were flooded with some evil vapor.
Somehow, Curtis' mind flashed to the stories he'd heard of the forts of
the Maginot Line, and of other forts in Holland and Belgium that had
fallen before the early Nazi blitzkrieg, when their defenders found
themselves struck numb and helpless by a gas that had been flooded into
the inner compartments of their strongholds.
There were those who said it was the work of sappers who had tunneled
under the foundations, while others laid the induction of the gas to
Fifth Column traitors. There were a hundred more or less plausible
explanations—
The vapor clouds that enveloped the
Comerford
were becoming thicker.
All about the deck lay the forms of unconscious seamen, suddenly
stricken helpless. And then Curtis saw other forms flitting about the
deck—forms that looked like creatures from another world, but he
recognized them for what they were—men wearing gas masks.
Nelson was nowhere in sight. The steersman lay in a limp heap beside
the swinging wheel. Then a gas-masked figure appeared through the
shroud of mist and steadied it, so that the cruiser would not be
completely at the mercy of the wind and the waves.
Curtis heard the anchor let down, as if by invisible hands, the chain
screaming and flailing its clanking way through the hawse hole. Then he
was completely walled in by the yellowish-gray mist. He felt his senses
swimming.
Voices droned all around him in mumbling confusion—guttural voices
that ebbed and flowed in a tide of excited talk. He caught a word of
English now and then, mixed in with a flood of Teuton phonetics.
Two words, in particular, registered clearly on his mind. One was
"
Carethusia
"; the other was "convoy." But gradually his eardrums
began to throb, as if someone were pounding on them from the inside. He
couldn't get his breath; a cloud seemed to be mounting within him until
it swept over his brain—
He felt something strike the side of his head, and realized that he had
fallen in a heap on the bridge. And after that, he wasn't conscious of
anything—
The rain had abated to a foggy drizzle. The wash of the surf swung the
Comerford
in a lazy, rolling motion, as she lay with her bow nosing
into the sandbar at the entrance of the inlet.
From her bridge, Navigating Officer Nelson watched the gas-masked
figures moving about the decks, descending companionways—like goblins
from an ancient fairy tale or a modern horror story. Nelson looked like
a goblin himself, with his face covered by a respirator. At his side,
stood his fellow conspirator Bos'n's Mate Joe Bradford, also wearing a
gas mask.
Nelson spoke in a low tone, his lips close to Bradford's ear. "It
worked, Joe!"
"Yeah!" Bradford agreed. "It worked—fine!"
The limp bodies of the
Comerford's
crew were being carried to the
lowered accommodation ladder and transferred into waiting lifeboats.
Nelson swore under his breath. "Reckon it'll take a couple of hours
before the ship's rid of that damn gas!"
Bradford shook his head in disagreement. "The old geezer claims he's
got a neutralizing chemical in one of them tanks of his that'll clear
everything up inside half an hour."
"I'd rather get along without Androka, if we could!" Nelson muttered.
"He's nothing but a crackpot!"
"It was a crackpot who invented the gas we used to break up the
Maginot Line," Bradford reminded him. "It saved a lot of lives for the
Fuehrer
—lives that'd have been lost if the forts had to be taken by
our storm troopers!"
Nelson grunted and turned away. A short, thick-set figure in the
uniform of a German naval commander had ascended the accommodation
ladder and was mounting to the bridge. He, too, was equipped with a
respirator.
He came up to Nelson, saluted, and held out his hand, introducing
himself as Herr Kommander Brandt. He began to speak in German, but
Nelson stopped him.
"I don't speak any German," he explained. "I was born and educated in
the United States—of German parents, who had been ruined in the First
World War. My mother committed suicide when she learned that we were
penniless. My father—" He paused and cleared his throat.
"
Ja!
Your father?" the German officer prompted, dropping into
accented English. "Your father?"
"My father dedicated me to a career of revenge—to wipe out his
wrongs," Nelson continued. "If America hadn't gone into the First
World War, he wouldn't have lost his business; my mother would still
be living. When he joined the Nazi party, the way became clear to use
me—to educate me in a military prep school, then send me to Annapolis,
for a career in the United States navy—and no one suspected me. No
one—"
"Sometimes," Bradford put in, "I think Curtis suspected you."
"Maybe Curtis'll find out his suspicions were justified," Nelson said
bitterly. "But it won't do Curtis any good—a commander who's lost
his ship." He turned to Brandt. "You have plenty of men to work the
Comerford
?"
Brandt nodded his square head. "We have a full crew—two hundred
men—officers, seamen, mechanics, radio men, technical experts, all
German naval reservists living in the United States, who've been sent
here secretly, a few at a time, during the past six weeks!"
The three—Brandt, Nelson and Bradford—stood on the bridge and talked,
while the efficient stretcher-bearers worked industriously to remove
the limp bodies of the
Comerford's
unconscious crew and row them
ashore.
And when that task was completed, lifeboats began to come alongside
with strange-looking radio equipment, and more gas tanks like those
Androka had brought aboard the
Comerford
with him, and dynamos and
batteries that looked like something out of a scientific nightmare.
And bustling all over the place, barking excited commands in German,
pushing and pulling and pointing to emphasize his directions, was the
strange figure of Professor Zukor Androka!
"The professor's in his glory!" Nelson remarked to Kommander Brandt.
"Funny thing about him," Bradford put in, "is that his inventions work.
That zone of silence cut us off completely."
Kommander Brandt nodded. "Goodt! But you got your message giving your
bearings—the wrong ones?"
"Yes," Nelson said. "That came through all right. And won't Curtis have
a time explaining it!"
"Hereafter," Brandt said solemnly, "the zone of silence vill be
projected from the
Comerford
; and ve have another invention of
Androka's vich vill be even more useful vhen ve come to cut the
Carethusia
out of her convoy."
"The
Carethusia
?" Nelson asked, in a puzzled tone.
Brandt said: "She's a freighter in a convoy out of St. Johns—twelve
thousand tons. The orders are to take her; not sink her."
"What's the idea?"
"Her cargo," Brandt explained. "It iss more precious than rubies. It
includes a large shipment of boarts."
"Boarts?" Nelson repeated. "What are they?"
"Boarts," Brandt told him, "are industrial diamonds—black,
imperfectly crystallized stones, but far more valuable to us than
flawless diamonds from Tiffany's on Fift' Avenue. They are needed for
making machine tools. They come from northern Brazil—and our supply is
low."
"I should think we could get a shipment of these boarts direct from
Brazil—through the blockade," Nelson said, "without taking the risk of
capturing a United States navy cruiser."
"There are other things Germany needs desperately on board the
Carethusia
," Brandt explained. "Vanadium and nickel and hundreds of
barrels of lard oil for machine-tool lubrication. Our agents have been
watching the convoys closely for weeks for just such a cargo as the
Carethusia
is taking over."
"Can we trust Androka?" Nelson asked, with a sudden note of suspicion
in his voice.
"Yes," Brandt assured him. "Of all men—we can trust Androka!"
"But he's a Czech," Nelson argued.
"The
gestapo
takes care of Czechs and Poles and Frenchmen and other
foreigners whom it chooses as its agents," Brandt pointed out. "Androka
has a daughter and other relations in Prague. He knows that if anything
misfires, if there is the slightest suspicion of treachery on his part,
his daughter and the others will suffer. Androka's loyalty is assured!"
Nelson turned to watch the forward fighting top of the
Comerford
.
The masked German seamen were installing some sort of apparatus
up there—a strange-looking object that looked something like an
old-fashioned trench mortar, and which connected with cables to the
room that served as Androka's laboratory and workshop.
Another crew was installing radio apparatus in the mizzentop turret.
Descending a companionway to see what was going on below, Nelson found
that portholes were being opened, and men were spraying chemical around
to rid the below-decks atmosphere of the lethal gas that had overcome
the
Comerford's
American crew.
Returning to the bridge, he found that the tide in the inlet had risen
considerably, and that the cruiser was riding more easily at her anchor.
Then, at Brandt's orders, the anchor was hauled in, and lifeboats and a
motor launch were used as tugs to work the vessel entirely free of the
sand bar. This was accomplished without difficulty.
Brandt came over to where Nelson was standing on the bridge and held
out his hand.
"Congratulations, Herr Kommander Nelson!" he said. "Ve have stolen one
of the United States navy's newest and fastest cruisers!" He made a
gesture as if raising a beer stein to drink a toast. "
Prosit!
" he
added.
"
Prosit!
" Nelson repeated, and the two grinned at each other.
Stars were twinkling in a patch of black-blue sky, and broken mountains
of gray cloud were skudding before the east wind. Commander Bob Curtis
found himself lying in wet sand, on a beach, somewhere, with the
rain—now a light, driving mist—beating on his face. He was chilled;
his limbs were stiff and numb. His nose and throat felt parched inside,
as if a wave of searing heat had scorched them.
According to his last calculations, the
Comerford
had been cruising
off the Maine coast. This probably was one of the islets of that
region, or it might be the mainland.
It was hard work getting to his feet, and when he did manage to stand,
he could only plant his heels in the sand and sway to and fro for fully
a minute, like a child learning to walk.
All around him in the nearly total darkness, he could make out the dim
forms of men sprawled on the beach; and of other men moving about,
exploring. He heard the murmur of voices and saw the glow of lighted
cigarettes.
A man with a flashlight was approaching him. Its white glare shone for
a moment in Curtis' face, and the familiar voice of Ensign Jack Dillon
spoke: "Commander Curtis! Are you O. K., sir?"
"I think so!" Curtis' heart warmed at the eager expression in Dillon's
face; at the heartfelt concern in his friendly brown eyes. The young
ensign was red-headed, impetuous, thoroughly genuine in his emotions.
"How about yourself, Jack?" Curtis added.
"A bit of a headache from the gas, but that's all. Any orders, sir?"
Curtis thought for a moment. "Muster the crew, as best you can. We'll
try to make a roll call. Is there any sign of the ship?"
There was a solemn note in Dillon's voice. "No, sir. She's been worked
off the sandbar and put to sea!"
The words struck Curtis with the numbing shock of a blow on some nerve
center. For the first time, he realized fully the tragedy that had
swept down on him. He had lost his ship—one of the United States
navy's fastest and newest small light cruisers—under circumstances
which smelled strongly of treachery and sabotage.
As he thought back, he realized that he
might
have prevented the
loss, if he had been more alert, more suspicious. For it was clear to
him now that the
Comerford
had been deliberately steered to this
place; that the men who had seized her had been waiting here for that
very purpose.
The pieces of the picture fitted together like a jigsaw
puzzle—Androka's zone of silence; the bearings given by radio;
Navigating Officer Nelson's queer conduct. They were all part of a
carefully laid plan!
All the suspicious circumstances surrounding Nelson came flooding into
Curtis' mind. He had never liked the man; never trusted him. Nelson
always acted as if he had some secret, something to hide.
Curtis recalled that Nelson and Androka had long conversations
together—conversations which they would end abruptly when anyone else
came within earshot. And Nelson had always been chummy with the worst
trouble maker in the crew—Bos'n's Mate Bradford.
Curtis went around, finding the officers, issuing orders. There were
still some unconscious men to be revived. In a sheltered cove among
the rocks, an exploring group had found enough dry driftwood to make a
fire—
In another hour, the skies had cleared, and white moonlight flooded
the scene with a ghostly radiance. The men of the
Comerford
had
all regained consciousness and were drying out in front of the big
driftwood bonfires in the cove.
Curtis ordered a beacon kept burning on a high promontory. Then he got
the men lined up, according to their respective classifications, for a
check-up on the missing.
When this was completed, it was found that the
Comerford's
entire
complement of two hundred and twenty men were present—except
Navigating Officer Nelson, and Bos'n's Mate Bradford! And Zukor Androka
was also missing!
With the coming of dawn, a little exploration revealed that the
Comerford's
crew was marooned on an islet, about a square mile in
area; that they had been put ashore without food or extra clothing or
equipment of any kind, and that no boats had been left for them.
One searching party reported finding the remains of what had been a
radio station on a high promontory on the north shore of the islet.
Another had found the remains of tents and log cabins, recently
demolished, in a small, timbered hollow—a well-hidden spot invisible
from the air, unless one were flying very low; a place where two
hundred or more men could have camped.
There was a good water supply—a small creek fed by springs—but
nothing in the way of food. Evidently food was a precious commodity
which the recent inhabitants of the islet couldn't afford to leave
behind.
Curtis was studying the wreckage of the wireless station, wondering
if this might have been the source of Androka's zone of silence, when
Ensign Jack Dillon came up to him.
"There's a coast-guard cutter heading for the island, sir," he
announced.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/1/4/8/61481//61481-h//61481-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | Who are the four to blame for the Comerford’s incident?
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61,481 | 61481_LZNKW9Z1 | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Silence is—Deadly | 1950.0 | Shurtleff, Bertrand | United States. Navy -- Fiction; PS; Science fiction; Inventors -- Fiction; World War, 1939-1945 -- Naval operations -- Fiction; Radio -- Fiction | SILENCE IS—DEADLY
By Bertrand L. Shurtleff
Radio is an absolute necessity in modern
organization—and particularly in modern
naval organization. If you could silence all
radio—silence of that sort would be deadly!
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Astounding Science-Fiction April 1942.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
The hurried
rat-a-tat
of knuckles hammered on the cabin door.
Commander Bob Curtis roused himself from his doze, got up from his
chair, stretched himself to his full, lanky height and yawned. That
would be Nelson, his navigating officer. Nelson always knocked that
way—like a man in an external state of jitters over nothing at all.
Curtis didn't hurry. It pleased him to let Nelson wait. He moved slowly
to the door, paused there, and flung a backward glance at the man in
the cabin with him—Zukor Androka, the elderly Czech scientist, a guest
of the United States navy, here aboard the cruiser
Comerford
.
The wizened face of the older man was molded in intent lines of
concentration, as his bushy gray head bent over his drawing board.
Curtis got a glimpse of the design on which he was working, and his
lips relaxed in a faint smile.
Androka had arrived on board the
Comerford
the day before she sailed
from Norfolk. With him came a boatload of scientific apparatus and
equipment, including a number of things that looked like oxygen tanks,
which were now stored in the forward hold. Androka had watched over
his treasures with the jealous care of a mother hen, and spent hours
daily in the room in the superstructure that had been assigned as his
laboratory.
Sometimes, Curtis thought old Androka was a bit wacky—a scientist
whose mind had been turned by the horror that had come to his country
under the domination of the Nazi
gestapo
. At other times, the man
seemed a genius. Perhaps that was the answer—a mad genius!
Curtis opened the door and looked out. Rain whipped against his face
like a stinging wet lash. Overhead, the sky was a storm-racked mass of
clouds, broken in one spot by a tiny patch of starlit blue.
His eyes rested inquiringly on the face of the man who stood before
him. It
was
Nelson, his shaggy blond brows drawn scowlingly down
over his pale eyes; his thin face a mass of tense lines; his big hands
fumbling at the neck of his slicker. Rain was coursing down his white
cheeks, streaking them with glistening furrows.
The fellow was a headache to Curtis. He was overfriendly with a
black-browed bos'n's mate named Joe Bradford—the worst trouble maker
on board. But there was no question of his ability. He was a good
navigating officer—dependable, accurate, conscientious. Nevertheless,
his taut face, restless, searching eyes, and eternally nervous manner
got Curtis' goat.
"Come in, Nelson!" he said.
Nelson shouldered his way inside, and stood there in his dripping
oilskins, blinking his eyes against the yellow light.
Curtis closed the door and nodded toward the bent form of Zukor
Androka, with a quizzical grin. "Old Czech-and-Double-Czech is working
hard on his latest invention to pull Hitler's teeth and re-establish
the Czech Republic!"
Nelson had no answering smile, although there had been a great deal
of good-natured joking aboard the
Comerford
ever since the navy
department had sent the scientist on board the cruiser to carry on his
experiments.
"I'm worried, sir!" Nelson said. "I'm not sure about my dead reckoning.
This storm—"
Curtis threw his arm around Nelson's dripping shoulders. "Forget it!
Don't let a little error get you down!"
"But this storm, sir!" Nelson avoided Curtis' friendly eyes and slipped
out from under his arm. "It's got me worried. Quartering wind of
undetermined force, variable and gusty. There's a chop to the sea—as
if from unestimated currents among the islets. No chance to check by
observation, and now there is a chance—look at me!"
He held out his hands. They were shaking as if he had the chills.
"You say there is a chance?" Curtis asked. "Stars out?"
"As if by providence, sir, there's a clear patch. I'm wondering—" His
voice trailed off, but his eyes swung toward the gleaming sextant on
the rack.
Commander Curtis shrugged good-naturedly and reached for the
instrument. "Not that I've lost confidence in you, Nels, but just
because you asked for it!"
Curtis donned his slicker and went outside, sextant in hand. In a few
minutes he returned and handed Nelson a sheet of paper with figures
underlined heavily.
"Here's what I make it," the commander told his navigating officer.
"Bet you're not off appreciably."
Nelson stared at the computations with shaking head. Then he mutely
held up his own.
Curtis stared, frowned, grabbed his own sheet again. "Any time I'm
that far off old Figure-'em Nelson's estimate, I'm checking back," he
declared, frowning at the two papers and hastily rechecking his own
figures.
"Call up to the bridge to stop her," he told Nelson. "We can't afford
to move in these waters with such a possibility of error!"
Nelson complied, and the throbbing drive of the engines lessened
at once. Nelson said: "I've been wondering, sir, if it wouldn't be
advisable to try getting a radio cross-bearing. With all these rocks
and islets—"
"Radio?" repeated the little Czech, thrusting his face between the
other two, in his independent fashion that ignored ship's discipline.
"You're using your radio?" He broke into a knowing chuckle, his keen
old eyes twinkling behind their thick lenses. "Go ahead and try it. See
how much you can get! It will be no more than Hitler can get when Zukor
Androka decrees silence over the German airways! Try it! Try it, I say!"
Bob Curtis stared at him, as if questioning his sanity. Then he
hastened to the radio room, with Nelson at his heels, and the Czech
trotting along behind.
The door burst open as they neared it. A frightened operator came out,
still wearing his earphones, and stood staring upward incredulously at
the aërial.
"Get us a radio cross-bearing for location at once," Curtis said
sharply, for the operator seemed in a daze.
"Bearing, sir?" The man brought his eyes down with difficulty, as if
still dissatisfied. "I'm sorry, sir, but the outfit's dead. Went out on
me about five minutes ago. I was taking the weather report when the set
conked. I was trying to see if something's wrong."
The Czech inventor giggled. Curtis gave him another curious look and
thrust himself into the radio room.
"Try again!" he told the operator. "See what you can get!"
The radio man leaped to his seat and tried frantically. Again and
again, he sent off a request for a cross-bearing from shore stations
that had recently been established to insure safety to naval vessels,
but there was no answer on any of the bands—not even the blare of a
high-powered commercial program in the higher reach, nor the chatter of
ships or amateurs on the shorter.
"Dead!" Androka muttered, with a bitter laugh. "Yet not dead,
gentlemen! The set is uninjured. The waves are what have been upset. I
have shattered them around your ship, just as I can eventually shatter
them all over Central Europe! For the next two hours, no radio messages
can enter or leave my zone of radio silence—of refracted radio waves,
set up by my little station on one of the neighboring islets!"
There was a long pause, while commander and navigator stared at him.
Curtis was the first to speak.
"Your secrecy might well cost the United States navy one of its best
light cruisers—and us our lives!" he said angrily. "We need that check
by radio at once! If you're not talking nonsense, call off your dogs
till we learn just where we are!"
Androka held out his palms helplessly. "I can do nothing. I have given
orders to my assistant that he must keep two hours of radio silence! I
can get no message to him, for our radio is dead!"
As if to mock him, the ship's radio began to answer:
"Station 297 calling U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
. Station 297 calling U.
S. Cruiser
Comerford
—"
"U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
calling Station 297!" the operator intoned,
winking at the two officers over Androka's discomfiture, and asked for
the bearings.
The answer came back: "Bearings north east by a quarter east, U. S.
Cruiser
Comerford
!"
Curtis sighed with relief. He saw that Nelson was staring fiercely
at the radio operator, as the man went on calling: "U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
calling Station 364. U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
calling
Station 364—"
Then the instrument rasped again: "Station 364 calling U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
. Bearings north west by three west. Bearings north west by
three west, U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
from Cay 364."
Commander and navigator had both scribbled verifications of the
numbers. Ignoring the gibbering Androka, who was wailing his
disappointment that messages had penetrated his veil of silence, they
raced for the chart room.
Quickly the parallels stepped off the bearing from the designated
points. Light intersecting lines proclaimed a check on their position.
Curtis frowned and shook his head. Slowly he forced a reluctant grin as
he stuck out his hand.
"Shake, Nels," he said. "It's my turn to eat crow. You and the radio
must be right. Continue as you were!"
"I'm relieved, sir, just the same," Nelson admitted, "to have the radio
bearings. We'd have piled up sure if you'd been right."
They went on through the night. The starlit gap in the clouds had
closed. The sky was again a blanket of darkness pouring sheets of rain
at them.
Nelson went back to the bridge, and Androka returned to the commander's
cabin. Curtis lingered in the wireless room with the radio operator.
"It's a funny thing," the latter said, still dialing and grousing, "how
I got that cross-bearing through and can't get another squeak out of
her. I'm wondering if that old goat really
has
done something to the
ether. The set seems O. K."
He lingered over the apparatus, checking and rechecking. Tubes lighted;
wires were alive to the touch and set him to shaking his head at the
tingle they sent through his inquiring fingers.
Curtis left him at it, and went to rejoin Androka in the cabin. He
found the little inventor pacing up and down, shaking his fists in the
air; pausing every now and then to run his bony fingers through his
tangled mop of gray hair, or to claw nervously at his beard.
"You have seen a miracle, commander!" he shouted at Curtis. "
My
miracle! My invention has shattered the ether waves hereabouts
hopelessly."
"Seems to me," Curtis said dryly, "this invention can harm your friends
as much as your enemies."
The scientist drew himself up to his full height—which was only a
little over five feet. His voice grew shrill. "Wait! Just wait! There
are other inventions to supplement this one. Put them together, and
they will defeat the Nazi hordes which have ravaged my country!"
Curtis was a little shocked by the hatred that gleamed in Androka's
eyes, under their bushy brows. There was something of the wild animal
in the man's expression, as his lips drew back from his yellowed teeth.
"Those tanks you have below," Curtis said, "have they some connection
with this radio silence?"
A far-away look came into Androka's eyes. He did not seem to hear
the question. He lowered his voice: "My daughter is still in Prague.
So are my sister and her husband, and
their
two daughters. If the
gestapo
knew what I am doing, all of them would be better dead. You
understand—better dead?"
Curtis said: "I understand."
"And if the Nazi agents in America knew of the islet from which my zone
of silence is projected—" Androka paused, his head tilted to one side,
as if he were listening to something—
On deck, there was shouting and commotion. Curtis rushed out, pulling
on his slicker as he went. The shout from the watch forward had been
picked up, and was being relayed all over the ship. The words struck on
Curtis' ears with a note of impending tragedy.
"Breakers ahead!"
He was beside Navigating Officer Nelson on the bridge, and saw the
helmsman climbing the rapidly spinning wheel like a monkey as he put it
hard aport.
Then the ship struck. Everything movable shot ahead until it brought up
at the end of a swing or smacked against something solid.
Curtis felt Nelson's hand grip his shoulder, as he put his lips close
to his ear and shouted: "You must have been right, sir, and the radio
bearings and my reckoning wrong. We've hit that reef a terrific smack.
I'm afraid we're gored!"
"Get out the collision mat!" Curtis ordered. "We ought to be able to
keep her up!"
And then he became aware of a deadly stillness. A vast wall of silence
enveloped the entire cruiser. Looking over the side, he could no longer
see the waves that a few minutes before had beaten savagely against the
ship.
The
Comerford
was shrouded in a huge pall of yellowish-gray mist, and
more of it was coming up from below—from ventilators and hatchways and
skylights—as if the whole ship were flooded with some evil vapor.
Somehow, Curtis' mind flashed to the stories he'd heard of the forts of
the Maginot Line, and of other forts in Holland and Belgium that had
fallen before the early Nazi blitzkrieg, when their defenders found
themselves struck numb and helpless by a gas that had been flooded into
the inner compartments of their strongholds.
There were those who said it was the work of sappers who had tunneled
under the foundations, while others laid the induction of the gas to
Fifth Column traitors. There were a hundred more or less plausible
explanations—
The vapor clouds that enveloped the
Comerford
were becoming thicker.
All about the deck lay the forms of unconscious seamen, suddenly
stricken helpless. And then Curtis saw other forms flitting about the
deck—forms that looked like creatures from another world, but he
recognized them for what they were—men wearing gas masks.
Nelson was nowhere in sight. The steersman lay in a limp heap beside
the swinging wheel. Then a gas-masked figure appeared through the
shroud of mist and steadied it, so that the cruiser would not be
completely at the mercy of the wind and the waves.
Curtis heard the anchor let down, as if by invisible hands, the chain
screaming and flailing its clanking way through the hawse hole. Then he
was completely walled in by the yellowish-gray mist. He felt his senses
swimming.
Voices droned all around him in mumbling confusion—guttural voices
that ebbed and flowed in a tide of excited talk. He caught a word of
English now and then, mixed in with a flood of Teuton phonetics.
Two words, in particular, registered clearly on his mind. One was
"
Carethusia
"; the other was "convoy." But gradually his eardrums
began to throb, as if someone were pounding on them from the inside. He
couldn't get his breath; a cloud seemed to be mounting within him until
it swept over his brain—
He felt something strike the side of his head, and realized that he had
fallen in a heap on the bridge. And after that, he wasn't conscious of
anything—
The rain had abated to a foggy drizzle. The wash of the surf swung the
Comerford
in a lazy, rolling motion, as she lay with her bow nosing
into the sandbar at the entrance of the inlet.
From her bridge, Navigating Officer Nelson watched the gas-masked
figures moving about the decks, descending companionways—like goblins
from an ancient fairy tale or a modern horror story. Nelson looked like
a goblin himself, with his face covered by a respirator. At his side,
stood his fellow conspirator Bos'n's Mate Joe Bradford, also wearing a
gas mask.
Nelson spoke in a low tone, his lips close to Bradford's ear. "It
worked, Joe!"
"Yeah!" Bradford agreed. "It worked—fine!"
The limp bodies of the
Comerford's
crew were being carried to the
lowered accommodation ladder and transferred into waiting lifeboats.
Nelson swore under his breath. "Reckon it'll take a couple of hours
before the ship's rid of that damn gas!"
Bradford shook his head in disagreement. "The old geezer claims he's
got a neutralizing chemical in one of them tanks of his that'll clear
everything up inside half an hour."
"I'd rather get along without Androka, if we could!" Nelson muttered.
"He's nothing but a crackpot!"
"It was a crackpot who invented the gas we used to break up the
Maginot Line," Bradford reminded him. "It saved a lot of lives for the
Fuehrer
—lives that'd have been lost if the forts had to be taken by
our storm troopers!"
Nelson grunted and turned away. A short, thick-set figure in the
uniform of a German naval commander had ascended the accommodation
ladder and was mounting to the bridge. He, too, was equipped with a
respirator.
He came up to Nelson, saluted, and held out his hand, introducing
himself as Herr Kommander Brandt. He began to speak in German, but
Nelson stopped him.
"I don't speak any German," he explained. "I was born and educated in
the United States—of German parents, who had been ruined in the First
World War. My mother committed suicide when she learned that we were
penniless. My father—" He paused and cleared his throat.
"
Ja!
Your father?" the German officer prompted, dropping into
accented English. "Your father?"
"My father dedicated me to a career of revenge—to wipe out his
wrongs," Nelson continued. "If America hadn't gone into the First
World War, he wouldn't have lost his business; my mother would still
be living. When he joined the Nazi party, the way became clear to use
me—to educate me in a military prep school, then send me to Annapolis,
for a career in the United States navy—and no one suspected me. No
one—"
"Sometimes," Bradford put in, "I think Curtis suspected you."
"Maybe Curtis'll find out his suspicions were justified," Nelson said
bitterly. "But it won't do Curtis any good—a commander who's lost
his ship." He turned to Brandt. "You have plenty of men to work the
Comerford
?"
Brandt nodded his square head. "We have a full crew—two hundred
men—officers, seamen, mechanics, radio men, technical experts, all
German naval reservists living in the United States, who've been sent
here secretly, a few at a time, during the past six weeks!"
The three—Brandt, Nelson and Bradford—stood on the bridge and talked,
while the efficient stretcher-bearers worked industriously to remove
the limp bodies of the
Comerford's
unconscious crew and row them
ashore.
And when that task was completed, lifeboats began to come alongside
with strange-looking radio equipment, and more gas tanks like those
Androka had brought aboard the
Comerford
with him, and dynamos and
batteries that looked like something out of a scientific nightmare.
And bustling all over the place, barking excited commands in German,
pushing and pulling and pointing to emphasize his directions, was the
strange figure of Professor Zukor Androka!
"The professor's in his glory!" Nelson remarked to Kommander Brandt.
"Funny thing about him," Bradford put in, "is that his inventions work.
That zone of silence cut us off completely."
Kommander Brandt nodded. "Goodt! But you got your message giving your
bearings—the wrong ones?"
"Yes," Nelson said. "That came through all right. And won't Curtis have
a time explaining it!"
"Hereafter," Brandt said solemnly, "the zone of silence vill be
projected from the
Comerford
; and ve have another invention of
Androka's vich vill be even more useful vhen ve come to cut the
Carethusia
out of her convoy."
"The
Carethusia
?" Nelson asked, in a puzzled tone.
Brandt said: "She's a freighter in a convoy out of St. Johns—twelve
thousand tons. The orders are to take her; not sink her."
"What's the idea?"
"Her cargo," Brandt explained. "It iss more precious than rubies. It
includes a large shipment of boarts."
"Boarts?" Nelson repeated. "What are they?"
"Boarts," Brandt told him, "are industrial diamonds—black,
imperfectly crystallized stones, but far more valuable to us than
flawless diamonds from Tiffany's on Fift' Avenue. They are needed for
making machine tools. They come from northern Brazil—and our supply is
low."
"I should think we could get a shipment of these boarts direct from
Brazil—through the blockade," Nelson said, "without taking the risk of
capturing a United States navy cruiser."
"There are other things Germany needs desperately on board the
Carethusia
," Brandt explained. "Vanadium and nickel and hundreds of
barrels of lard oil for machine-tool lubrication. Our agents have been
watching the convoys closely for weeks for just such a cargo as the
Carethusia
is taking over."
"Can we trust Androka?" Nelson asked, with a sudden note of suspicion
in his voice.
"Yes," Brandt assured him. "Of all men—we can trust Androka!"
"But he's a Czech," Nelson argued.
"The
gestapo
takes care of Czechs and Poles and Frenchmen and other
foreigners whom it chooses as its agents," Brandt pointed out. "Androka
has a daughter and other relations in Prague. He knows that if anything
misfires, if there is the slightest suspicion of treachery on his part,
his daughter and the others will suffer. Androka's loyalty is assured!"
Nelson turned to watch the forward fighting top of the
Comerford
.
The masked German seamen were installing some sort of apparatus
up there—a strange-looking object that looked something like an
old-fashioned trench mortar, and which connected with cables to the
room that served as Androka's laboratory and workshop.
Another crew was installing radio apparatus in the mizzentop turret.
Descending a companionway to see what was going on below, Nelson found
that portholes were being opened, and men were spraying chemical around
to rid the below-decks atmosphere of the lethal gas that had overcome
the
Comerford's
American crew.
Returning to the bridge, he found that the tide in the inlet had risen
considerably, and that the cruiser was riding more easily at her anchor.
Then, at Brandt's orders, the anchor was hauled in, and lifeboats and a
motor launch were used as tugs to work the vessel entirely free of the
sand bar. This was accomplished without difficulty.
Brandt came over to where Nelson was standing on the bridge and held
out his hand.
"Congratulations, Herr Kommander Nelson!" he said. "Ve have stolen one
of the United States navy's newest and fastest cruisers!" He made a
gesture as if raising a beer stein to drink a toast. "
Prosit!
" he
added.
"
Prosit!
" Nelson repeated, and the two grinned at each other.
Stars were twinkling in a patch of black-blue sky, and broken mountains
of gray cloud were skudding before the east wind. Commander Bob Curtis
found himself lying in wet sand, on a beach, somewhere, with the
rain—now a light, driving mist—beating on his face. He was chilled;
his limbs were stiff and numb. His nose and throat felt parched inside,
as if a wave of searing heat had scorched them.
According to his last calculations, the
Comerford
had been cruising
off the Maine coast. This probably was one of the islets of that
region, or it might be the mainland.
It was hard work getting to his feet, and when he did manage to stand,
he could only plant his heels in the sand and sway to and fro for fully
a minute, like a child learning to walk.
All around him in the nearly total darkness, he could make out the dim
forms of men sprawled on the beach; and of other men moving about,
exploring. He heard the murmur of voices and saw the glow of lighted
cigarettes.
A man with a flashlight was approaching him. Its white glare shone for
a moment in Curtis' face, and the familiar voice of Ensign Jack Dillon
spoke: "Commander Curtis! Are you O. K., sir?"
"I think so!" Curtis' heart warmed at the eager expression in Dillon's
face; at the heartfelt concern in his friendly brown eyes. The young
ensign was red-headed, impetuous, thoroughly genuine in his emotions.
"How about yourself, Jack?" Curtis added.
"A bit of a headache from the gas, but that's all. Any orders, sir?"
Curtis thought for a moment. "Muster the crew, as best you can. We'll
try to make a roll call. Is there any sign of the ship?"
There was a solemn note in Dillon's voice. "No, sir. She's been worked
off the sandbar and put to sea!"
The words struck Curtis with the numbing shock of a blow on some nerve
center. For the first time, he realized fully the tragedy that had
swept down on him. He had lost his ship—one of the United States
navy's fastest and newest small light cruisers—under circumstances
which smelled strongly of treachery and sabotage.
As he thought back, he realized that he
might
have prevented the
loss, if he had been more alert, more suspicious. For it was clear to
him now that the
Comerford
had been deliberately steered to this
place; that the men who had seized her had been waiting here for that
very purpose.
The pieces of the picture fitted together like a jigsaw
puzzle—Androka's zone of silence; the bearings given by radio;
Navigating Officer Nelson's queer conduct. They were all part of a
carefully laid plan!
All the suspicious circumstances surrounding Nelson came flooding into
Curtis' mind. He had never liked the man; never trusted him. Nelson
always acted as if he had some secret, something to hide.
Curtis recalled that Nelson and Androka had long conversations
together—conversations which they would end abruptly when anyone else
came within earshot. And Nelson had always been chummy with the worst
trouble maker in the crew—Bos'n's Mate Bradford.
Curtis went around, finding the officers, issuing orders. There were
still some unconscious men to be revived. In a sheltered cove among
the rocks, an exploring group had found enough dry driftwood to make a
fire—
In another hour, the skies had cleared, and white moonlight flooded
the scene with a ghostly radiance. The men of the
Comerford
had
all regained consciousness and were drying out in front of the big
driftwood bonfires in the cove.
Curtis ordered a beacon kept burning on a high promontory. Then he got
the men lined up, according to their respective classifications, for a
check-up on the missing.
When this was completed, it was found that the
Comerford's
entire
complement of two hundred and twenty men were present—except
Navigating Officer Nelson, and Bos'n's Mate Bradford! And Zukor Androka
was also missing!
With the coming of dawn, a little exploration revealed that the
Comerford's
crew was marooned on an islet, about a square mile in
area; that they had been put ashore without food or extra clothing or
equipment of any kind, and that no boats had been left for them.
One searching party reported finding the remains of what had been a
radio station on a high promontory on the north shore of the islet.
Another had found the remains of tents and log cabins, recently
demolished, in a small, timbered hollow—a well-hidden spot invisible
from the air, unless one were flying very low; a place where two
hundred or more men could have camped.
There was a good water supply—a small creek fed by springs—but
nothing in the way of food. Evidently food was a precious commodity
which the recent inhabitants of the islet couldn't afford to leave
behind.
Curtis was studying the wreckage of the wireless station, wondering
if this might have been the source of Androka's zone of silence, when
Ensign Jack Dillon came up to him.
"There's a coast-guard cutter heading for the island, sir," he
announced.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/1/4/8/61481//61481-h//61481-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | To what is the title of the story, “Silence is—Deadly” referring?
| 61481_LZNKW9Z1_8 | [
"Androka’s zone of silence is used as a deadly tool against the Nazi war effort. \n",
"Androka’s zone of silence is used as a deadly tool against the Comerford’s crew. \n",
"Androka’s zone of silence is used as a deadly tool, made in the name of revenging the Czech war effort. \n",
"Androka’s zone of silence is used as a deadly tool, helping the Americans sneak up on a Nazi Islet. \n"
] | 2 | 2 | [
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61,481 | 61481_LZNKW9Z1 | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Silence is—Deadly | 1950.0 | Shurtleff, Bertrand | United States. Navy -- Fiction; PS; Science fiction; Inventors -- Fiction; World War, 1939-1945 -- Naval operations -- Fiction; Radio -- Fiction | SILENCE IS—DEADLY
By Bertrand L. Shurtleff
Radio is an absolute necessity in modern
organization—and particularly in modern
naval organization. If you could silence all
radio—silence of that sort would be deadly!
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Astounding Science-Fiction April 1942.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
The hurried
rat-a-tat
of knuckles hammered on the cabin door.
Commander Bob Curtis roused himself from his doze, got up from his
chair, stretched himself to his full, lanky height and yawned. That
would be Nelson, his navigating officer. Nelson always knocked that
way—like a man in an external state of jitters over nothing at all.
Curtis didn't hurry. It pleased him to let Nelson wait. He moved slowly
to the door, paused there, and flung a backward glance at the man in
the cabin with him—Zukor Androka, the elderly Czech scientist, a guest
of the United States navy, here aboard the cruiser
Comerford
.
The wizened face of the older man was molded in intent lines of
concentration, as his bushy gray head bent over his drawing board.
Curtis got a glimpse of the design on which he was working, and his
lips relaxed in a faint smile.
Androka had arrived on board the
Comerford
the day before she sailed
from Norfolk. With him came a boatload of scientific apparatus and
equipment, including a number of things that looked like oxygen tanks,
which were now stored in the forward hold. Androka had watched over
his treasures with the jealous care of a mother hen, and spent hours
daily in the room in the superstructure that had been assigned as his
laboratory.
Sometimes, Curtis thought old Androka was a bit wacky—a scientist
whose mind had been turned by the horror that had come to his country
under the domination of the Nazi
gestapo
. At other times, the man
seemed a genius. Perhaps that was the answer—a mad genius!
Curtis opened the door and looked out. Rain whipped against his face
like a stinging wet lash. Overhead, the sky was a storm-racked mass of
clouds, broken in one spot by a tiny patch of starlit blue.
His eyes rested inquiringly on the face of the man who stood before
him. It
was
Nelson, his shaggy blond brows drawn scowlingly down
over his pale eyes; his thin face a mass of tense lines; his big hands
fumbling at the neck of his slicker. Rain was coursing down his white
cheeks, streaking them with glistening furrows.
The fellow was a headache to Curtis. He was overfriendly with a
black-browed bos'n's mate named Joe Bradford—the worst trouble maker
on board. But there was no question of his ability. He was a good
navigating officer—dependable, accurate, conscientious. Nevertheless,
his taut face, restless, searching eyes, and eternally nervous manner
got Curtis' goat.
"Come in, Nelson!" he said.
Nelson shouldered his way inside, and stood there in his dripping
oilskins, blinking his eyes against the yellow light.
Curtis closed the door and nodded toward the bent form of Zukor
Androka, with a quizzical grin. "Old Czech-and-Double-Czech is working
hard on his latest invention to pull Hitler's teeth and re-establish
the Czech Republic!"
Nelson had no answering smile, although there had been a great deal
of good-natured joking aboard the
Comerford
ever since the navy
department had sent the scientist on board the cruiser to carry on his
experiments.
"I'm worried, sir!" Nelson said. "I'm not sure about my dead reckoning.
This storm—"
Curtis threw his arm around Nelson's dripping shoulders. "Forget it!
Don't let a little error get you down!"
"But this storm, sir!" Nelson avoided Curtis' friendly eyes and slipped
out from under his arm. "It's got me worried. Quartering wind of
undetermined force, variable and gusty. There's a chop to the sea—as
if from unestimated currents among the islets. No chance to check by
observation, and now there is a chance—look at me!"
He held out his hands. They were shaking as if he had the chills.
"You say there is a chance?" Curtis asked. "Stars out?"
"As if by providence, sir, there's a clear patch. I'm wondering—" His
voice trailed off, but his eyes swung toward the gleaming sextant on
the rack.
Commander Curtis shrugged good-naturedly and reached for the
instrument. "Not that I've lost confidence in you, Nels, but just
because you asked for it!"
Curtis donned his slicker and went outside, sextant in hand. In a few
minutes he returned and handed Nelson a sheet of paper with figures
underlined heavily.
"Here's what I make it," the commander told his navigating officer.
"Bet you're not off appreciably."
Nelson stared at the computations with shaking head. Then he mutely
held up his own.
Curtis stared, frowned, grabbed his own sheet again. "Any time I'm
that far off old Figure-'em Nelson's estimate, I'm checking back," he
declared, frowning at the two papers and hastily rechecking his own
figures.
"Call up to the bridge to stop her," he told Nelson. "We can't afford
to move in these waters with such a possibility of error!"
Nelson complied, and the throbbing drive of the engines lessened
at once. Nelson said: "I've been wondering, sir, if it wouldn't be
advisable to try getting a radio cross-bearing. With all these rocks
and islets—"
"Radio?" repeated the little Czech, thrusting his face between the
other two, in his independent fashion that ignored ship's discipline.
"You're using your radio?" He broke into a knowing chuckle, his keen
old eyes twinkling behind their thick lenses. "Go ahead and try it. See
how much you can get! It will be no more than Hitler can get when Zukor
Androka decrees silence over the German airways! Try it! Try it, I say!"
Bob Curtis stared at him, as if questioning his sanity. Then he
hastened to the radio room, with Nelson at his heels, and the Czech
trotting along behind.
The door burst open as they neared it. A frightened operator came out,
still wearing his earphones, and stood staring upward incredulously at
the aërial.
"Get us a radio cross-bearing for location at once," Curtis said
sharply, for the operator seemed in a daze.
"Bearing, sir?" The man brought his eyes down with difficulty, as if
still dissatisfied. "I'm sorry, sir, but the outfit's dead. Went out on
me about five minutes ago. I was taking the weather report when the set
conked. I was trying to see if something's wrong."
The Czech inventor giggled. Curtis gave him another curious look and
thrust himself into the radio room.
"Try again!" he told the operator. "See what you can get!"
The radio man leaped to his seat and tried frantically. Again and
again, he sent off a request for a cross-bearing from shore stations
that had recently been established to insure safety to naval vessels,
but there was no answer on any of the bands—not even the blare of a
high-powered commercial program in the higher reach, nor the chatter of
ships or amateurs on the shorter.
"Dead!" Androka muttered, with a bitter laugh. "Yet not dead,
gentlemen! The set is uninjured. The waves are what have been upset. I
have shattered them around your ship, just as I can eventually shatter
them all over Central Europe! For the next two hours, no radio messages
can enter or leave my zone of radio silence—of refracted radio waves,
set up by my little station on one of the neighboring islets!"
There was a long pause, while commander and navigator stared at him.
Curtis was the first to speak.
"Your secrecy might well cost the United States navy one of its best
light cruisers—and us our lives!" he said angrily. "We need that check
by radio at once! If you're not talking nonsense, call off your dogs
till we learn just where we are!"
Androka held out his palms helplessly. "I can do nothing. I have given
orders to my assistant that he must keep two hours of radio silence! I
can get no message to him, for our radio is dead!"
As if to mock him, the ship's radio began to answer:
"Station 297 calling U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
. Station 297 calling U.
S. Cruiser
Comerford
—"
"U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
calling Station 297!" the operator intoned,
winking at the two officers over Androka's discomfiture, and asked for
the bearings.
The answer came back: "Bearings north east by a quarter east, U. S.
Cruiser
Comerford
!"
Curtis sighed with relief. He saw that Nelson was staring fiercely
at the radio operator, as the man went on calling: "U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
calling Station 364. U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
calling
Station 364—"
Then the instrument rasped again: "Station 364 calling U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
. Bearings north west by three west. Bearings north west by
three west, U. S. Cruiser
Comerford
from Cay 364."
Commander and navigator had both scribbled verifications of the
numbers. Ignoring the gibbering Androka, who was wailing his
disappointment that messages had penetrated his veil of silence, they
raced for the chart room.
Quickly the parallels stepped off the bearing from the designated
points. Light intersecting lines proclaimed a check on their position.
Curtis frowned and shook his head. Slowly he forced a reluctant grin as
he stuck out his hand.
"Shake, Nels," he said. "It's my turn to eat crow. You and the radio
must be right. Continue as you were!"
"I'm relieved, sir, just the same," Nelson admitted, "to have the radio
bearings. We'd have piled up sure if you'd been right."
They went on through the night. The starlit gap in the clouds had
closed. The sky was again a blanket of darkness pouring sheets of rain
at them.
Nelson went back to the bridge, and Androka returned to the commander's
cabin. Curtis lingered in the wireless room with the radio operator.
"It's a funny thing," the latter said, still dialing and grousing, "how
I got that cross-bearing through and can't get another squeak out of
her. I'm wondering if that old goat really
has
done something to the
ether. The set seems O. K."
He lingered over the apparatus, checking and rechecking. Tubes lighted;
wires were alive to the touch and set him to shaking his head at the
tingle they sent through his inquiring fingers.
Curtis left him at it, and went to rejoin Androka in the cabin. He
found the little inventor pacing up and down, shaking his fists in the
air; pausing every now and then to run his bony fingers through his
tangled mop of gray hair, or to claw nervously at his beard.
"You have seen a miracle, commander!" he shouted at Curtis. "
My
miracle! My invention has shattered the ether waves hereabouts
hopelessly."
"Seems to me," Curtis said dryly, "this invention can harm your friends
as much as your enemies."
The scientist drew himself up to his full height—which was only a
little over five feet. His voice grew shrill. "Wait! Just wait! There
are other inventions to supplement this one. Put them together, and
they will defeat the Nazi hordes which have ravaged my country!"
Curtis was a little shocked by the hatred that gleamed in Androka's
eyes, under their bushy brows. There was something of the wild animal
in the man's expression, as his lips drew back from his yellowed teeth.
"Those tanks you have below," Curtis said, "have they some connection
with this radio silence?"
A far-away look came into Androka's eyes. He did not seem to hear
the question. He lowered his voice: "My daughter is still in Prague.
So are my sister and her husband, and
their
two daughters. If the
gestapo
knew what I am doing, all of them would be better dead. You
understand—better dead?"
Curtis said: "I understand."
"And if the Nazi agents in America knew of the islet from which my zone
of silence is projected—" Androka paused, his head tilted to one side,
as if he were listening to something—
On deck, there was shouting and commotion. Curtis rushed out, pulling
on his slicker as he went. The shout from the watch forward had been
picked up, and was being relayed all over the ship. The words struck on
Curtis' ears with a note of impending tragedy.
"Breakers ahead!"
He was beside Navigating Officer Nelson on the bridge, and saw the
helmsman climbing the rapidly spinning wheel like a monkey as he put it
hard aport.
Then the ship struck. Everything movable shot ahead until it brought up
at the end of a swing or smacked against something solid.
Curtis felt Nelson's hand grip his shoulder, as he put his lips close
to his ear and shouted: "You must have been right, sir, and the radio
bearings and my reckoning wrong. We've hit that reef a terrific smack.
I'm afraid we're gored!"
"Get out the collision mat!" Curtis ordered. "We ought to be able to
keep her up!"
And then he became aware of a deadly stillness. A vast wall of silence
enveloped the entire cruiser. Looking over the side, he could no longer
see the waves that a few minutes before had beaten savagely against the
ship.
The
Comerford
was shrouded in a huge pall of yellowish-gray mist, and
more of it was coming up from below—from ventilators and hatchways and
skylights—as if the whole ship were flooded with some evil vapor.
Somehow, Curtis' mind flashed to the stories he'd heard of the forts of
the Maginot Line, and of other forts in Holland and Belgium that had
fallen before the early Nazi blitzkrieg, when their defenders found
themselves struck numb and helpless by a gas that had been flooded into
the inner compartments of their strongholds.
There were those who said it was the work of sappers who had tunneled
under the foundations, while others laid the induction of the gas to
Fifth Column traitors. There were a hundred more or less plausible
explanations—
The vapor clouds that enveloped the
Comerford
were becoming thicker.
All about the deck lay the forms of unconscious seamen, suddenly
stricken helpless. And then Curtis saw other forms flitting about the
deck—forms that looked like creatures from another world, but he
recognized them for what they were—men wearing gas masks.
Nelson was nowhere in sight. The steersman lay in a limp heap beside
the swinging wheel. Then a gas-masked figure appeared through the
shroud of mist and steadied it, so that the cruiser would not be
completely at the mercy of the wind and the waves.
Curtis heard the anchor let down, as if by invisible hands, the chain
screaming and flailing its clanking way through the hawse hole. Then he
was completely walled in by the yellowish-gray mist. He felt his senses
swimming.
Voices droned all around him in mumbling confusion—guttural voices
that ebbed and flowed in a tide of excited talk. He caught a word of
English now and then, mixed in with a flood of Teuton phonetics.
Two words, in particular, registered clearly on his mind. One was
"
Carethusia
"; the other was "convoy." But gradually his eardrums
began to throb, as if someone were pounding on them from the inside. He
couldn't get his breath; a cloud seemed to be mounting within him until
it swept over his brain—
He felt something strike the side of his head, and realized that he had
fallen in a heap on the bridge. And after that, he wasn't conscious of
anything—
The rain had abated to a foggy drizzle. The wash of the surf swung the
Comerford
in a lazy, rolling motion, as she lay with her bow nosing
into the sandbar at the entrance of the inlet.
From her bridge, Navigating Officer Nelson watched the gas-masked
figures moving about the decks, descending companionways—like goblins
from an ancient fairy tale or a modern horror story. Nelson looked like
a goblin himself, with his face covered by a respirator. At his side,
stood his fellow conspirator Bos'n's Mate Joe Bradford, also wearing a
gas mask.
Nelson spoke in a low tone, his lips close to Bradford's ear. "It
worked, Joe!"
"Yeah!" Bradford agreed. "It worked—fine!"
The limp bodies of the
Comerford's
crew were being carried to the
lowered accommodation ladder and transferred into waiting lifeboats.
Nelson swore under his breath. "Reckon it'll take a couple of hours
before the ship's rid of that damn gas!"
Bradford shook his head in disagreement. "The old geezer claims he's
got a neutralizing chemical in one of them tanks of his that'll clear
everything up inside half an hour."
"I'd rather get along without Androka, if we could!" Nelson muttered.
"He's nothing but a crackpot!"
"It was a crackpot who invented the gas we used to break up the
Maginot Line," Bradford reminded him. "It saved a lot of lives for the
Fuehrer
—lives that'd have been lost if the forts had to be taken by
our storm troopers!"
Nelson grunted and turned away. A short, thick-set figure in the
uniform of a German naval commander had ascended the accommodation
ladder and was mounting to the bridge. He, too, was equipped with a
respirator.
He came up to Nelson, saluted, and held out his hand, introducing
himself as Herr Kommander Brandt. He began to speak in German, but
Nelson stopped him.
"I don't speak any German," he explained. "I was born and educated in
the United States—of German parents, who had been ruined in the First
World War. My mother committed suicide when she learned that we were
penniless. My father—" He paused and cleared his throat.
"
Ja!
Your father?" the German officer prompted, dropping into
accented English. "Your father?"
"My father dedicated me to a career of revenge—to wipe out his
wrongs," Nelson continued. "If America hadn't gone into the First
World War, he wouldn't have lost his business; my mother would still
be living. When he joined the Nazi party, the way became clear to use
me—to educate me in a military prep school, then send me to Annapolis,
for a career in the United States navy—and no one suspected me. No
one—"
"Sometimes," Bradford put in, "I think Curtis suspected you."
"Maybe Curtis'll find out his suspicions were justified," Nelson said
bitterly. "But it won't do Curtis any good—a commander who's lost
his ship." He turned to Brandt. "You have plenty of men to work the
Comerford
?"
Brandt nodded his square head. "We have a full crew—two hundred
men—officers, seamen, mechanics, radio men, technical experts, all
German naval reservists living in the United States, who've been sent
here secretly, a few at a time, during the past six weeks!"
The three—Brandt, Nelson and Bradford—stood on the bridge and talked,
while the efficient stretcher-bearers worked industriously to remove
the limp bodies of the
Comerford's
unconscious crew and row them
ashore.
And when that task was completed, lifeboats began to come alongside
with strange-looking radio equipment, and more gas tanks like those
Androka had brought aboard the
Comerford
with him, and dynamos and
batteries that looked like something out of a scientific nightmare.
And bustling all over the place, barking excited commands in German,
pushing and pulling and pointing to emphasize his directions, was the
strange figure of Professor Zukor Androka!
"The professor's in his glory!" Nelson remarked to Kommander Brandt.
"Funny thing about him," Bradford put in, "is that his inventions work.
That zone of silence cut us off completely."
Kommander Brandt nodded. "Goodt! But you got your message giving your
bearings—the wrong ones?"
"Yes," Nelson said. "That came through all right. And won't Curtis have
a time explaining it!"
"Hereafter," Brandt said solemnly, "the zone of silence vill be
projected from the
Comerford
; and ve have another invention of
Androka's vich vill be even more useful vhen ve come to cut the
Carethusia
out of her convoy."
"The
Carethusia
?" Nelson asked, in a puzzled tone.
Brandt said: "She's a freighter in a convoy out of St. Johns—twelve
thousand tons. The orders are to take her; not sink her."
"What's the idea?"
"Her cargo," Brandt explained. "It iss more precious than rubies. It
includes a large shipment of boarts."
"Boarts?" Nelson repeated. "What are they?"
"Boarts," Brandt told him, "are industrial diamonds—black,
imperfectly crystallized stones, but far more valuable to us than
flawless diamonds from Tiffany's on Fift' Avenue. They are needed for
making machine tools. They come from northern Brazil—and our supply is
low."
"I should think we could get a shipment of these boarts direct from
Brazil—through the blockade," Nelson said, "without taking the risk of
capturing a United States navy cruiser."
"There are other things Germany needs desperately on board the
Carethusia
," Brandt explained. "Vanadium and nickel and hundreds of
barrels of lard oil for machine-tool lubrication. Our agents have been
watching the convoys closely for weeks for just such a cargo as the
Carethusia
is taking over."
"Can we trust Androka?" Nelson asked, with a sudden note of suspicion
in his voice.
"Yes," Brandt assured him. "Of all men—we can trust Androka!"
"But he's a Czech," Nelson argued.
"The
gestapo
takes care of Czechs and Poles and Frenchmen and other
foreigners whom it chooses as its agents," Brandt pointed out. "Androka
has a daughter and other relations in Prague. He knows that if anything
misfires, if there is the slightest suspicion of treachery on his part,
his daughter and the others will suffer. Androka's loyalty is assured!"
Nelson turned to watch the forward fighting top of the
Comerford
.
The masked German seamen were installing some sort of apparatus
up there—a strange-looking object that looked something like an
old-fashioned trench mortar, and which connected with cables to the
room that served as Androka's laboratory and workshop.
Another crew was installing radio apparatus in the mizzentop turret.
Descending a companionway to see what was going on below, Nelson found
that portholes were being opened, and men were spraying chemical around
to rid the below-decks atmosphere of the lethal gas that had overcome
the
Comerford's
American crew.
Returning to the bridge, he found that the tide in the inlet had risen
considerably, and that the cruiser was riding more easily at her anchor.
Then, at Brandt's orders, the anchor was hauled in, and lifeboats and a
motor launch were used as tugs to work the vessel entirely free of the
sand bar. This was accomplished without difficulty.
Brandt came over to where Nelson was standing on the bridge and held
out his hand.
"Congratulations, Herr Kommander Nelson!" he said. "Ve have stolen one
of the United States navy's newest and fastest cruisers!" He made a
gesture as if raising a beer stein to drink a toast. "
Prosit!
" he
added.
"
Prosit!
" Nelson repeated, and the two grinned at each other.
Stars were twinkling in a patch of black-blue sky, and broken mountains
of gray cloud were skudding before the east wind. Commander Bob Curtis
found himself lying in wet sand, on a beach, somewhere, with the
rain—now a light, driving mist—beating on his face. He was chilled;
his limbs were stiff and numb. His nose and throat felt parched inside,
as if a wave of searing heat had scorched them.
According to his last calculations, the
Comerford
had been cruising
off the Maine coast. This probably was one of the islets of that
region, or it might be the mainland.
It was hard work getting to his feet, and when he did manage to stand,
he could only plant his heels in the sand and sway to and fro for fully
a minute, like a child learning to walk.
All around him in the nearly total darkness, he could make out the dim
forms of men sprawled on the beach; and of other men moving about,
exploring. He heard the murmur of voices and saw the glow of lighted
cigarettes.
A man with a flashlight was approaching him. Its white glare shone for
a moment in Curtis' face, and the familiar voice of Ensign Jack Dillon
spoke: "Commander Curtis! Are you O. K., sir?"
"I think so!" Curtis' heart warmed at the eager expression in Dillon's
face; at the heartfelt concern in his friendly brown eyes. The young
ensign was red-headed, impetuous, thoroughly genuine in his emotions.
"How about yourself, Jack?" Curtis added.
"A bit of a headache from the gas, but that's all. Any orders, sir?"
Curtis thought for a moment. "Muster the crew, as best you can. We'll
try to make a roll call. Is there any sign of the ship?"
There was a solemn note in Dillon's voice. "No, sir. She's been worked
off the sandbar and put to sea!"
The words struck Curtis with the numbing shock of a blow on some nerve
center. For the first time, he realized fully the tragedy that had
swept down on him. He had lost his ship—one of the United States
navy's fastest and newest small light cruisers—under circumstances
which smelled strongly of treachery and sabotage.
As he thought back, he realized that he
might
have prevented the
loss, if he had been more alert, more suspicious. For it was clear to
him now that the
Comerford
had been deliberately steered to this
place; that the men who had seized her had been waiting here for that
very purpose.
The pieces of the picture fitted together like a jigsaw
puzzle—Androka's zone of silence; the bearings given by radio;
Navigating Officer Nelson's queer conduct. They were all part of a
carefully laid plan!
All the suspicious circumstances surrounding Nelson came flooding into
Curtis' mind. He had never liked the man; never trusted him. Nelson
always acted as if he had some secret, something to hide.
Curtis recalled that Nelson and Androka had long conversations
together—conversations which they would end abruptly when anyone else
came within earshot. And Nelson had always been chummy with the worst
trouble maker in the crew—Bos'n's Mate Bradford.
Curtis went around, finding the officers, issuing orders. There were
still some unconscious men to be revived. In a sheltered cove among
the rocks, an exploring group had found enough dry driftwood to make a
fire—
In another hour, the skies had cleared, and white moonlight flooded
the scene with a ghostly radiance. The men of the
Comerford
had
all regained consciousness and were drying out in front of the big
driftwood bonfires in the cove.
Curtis ordered a beacon kept burning on a high promontory. Then he got
the men lined up, according to their respective classifications, for a
check-up on the missing.
When this was completed, it was found that the
Comerford's
entire
complement of two hundred and twenty men were present—except
Navigating Officer Nelson, and Bos'n's Mate Bradford! And Zukor Androka
was also missing!
With the coming of dawn, a little exploration revealed that the
Comerford's
crew was marooned on an islet, about a square mile in
area; that they had been put ashore without food or extra clothing or
equipment of any kind, and that no boats had been left for them.
One searching party reported finding the remains of what had been a
radio station on a high promontory on the north shore of the islet.
Another had found the remains of tents and log cabins, recently
demolished, in a small, timbered hollow—a well-hidden spot invisible
from the air, unless one were flying very low; a place where two
hundred or more men could have camped.
There was a good water supply—a small creek fed by springs—but
nothing in the way of food. Evidently food was a precious commodity
which the recent inhabitants of the islet couldn't afford to leave
behind.
Curtis was studying the wreckage of the wireless station, wondering
if this might have been the source of Androka's zone of silence, when
Ensign Jack Dillon came up to him.
"There's a coast-guard cutter heading for the island, sir," he
announced.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/1/4/8/61481//61481-h//61481-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | Why is Brandt interested in The Comerford?
| 61481_LZNKW9Z1_9 | [
"He is holding the ship ransom as revenge for what American has done to Germany. \n",
"He is holding the ship ransom for Boarts—black diamonds. \n",
"He wants to use its zone of silence to apprehend the Carthusia. \n",
"He wants to use its zone of silence to trick other ships into crashing on the islet. \n"
] | 3 | 3 | [
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63,097 | 63097_4CW2KAPS | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Warrior of Two Worlds | 1954.0 | Wellman, Manly Wade | Science fiction; War stories; Adventure stories; PS; Prophecies -- Fiction | Warrior of Two Worlds
By MANLY WADE WELLMAN
He was the man of two planets, drawn through
the blackness of space to save a nation from
ruthless invaders. He was Yandro, the
Stranger of the Prophecy—and he found that
he was destined to fight both sides.
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Planet Stories Summer 1944.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
My senses came to me slowly and somehow shyly, as if not sure of their
way or welcome. I felt first—pressure on my brow and chest, as if I
lay face downward; then the tug and buffet of a strong, probing wind,
insistent but not cold, upon my naked skin. Closing my hands, I felt
them dig into coarse dirt. I turned my face downwind and opened my
eyes. There was little to see, so thick was the dust cloud around me.
Words formed themselves on my thick tongue, words that must have been
spoken by so many reviving unfortunates through the ages:
"Where am I?"
And at once there was an answer:
"
You lie upon the world Dondromogon.
"
I knew the language of that answer, but where it came from—above,
beneath, or indeed within me—I could not say. I lifted a hand, and
knuckled dust from my eyes.
"How did I get here?" I demanded of the speaker.
"It was ordered—by the Masters of the Worlds—that you should be
brought from your own home planet, called Earth in the System of the
star called Sun. Do you remember Earth?"
And I did not know whether I remembered or not. Vague matters stirred
deep in me, but I could not for certain say they were memories. I asked
yet again:
"Who am I?"
The voice had a note of triumph. "You do not know that. It is as well,
for this will be a birth and beginning of your destined leadership on
Dondromogon."
"Destined—leadership—" I began to repeat, and fell silent. I had
need to think. The voice was telling me that I had been snatched from
worlds away, for a specified purpose here on whatever windswept planet
Dondromogon might be. "Birth and beginning—destined leadership—"
Fantastic! And yet, for all I could say to the contrary, unvarnishedly
true.
"Dondromogon?" I mumbled. "The name is strange to me."
"It is a world the size of your native one," came words of information.
"Around a star it spins, light-years away from the world of your
birth. One face of Dondromogon ever looks to the light and heat,
wherefore its metals run in glowing seas. The other face is ever away
in cold darkness, with its air freezing into solid chunks. But because
Dondromogon wavers on its axis, there are two lunes of its surface
which from time to time shift from night to day. These are habitable."
My eyes were tight shut against the dust, but they saw in imagination
such a planet—one-half incandescent, one-half pitchy black. From pole
to pole on opposite sides ran the two twilight zones, widest at the
equators like the outer rind of two slices of melon. Of course, such
areas, between the hot and cold hemispheres, would be buffeted by
mighty gales ... the voice was to be heard again:
"War is fought between the two strips of habitable ground. War,
unceasing, bitter, with no quarter asked, given or expected.
Dondromogon was found and settled long ago, by adventurers from afar.
Now come invaders, to reap the benefits of discovery and toil." A
pause. "You find that thought unpleasant? You wish to right that
wrong?"
"Anyone would wish that," I replied. "But how—"
"You are going to ask how you were brought here. That is the mystery
of the
Masters
." The voice became grand. "Suffice it that you were
needed, and that the time was ripe. There is a proper time, like a
proper place, for each thing and each happening. Now, go to your
destiny."
I rose on my knees, shielding my face from the buffeting wind by
lifting a forearm. Somewhere through the murky clouds showed a dim
blocky silhouette, a building of sorts.
The voice spoke no more. I had not the time to wonder about it. I got
to my feet, bent double to keep from being blown over, and staggered
toward the promised haven.
I reached it, groped along until I found a door. There was no latch,
handle or entry button, and I pounded heavily on the massive panels.
The door opened from within, and I was blown inside, to fall sprawling.
I struck my forehead upon a floor of stone or concrete, and so was
half-stunned, but still I could distinguish something like the sound
of agitated voices. Then I felt myself grasped, by both shoulders,
and drawn roughly erect. The touch restored my senses, and I wrenched
myself violently free.
What had seized me? That was my first wonder. On this strange world
called Dondromogon, what manner of intelligent life bade defiance to
heat and cold and storm, and built these stout structures, and now laid
hands—were they hands indeed?—upon me? I swung around, setting my
back to a solid wall.
My first glance showed me that my companions were creatures like
myself—two-legged, fair-skinned men, shorter and slighter than I, but
clad in metal-faced garments and wearing weapons in their girdles. I
saw that each bore a swordlike device with a curved guard, set in a
narrow sheath as long as my arm. Each also had a shorter weapon, with
a curved stock to fit the palm of the hand, borne snugly in a holster.
With such arms I had a faint sense of familiarity.
"Who are you, and where are you from?" said one of the two, a
broad-faced middle-aged fellow. "Don't lie any more than you can help."
I felt a stirring of the hair on my neck, but kept my voice mild and
level: "Why should I lie? Especially as I don't know who I am, or where
I'm from, or anything that has happened longer ago than just a moment.
I woke up out there in the dust storm, and I managed to come here for
shelter."
"He's a Newcomer spy," quoth the other. "Let's put him under arrest."
"And leave this gate unguarded?" demanded the other. "Sound the
signal," and he jerked his head toward a system of levers and gauges on
the wall beside the door-jamb.
"There's a bigger reward for capture than for warning," objected
his friend in turn, "and whoever comes to take this man will claim
'capture.' I'll guard here, and you take him in, then we'll divide—"
"No. Yours is the idea. I'll guard and you take him in." The second man
studied me apprehensively. "He's big, and looks strong, even without
weapons."
"Don't be afraid," I urged. "I'll make no resistance, if you'll only
conduct me to your commander. I can show him that I'm no spy or enemy."
Both stared narrowly. "No spy? No enemy?" asked the broad-faced one who
had first spoken. Then, to his comrade: "No reward, then."
"I think there'll be a reward," was the rejoinder, and the second man's
hand stole to the sword-weapon. With a whispering rasp it cleared from
its scabbard. "If he's dead, we get pay for both warning and capture—"
His thumb touched a button at the pommel of the hilt. The dull blade
suddenly glowed like heated iron, and from it crackled and pulsed
little rainbow rays.
There was no time to think or plan or ponder. I moved in, with a
knowing speed that surprised me as much as the two guards. Catching the
fellow's weapon wrist, I clamped it firmly and bent it back and around.
He whimpered and swore, and his glowing sword dropped. Its radiant
blade almost fell on my naked foot. Before the clang of its fall was
through echoing, I had caught it up, and set the point within inches of
its owner's unprotected face.
"Quiet, or I'll roast you," I told him.
The other had drawn a weapon of his own, a pistol-form arrangement.
I turned on him, but too late. He pressed the trigger, and from the
muzzle came—not a projectile but a flying, spouting filament of cord
that seemed to spring on me like a long thin snake and to fasten coil
after coil around my body. The stuff that gushed from the gun-muzzle
seemed plastic in form, but hardened so quickly upon contact with the
air, it bound me like wire. Half a dozen adroit motions of the fellow's
gun hand, and my arms were caught to my body. I dropped my sword to
prevent it burning me, and tried to break away, but my bonds were too
much for me.
"Let me out of this," I growled, and kicked at the man with my still
unbound foot. He snapped a half-hitch on my ankle, and threw me
heavily. Triumphant laughter came from both adversaries. Then:
"What's this?"
The challenge was clear, rich, authoritative. Someone else had come,
from a rearward door into the stone-walled vestibule where the
encounter was taking place.
A woman this time, not of great height, and robust but not heavy. She
was dressed for vigorous action in dark slacks with buskins to make
them snug around ankles and calves, a jerkin of stout material that was
faced with metal armor plates and left bare her round, strong arms. A
gold-worked fillet bound her tawny hair back from a rosy, bold-featured
face—a nose that was positively regal, a mouth short and firm but not
hard, and blue eyes that just now burned and questioned. She wore a
holstered pistol, and a cross-belt supported several instruments of a
kind I could not remember seeing before. A crimson cloak gave color and
dignity to her costume, and plainly she was someone of position, for
both the men stiffened to attention.
"A spy," one ventured. "He pushed in, claimed he was no enemy, then
tried to attack—"
"They lie," I broke in, very conscious of my naked helplessness before
her regard. "They wanted to kill me and be rewarded for a false story
of vigilance. I only defended myself."
"Get him on his feet," the young woman said, and the two guards
obeyed. Then her eyes studied me again. "Gods! What a mountain of a
man!" she exclaimed. "Can you walk, stranger?"
"Barely, with these bonds."
"Then manage to do so." She flung off her cloak and draped it over my
nakedness. "Walk along beside me. No tricks, and I promise you fair
hearing."
We went through the door by which she had entered, into a corridor
beyond. It was lighted by small, brilliant bulbs at regular intervals.
Beyond, it gave into several passages. She chose one of them and
conducted me along. "You are surely not of us," she commented. "Men I
have seen who are heavier than you, but none taller. Whence came you?"
I remembered the strange voice that had instructed me. "I am from a
far world," I replied. "It is called—yes, Earth. Beyond that, I know
nothing. Memory left me."
"The story is a strange one," she commented. "And your name?"
"I do not know that, either. Who are you?"
"Doriza—a gentlewoman of the guard. My inspection tour brought me by
chance to where you fought my outposts. But it is not for you to ask
questions. Enter here."
We passed through another door, and I found myself in an office. A man
in richly-embossed armor platings sat there. He had a fringe of pale
beard, and his eyes were bluer than the gentlewoman Doriza's.
She made a gesture of salute, hand at shoulder height, and reported the
matter. He nodded for her to fall back to a corner.
"Stranger," he said to me, "can you think of no better tale to tell
than you now offer?"
"I tell the truth," was my reply, not very gracious.
"You will have to prove that," he admonished me.
"What proof have I?" I demanded. "On this world of yours—Dondromogon,
isn't it called?—I'm no more than an hour old. Accident or shock
has taken my memory. Let me have a medical examination. A scientist
probably can tell what happened to put me in such a condition."
"I am a scientist," offered Doriza, and came forward. Her eyes met
mine, suddenly flickered and lowered. "His gaze," she muttered.
The officer at the table was touching a button. An attendant appeared,
received an order, and vanished again. In a few moments two other
men came—one a heavily armed officer of rank, the other an elderly,
bearded fellow in a voluminous robe that enfolded him in most dignified
manner.
This latter man opened wide his clear old eyes at sight of me.
"The stranger of the prophecy!" he cried, in a voice that made us all
jump.
The officer rose from behind the table. "Are you totally mad, Sporr?
You mystic doctors are too apt to become fuddled—"
"But it is, it is!" The graybeard flourished a thin hand at me. "Look
at him, you of little faith! Your mind dwells so much on material
strength that you lose touch with the spiritual—"
He broke off, and wheeled on the attendant who had led him in. "To my
study," he commanded. "On the shelf behind my desk, bring the great
gold-bound book that is third from the right." Then he turned back,
and bowed toward me. "Surely you are Yandro, the Conquering Stranger,"
he said, intoning as if in formal prayer. "Pardon these short-sighted
ones—deign to save us from our enemies—"
The girl Doriza spoke to the officer: "If Sporr speaks truth, and he
generally does, you have committed a blasphemy."
The other made a little grimace. "This may be Yandro, though I'm a
plain soldier and follow the classics very little. The First Comers are
souls to worship, not to study. If indeed he is Yandro," and he was
most respectful, "he will appreciate, like a good military mind, my
caution against possible impostors."
"Who might Yandro be?" I demanded, very uncomfortable in my bonds and
loose draperies.
Old Sporr almost crowed. "You see? If he was a true imposter, he would
come equipped with all plausible knowledge. As it is—"
"As it is, he may remember that the Conquering Stranger is foretold
to come with no memory of anything," supplied the officer. "Score one
against you, Sporr. You should have been able to instruct me, not I
you."
The attendant reentered, with a big book in his hands. It looked
old and well-thumbed, with dim gold traceries on its binding. Sporr
snatched it, and turned to a brightly colored picture. He looked once,
his beard gaped, and he dropped to his knees.
"Happy, happy the day," he jabbered, "that I was spared to see our
great champion come among us in the flesh, as was foretold of ancient
time by the First Comers!"
Doriza and the officer crossed to his side, snatching the book. Their
bright heads bent above it. Doriza was first to speak. "It is very
like," she half-stammered.
The officer faced me, with a sort of baffled respect.
"I still say you will understand my caution," he addressed me, with
real respect and shyness this time. "If you are Yandro himself, you can
prove it. The prophecy even sketches a thumb-print—" And he held the
book toward me.
It contained a full-page likeness, in color, of myself wrapped in a
scarlet robe. Under this was considerable printed description, and to
one side a thumb-print, or a drawing of one, in black.
"Behold," Doriza was saying, "matters which even expert identification
men take into thought. The ears in the picture are like the ears of the
real man—"
"That could be plastic surgery," rejoined the officer. "Such things are
artfully done by the Newcomers, and the red mantle he wears more easily
assumed."
Doriza shook her head. "That happens to be my cloak. I gave it to him
because he was naked, and not for any treasonable masquerade. But the
thumb-print—"
"Oh, yes, the thumb-print," I repeated wearily. "By all means, study my
thumbs, if you'll first take these bonds off of me."
"Bonds," mumbled old Sporr. He got creakily up from his knees and
bustled to me. From under his robe he produced a pouch, and took out a
pencil-sized rod. Gingerly opening the red mantle, he touched my tether
in several places with the glowing end of the rod. The coils dropped
away from my grateful body and limbs. I thrust out my hands.
"Thumb-prints?" I offered.
Sporr had produced something else, a little vial of dark pigment. He
carefully anointed one of my thumbs, and pressed it to the page. All
three gazed.
"The same," said Doriza.
And they were all on their knees before me.
"Forgive me, great Yandro," said the officer thickly. "I did not know."
"Get up," I bade them. "I want to hear why I was first bound, and now
worshipped."
II
They rose, but stood off respectfully. The officer spoke first. "I am
Rohbar, field commander of this defense position," he said with crisp
respect. "Sporr is a mystic doctor, full of godly wisdom. Doriza,
a junior officer and chief of the guard. And you—how could you
know?—are sent by the First Comers to save us from our enemies."
"Enemies?" I repeated.
"The Newcomers," supplemented Doriza. "They have taken the "Other Side"
of Dondromogon, and would take our side as well. We defend ourselves
at the poles. Now," and her voice rang joyously, "you will lead us to
defeat and crush them utterly!"
"Not naked like this," I said, and laughed. I must have sounded
foolish, but it had its effect.
"Follow me, deign to follow me," Sporr said. "Your clothing, your
quarters, your destiny, all await you."
We went out by the door at the rear, and Sporr respectfully gestured me
upon a metal-plated platform. Standing beside me, he tinkered with a
lever. We dropped smoothly away into a dark corridor, past level after
level of light and sound.
"Our cities are below ground," he quavered. "Whipped by winds above,
we must scrabble in the depths for life's necessities—chemicals to
transmute into food, to weave into clothing, to weld into tools and
weapons—"
The mention of food brought to me the thought that I was hungry. I said
as much, even as our elevator platform came to the lowest level and
stopped.
"I have arranged for that," Sporr began, then fell silent, fingers
combing his beard in embarrassment.
"Arranged food for me?" I prompted sharply. "As if you know I had come?
What—"
"Pardon, great Yandro," babbled Sporr. "I was saying that I arranged
food, as always, for whatever guest should come. Please follow."
We entered a new small chamber, where a table was set with dishes of
porcelain-like plastic. Sporr held a chair for me, and waited on me
with the utmost gingerly respect. The food was a pungent and filling
jelly, a little bundle of transparent leaves or scraps like cellophane
and tasting of spice, and a tumbler of pink juice. I felt refreshed and
satisfied, and thanked Sporr, who led me on to the next room.
"Behold!" he said, with a dramatic gesture. "Your garments, even as
they have been preserved against your coming!"
It was a sleeping chamber, with a cot made fast to the wall, a metal
locker or cupboard, with a glass door through which showed the garments
of which Sporr spoke.
The door closed softly behind me—I was left alone.
Knowing that it was expected of me, I went to the locker and opened
the door. The garments inside were old, I could see, but well kept and
serviceable. I studied their type, and my hands, if not my mind, seemed
familiar with them.
There was a kiltlike item, belted at the waist and falling to
mid-thigh. A resilient band at the top, with a series of belt-holes,
made it adaptable to my own body or to any other. Then came an upper
garment, a long strip of soft, close-woven fabric that spiralled
around the torso from hip to armpit, the end looping over the left
shoulder and giving full play to the arms. A gold-worked fillet bound
the brows and swept back my longish hair, knotting at the nape of the
neck. The only fitted articles were a pair of shoes, metal-soled and
soft-uppered, that went on well enough and ran cross-garters up to
below the knee, like buskins. The case also held a platinum chain for
the neck, a belt-bag, and a handsome sword, with clips to fasten them
in place. These things, too, I donned, and closed the glass door.
The light struck it at such an angle as to make it serve for a
full-length mirror. With some curiosity I gazed at my image.
The close-fitting costume was rich and dark, with bright colors only
for edgings and minor accessories. I myself—and it was as if I saw my
body for the first time—towered rather bluffly, with great breadth
of chest and shoulder, and legs robust enough to carry such bulk. The
face was square but haggard, as if from some toil or pain which was now
wiped from my recollection. That nose had been even bigger than it was
now, but a fracture had shortened it somewhat. The eyes were deep set
and dark and moody—small wonder!—the chin heavy, the mouth made grim
by a scar at one corner. Black, shaggy hair hung down like brackets.
All told, I looked like a proper person for physical labor, or even
fierce fighting—but surely no inspirational leader or savior of a
distressed people.
I took the military cloak which Doriza had lent me and slung it over my
shoulders. Turning, I clanked out on my metal-soled shoes.
Sporr was waiting in the room where I had eaten. His eyes widened at
sight of me, something like a grin of triumph flashed through his
beard. Then he bowed, supple and humble, his palms together.
"It is indeed Yandro, our great chief," he mumbled. Then he turned and
crossed the room. A sort of mouthpiece sprouted from the wall.
"I announce," he intoned into it. "I announce, I, Sporr, the reader and
fore-teller of wisdom. Yandro is with us, he awaits his partners and
friends. Let them meet him in the audience hall."
Facing me again, he motioned most respectfully toward the door to the
hall. I moved to open it, and he followed, muttering.
Outside stood Doriza. Her blue eyes met mine, and her lips moved to
frame a word. Then, suddenly, she was on her knee, catching my hand and
kissing it.
"I serve Yandro," she vowed tremulously. "Now and forever—and happy
that I was fated to live when he returned for the rescue of all
Dondromogon."
"Please get up," I bade her, trying not to sound as embarrassed as I
felt. "Come with me. There is still much that I do not understand."
"I am Yandro's orderly and helper," she said. Rising, she ranged
herself at my left hand. "Will Yandro come this way? He will be awaited
in the audience hall."
It seemed to me then that the corridors were vast and mixed as a
labyrinth, but Doriza guided me without the slightest hesitation past
one tangled crossway after another. My questions she answered with a
mixture of awe and brightness.
"It is necessary that we live like this," she explained. "The hot air
of Dondromogon's sunlit face is ever rising, and the cold air from
the dark side comes rushing under to fill the vacuum. Naturally, our
strip of twilight country is never free of winds too high and fierce to
fight. No crops can grow outside, no domestic animals flourish. We must
pen ourselves away from the sky and soil, with stout walls and heavy
sunken parapets. Our deep mines afford every element for necessities of
life."
I looked at my garments, and hers. There were various kinds of fabric,
which I now saw plainly to be synthetic. "The other side, where those
you call the Newcomers dwell and fight," I reminded. "Is it also
windswept? Why can two people not join forces and face toil and nature
together? They should fight, not each other, but the elements."
Doriza had no answer that time, but Sporr spoke up behind us: "Great
Yandro is wise as well as powerful. But the Newcomers do not want to
help, not even to conquer. They want to obliterate us. There is nothing
to do—not for lifetimes—but to fight them back at the two poles."
We came to a main corridor. It had a line of armed guards, but no
pedestrians or vehicles, though I thought I caught a murmur of far-off
traffic. Doriza paused before a great portal, closed by a curtainlike
sheet of dull metal. She spoke into a mouthpiece:
"Doriza, gentlewoman of the guard, conducts Yandro, the Conquering
Stranger, to greet his lieutenants!"
I have said that the portal was closed by a curtainlike metal sheet;
and like a curtain it lifted, letting us through into the auditorium.
That spacious chamber had rows of benches, with galleries above, that
might have seated a thousand. However, only a dozen or so were present,
on metal chairs ranged across the stage upon which we entered. They
were all men but two, and wore robes of black, plum-purple or red. At
sight of me, they rose together, most respectfully. They looked at me,
and I looked at them.
My first thought was, that if these were people of authority and trust
in the nation I seemed destined to save, my work was cut out for me.
Not that they really seemed stupid—none had the look, or the
subsequent action, of stupidity. But they were not pleasant. Their
dozen pairs of eyes fixed me with some steadiness, but with no
frankness anywhere. One man had a round, greedy-seeming face. Another
was too narrow and cunning to look it. Of the women, one was nearly
as tall as I and nobly proportioned, with hair of a red that would be
inspiring were it not so blatantly dyed. The other was a little wisp of
a brunette, with teeth too big for her scarlet mouth and bright eyes
like some sort of a rodent. They all wore jewelry. Too much jewelry.
My mind flew back to the two scrubby, venial guardsmen who had first
welcomed me; to stuffy Rohbar, the commander; to Sporr, spry and clever
enough, but somehow unwholesome; Doriza—no, she was not like these
others, who may have lived too long in their earth-buried shelters. And
Doriza now spoke to the gathering:
"Yandro, folk of the Council! He deigns to give you audience."
"
Yandro!
"
They all spoke the name in chorus, and bowed toward me.
Silence then, a silence which evidently I must break. I broke it:
"Friends, I am among you with no more memory or knowledge than an
infant. I hear wonderful things, of which I seem to be the center. Are
they true?"
"The tenth part of the wonders which concern mighty Yandro have not
been told," intoned Sporr, ducking his bearded head in a bow, but
fixing me with his wise old eyes.
One of the group, called Council by Doriza, now moved a pace forward.
He was the greedy-faced man, short but plump, and very conscious of
the dignified folds of his purple robe. One carefully-tended hand
brushed back his ginger-brown hair, then toyed with a little moustache.
"I am Gederr, senior of this Council," he purred. "If Yandro permits, I
will speak simply. Our hopes have been raised by Yandro's return—the
return presaged of old by those who could see the future, and more
recently by the death in battle of the Newcomer champion, called Barak."
"Barak!" I repeated. "I—I—" And I paused. When I had to learn my own
name, how could it be that I sensed memory of another's name?
"Barak was a brute—mighty, but a brute." Thus Gederr continued.
"Weapons in his hands were the instruments of fate. His hands alone
caused fear and ruin. But it pleased our fortune-bringing stars to
encompass his destruction." He grinned, and licked his full lips. "Now,
even as they are without their battle-leader, so we have ours."
"You honor me," I told him. "Yet I still know little. It seems that I
am expected to aid and lead and save the people of this world called
Dondromogon. But I must know them before I can help."
Gederr turned his eyes upon the woman with the red hair, and gestured
to her "Tell him, Elonie." Then he faced me. "Have we Yandro's
permission to sit?"
"By all means," I granted, a little impatiently, and sat down myself.
The others followed suit—the Council on their range of chairs, Doriza
on a bench near me, Sporr somewhere behind. The woman called Elonie
remained upon her sandalled feet, great eyes the color of deep green
water fixed upon me.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/3/0/9/63097//63097-h//63097-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | Who ordered that the narrator to Dondromogon?
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63,097 | 63097_4CW2KAPS | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Warrior of Two Worlds | 1954.0 | Wellman, Manly Wade | Science fiction; War stories; Adventure stories; PS; Prophecies -- Fiction | Warrior of Two Worlds
By MANLY WADE WELLMAN
He was the man of two planets, drawn through
the blackness of space to save a nation from
ruthless invaders. He was Yandro, the
Stranger of the Prophecy—and he found that
he was destined to fight both sides.
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Planet Stories Summer 1944.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
My senses came to me slowly and somehow shyly, as if not sure of their
way or welcome. I felt first—pressure on my brow and chest, as if I
lay face downward; then the tug and buffet of a strong, probing wind,
insistent but not cold, upon my naked skin. Closing my hands, I felt
them dig into coarse dirt. I turned my face downwind and opened my
eyes. There was little to see, so thick was the dust cloud around me.
Words formed themselves on my thick tongue, words that must have been
spoken by so many reviving unfortunates through the ages:
"Where am I?"
And at once there was an answer:
"
You lie upon the world Dondromogon.
"
I knew the language of that answer, but where it came from—above,
beneath, or indeed within me—I could not say. I lifted a hand, and
knuckled dust from my eyes.
"How did I get here?" I demanded of the speaker.
"It was ordered—by the Masters of the Worlds—that you should be
brought from your own home planet, called Earth in the System of the
star called Sun. Do you remember Earth?"
And I did not know whether I remembered or not. Vague matters stirred
deep in me, but I could not for certain say they were memories. I asked
yet again:
"Who am I?"
The voice had a note of triumph. "You do not know that. It is as well,
for this will be a birth and beginning of your destined leadership on
Dondromogon."
"Destined—leadership—" I began to repeat, and fell silent. I had
need to think. The voice was telling me that I had been snatched from
worlds away, for a specified purpose here on whatever windswept planet
Dondromogon might be. "Birth and beginning—destined leadership—"
Fantastic! And yet, for all I could say to the contrary, unvarnishedly
true.
"Dondromogon?" I mumbled. "The name is strange to me."
"It is a world the size of your native one," came words of information.
"Around a star it spins, light-years away from the world of your
birth. One face of Dondromogon ever looks to the light and heat,
wherefore its metals run in glowing seas. The other face is ever away
in cold darkness, with its air freezing into solid chunks. But because
Dondromogon wavers on its axis, there are two lunes of its surface
which from time to time shift from night to day. These are habitable."
My eyes were tight shut against the dust, but they saw in imagination
such a planet—one-half incandescent, one-half pitchy black. From pole
to pole on opposite sides ran the two twilight zones, widest at the
equators like the outer rind of two slices of melon. Of course, such
areas, between the hot and cold hemispheres, would be buffeted by
mighty gales ... the voice was to be heard again:
"War is fought between the two strips of habitable ground. War,
unceasing, bitter, with no quarter asked, given or expected.
Dondromogon was found and settled long ago, by adventurers from afar.
Now come invaders, to reap the benefits of discovery and toil." A
pause. "You find that thought unpleasant? You wish to right that
wrong?"
"Anyone would wish that," I replied. "But how—"
"You are going to ask how you were brought here. That is the mystery
of the
Masters
." The voice became grand. "Suffice it that you were
needed, and that the time was ripe. There is a proper time, like a
proper place, for each thing and each happening. Now, go to your
destiny."
I rose on my knees, shielding my face from the buffeting wind by
lifting a forearm. Somewhere through the murky clouds showed a dim
blocky silhouette, a building of sorts.
The voice spoke no more. I had not the time to wonder about it. I got
to my feet, bent double to keep from being blown over, and staggered
toward the promised haven.
I reached it, groped along until I found a door. There was no latch,
handle or entry button, and I pounded heavily on the massive panels.
The door opened from within, and I was blown inside, to fall sprawling.
I struck my forehead upon a floor of stone or concrete, and so was
half-stunned, but still I could distinguish something like the sound
of agitated voices. Then I felt myself grasped, by both shoulders,
and drawn roughly erect. The touch restored my senses, and I wrenched
myself violently free.
What had seized me? That was my first wonder. On this strange world
called Dondromogon, what manner of intelligent life bade defiance to
heat and cold and storm, and built these stout structures, and now laid
hands—were they hands indeed?—upon me? I swung around, setting my
back to a solid wall.
My first glance showed me that my companions were creatures like
myself—two-legged, fair-skinned men, shorter and slighter than I, but
clad in metal-faced garments and wearing weapons in their girdles. I
saw that each bore a swordlike device with a curved guard, set in a
narrow sheath as long as my arm. Each also had a shorter weapon, with
a curved stock to fit the palm of the hand, borne snugly in a holster.
With such arms I had a faint sense of familiarity.
"Who are you, and where are you from?" said one of the two, a
broad-faced middle-aged fellow. "Don't lie any more than you can help."
I felt a stirring of the hair on my neck, but kept my voice mild and
level: "Why should I lie? Especially as I don't know who I am, or where
I'm from, or anything that has happened longer ago than just a moment.
I woke up out there in the dust storm, and I managed to come here for
shelter."
"He's a Newcomer spy," quoth the other. "Let's put him under arrest."
"And leave this gate unguarded?" demanded the other. "Sound the
signal," and he jerked his head toward a system of levers and gauges on
the wall beside the door-jamb.
"There's a bigger reward for capture than for warning," objected
his friend in turn, "and whoever comes to take this man will claim
'capture.' I'll guard here, and you take him in, then we'll divide—"
"No. Yours is the idea. I'll guard and you take him in." The second man
studied me apprehensively. "He's big, and looks strong, even without
weapons."
"Don't be afraid," I urged. "I'll make no resistance, if you'll only
conduct me to your commander. I can show him that I'm no spy or enemy."
Both stared narrowly. "No spy? No enemy?" asked the broad-faced one who
had first spoken. Then, to his comrade: "No reward, then."
"I think there'll be a reward," was the rejoinder, and the second man's
hand stole to the sword-weapon. With a whispering rasp it cleared from
its scabbard. "If he's dead, we get pay for both warning and capture—"
His thumb touched a button at the pommel of the hilt. The dull blade
suddenly glowed like heated iron, and from it crackled and pulsed
little rainbow rays.
There was no time to think or plan or ponder. I moved in, with a
knowing speed that surprised me as much as the two guards. Catching the
fellow's weapon wrist, I clamped it firmly and bent it back and around.
He whimpered and swore, and his glowing sword dropped. Its radiant
blade almost fell on my naked foot. Before the clang of its fall was
through echoing, I had caught it up, and set the point within inches of
its owner's unprotected face.
"Quiet, or I'll roast you," I told him.
The other had drawn a weapon of his own, a pistol-form arrangement.
I turned on him, but too late. He pressed the trigger, and from the
muzzle came—not a projectile but a flying, spouting filament of cord
that seemed to spring on me like a long thin snake and to fasten coil
after coil around my body. The stuff that gushed from the gun-muzzle
seemed plastic in form, but hardened so quickly upon contact with the
air, it bound me like wire. Half a dozen adroit motions of the fellow's
gun hand, and my arms were caught to my body. I dropped my sword to
prevent it burning me, and tried to break away, but my bonds were too
much for me.
"Let me out of this," I growled, and kicked at the man with my still
unbound foot. He snapped a half-hitch on my ankle, and threw me
heavily. Triumphant laughter came from both adversaries. Then:
"What's this?"
The challenge was clear, rich, authoritative. Someone else had come,
from a rearward door into the stone-walled vestibule where the
encounter was taking place.
A woman this time, not of great height, and robust but not heavy. She
was dressed for vigorous action in dark slacks with buskins to make
them snug around ankles and calves, a jerkin of stout material that was
faced with metal armor plates and left bare her round, strong arms. A
gold-worked fillet bound her tawny hair back from a rosy, bold-featured
face—a nose that was positively regal, a mouth short and firm but not
hard, and blue eyes that just now burned and questioned. She wore a
holstered pistol, and a cross-belt supported several instruments of a
kind I could not remember seeing before. A crimson cloak gave color and
dignity to her costume, and plainly she was someone of position, for
both the men stiffened to attention.
"A spy," one ventured. "He pushed in, claimed he was no enemy, then
tried to attack—"
"They lie," I broke in, very conscious of my naked helplessness before
her regard. "They wanted to kill me and be rewarded for a false story
of vigilance. I only defended myself."
"Get him on his feet," the young woman said, and the two guards
obeyed. Then her eyes studied me again. "Gods! What a mountain of a
man!" she exclaimed. "Can you walk, stranger?"
"Barely, with these bonds."
"Then manage to do so." She flung off her cloak and draped it over my
nakedness. "Walk along beside me. No tricks, and I promise you fair
hearing."
We went through the door by which she had entered, into a corridor
beyond. It was lighted by small, brilliant bulbs at regular intervals.
Beyond, it gave into several passages. She chose one of them and
conducted me along. "You are surely not of us," she commented. "Men I
have seen who are heavier than you, but none taller. Whence came you?"
I remembered the strange voice that had instructed me. "I am from a
far world," I replied. "It is called—yes, Earth. Beyond that, I know
nothing. Memory left me."
"The story is a strange one," she commented. "And your name?"
"I do not know that, either. Who are you?"
"Doriza—a gentlewoman of the guard. My inspection tour brought me by
chance to where you fought my outposts. But it is not for you to ask
questions. Enter here."
We passed through another door, and I found myself in an office. A man
in richly-embossed armor platings sat there. He had a fringe of pale
beard, and his eyes were bluer than the gentlewoman Doriza's.
She made a gesture of salute, hand at shoulder height, and reported the
matter. He nodded for her to fall back to a corner.
"Stranger," he said to me, "can you think of no better tale to tell
than you now offer?"
"I tell the truth," was my reply, not very gracious.
"You will have to prove that," he admonished me.
"What proof have I?" I demanded. "On this world of yours—Dondromogon,
isn't it called?—I'm no more than an hour old. Accident or shock
has taken my memory. Let me have a medical examination. A scientist
probably can tell what happened to put me in such a condition."
"I am a scientist," offered Doriza, and came forward. Her eyes met
mine, suddenly flickered and lowered. "His gaze," she muttered.
The officer at the table was touching a button. An attendant appeared,
received an order, and vanished again. In a few moments two other
men came—one a heavily armed officer of rank, the other an elderly,
bearded fellow in a voluminous robe that enfolded him in most dignified
manner.
This latter man opened wide his clear old eyes at sight of me.
"The stranger of the prophecy!" he cried, in a voice that made us all
jump.
The officer rose from behind the table. "Are you totally mad, Sporr?
You mystic doctors are too apt to become fuddled—"
"But it is, it is!" The graybeard flourished a thin hand at me. "Look
at him, you of little faith! Your mind dwells so much on material
strength that you lose touch with the spiritual—"
He broke off, and wheeled on the attendant who had led him in. "To my
study," he commanded. "On the shelf behind my desk, bring the great
gold-bound book that is third from the right." Then he turned back,
and bowed toward me. "Surely you are Yandro, the Conquering Stranger,"
he said, intoning as if in formal prayer. "Pardon these short-sighted
ones—deign to save us from our enemies—"
The girl Doriza spoke to the officer: "If Sporr speaks truth, and he
generally does, you have committed a blasphemy."
The other made a little grimace. "This may be Yandro, though I'm a
plain soldier and follow the classics very little. The First Comers are
souls to worship, not to study. If indeed he is Yandro," and he was
most respectful, "he will appreciate, like a good military mind, my
caution against possible impostors."
"Who might Yandro be?" I demanded, very uncomfortable in my bonds and
loose draperies.
Old Sporr almost crowed. "You see? If he was a true imposter, he would
come equipped with all plausible knowledge. As it is—"
"As it is, he may remember that the Conquering Stranger is foretold
to come with no memory of anything," supplied the officer. "Score one
against you, Sporr. You should have been able to instruct me, not I
you."
The attendant reentered, with a big book in his hands. It looked
old and well-thumbed, with dim gold traceries on its binding. Sporr
snatched it, and turned to a brightly colored picture. He looked once,
his beard gaped, and he dropped to his knees.
"Happy, happy the day," he jabbered, "that I was spared to see our
great champion come among us in the flesh, as was foretold of ancient
time by the First Comers!"
Doriza and the officer crossed to his side, snatching the book. Their
bright heads bent above it. Doriza was first to speak. "It is very
like," she half-stammered.
The officer faced me, with a sort of baffled respect.
"I still say you will understand my caution," he addressed me, with
real respect and shyness this time. "If you are Yandro himself, you can
prove it. The prophecy even sketches a thumb-print—" And he held the
book toward me.
It contained a full-page likeness, in color, of myself wrapped in a
scarlet robe. Under this was considerable printed description, and to
one side a thumb-print, or a drawing of one, in black.
"Behold," Doriza was saying, "matters which even expert identification
men take into thought. The ears in the picture are like the ears of the
real man—"
"That could be plastic surgery," rejoined the officer. "Such things are
artfully done by the Newcomers, and the red mantle he wears more easily
assumed."
Doriza shook her head. "That happens to be my cloak. I gave it to him
because he was naked, and not for any treasonable masquerade. But the
thumb-print—"
"Oh, yes, the thumb-print," I repeated wearily. "By all means, study my
thumbs, if you'll first take these bonds off of me."
"Bonds," mumbled old Sporr. He got creakily up from his knees and
bustled to me. From under his robe he produced a pouch, and took out a
pencil-sized rod. Gingerly opening the red mantle, he touched my tether
in several places with the glowing end of the rod. The coils dropped
away from my grateful body and limbs. I thrust out my hands.
"Thumb-prints?" I offered.
Sporr had produced something else, a little vial of dark pigment. He
carefully anointed one of my thumbs, and pressed it to the page. All
three gazed.
"The same," said Doriza.
And they were all on their knees before me.
"Forgive me, great Yandro," said the officer thickly. "I did not know."
"Get up," I bade them. "I want to hear why I was first bound, and now
worshipped."
II
They rose, but stood off respectfully. The officer spoke first. "I am
Rohbar, field commander of this defense position," he said with crisp
respect. "Sporr is a mystic doctor, full of godly wisdom. Doriza,
a junior officer and chief of the guard. And you—how could you
know?—are sent by the First Comers to save us from our enemies."
"Enemies?" I repeated.
"The Newcomers," supplemented Doriza. "They have taken the "Other Side"
of Dondromogon, and would take our side as well. We defend ourselves
at the poles. Now," and her voice rang joyously, "you will lead us to
defeat and crush them utterly!"
"Not naked like this," I said, and laughed. I must have sounded
foolish, but it had its effect.
"Follow me, deign to follow me," Sporr said. "Your clothing, your
quarters, your destiny, all await you."
We went out by the door at the rear, and Sporr respectfully gestured me
upon a metal-plated platform. Standing beside me, he tinkered with a
lever. We dropped smoothly away into a dark corridor, past level after
level of light and sound.
"Our cities are below ground," he quavered. "Whipped by winds above,
we must scrabble in the depths for life's necessities—chemicals to
transmute into food, to weave into clothing, to weld into tools and
weapons—"
The mention of food brought to me the thought that I was hungry. I said
as much, even as our elevator platform came to the lowest level and
stopped.
"I have arranged for that," Sporr began, then fell silent, fingers
combing his beard in embarrassment.
"Arranged food for me?" I prompted sharply. "As if you know I had come?
What—"
"Pardon, great Yandro," babbled Sporr. "I was saying that I arranged
food, as always, for whatever guest should come. Please follow."
We entered a new small chamber, where a table was set with dishes of
porcelain-like plastic. Sporr held a chair for me, and waited on me
with the utmost gingerly respect. The food was a pungent and filling
jelly, a little bundle of transparent leaves or scraps like cellophane
and tasting of spice, and a tumbler of pink juice. I felt refreshed and
satisfied, and thanked Sporr, who led me on to the next room.
"Behold!" he said, with a dramatic gesture. "Your garments, even as
they have been preserved against your coming!"
It was a sleeping chamber, with a cot made fast to the wall, a metal
locker or cupboard, with a glass door through which showed the garments
of which Sporr spoke.
The door closed softly behind me—I was left alone.
Knowing that it was expected of me, I went to the locker and opened
the door. The garments inside were old, I could see, but well kept and
serviceable. I studied their type, and my hands, if not my mind, seemed
familiar with them.
There was a kiltlike item, belted at the waist and falling to
mid-thigh. A resilient band at the top, with a series of belt-holes,
made it adaptable to my own body or to any other. Then came an upper
garment, a long strip of soft, close-woven fabric that spiralled
around the torso from hip to armpit, the end looping over the left
shoulder and giving full play to the arms. A gold-worked fillet bound
the brows and swept back my longish hair, knotting at the nape of the
neck. The only fitted articles were a pair of shoes, metal-soled and
soft-uppered, that went on well enough and ran cross-garters up to
below the knee, like buskins. The case also held a platinum chain for
the neck, a belt-bag, and a handsome sword, with clips to fasten them
in place. These things, too, I donned, and closed the glass door.
The light struck it at such an angle as to make it serve for a
full-length mirror. With some curiosity I gazed at my image.
The close-fitting costume was rich and dark, with bright colors only
for edgings and minor accessories. I myself—and it was as if I saw my
body for the first time—towered rather bluffly, with great breadth
of chest and shoulder, and legs robust enough to carry such bulk. The
face was square but haggard, as if from some toil or pain which was now
wiped from my recollection. That nose had been even bigger than it was
now, but a fracture had shortened it somewhat. The eyes were deep set
and dark and moody—small wonder!—the chin heavy, the mouth made grim
by a scar at one corner. Black, shaggy hair hung down like brackets.
All told, I looked like a proper person for physical labor, or even
fierce fighting—but surely no inspirational leader or savior of a
distressed people.
I took the military cloak which Doriza had lent me and slung it over my
shoulders. Turning, I clanked out on my metal-soled shoes.
Sporr was waiting in the room where I had eaten. His eyes widened at
sight of me, something like a grin of triumph flashed through his
beard. Then he bowed, supple and humble, his palms together.
"It is indeed Yandro, our great chief," he mumbled. Then he turned and
crossed the room. A sort of mouthpiece sprouted from the wall.
"I announce," he intoned into it. "I announce, I, Sporr, the reader and
fore-teller of wisdom. Yandro is with us, he awaits his partners and
friends. Let them meet him in the audience hall."
Facing me again, he motioned most respectfully toward the door to the
hall. I moved to open it, and he followed, muttering.
Outside stood Doriza. Her blue eyes met mine, and her lips moved to
frame a word. Then, suddenly, she was on her knee, catching my hand and
kissing it.
"I serve Yandro," she vowed tremulously. "Now and forever—and happy
that I was fated to live when he returned for the rescue of all
Dondromogon."
"Please get up," I bade her, trying not to sound as embarrassed as I
felt. "Come with me. There is still much that I do not understand."
"I am Yandro's orderly and helper," she said. Rising, she ranged
herself at my left hand. "Will Yandro come this way? He will be awaited
in the audience hall."
It seemed to me then that the corridors were vast and mixed as a
labyrinth, but Doriza guided me without the slightest hesitation past
one tangled crossway after another. My questions she answered with a
mixture of awe and brightness.
"It is necessary that we live like this," she explained. "The hot air
of Dondromogon's sunlit face is ever rising, and the cold air from
the dark side comes rushing under to fill the vacuum. Naturally, our
strip of twilight country is never free of winds too high and fierce to
fight. No crops can grow outside, no domestic animals flourish. We must
pen ourselves away from the sky and soil, with stout walls and heavy
sunken parapets. Our deep mines afford every element for necessities of
life."
I looked at my garments, and hers. There were various kinds of fabric,
which I now saw plainly to be synthetic. "The other side, where those
you call the Newcomers dwell and fight," I reminded. "Is it also
windswept? Why can two people not join forces and face toil and nature
together? They should fight, not each other, but the elements."
Doriza had no answer that time, but Sporr spoke up behind us: "Great
Yandro is wise as well as powerful. But the Newcomers do not want to
help, not even to conquer. They want to obliterate us. There is nothing
to do—not for lifetimes—but to fight them back at the two poles."
We came to a main corridor. It had a line of armed guards, but no
pedestrians or vehicles, though I thought I caught a murmur of far-off
traffic. Doriza paused before a great portal, closed by a curtainlike
sheet of dull metal. She spoke into a mouthpiece:
"Doriza, gentlewoman of the guard, conducts Yandro, the Conquering
Stranger, to greet his lieutenants!"
I have said that the portal was closed by a curtainlike metal sheet;
and like a curtain it lifted, letting us through into the auditorium.
That spacious chamber had rows of benches, with galleries above, that
might have seated a thousand. However, only a dozen or so were present,
on metal chairs ranged across the stage upon which we entered. They
were all men but two, and wore robes of black, plum-purple or red. At
sight of me, they rose together, most respectfully. They looked at me,
and I looked at them.
My first thought was, that if these were people of authority and trust
in the nation I seemed destined to save, my work was cut out for me.
Not that they really seemed stupid—none had the look, or the
subsequent action, of stupidity. But they were not pleasant. Their
dozen pairs of eyes fixed me with some steadiness, but with no
frankness anywhere. One man had a round, greedy-seeming face. Another
was too narrow and cunning to look it. Of the women, one was nearly
as tall as I and nobly proportioned, with hair of a red that would be
inspiring were it not so blatantly dyed. The other was a little wisp of
a brunette, with teeth too big for her scarlet mouth and bright eyes
like some sort of a rodent. They all wore jewelry. Too much jewelry.
My mind flew back to the two scrubby, venial guardsmen who had first
welcomed me; to stuffy Rohbar, the commander; to Sporr, spry and clever
enough, but somehow unwholesome; Doriza—no, she was not like these
others, who may have lived too long in their earth-buried shelters. And
Doriza now spoke to the gathering:
"Yandro, folk of the Council! He deigns to give you audience."
"
Yandro!
"
They all spoke the name in chorus, and bowed toward me.
Silence then, a silence which evidently I must break. I broke it:
"Friends, I am among you with no more memory or knowledge than an
infant. I hear wonderful things, of which I seem to be the center. Are
they true?"
"The tenth part of the wonders which concern mighty Yandro have not
been told," intoned Sporr, ducking his bearded head in a bow, but
fixing me with his wise old eyes.
One of the group, called Council by Doriza, now moved a pace forward.
He was the greedy-faced man, short but plump, and very conscious of
the dignified folds of his purple robe. One carefully-tended hand
brushed back his ginger-brown hair, then toyed with a little moustache.
"I am Gederr, senior of this Council," he purred. "If Yandro permits, I
will speak simply. Our hopes have been raised by Yandro's return—the
return presaged of old by those who could see the future, and more
recently by the death in battle of the Newcomer champion, called Barak."
"Barak!" I repeated. "I—I—" And I paused. When I had to learn my own
name, how could it be that I sensed memory of another's name?
"Barak was a brute—mighty, but a brute." Thus Gederr continued.
"Weapons in his hands were the instruments of fate. His hands alone
caused fear and ruin. But it pleased our fortune-bringing stars to
encompass his destruction." He grinned, and licked his full lips. "Now,
even as they are without their battle-leader, so we have ours."
"You honor me," I told him. "Yet I still know little. It seems that I
am expected to aid and lead and save the people of this world called
Dondromogon. But I must know them before I can help."
Gederr turned his eyes upon the woman with the red hair, and gestured
to her "Tell him, Elonie." Then he faced me. "Have we Yandro's
permission to sit?"
"By all means," I granted, a little impatiently, and sat down myself.
The others followed suit—the Council on their range of chairs, Doriza
on a bench near me, Sporr somewhere behind. The woman called Elonie
remained upon her sandalled feet, great eyes the color of deep green
water fixed upon me.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/3/0/9/63097//63097-h//63097-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | What is the significance of the narrator’s height?
| 63097_4CW2KAPS_2 | [
"It shows he is liar. \n",
"It shows he is not from Dondromogon\n",
"It shows he is the Conquering Stranger \n",
"It shows he is not from Earth \n"
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63,097 | 63097_4CW2KAPS | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Warrior of Two Worlds | 1954.0 | Wellman, Manly Wade | Science fiction; War stories; Adventure stories; PS; Prophecies -- Fiction | Warrior of Two Worlds
By MANLY WADE WELLMAN
He was the man of two planets, drawn through
the blackness of space to save a nation from
ruthless invaders. He was Yandro, the
Stranger of the Prophecy—and he found that
he was destined to fight both sides.
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Planet Stories Summer 1944.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
My senses came to me slowly and somehow shyly, as if not sure of their
way or welcome. I felt first—pressure on my brow and chest, as if I
lay face downward; then the tug and buffet of a strong, probing wind,
insistent but not cold, upon my naked skin. Closing my hands, I felt
them dig into coarse dirt. I turned my face downwind and opened my
eyes. There was little to see, so thick was the dust cloud around me.
Words formed themselves on my thick tongue, words that must have been
spoken by so many reviving unfortunates through the ages:
"Where am I?"
And at once there was an answer:
"
You lie upon the world Dondromogon.
"
I knew the language of that answer, but where it came from—above,
beneath, or indeed within me—I could not say. I lifted a hand, and
knuckled dust from my eyes.
"How did I get here?" I demanded of the speaker.
"It was ordered—by the Masters of the Worlds—that you should be
brought from your own home planet, called Earth in the System of the
star called Sun. Do you remember Earth?"
And I did not know whether I remembered or not. Vague matters stirred
deep in me, but I could not for certain say they were memories. I asked
yet again:
"Who am I?"
The voice had a note of triumph. "You do not know that. It is as well,
for this will be a birth and beginning of your destined leadership on
Dondromogon."
"Destined—leadership—" I began to repeat, and fell silent. I had
need to think. The voice was telling me that I had been snatched from
worlds away, for a specified purpose here on whatever windswept planet
Dondromogon might be. "Birth and beginning—destined leadership—"
Fantastic! And yet, for all I could say to the contrary, unvarnishedly
true.
"Dondromogon?" I mumbled. "The name is strange to me."
"It is a world the size of your native one," came words of information.
"Around a star it spins, light-years away from the world of your
birth. One face of Dondromogon ever looks to the light and heat,
wherefore its metals run in glowing seas. The other face is ever away
in cold darkness, with its air freezing into solid chunks. But because
Dondromogon wavers on its axis, there are two lunes of its surface
which from time to time shift from night to day. These are habitable."
My eyes were tight shut against the dust, but they saw in imagination
such a planet—one-half incandescent, one-half pitchy black. From pole
to pole on opposite sides ran the two twilight zones, widest at the
equators like the outer rind of two slices of melon. Of course, such
areas, between the hot and cold hemispheres, would be buffeted by
mighty gales ... the voice was to be heard again:
"War is fought between the two strips of habitable ground. War,
unceasing, bitter, with no quarter asked, given or expected.
Dondromogon was found and settled long ago, by adventurers from afar.
Now come invaders, to reap the benefits of discovery and toil." A
pause. "You find that thought unpleasant? You wish to right that
wrong?"
"Anyone would wish that," I replied. "But how—"
"You are going to ask how you were brought here. That is the mystery
of the
Masters
." The voice became grand. "Suffice it that you were
needed, and that the time was ripe. There is a proper time, like a
proper place, for each thing and each happening. Now, go to your
destiny."
I rose on my knees, shielding my face from the buffeting wind by
lifting a forearm. Somewhere through the murky clouds showed a dim
blocky silhouette, a building of sorts.
The voice spoke no more. I had not the time to wonder about it. I got
to my feet, bent double to keep from being blown over, and staggered
toward the promised haven.
I reached it, groped along until I found a door. There was no latch,
handle or entry button, and I pounded heavily on the massive panels.
The door opened from within, and I was blown inside, to fall sprawling.
I struck my forehead upon a floor of stone or concrete, and so was
half-stunned, but still I could distinguish something like the sound
of agitated voices. Then I felt myself grasped, by both shoulders,
and drawn roughly erect. The touch restored my senses, and I wrenched
myself violently free.
What had seized me? That was my first wonder. On this strange world
called Dondromogon, what manner of intelligent life bade defiance to
heat and cold and storm, and built these stout structures, and now laid
hands—were they hands indeed?—upon me? I swung around, setting my
back to a solid wall.
My first glance showed me that my companions were creatures like
myself—two-legged, fair-skinned men, shorter and slighter than I, but
clad in metal-faced garments and wearing weapons in their girdles. I
saw that each bore a swordlike device with a curved guard, set in a
narrow sheath as long as my arm. Each also had a shorter weapon, with
a curved stock to fit the palm of the hand, borne snugly in a holster.
With such arms I had a faint sense of familiarity.
"Who are you, and where are you from?" said one of the two, a
broad-faced middle-aged fellow. "Don't lie any more than you can help."
I felt a stirring of the hair on my neck, but kept my voice mild and
level: "Why should I lie? Especially as I don't know who I am, or where
I'm from, or anything that has happened longer ago than just a moment.
I woke up out there in the dust storm, and I managed to come here for
shelter."
"He's a Newcomer spy," quoth the other. "Let's put him under arrest."
"And leave this gate unguarded?" demanded the other. "Sound the
signal," and he jerked his head toward a system of levers and gauges on
the wall beside the door-jamb.
"There's a bigger reward for capture than for warning," objected
his friend in turn, "and whoever comes to take this man will claim
'capture.' I'll guard here, and you take him in, then we'll divide—"
"No. Yours is the idea. I'll guard and you take him in." The second man
studied me apprehensively. "He's big, and looks strong, even without
weapons."
"Don't be afraid," I urged. "I'll make no resistance, if you'll only
conduct me to your commander. I can show him that I'm no spy or enemy."
Both stared narrowly. "No spy? No enemy?" asked the broad-faced one who
had first spoken. Then, to his comrade: "No reward, then."
"I think there'll be a reward," was the rejoinder, and the second man's
hand stole to the sword-weapon. With a whispering rasp it cleared from
its scabbard. "If he's dead, we get pay for both warning and capture—"
His thumb touched a button at the pommel of the hilt. The dull blade
suddenly glowed like heated iron, and from it crackled and pulsed
little rainbow rays.
There was no time to think or plan or ponder. I moved in, with a
knowing speed that surprised me as much as the two guards. Catching the
fellow's weapon wrist, I clamped it firmly and bent it back and around.
He whimpered and swore, and his glowing sword dropped. Its radiant
blade almost fell on my naked foot. Before the clang of its fall was
through echoing, I had caught it up, and set the point within inches of
its owner's unprotected face.
"Quiet, or I'll roast you," I told him.
The other had drawn a weapon of his own, a pistol-form arrangement.
I turned on him, but too late. He pressed the trigger, and from the
muzzle came—not a projectile but a flying, spouting filament of cord
that seemed to spring on me like a long thin snake and to fasten coil
after coil around my body. The stuff that gushed from the gun-muzzle
seemed plastic in form, but hardened so quickly upon contact with the
air, it bound me like wire. Half a dozen adroit motions of the fellow's
gun hand, and my arms were caught to my body. I dropped my sword to
prevent it burning me, and tried to break away, but my bonds were too
much for me.
"Let me out of this," I growled, and kicked at the man with my still
unbound foot. He snapped a half-hitch on my ankle, and threw me
heavily. Triumphant laughter came from both adversaries. Then:
"What's this?"
The challenge was clear, rich, authoritative. Someone else had come,
from a rearward door into the stone-walled vestibule where the
encounter was taking place.
A woman this time, not of great height, and robust but not heavy. She
was dressed for vigorous action in dark slacks with buskins to make
them snug around ankles and calves, a jerkin of stout material that was
faced with metal armor plates and left bare her round, strong arms. A
gold-worked fillet bound her tawny hair back from a rosy, bold-featured
face—a nose that was positively regal, a mouth short and firm but not
hard, and blue eyes that just now burned and questioned. She wore a
holstered pistol, and a cross-belt supported several instruments of a
kind I could not remember seeing before. A crimson cloak gave color and
dignity to her costume, and plainly she was someone of position, for
both the men stiffened to attention.
"A spy," one ventured. "He pushed in, claimed he was no enemy, then
tried to attack—"
"They lie," I broke in, very conscious of my naked helplessness before
her regard. "They wanted to kill me and be rewarded for a false story
of vigilance. I only defended myself."
"Get him on his feet," the young woman said, and the two guards
obeyed. Then her eyes studied me again. "Gods! What a mountain of a
man!" she exclaimed. "Can you walk, stranger?"
"Barely, with these bonds."
"Then manage to do so." She flung off her cloak and draped it over my
nakedness. "Walk along beside me. No tricks, and I promise you fair
hearing."
We went through the door by which she had entered, into a corridor
beyond. It was lighted by small, brilliant bulbs at regular intervals.
Beyond, it gave into several passages. She chose one of them and
conducted me along. "You are surely not of us," she commented. "Men I
have seen who are heavier than you, but none taller. Whence came you?"
I remembered the strange voice that had instructed me. "I am from a
far world," I replied. "It is called—yes, Earth. Beyond that, I know
nothing. Memory left me."
"The story is a strange one," she commented. "And your name?"
"I do not know that, either. Who are you?"
"Doriza—a gentlewoman of the guard. My inspection tour brought me by
chance to where you fought my outposts. But it is not for you to ask
questions. Enter here."
We passed through another door, and I found myself in an office. A man
in richly-embossed armor platings sat there. He had a fringe of pale
beard, and his eyes were bluer than the gentlewoman Doriza's.
She made a gesture of salute, hand at shoulder height, and reported the
matter. He nodded for her to fall back to a corner.
"Stranger," he said to me, "can you think of no better tale to tell
than you now offer?"
"I tell the truth," was my reply, not very gracious.
"You will have to prove that," he admonished me.
"What proof have I?" I demanded. "On this world of yours—Dondromogon,
isn't it called?—I'm no more than an hour old. Accident or shock
has taken my memory. Let me have a medical examination. A scientist
probably can tell what happened to put me in such a condition."
"I am a scientist," offered Doriza, and came forward. Her eyes met
mine, suddenly flickered and lowered. "His gaze," she muttered.
The officer at the table was touching a button. An attendant appeared,
received an order, and vanished again. In a few moments two other
men came—one a heavily armed officer of rank, the other an elderly,
bearded fellow in a voluminous robe that enfolded him in most dignified
manner.
This latter man opened wide his clear old eyes at sight of me.
"The stranger of the prophecy!" he cried, in a voice that made us all
jump.
The officer rose from behind the table. "Are you totally mad, Sporr?
You mystic doctors are too apt to become fuddled—"
"But it is, it is!" The graybeard flourished a thin hand at me. "Look
at him, you of little faith! Your mind dwells so much on material
strength that you lose touch with the spiritual—"
He broke off, and wheeled on the attendant who had led him in. "To my
study," he commanded. "On the shelf behind my desk, bring the great
gold-bound book that is third from the right." Then he turned back,
and bowed toward me. "Surely you are Yandro, the Conquering Stranger,"
he said, intoning as if in formal prayer. "Pardon these short-sighted
ones—deign to save us from our enemies—"
The girl Doriza spoke to the officer: "If Sporr speaks truth, and he
generally does, you have committed a blasphemy."
The other made a little grimace. "This may be Yandro, though I'm a
plain soldier and follow the classics very little. The First Comers are
souls to worship, not to study. If indeed he is Yandro," and he was
most respectful, "he will appreciate, like a good military mind, my
caution against possible impostors."
"Who might Yandro be?" I demanded, very uncomfortable in my bonds and
loose draperies.
Old Sporr almost crowed. "You see? If he was a true imposter, he would
come equipped with all plausible knowledge. As it is—"
"As it is, he may remember that the Conquering Stranger is foretold
to come with no memory of anything," supplied the officer. "Score one
against you, Sporr. You should have been able to instruct me, not I
you."
The attendant reentered, with a big book in his hands. It looked
old and well-thumbed, with dim gold traceries on its binding. Sporr
snatched it, and turned to a brightly colored picture. He looked once,
his beard gaped, and he dropped to his knees.
"Happy, happy the day," he jabbered, "that I was spared to see our
great champion come among us in the flesh, as was foretold of ancient
time by the First Comers!"
Doriza and the officer crossed to his side, snatching the book. Their
bright heads bent above it. Doriza was first to speak. "It is very
like," she half-stammered.
The officer faced me, with a sort of baffled respect.
"I still say you will understand my caution," he addressed me, with
real respect and shyness this time. "If you are Yandro himself, you can
prove it. The prophecy even sketches a thumb-print—" And he held the
book toward me.
It contained a full-page likeness, in color, of myself wrapped in a
scarlet robe. Under this was considerable printed description, and to
one side a thumb-print, or a drawing of one, in black.
"Behold," Doriza was saying, "matters which even expert identification
men take into thought. The ears in the picture are like the ears of the
real man—"
"That could be plastic surgery," rejoined the officer. "Such things are
artfully done by the Newcomers, and the red mantle he wears more easily
assumed."
Doriza shook her head. "That happens to be my cloak. I gave it to him
because he was naked, and not for any treasonable masquerade. But the
thumb-print—"
"Oh, yes, the thumb-print," I repeated wearily. "By all means, study my
thumbs, if you'll first take these bonds off of me."
"Bonds," mumbled old Sporr. He got creakily up from his knees and
bustled to me. From under his robe he produced a pouch, and took out a
pencil-sized rod. Gingerly opening the red mantle, he touched my tether
in several places with the glowing end of the rod. The coils dropped
away from my grateful body and limbs. I thrust out my hands.
"Thumb-prints?" I offered.
Sporr had produced something else, a little vial of dark pigment. He
carefully anointed one of my thumbs, and pressed it to the page. All
three gazed.
"The same," said Doriza.
And they were all on their knees before me.
"Forgive me, great Yandro," said the officer thickly. "I did not know."
"Get up," I bade them. "I want to hear why I was first bound, and now
worshipped."
II
They rose, but stood off respectfully. The officer spoke first. "I am
Rohbar, field commander of this defense position," he said with crisp
respect. "Sporr is a mystic doctor, full of godly wisdom. Doriza,
a junior officer and chief of the guard. And you—how could you
know?—are sent by the First Comers to save us from our enemies."
"Enemies?" I repeated.
"The Newcomers," supplemented Doriza. "They have taken the "Other Side"
of Dondromogon, and would take our side as well. We defend ourselves
at the poles. Now," and her voice rang joyously, "you will lead us to
defeat and crush them utterly!"
"Not naked like this," I said, and laughed. I must have sounded
foolish, but it had its effect.
"Follow me, deign to follow me," Sporr said. "Your clothing, your
quarters, your destiny, all await you."
We went out by the door at the rear, and Sporr respectfully gestured me
upon a metal-plated platform. Standing beside me, he tinkered with a
lever. We dropped smoothly away into a dark corridor, past level after
level of light and sound.
"Our cities are below ground," he quavered. "Whipped by winds above,
we must scrabble in the depths for life's necessities—chemicals to
transmute into food, to weave into clothing, to weld into tools and
weapons—"
The mention of food brought to me the thought that I was hungry. I said
as much, even as our elevator platform came to the lowest level and
stopped.
"I have arranged for that," Sporr began, then fell silent, fingers
combing his beard in embarrassment.
"Arranged food for me?" I prompted sharply. "As if you know I had come?
What—"
"Pardon, great Yandro," babbled Sporr. "I was saying that I arranged
food, as always, for whatever guest should come. Please follow."
We entered a new small chamber, where a table was set with dishes of
porcelain-like plastic. Sporr held a chair for me, and waited on me
with the utmost gingerly respect. The food was a pungent and filling
jelly, a little bundle of transparent leaves or scraps like cellophane
and tasting of spice, and a tumbler of pink juice. I felt refreshed and
satisfied, and thanked Sporr, who led me on to the next room.
"Behold!" he said, with a dramatic gesture. "Your garments, even as
they have been preserved against your coming!"
It was a sleeping chamber, with a cot made fast to the wall, a metal
locker or cupboard, with a glass door through which showed the garments
of which Sporr spoke.
The door closed softly behind me—I was left alone.
Knowing that it was expected of me, I went to the locker and opened
the door. The garments inside were old, I could see, but well kept and
serviceable. I studied their type, and my hands, if not my mind, seemed
familiar with them.
There was a kiltlike item, belted at the waist and falling to
mid-thigh. A resilient band at the top, with a series of belt-holes,
made it adaptable to my own body or to any other. Then came an upper
garment, a long strip of soft, close-woven fabric that spiralled
around the torso from hip to armpit, the end looping over the left
shoulder and giving full play to the arms. A gold-worked fillet bound
the brows and swept back my longish hair, knotting at the nape of the
neck. The only fitted articles were a pair of shoes, metal-soled and
soft-uppered, that went on well enough and ran cross-garters up to
below the knee, like buskins. The case also held a platinum chain for
the neck, a belt-bag, and a handsome sword, with clips to fasten them
in place. These things, too, I donned, and closed the glass door.
The light struck it at such an angle as to make it serve for a
full-length mirror. With some curiosity I gazed at my image.
The close-fitting costume was rich and dark, with bright colors only
for edgings and minor accessories. I myself—and it was as if I saw my
body for the first time—towered rather bluffly, with great breadth
of chest and shoulder, and legs robust enough to carry such bulk. The
face was square but haggard, as if from some toil or pain which was now
wiped from my recollection. That nose had been even bigger than it was
now, but a fracture had shortened it somewhat. The eyes were deep set
and dark and moody—small wonder!—the chin heavy, the mouth made grim
by a scar at one corner. Black, shaggy hair hung down like brackets.
All told, I looked like a proper person for physical labor, or even
fierce fighting—but surely no inspirational leader or savior of a
distressed people.
I took the military cloak which Doriza had lent me and slung it over my
shoulders. Turning, I clanked out on my metal-soled shoes.
Sporr was waiting in the room where I had eaten. His eyes widened at
sight of me, something like a grin of triumph flashed through his
beard. Then he bowed, supple and humble, his palms together.
"It is indeed Yandro, our great chief," he mumbled. Then he turned and
crossed the room. A sort of mouthpiece sprouted from the wall.
"I announce," he intoned into it. "I announce, I, Sporr, the reader and
fore-teller of wisdom. Yandro is with us, he awaits his partners and
friends. Let them meet him in the audience hall."
Facing me again, he motioned most respectfully toward the door to the
hall. I moved to open it, and he followed, muttering.
Outside stood Doriza. Her blue eyes met mine, and her lips moved to
frame a word. Then, suddenly, she was on her knee, catching my hand and
kissing it.
"I serve Yandro," she vowed tremulously. "Now and forever—and happy
that I was fated to live when he returned for the rescue of all
Dondromogon."
"Please get up," I bade her, trying not to sound as embarrassed as I
felt. "Come with me. There is still much that I do not understand."
"I am Yandro's orderly and helper," she said. Rising, she ranged
herself at my left hand. "Will Yandro come this way? He will be awaited
in the audience hall."
It seemed to me then that the corridors were vast and mixed as a
labyrinth, but Doriza guided me without the slightest hesitation past
one tangled crossway after another. My questions she answered with a
mixture of awe and brightness.
"It is necessary that we live like this," she explained. "The hot air
of Dondromogon's sunlit face is ever rising, and the cold air from
the dark side comes rushing under to fill the vacuum. Naturally, our
strip of twilight country is never free of winds too high and fierce to
fight. No crops can grow outside, no domestic animals flourish. We must
pen ourselves away from the sky and soil, with stout walls and heavy
sunken parapets. Our deep mines afford every element for necessities of
life."
I looked at my garments, and hers. There were various kinds of fabric,
which I now saw plainly to be synthetic. "The other side, where those
you call the Newcomers dwell and fight," I reminded. "Is it also
windswept? Why can two people not join forces and face toil and nature
together? They should fight, not each other, but the elements."
Doriza had no answer that time, but Sporr spoke up behind us: "Great
Yandro is wise as well as powerful. But the Newcomers do not want to
help, not even to conquer. They want to obliterate us. There is nothing
to do—not for lifetimes—but to fight them back at the two poles."
We came to a main corridor. It had a line of armed guards, but no
pedestrians or vehicles, though I thought I caught a murmur of far-off
traffic. Doriza paused before a great portal, closed by a curtainlike
sheet of dull metal. She spoke into a mouthpiece:
"Doriza, gentlewoman of the guard, conducts Yandro, the Conquering
Stranger, to greet his lieutenants!"
I have said that the portal was closed by a curtainlike metal sheet;
and like a curtain it lifted, letting us through into the auditorium.
That spacious chamber had rows of benches, with galleries above, that
might have seated a thousand. However, only a dozen or so were present,
on metal chairs ranged across the stage upon which we entered. They
were all men but two, and wore robes of black, plum-purple or red. At
sight of me, they rose together, most respectfully. They looked at me,
and I looked at them.
My first thought was, that if these were people of authority and trust
in the nation I seemed destined to save, my work was cut out for me.
Not that they really seemed stupid—none had the look, or the
subsequent action, of stupidity. But they were not pleasant. Their
dozen pairs of eyes fixed me with some steadiness, but with no
frankness anywhere. One man had a round, greedy-seeming face. Another
was too narrow and cunning to look it. Of the women, one was nearly
as tall as I and nobly proportioned, with hair of a red that would be
inspiring were it not so blatantly dyed. The other was a little wisp of
a brunette, with teeth too big for her scarlet mouth and bright eyes
like some sort of a rodent. They all wore jewelry. Too much jewelry.
My mind flew back to the two scrubby, venial guardsmen who had first
welcomed me; to stuffy Rohbar, the commander; to Sporr, spry and clever
enough, but somehow unwholesome; Doriza—no, she was not like these
others, who may have lived too long in their earth-buried shelters. And
Doriza now spoke to the gathering:
"Yandro, folk of the Council! He deigns to give you audience."
"
Yandro!
"
They all spoke the name in chorus, and bowed toward me.
Silence then, a silence which evidently I must break. I broke it:
"Friends, I am among you with no more memory or knowledge than an
infant. I hear wonderful things, of which I seem to be the center. Are
they true?"
"The tenth part of the wonders which concern mighty Yandro have not
been told," intoned Sporr, ducking his bearded head in a bow, but
fixing me with his wise old eyes.
One of the group, called Council by Doriza, now moved a pace forward.
He was the greedy-faced man, short but plump, and very conscious of
the dignified folds of his purple robe. One carefully-tended hand
brushed back his ginger-brown hair, then toyed with a little moustache.
"I am Gederr, senior of this Council," he purred. "If Yandro permits, I
will speak simply. Our hopes have been raised by Yandro's return—the
return presaged of old by those who could see the future, and more
recently by the death in battle of the Newcomer champion, called Barak."
"Barak!" I repeated. "I—I—" And I paused. When I had to learn my own
name, how could it be that I sensed memory of another's name?
"Barak was a brute—mighty, but a brute." Thus Gederr continued.
"Weapons in his hands were the instruments of fate. His hands alone
caused fear and ruin. But it pleased our fortune-bringing stars to
encompass his destruction." He grinned, and licked his full lips. "Now,
even as they are without their battle-leader, so we have ours."
"You honor me," I told him. "Yet I still know little. It seems that I
am expected to aid and lead and save the people of this world called
Dondromogon. But I must know them before I can help."
Gederr turned his eyes upon the woman with the red hair, and gestured
to her "Tell him, Elonie." Then he faced me. "Have we Yandro's
permission to sit?"
"By all means," I granted, a little impatiently, and sat down myself.
The others followed suit—the Council on their range of chairs, Doriza
on a bench near me, Sporr somewhere behind. The woman called Elonie
remained upon her sandalled feet, great eyes the color of deep green
water fixed upon me.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/3/0/9/63097//63097-h//63097-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | The purpose for the narrator losing his memory is. . .
| 63097_4CW2KAPS_3 | [
"Earth is not something a Dondromogon leader should remember. \n",
"So he can be birthed on a clean slate as the new Dondromogon leader. \n",
"So that the Dondromogons will be suspicious of him\n",
"To better assimilate to Dondromogon culture.\n"
] | 2 | 2 | [
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63,097 | 63097_4CW2KAPS | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Warrior of Two Worlds | 1954.0 | Wellman, Manly Wade | Science fiction; War stories; Adventure stories; PS; Prophecies -- Fiction | Warrior of Two Worlds
By MANLY WADE WELLMAN
He was the man of two planets, drawn through
the blackness of space to save a nation from
ruthless invaders. He was Yandro, the
Stranger of the Prophecy—and he found that
he was destined to fight both sides.
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Planet Stories Summer 1944.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
My senses came to me slowly and somehow shyly, as if not sure of their
way or welcome. I felt first—pressure on my brow and chest, as if I
lay face downward; then the tug and buffet of a strong, probing wind,
insistent but not cold, upon my naked skin. Closing my hands, I felt
them dig into coarse dirt. I turned my face downwind and opened my
eyes. There was little to see, so thick was the dust cloud around me.
Words formed themselves on my thick tongue, words that must have been
spoken by so many reviving unfortunates through the ages:
"Where am I?"
And at once there was an answer:
"
You lie upon the world Dondromogon.
"
I knew the language of that answer, but where it came from—above,
beneath, or indeed within me—I could not say. I lifted a hand, and
knuckled dust from my eyes.
"How did I get here?" I demanded of the speaker.
"It was ordered—by the Masters of the Worlds—that you should be
brought from your own home planet, called Earth in the System of the
star called Sun. Do you remember Earth?"
And I did not know whether I remembered or not. Vague matters stirred
deep in me, but I could not for certain say they were memories. I asked
yet again:
"Who am I?"
The voice had a note of triumph. "You do not know that. It is as well,
for this will be a birth and beginning of your destined leadership on
Dondromogon."
"Destined—leadership—" I began to repeat, and fell silent. I had
need to think. The voice was telling me that I had been snatched from
worlds away, for a specified purpose here on whatever windswept planet
Dondromogon might be. "Birth and beginning—destined leadership—"
Fantastic! And yet, for all I could say to the contrary, unvarnishedly
true.
"Dondromogon?" I mumbled. "The name is strange to me."
"It is a world the size of your native one," came words of information.
"Around a star it spins, light-years away from the world of your
birth. One face of Dondromogon ever looks to the light and heat,
wherefore its metals run in glowing seas. The other face is ever away
in cold darkness, with its air freezing into solid chunks. But because
Dondromogon wavers on its axis, there are two lunes of its surface
which from time to time shift from night to day. These are habitable."
My eyes were tight shut against the dust, but they saw in imagination
such a planet—one-half incandescent, one-half pitchy black. From pole
to pole on opposite sides ran the two twilight zones, widest at the
equators like the outer rind of two slices of melon. Of course, such
areas, between the hot and cold hemispheres, would be buffeted by
mighty gales ... the voice was to be heard again:
"War is fought between the two strips of habitable ground. War,
unceasing, bitter, with no quarter asked, given or expected.
Dondromogon was found and settled long ago, by adventurers from afar.
Now come invaders, to reap the benefits of discovery and toil." A
pause. "You find that thought unpleasant? You wish to right that
wrong?"
"Anyone would wish that," I replied. "But how—"
"You are going to ask how you were brought here. That is the mystery
of the
Masters
." The voice became grand. "Suffice it that you were
needed, and that the time was ripe. There is a proper time, like a
proper place, for each thing and each happening. Now, go to your
destiny."
I rose on my knees, shielding my face from the buffeting wind by
lifting a forearm. Somewhere through the murky clouds showed a dim
blocky silhouette, a building of sorts.
The voice spoke no more. I had not the time to wonder about it. I got
to my feet, bent double to keep from being blown over, and staggered
toward the promised haven.
I reached it, groped along until I found a door. There was no latch,
handle or entry button, and I pounded heavily on the massive panels.
The door opened from within, and I was blown inside, to fall sprawling.
I struck my forehead upon a floor of stone or concrete, and so was
half-stunned, but still I could distinguish something like the sound
of agitated voices. Then I felt myself grasped, by both shoulders,
and drawn roughly erect. The touch restored my senses, and I wrenched
myself violently free.
What had seized me? That was my first wonder. On this strange world
called Dondromogon, what manner of intelligent life bade defiance to
heat and cold and storm, and built these stout structures, and now laid
hands—were they hands indeed?—upon me? I swung around, setting my
back to a solid wall.
My first glance showed me that my companions were creatures like
myself—two-legged, fair-skinned men, shorter and slighter than I, but
clad in metal-faced garments and wearing weapons in their girdles. I
saw that each bore a swordlike device with a curved guard, set in a
narrow sheath as long as my arm. Each also had a shorter weapon, with
a curved stock to fit the palm of the hand, borne snugly in a holster.
With such arms I had a faint sense of familiarity.
"Who are you, and where are you from?" said one of the two, a
broad-faced middle-aged fellow. "Don't lie any more than you can help."
I felt a stirring of the hair on my neck, but kept my voice mild and
level: "Why should I lie? Especially as I don't know who I am, or where
I'm from, or anything that has happened longer ago than just a moment.
I woke up out there in the dust storm, and I managed to come here for
shelter."
"He's a Newcomer spy," quoth the other. "Let's put him under arrest."
"And leave this gate unguarded?" demanded the other. "Sound the
signal," and he jerked his head toward a system of levers and gauges on
the wall beside the door-jamb.
"There's a bigger reward for capture than for warning," objected
his friend in turn, "and whoever comes to take this man will claim
'capture.' I'll guard here, and you take him in, then we'll divide—"
"No. Yours is the idea. I'll guard and you take him in." The second man
studied me apprehensively. "He's big, and looks strong, even without
weapons."
"Don't be afraid," I urged. "I'll make no resistance, if you'll only
conduct me to your commander. I can show him that I'm no spy or enemy."
Both stared narrowly. "No spy? No enemy?" asked the broad-faced one who
had first spoken. Then, to his comrade: "No reward, then."
"I think there'll be a reward," was the rejoinder, and the second man's
hand stole to the sword-weapon. With a whispering rasp it cleared from
its scabbard. "If he's dead, we get pay for both warning and capture—"
His thumb touched a button at the pommel of the hilt. The dull blade
suddenly glowed like heated iron, and from it crackled and pulsed
little rainbow rays.
There was no time to think or plan or ponder. I moved in, with a
knowing speed that surprised me as much as the two guards. Catching the
fellow's weapon wrist, I clamped it firmly and bent it back and around.
He whimpered and swore, and his glowing sword dropped. Its radiant
blade almost fell on my naked foot. Before the clang of its fall was
through echoing, I had caught it up, and set the point within inches of
its owner's unprotected face.
"Quiet, or I'll roast you," I told him.
The other had drawn a weapon of his own, a pistol-form arrangement.
I turned on him, but too late. He pressed the trigger, and from the
muzzle came—not a projectile but a flying, spouting filament of cord
that seemed to spring on me like a long thin snake and to fasten coil
after coil around my body. The stuff that gushed from the gun-muzzle
seemed plastic in form, but hardened so quickly upon contact with the
air, it bound me like wire. Half a dozen adroit motions of the fellow's
gun hand, and my arms were caught to my body. I dropped my sword to
prevent it burning me, and tried to break away, but my bonds were too
much for me.
"Let me out of this," I growled, and kicked at the man with my still
unbound foot. He snapped a half-hitch on my ankle, and threw me
heavily. Triumphant laughter came from both adversaries. Then:
"What's this?"
The challenge was clear, rich, authoritative. Someone else had come,
from a rearward door into the stone-walled vestibule where the
encounter was taking place.
A woman this time, not of great height, and robust but not heavy. She
was dressed for vigorous action in dark slacks with buskins to make
them snug around ankles and calves, a jerkin of stout material that was
faced with metal armor plates and left bare her round, strong arms. A
gold-worked fillet bound her tawny hair back from a rosy, bold-featured
face—a nose that was positively regal, a mouth short and firm but not
hard, and blue eyes that just now burned and questioned. She wore a
holstered pistol, and a cross-belt supported several instruments of a
kind I could not remember seeing before. A crimson cloak gave color and
dignity to her costume, and plainly she was someone of position, for
both the men stiffened to attention.
"A spy," one ventured. "He pushed in, claimed he was no enemy, then
tried to attack—"
"They lie," I broke in, very conscious of my naked helplessness before
her regard. "They wanted to kill me and be rewarded for a false story
of vigilance. I only defended myself."
"Get him on his feet," the young woman said, and the two guards
obeyed. Then her eyes studied me again. "Gods! What a mountain of a
man!" she exclaimed. "Can you walk, stranger?"
"Barely, with these bonds."
"Then manage to do so." She flung off her cloak and draped it over my
nakedness. "Walk along beside me. No tricks, and I promise you fair
hearing."
We went through the door by which she had entered, into a corridor
beyond. It was lighted by small, brilliant bulbs at regular intervals.
Beyond, it gave into several passages. She chose one of them and
conducted me along. "You are surely not of us," she commented. "Men I
have seen who are heavier than you, but none taller. Whence came you?"
I remembered the strange voice that had instructed me. "I am from a
far world," I replied. "It is called—yes, Earth. Beyond that, I know
nothing. Memory left me."
"The story is a strange one," she commented. "And your name?"
"I do not know that, either. Who are you?"
"Doriza—a gentlewoman of the guard. My inspection tour brought me by
chance to where you fought my outposts. But it is not for you to ask
questions. Enter here."
We passed through another door, and I found myself in an office. A man
in richly-embossed armor platings sat there. He had a fringe of pale
beard, and his eyes were bluer than the gentlewoman Doriza's.
She made a gesture of salute, hand at shoulder height, and reported the
matter. He nodded for her to fall back to a corner.
"Stranger," he said to me, "can you think of no better tale to tell
than you now offer?"
"I tell the truth," was my reply, not very gracious.
"You will have to prove that," he admonished me.
"What proof have I?" I demanded. "On this world of yours—Dondromogon,
isn't it called?—I'm no more than an hour old. Accident or shock
has taken my memory. Let me have a medical examination. A scientist
probably can tell what happened to put me in such a condition."
"I am a scientist," offered Doriza, and came forward. Her eyes met
mine, suddenly flickered and lowered. "His gaze," she muttered.
The officer at the table was touching a button. An attendant appeared,
received an order, and vanished again. In a few moments two other
men came—one a heavily armed officer of rank, the other an elderly,
bearded fellow in a voluminous robe that enfolded him in most dignified
manner.
This latter man opened wide his clear old eyes at sight of me.
"The stranger of the prophecy!" he cried, in a voice that made us all
jump.
The officer rose from behind the table. "Are you totally mad, Sporr?
You mystic doctors are too apt to become fuddled—"
"But it is, it is!" The graybeard flourished a thin hand at me. "Look
at him, you of little faith! Your mind dwells so much on material
strength that you lose touch with the spiritual—"
He broke off, and wheeled on the attendant who had led him in. "To my
study," he commanded. "On the shelf behind my desk, bring the great
gold-bound book that is third from the right." Then he turned back,
and bowed toward me. "Surely you are Yandro, the Conquering Stranger,"
he said, intoning as if in formal prayer. "Pardon these short-sighted
ones—deign to save us from our enemies—"
The girl Doriza spoke to the officer: "If Sporr speaks truth, and he
generally does, you have committed a blasphemy."
The other made a little grimace. "This may be Yandro, though I'm a
plain soldier and follow the classics very little. The First Comers are
souls to worship, not to study. If indeed he is Yandro," and he was
most respectful, "he will appreciate, like a good military mind, my
caution against possible impostors."
"Who might Yandro be?" I demanded, very uncomfortable in my bonds and
loose draperies.
Old Sporr almost crowed. "You see? If he was a true imposter, he would
come equipped with all plausible knowledge. As it is—"
"As it is, he may remember that the Conquering Stranger is foretold
to come with no memory of anything," supplied the officer. "Score one
against you, Sporr. You should have been able to instruct me, not I
you."
The attendant reentered, with a big book in his hands. It looked
old and well-thumbed, with dim gold traceries on its binding. Sporr
snatched it, and turned to a brightly colored picture. He looked once,
his beard gaped, and he dropped to his knees.
"Happy, happy the day," he jabbered, "that I was spared to see our
great champion come among us in the flesh, as was foretold of ancient
time by the First Comers!"
Doriza and the officer crossed to his side, snatching the book. Their
bright heads bent above it. Doriza was first to speak. "It is very
like," she half-stammered.
The officer faced me, with a sort of baffled respect.
"I still say you will understand my caution," he addressed me, with
real respect and shyness this time. "If you are Yandro himself, you can
prove it. The prophecy even sketches a thumb-print—" And he held the
book toward me.
It contained a full-page likeness, in color, of myself wrapped in a
scarlet robe. Under this was considerable printed description, and to
one side a thumb-print, or a drawing of one, in black.
"Behold," Doriza was saying, "matters which even expert identification
men take into thought. The ears in the picture are like the ears of the
real man—"
"That could be plastic surgery," rejoined the officer. "Such things are
artfully done by the Newcomers, and the red mantle he wears more easily
assumed."
Doriza shook her head. "That happens to be my cloak. I gave it to him
because he was naked, and not for any treasonable masquerade. But the
thumb-print—"
"Oh, yes, the thumb-print," I repeated wearily. "By all means, study my
thumbs, if you'll first take these bonds off of me."
"Bonds," mumbled old Sporr. He got creakily up from his knees and
bustled to me. From under his robe he produced a pouch, and took out a
pencil-sized rod. Gingerly opening the red mantle, he touched my tether
in several places with the glowing end of the rod. The coils dropped
away from my grateful body and limbs. I thrust out my hands.
"Thumb-prints?" I offered.
Sporr had produced something else, a little vial of dark pigment. He
carefully anointed one of my thumbs, and pressed it to the page. All
three gazed.
"The same," said Doriza.
And they were all on their knees before me.
"Forgive me, great Yandro," said the officer thickly. "I did not know."
"Get up," I bade them. "I want to hear why I was first bound, and now
worshipped."
II
They rose, but stood off respectfully. The officer spoke first. "I am
Rohbar, field commander of this defense position," he said with crisp
respect. "Sporr is a mystic doctor, full of godly wisdom. Doriza,
a junior officer and chief of the guard. And you—how could you
know?—are sent by the First Comers to save us from our enemies."
"Enemies?" I repeated.
"The Newcomers," supplemented Doriza. "They have taken the "Other Side"
of Dondromogon, and would take our side as well. We defend ourselves
at the poles. Now," and her voice rang joyously, "you will lead us to
defeat and crush them utterly!"
"Not naked like this," I said, and laughed. I must have sounded
foolish, but it had its effect.
"Follow me, deign to follow me," Sporr said. "Your clothing, your
quarters, your destiny, all await you."
We went out by the door at the rear, and Sporr respectfully gestured me
upon a metal-plated platform. Standing beside me, he tinkered with a
lever. We dropped smoothly away into a dark corridor, past level after
level of light and sound.
"Our cities are below ground," he quavered. "Whipped by winds above,
we must scrabble in the depths for life's necessities—chemicals to
transmute into food, to weave into clothing, to weld into tools and
weapons—"
The mention of food brought to me the thought that I was hungry. I said
as much, even as our elevator platform came to the lowest level and
stopped.
"I have arranged for that," Sporr began, then fell silent, fingers
combing his beard in embarrassment.
"Arranged food for me?" I prompted sharply. "As if you know I had come?
What—"
"Pardon, great Yandro," babbled Sporr. "I was saying that I arranged
food, as always, for whatever guest should come. Please follow."
We entered a new small chamber, where a table was set with dishes of
porcelain-like plastic. Sporr held a chair for me, and waited on me
with the utmost gingerly respect. The food was a pungent and filling
jelly, a little bundle of transparent leaves or scraps like cellophane
and tasting of spice, and a tumbler of pink juice. I felt refreshed and
satisfied, and thanked Sporr, who led me on to the next room.
"Behold!" he said, with a dramatic gesture. "Your garments, even as
they have been preserved against your coming!"
It was a sleeping chamber, with a cot made fast to the wall, a metal
locker or cupboard, with a glass door through which showed the garments
of which Sporr spoke.
The door closed softly behind me—I was left alone.
Knowing that it was expected of me, I went to the locker and opened
the door. The garments inside were old, I could see, but well kept and
serviceable. I studied their type, and my hands, if not my mind, seemed
familiar with them.
There was a kiltlike item, belted at the waist and falling to
mid-thigh. A resilient band at the top, with a series of belt-holes,
made it adaptable to my own body or to any other. Then came an upper
garment, a long strip of soft, close-woven fabric that spiralled
around the torso from hip to armpit, the end looping over the left
shoulder and giving full play to the arms. A gold-worked fillet bound
the brows and swept back my longish hair, knotting at the nape of the
neck. The only fitted articles were a pair of shoes, metal-soled and
soft-uppered, that went on well enough and ran cross-garters up to
below the knee, like buskins. The case also held a platinum chain for
the neck, a belt-bag, and a handsome sword, with clips to fasten them
in place. These things, too, I donned, and closed the glass door.
The light struck it at such an angle as to make it serve for a
full-length mirror. With some curiosity I gazed at my image.
The close-fitting costume was rich and dark, with bright colors only
for edgings and minor accessories. I myself—and it was as if I saw my
body for the first time—towered rather bluffly, with great breadth
of chest and shoulder, and legs robust enough to carry such bulk. The
face was square but haggard, as if from some toil or pain which was now
wiped from my recollection. That nose had been even bigger than it was
now, but a fracture had shortened it somewhat. The eyes were deep set
and dark and moody—small wonder!—the chin heavy, the mouth made grim
by a scar at one corner. Black, shaggy hair hung down like brackets.
All told, I looked like a proper person for physical labor, or even
fierce fighting—but surely no inspirational leader or savior of a
distressed people.
I took the military cloak which Doriza had lent me and slung it over my
shoulders. Turning, I clanked out on my metal-soled shoes.
Sporr was waiting in the room where I had eaten. His eyes widened at
sight of me, something like a grin of triumph flashed through his
beard. Then he bowed, supple and humble, his palms together.
"It is indeed Yandro, our great chief," he mumbled. Then he turned and
crossed the room. A sort of mouthpiece sprouted from the wall.
"I announce," he intoned into it. "I announce, I, Sporr, the reader and
fore-teller of wisdom. Yandro is with us, he awaits his partners and
friends. Let them meet him in the audience hall."
Facing me again, he motioned most respectfully toward the door to the
hall. I moved to open it, and he followed, muttering.
Outside stood Doriza. Her blue eyes met mine, and her lips moved to
frame a word. Then, suddenly, she was on her knee, catching my hand and
kissing it.
"I serve Yandro," she vowed tremulously. "Now and forever—and happy
that I was fated to live when he returned for the rescue of all
Dondromogon."
"Please get up," I bade her, trying not to sound as embarrassed as I
felt. "Come with me. There is still much that I do not understand."
"I am Yandro's orderly and helper," she said. Rising, she ranged
herself at my left hand. "Will Yandro come this way? He will be awaited
in the audience hall."
It seemed to me then that the corridors were vast and mixed as a
labyrinth, but Doriza guided me without the slightest hesitation past
one tangled crossway after another. My questions she answered with a
mixture of awe and brightness.
"It is necessary that we live like this," she explained. "The hot air
of Dondromogon's sunlit face is ever rising, and the cold air from
the dark side comes rushing under to fill the vacuum. Naturally, our
strip of twilight country is never free of winds too high and fierce to
fight. No crops can grow outside, no domestic animals flourish. We must
pen ourselves away from the sky and soil, with stout walls and heavy
sunken parapets. Our deep mines afford every element for necessities of
life."
I looked at my garments, and hers. There were various kinds of fabric,
which I now saw plainly to be synthetic. "The other side, where those
you call the Newcomers dwell and fight," I reminded. "Is it also
windswept? Why can two people not join forces and face toil and nature
together? They should fight, not each other, but the elements."
Doriza had no answer that time, but Sporr spoke up behind us: "Great
Yandro is wise as well as powerful. But the Newcomers do not want to
help, not even to conquer. They want to obliterate us. There is nothing
to do—not for lifetimes—but to fight them back at the two poles."
We came to a main corridor. It had a line of armed guards, but no
pedestrians or vehicles, though I thought I caught a murmur of far-off
traffic. Doriza paused before a great portal, closed by a curtainlike
sheet of dull metal. She spoke into a mouthpiece:
"Doriza, gentlewoman of the guard, conducts Yandro, the Conquering
Stranger, to greet his lieutenants!"
I have said that the portal was closed by a curtainlike metal sheet;
and like a curtain it lifted, letting us through into the auditorium.
That spacious chamber had rows of benches, with galleries above, that
might have seated a thousand. However, only a dozen or so were present,
on metal chairs ranged across the stage upon which we entered. They
were all men but two, and wore robes of black, plum-purple or red. At
sight of me, they rose together, most respectfully. They looked at me,
and I looked at them.
My first thought was, that if these were people of authority and trust
in the nation I seemed destined to save, my work was cut out for me.
Not that they really seemed stupid—none had the look, or the
subsequent action, of stupidity. But they were not pleasant. Their
dozen pairs of eyes fixed me with some steadiness, but with no
frankness anywhere. One man had a round, greedy-seeming face. Another
was too narrow and cunning to look it. Of the women, one was nearly
as tall as I and nobly proportioned, with hair of a red that would be
inspiring were it not so blatantly dyed. The other was a little wisp of
a brunette, with teeth too big for her scarlet mouth and bright eyes
like some sort of a rodent. They all wore jewelry. Too much jewelry.
My mind flew back to the two scrubby, venial guardsmen who had first
welcomed me; to stuffy Rohbar, the commander; to Sporr, spry and clever
enough, but somehow unwholesome; Doriza—no, she was not like these
others, who may have lived too long in their earth-buried shelters. And
Doriza now spoke to the gathering:
"Yandro, folk of the Council! He deigns to give you audience."
"
Yandro!
"
They all spoke the name in chorus, and bowed toward me.
Silence then, a silence which evidently I must break. I broke it:
"Friends, I am among you with no more memory or knowledge than an
infant. I hear wonderful things, of which I seem to be the center. Are
they true?"
"The tenth part of the wonders which concern mighty Yandro have not
been told," intoned Sporr, ducking his bearded head in a bow, but
fixing me with his wise old eyes.
One of the group, called Council by Doriza, now moved a pace forward.
He was the greedy-faced man, short but plump, and very conscious of
the dignified folds of his purple robe. One carefully-tended hand
brushed back his ginger-brown hair, then toyed with a little moustache.
"I am Gederr, senior of this Council," he purred. "If Yandro permits, I
will speak simply. Our hopes have been raised by Yandro's return—the
return presaged of old by those who could see the future, and more
recently by the death in battle of the Newcomer champion, called Barak."
"Barak!" I repeated. "I—I—" And I paused. When I had to learn my own
name, how could it be that I sensed memory of another's name?
"Barak was a brute—mighty, but a brute." Thus Gederr continued.
"Weapons in his hands were the instruments of fate. His hands alone
caused fear and ruin. But it pleased our fortune-bringing stars to
encompass his destruction." He grinned, and licked his full lips. "Now,
even as they are without their battle-leader, so we have ours."
"You honor me," I told him. "Yet I still know little. It seems that I
am expected to aid and lead and save the people of this world called
Dondromogon. But I must know them before I can help."
Gederr turned his eyes upon the woman with the red hair, and gestured
to her "Tell him, Elonie." Then he faced me. "Have we Yandro's
permission to sit?"
"By all means," I granted, a little impatiently, and sat down myself.
The others followed suit—the Council on their range of chairs, Doriza
on a bench near me, Sporr somewhere behind. The woman called Elonie
remained upon her sandalled feet, great eyes the color of deep green
water fixed upon me.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/3/0/9/63097//63097-h//63097-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | Who first tells the narrator about his destiny?
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63,097 | 63097_4CW2KAPS | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Warrior of Two Worlds | 1954.0 | Wellman, Manly Wade | Science fiction; War stories; Adventure stories; PS; Prophecies -- Fiction | Warrior of Two Worlds
By MANLY WADE WELLMAN
He was the man of two planets, drawn through
the blackness of space to save a nation from
ruthless invaders. He was Yandro, the
Stranger of the Prophecy—and he found that
he was destined to fight both sides.
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Planet Stories Summer 1944.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
My senses came to me slowly and somehow shyly, as if not sure of their
way or welcome. I felt first—pressure on my brow and chest, as if I
lay face downward; then the tug and buffet of a strong, probing wind,
insistent but not cold, upon my naked skin. Closing my hands, I felt
them dig into coarse dirt. I turned my face downwind and opened my
eyes. There was little to see, so thick was the dust cloud around me.
Words formed themselves on my thick tongue, words that must have been
spoken by so many reviving unfortunates through the ages:
"Where am I?"
And at once there was an answer:
"
You lie upon the world Dondromogon.
"
I knew the language of that answer, but where it came from—above,
beneath, or indeed within me—I could not say. I lifted a hand, and
knuckled dust from my eyes.
"How did I get here?" I demanded of the speaker.
"It was ordered—by the Masters of the Worlds—that you should be
brought from your own home planet, called Earth in the System of the
star called Sun. Do you remember Earth?"
And I did not know whether I remembered or not. Vague matters stirred
deep in me, but I could not for certain say they were memories. I asked
yet again:
"Who am I?"
The voice had a note of triumph. "You do not know that. It is as well,
for this will be a birth and beginning of your destined leadership on
Dondromogon."
"Destined—leadership—" I began to repeat, and fell silent. I had
need to think. The voice was telling me that I had been snatched from
worlds away, for a specified purpose here on whatever windswept planet
Dondromogon might be. "Birth and beginning—destined leadership—"
Fantastic! And yet, for all I could say to the contrary, unvarnishedly
true.
"Dondromogon?" I mumbled. "The name is strange to me."
"It is a world the size of your native one," came words of information.
"Around a star it spins, light-years away from the world of your
birth. One face of Dondromogon ever looks to the light and heat,
wherefore its metals run in glowing seas. The other face is ever away
in cold darkness, with its air freezing into solid chunks. But because
Dondromogon wavers on its axis, there are two lunes of its surface
which from time to time shift from night to day. These are habitable."
My eyes were tight shut against the dust, but they saw in imagination
such a planet—one-half incandescent, one-half pitchy black. From pole
to pole on opposite sides ran the two twilight zones, widest at the
equators like the outer rind of two slices of melon. Of course, such
areas, between the hot and cold hemispheres, would be buffeted by
mighty gales ... the voice was to be heard again:
"War is fought between the two strips of habitable ground. War,
unceasing, bitter, with no quarter asked, given or expected.
Dondromogon was found and settled long ago, by adventurers from afar.
Now come invaders, to reap the benefits of discovery and toil." A
pause. "You find that thought unpleasant? You wish to right that
wrong?"
"Anyone would wish that," I replied. "But how—"
"You are going to ask how you were brought here. That is the mystery
of the
Masters
." The voice became grand. "Suffice it that you were
needed, and that the time was ripe. There is a proper time, like a
proper place, for each thing and each happening. Now, go to your
destiny."
I rose on my knees, shielding my face from the buffeting wind by
lifting a forearm. Somewhere through the murky clouds showed a dim
blocky silhouette, a building of sorts.
The voice spoke no more. I had not the time to wonder about it. I got
to my feet, bent double to keep from being blown over, and staggered
toward the promised haven.
I reached it, groped along until I found a door. There was no latch,
handle or entry button, and I pounded heavily on the massive panels.
The door opened from within, and I was blown inside, to fall sprawling.
I struck my forehead upon a floor of stone or concrete, and so was
half-stunned, but still I could distinguish something like the sound
of agitated voices. Then I felt myself grasped, by both shoulders,
and drawn roughly erect. The touch restored my senses, and I wrenched
myself violently free.
What had seized me? That was my first wonder. On this strange world
called Dondromogon, what manner of intelligent life bade defiance to
heat and cold and storm, and built these stout structures, and now laid
hands—were they hands indeed?—upon me? I swung around, setting my
back to a solid wall.
My first glance showed me that my companions were creatures like
myself—two-legged, fair-skinned men, shorter and slighter than I, but
clad in metal-faced garments and wearing weapons in their girdles. I
saw that each bore a swordlike device with a curved guard, set in a
narrow sheath as long as my arm. Each also had a shorter weapon, with
a curved stock to fit the palm of the hand, borne snugly in a holster.
With such arms I had a faint sense of familiarity.
"Who are you, and where are you from?" said one of the two, a
broad-faced middle-aged fellow. "Don't lie any more than you can help."
I felt a stirring of the hair on my neck, but kept my voice mild and
level: "Why should I lie? Especially as I don't know who I am, or where
I'm from, or anything that has happened longer ago than just a moment.
I woke up out there in the dust storm, and I managed to come here for
shelter."
"He's a Newcomer spy," quoth the other. "Let's put him under arrest."
"And leave this gate unguarded?" demanded the other. "Sound the
signal," and he jerked his head toward a system of levers and gauges on
the wall beside the door-jamb.
"There's a bigger reward for capture than for warning," objected
his friend in turn, "and whoever comes to take this man will claim
'capture.' I'll guard here, and you take him in, then we'll divide—"
"No. Yours is the idea. I'll guard and you take him in." The second man
studied me apprehensively. "He's big, and looks strong, even without
weapons."
"Don't be afraid," I urged. "I'll make no resistance, if you'll only
conduct me to your commander. I can show him that I'm no spy or enemy."
Both stared narrowly. "No spy? No enemy?" asked the broad-faced one who
had first spoken. Then, to his comrade: "No reward, then."
"I think there'll be a reward," was the rejoinder, and the second man's
hand stole to the sword-weapon. With a whispering rasp it cleared from
its scabbard. "If he's dead, we get pay for both warning and capture—"
His thumb touched a button at the pommel of the hilt. The dull blade
suddenly glowed like heated iron, and from it crackled and pulsed
little rainbow rays.
There was no time to think or plan or ponder. I moved in, with a
knowing speed that surprised me as much as the two guards. Catching the
fellow's weapon wrist, I clamped it firmly and bent it back and around.
He whimpered and swore, and his glowing sword dropped. Its radiant
blade almost fell on my naked foot. Before the clang of its fall was
through echoing, I had caught it up, and set the point within inches of
its owner's unprotected face.
"Quiet, or I'll roast you," I told him.
The other had drawn a weapon of his own, a pistol-form arrangement.
I turned on him, but too late. He pressed the trigger, and from the
muzzle came—not a projectile but a flying, spouting filament of cord
that seemed to spring on me like a long thin snake and to fasten coil
after coil around my body. The stuff that gushed from the gun-muzzle
seemed plastic in form, but hardened so quickly upon contact with the
air, it bound me like wire. Half a dozen adroit motions of the fellow's
gun hand, and my arms were caught to my body. I dropped my sword to
prevent it burning me, and tried to break away, but my bonds were too
much for me.
"Let me out of this," I growled, and kicked at the man with my still
unbound foot. He snapped a half-hitch on my ankle, and threw me
heavily. Triumphant laughter came from both adversaries. Then:
"What's this?"
The challenge was clear, rich, authoritative. Someone else had come,
from a rearward door into the stone-walled vestibule where the
encounter was taking place.
A woman this time, not of great height, and robust but not heavy. She
was dressed for vigorous action in dark slacks with buskins to make
them snug around ankles and calves, a jerkin of stout material that was
faced with metal armor plates and left bare her round, strong arms. A
gold-worked fillet bound her tawny hair back from a rosy, bold-featured
face—a nose that was positively regal, a mouth short and firm but not
hard, and blue eyes that just now burned and questioned. She wore a
holstered pistol, and a cross-belt supported several instruments of a
kind I could not remember seeing before. A crimson cloak gave color and
dignity to her costume, and plainly she was someone of position, for
both the men stiffened to attention.
"A spy," one ventured. "He pushed in, claimed he was no enemy, then
tried to attack—"
"They lie," I broke in, very conscious of my naked helplessness before
her regard. "They wanted to kill me and be rewarded for a false story
of vigilance. I only defended myself."
"Get him on his feet," the young woman said, and the two guards
obeyed. Then her eyes studied me again. "Gods! What a mountain of a
man!" she exclaimed. "Can you walk, stranger?"
"Barely, with these bonds."
"Then manage to do so." She flung off her cloak and draped it over my
nakedness. "Walk along beside me. No tricks, and I promise you fair
hearing."
We went through the door by which she had entered, into a corridor
beyond. It was lighted by small, brilliant bulbs at regular intervals.
Beyond, it gave into several passages. She chose one of them and
conducted me along. "You are surely not of us," she commented. "Men I
have seen who are heavier than you, but none taller. Whence came you?"
I remembered the strange voice that had instructed me. "I am from a
far world," I replied. "It is called—yes, Earth. Beyond that, I know
nothing. Memory left me."
"The story is a strange one," she commented. "And your name?"
"I do not know that, either. Who are you?"
"Doriza—a gentlewoman of the guard. My inspection tour brought me by
chance to where you fought my outposts. But it is not for you to ask
questions. Enter here."
We passed through another door, and I found myself in an office. A man
in richly-embossed armor platings sat there. He had a fringe of pale
beard, and his eyes were bluer than the gentlewoman Doriza's.
She made a gesture of salute, hand at shoulder height, and reported the
matter. He nodded for her to fall back to a corner.
"Stranger," he said to me, "can you think of no better tale to tell
than you now offer?"
"I tell the truth," was my reply, not very gracious.
"You will have to prove that," he admonished me.
"What proof have I?" I demanded. "On this world of yours—Dondromogon,
isn't it called?—I'm no more than an hour old. Accident or shock
has taken my memory. Let me have a medical examination. A scientist
probably can tell what happened to put me in such a condition."
"I am a scientist," offered Doriza, and came forward. Her eyes met
mine, suddenly flickered and lowered. "His gaze," she muttered.
The officer at the table was touching a button. An attendant appeared,
received an order, and vanished again. In a few moments two other
men came—one a heavily armed officer of rank, the other an elderly,
bearded fellow in a voluminous robe that enfolded him in most dignified
manner.
This latter man opened wide his clear old eyes at sight of me.
"The stranger of the prophecy!" he cried, in a voice that made us all
jump.
The officer rose from behind the table. "Are you totally mad, Sporr?
You mystic doctors are too apt to become fuddled—"
"But it is, it is!" The graybeard flourished a thin hand at me. "Look
at him, you of little faith! Your mind dwells so much on material
strength that you lose touch with the spiritual—"
He broke off, and wheeled on the attendant who had led him in. "To my
study," he commanded. "On the shelf behind my desk, bring the great
gold-bound book that is third from the right." Then he turned back,
and bowed toward me. "Surely you are Yandro, the Conquering Stranger,"
he said, intoning as if in formal prayer. "Pardon these short-sighted
ones—deign to save us from our enemies—"
The girl Doriza spoke to the officer: "If Sporr speaks truth, and he
generally does, you have committed a blasphemy."
The other made a little grimace. "This may be Yandro, though I'm a
plain soldier and follow the classics very little. The First Comers are
souls to worship, not to study. If indeed he is Yandro," and he was
most respectful, "he will appreciate, like a good military mind, my
caution against possible impostors."
"Who might Yandro be?" I demanded, very uncomfortable in my bonds and
loose draperies.
Old Sporr almost crowed. "You see? If he was a true imposter, he would
come equipped with all plausible knowledge. As it is—"
"As it is, he may remember that the Conquering Stranger is foretold
to come with no memory of anything," supplied the officer. "Score one
against you, Sporr. You should have been able to instruct me, not I
you."
The attendant reentered, with a big book in his hands. It looked
old and well-thumbed, with dim gold traceries on its binding. Sporr
snatched it, and turned to a brightly colored picture. He looked once,
his beard gaped, and he dropped to his knees.
"Happy, happy the day," he jabbered, "that I was spared to see our
great champion come among us in the flesh, as was foretold of ancient
time by the First Comers!"
Doriza and the officer crossed to his side, snatching the book. Their
bright heads bent above it. Doriza was first to speak. "It is very
like," she half-stammered.
The officer faced me, with a sort of baffled respect.
"I still say you will understand my caution," he addressed me, with
real respect and shyness this time. "If you are Yandro himself, you can
prove it. The prophecy even sketches a thumb-print—" And he held the
book toward me.
It contained a full-page likeness, in color, of myself wrapped in a
scarlet robe. Under this was considerable printed description, and to
one side a thumb-print, or a drawing of one, in black.
"Behold," Doriza was saying, "matters which even expert identification
men take into thought. The ears in the picture are like the ears of the
real man—"
"That could be plastic surgery," rejoined the officer. "Such things are
artfully done by the Newcomers, and the red mantle he wears more easily
assumed."
Doriza shook her head. "That happens to be my cloak. I gave it to him
because he was naked, and not for any treasonable masquerade. But the
thumb-print—"
"Oh, yes, the thumb-print," I repeated wearily. "By all means, study my
thumbs, if you'll first take these bonds off of me."
"Bonds," mumbled old Sporr. He got creakily up from his knees and
bustled to me. From under his robe he produced a pouch, and took out a
pencil-sized rod. Gingerly opening the red mantle, he touched my tether
in several places with the glowing end of the rod. The coils dropped
away from my grateful body and limbs. I thrust out my hands.
"Thumb-prints?" I offered.
Sporr had produced something else, a little vial of dark pigment. He
carefully anointed one of my thumbs, and pressed it to the page. All
three gazed.
"The same," said Doriza.
And they were all on their knees before me.
"Forgive me, great Yandro," said the officer thickly. "I did not know."
"Get up," I bade them. "I want to hear why I was first bound, and now
worshipped."
II
They rose, but stood off respectfully. The officer spoke first. "I am
Rohbar, field commander of this defense position," he said with crisp
respect. "Sporr is a mystic doctor, full of godly wisdom. Doriza,
a junior officer and chief of the guard. And you—how could you
know?—are sent by the First Comers to save us from our enemies."
"Enemies?" I repeated.
"The Newcomers," supplemented Doriza. "They have taken the "Other Side"
of Dondromogon, and would take our side as well. We defend ourselves
at the poles. Now," and her voice rang joyously, "you will lead us to
defeat and crush them utterly!"
"Not naked like this," I said, and laughed. I must have sounded
foolish, but it had its effect.
"Follow me, deign to follow me," Sporr said. "Your clothing, your
quarters, your destiny, all await you."
We went out by the door at the rear, and Sporr respectfully gestured me
upon a metal-plated platform. Standing beside me, he tinkered with a
lever. We dropped smoothly away into a dark corridor, past level after
level of light and sound.
"Our cities are below ground," he quavered. "Whipped by winds above,
we must scrabble in the depths for life's necessities—chemicals to
transmute into food, to weave into clothing, to weld into tools and
weapons—"
The mention of food brought to me the thought that I was hungry. I said
as much, even as our elevator platform came to the lowest level and
stopped.
"I have arranged for that," Sporr began, then fell silent, fingers
combing his beard in embarrassment.
"Arranged food for me?" I prompted sharply. "As if you know I had come?
What—"
"Pardon, great Yandro," babbled Sporr. "I was saying that I arranged
food, as always, for whatever guest should come. Please follow."
We entered a new small chamber, where a table was set with dishes of
porcelain-like plastic. Sporr held a chair for me, and waited on me
with the utmost gingerly respect. The food was a pungent and filling
jelly, a little bundle of transparent leaves or scraps like cellophane
and tasting of spice, and a tumbler of pink juice. I felt refreshed and
satisfied, and thanked Sporr, who led me on to the next room.
"Behold!" he said, with a dramatic gesture. "Your garments, even as
they have been preserved against your coming!"
It was a sleeping chamber, with a cot made fast to the wall, a metal
locker or cupboard, with a glass door through which showed the garments
of which Sporr spoke.
The door closed softly behind me—I was left alone.
Knowing that it was expected of me, I went to the locker and opened
the door. The garments inside were old, I could see, but well kept and
serviceable. I studied their type, and my hands, if not my mind, seemed
familiar with them.
There was a kiltlike item, belted at the waist and falling to
mid-thigh. A resilient band at the top, with a series of belt-holes,
made it adaptable to my own body or to any other. Then came an upper
garment, a long strip of soft, close-woven fabric that spiralled
around the torso from hip to armpit, the end looping over the left
shoulder and giving full play to the arms. A gold-worked fillet bound
the brows and swept back my longish hair, knotting at the nape of the
neck. The only fitted articles were a pair of shoes, metal-soled and
soft-uppered, that went on well enough and ran cross-garters up to
below the knee, like buskins. The case also held a platinum chain for
the neck, a belt-bag, and a handsome sword, with clips to fasten them
in place. These things, too, I donned, and closed the glass door.
The light struck it at such an angle as to make it serve for a
full-length mirror. With some curiosity I gazed at my image.
The close-fitting costume was rich and dark, with bright colors only
for edgings and minor accessories. I myself—and it was as if I saw my
body for the first time—towered rather bluffly, with great breadth
of chest and shoulder, and legs robust enough to carry such bulk. The
face was square but haggard, as if from some toil or pain which was now
wiped from my recollection. That nose had been even bigger than it was
now, but a fracture had shortened it somewhat. The eyes were deep set
and dark and moody—small wonder!—the chin heavy, the mouth made grim
by a scar at one corner. Black, shaggy hair hung down like brackets.
All told, I looked like a proper person for physical labor, or even
fierce fighting—but surely no inspirational leader or savior of a
distressed people.
I took the military cloak which Doriza had lent me and slung it over my
shoulders. Turning, I clanked out on my metal-soled shoes.
Sporr was waiting in the room where I had eaten. His eyes widened at
sight of me, something like a grin of triumph flashed through his
beard. Then he bowed, supple and humble, his palms together.
"It is indeed Yandro, our great chief," he mumbled. Then he turned and
crossed the room. A sort of mouthpiece sprouted from the wall.
"I announce," he intoned into it. "I announce, I, Sporr, the reader and
fore-teller of wisdom. Yandro is with us, he awaits his partners and
friends. Let them meet him in the audience hall."
Facing me again, he motioned most respectfully toward the door to the
hall. I moved to open it, and he followed, muttering.
Outside stood Doriza. Her blue eyes met mine, and her lips moved to
frame a word. Then, suddenly, she was on her knee, catching my hand and
kissing it.
"I serve Yandro," she vowed tremulously. "Now and forever—and happy
that I was fated to live when he returned for the rescue of all
Dondromogon."
"Please get up," I bade her, trying not to sound as embarrassed as I
felt. "Come with me. There is still much that I do not understand."
"I am Yandro's orderly and helper," she said. Rising, she ranged
herself at my left hand. "Will Yandro come this way? He will be awaited
in the audience hall."
It seemed to me then that the corridors were vast and mixed as a
labyrinth, but Doriza guided me without the slightest hesitation past
one tangled crossway after another. My questions she answered with a
mixture of awe and brightness.
"It is necessary that we live like this," she explained. "The hot air
of Dondromogon's sunlit face is ever rising, and the cold air from
the dark side comes rushing under to fill the vacuum. Naturally, our
strip of twilight country is never free of winds too high and fierce to
fight. No crops can grow outside, no domestic animals flourish. We must
pen ourselves away from the sky and soil, with stout walls and heavy
sunken parapets. Our deep mines afford every element for necessities of
life."
I looked at my garments, and hers. There were various kinds of fabric,
which I now saw plainly to be synthetic. "The other side, where those
you call the Newcomers dwell and fight," I reminded. "Is it also
windswept? Why can two people not join forces and face toil and nature
together? They should fight, not each other, but the elements."
Doriza had no answer that time, but Sporr spoke up behind us: "Great
Yandro is wise as well as powerful. But the Newcomers do not want to
help, not even to conquer. They want to obliterate us. There is nothing
to do—not for lifetimes—but to fight them back at the two poles."
We came to a main corridor. It had a line of armed guards, but no
pedestrians or vehicles, though I thought I caught a murmur of far-off
traffic. Doriza paused before a great portal, closed by a curtainlike
sheet of dull metal. She spoke into a mouthpiece:
"Doriza, gentlewoman of the guard, conducts Yandro, the Conquering
Stranger, to greet his lieutenants!"
I have said that the portal was closed by a curtainlike metal sheet;
and like a curtain it lifted, letting us through into the auditorium.
That spacious chamber had rows of benches, with galleries above, that
might have seated a thousand. However, only a dozen or so were present,
on metal chairs ranged across the stage upon which we entered. They
were all men but two, and wore robes of black, plum-purple or red. At
sight of me, they rose together, most respectfully. They looked at me,
and I looked at them.
My first thought was, that if these were people of authority and trust
in the nation I seemed destined to save, my work was cut out for me.
Not that they really seemed stupid—none had the look, or the
subsequent action, of stupidity. But they were not pleasant. Their
dozen pairs of eyes fixed me with some steadiness, but with no
frankness anywhere. One man had a round, greedy-seeming face. Another
was too narrow and cunning to look it. Of the women, one was nearly
as tall as I and nobly proportioned, with hair of a red that would be
inspiring were it not so blatantly dyed. The other was a little wisp of
a brunette, with teeth too big for her scarlet mouth and bright eyes
like some sort of a rodent. They all wore jewelry. Too much jewelry.
My mind flew back to the two scrubby, venial guardsmen who had first
welcomed me; to stuffy Rohbar, the commander; to Sporr, spry and clever
enough, but somehow unwholesome; Doriza—no, she was not like these
others, who may have lived too long in their earth-buried shelters. And
Doriza now spoke to the gathering:
"Yandro, folk of the Council! He deigns to give you audience."
"
Yandro!
"
They all spoke the name in chorus, and bowed toward me.
Silence then, a silence which evidently I must break. I broke it:
"Friends, I am among you with no more memory or knowledge than an
infant. I hear wonderful things, of which I seem to be the center. Are
they true?"
"The tenth part of the wonders which concern mighty Yandro have not
been told," intoned Sporr, ducking his bearded head in a bow, but
fixing me with his wise old eyes.
One of the group, called Council by Doriza, now moved a pace forward.
He was the greedy-faced man, short but plump, and very conscious of
the dignified folds of his purple robe. One carefully-tended hand
brushed back his ginger-brown hair, then toyed with a little moustache.
"I am Gederr, senior of this Council," he purred. "If Yandro permits, I
will speak simply. Our hopes have been raised by Yandro's return—the
return presaged of old by those who could see the future, and more
recently by the death in battle of the Newcomer champion, called Barak."
"Barak!" I repeated. "I—I—" And I paused. When I had to learn my own
name, how could it be that I sensed memory of another's name?
"Barak was a brute—mighty, but a brute." Thus Gederr continued.
"Weapons in his hands were the instruments of fate. His hands alone
caused fear and ruin. But it pleased our fortune-bringing stars to
encompass his destruction." He grinned, and licked his full lips. "Now,
even as they are without their battle-leader, so we have ours."
"You honor me," I told him. "Yet I still know little. It seems that I
am expected to aid and lead and save the people of this world called
Dondromogon. But I must know them before I can help."
Gederr turned his eyes upon the woman with the red hair, and gestured
to her "Tell him, Elonie." Then he faced me. "Have we Yandro's
permission to sit?"
"By all means," I granted, a little impatiently, and sat down myself.
The others followed suit—the Council on their range of chairs, Doriza
on a bench near me, Sporr somewhere behind. The woman called Elonie
remained upon her sandalled feet, great eyes the color of deep green
water fixed upon me.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/3/0/9/63097//63097-h//63097-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | What is the significance of the narrator’s thumb print?
| 63097_4CW2KAPS_5 | [
"It is proof that he is Yandro \n",
"It is proof that he is from Earth \n",
"It is proof that he is a Newcomer \n",
"It is proof that he is a Master of Worlds \n"
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63,097 | 63097_4CW2KAPS | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Warrior of Two Worlds | 1954.0 | Wellman, Manly Wade | Science fiction; War stories; Adventure stories; PS; Prophecies -- Fiction | Warrior of Two Worlds
By MANLY WADE WELLMAN
He was the man of two planets, drawn through
the blackness of space to save a nation from
ruthless invaders. He was Yandro, the
Stranger of the Prophecy—and he found that
he was destined to fight both sides.
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Planet Stories Summer 1944.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
My senses came to me slowly and somehow shyly, as if not sure of their
way or welcome. I felt first—pressure on my brow and chest, as if I
lay face downward; then the tug and buffet of a strong, probing wind,
insistent but not cold, upon my naked skin. Closing my hands, I felt
them dig into coarse dirt. I turned my face downwind and opened my
eyes. There was little to see, so thick was the dust cloud around me.
Words formed themselves on my thick tongue, words that must have been
spoken by so many reviving unfortunates through the ages:
"Where am I?"
And at once there was an answer:
"
You lie upon the world Dondromogon.
"
I knew the language of that answer, but where it came from—above,
beneath, or indeed within me—I could not say. I lifted a hand, and
knuckled dust from my eyes.
"How did I get here?" I demanded of the speaker.
"It was ordered—by the Masters of the Worlds—that you should be
brought from your own home planet, called Earth in the System of the
star called Sun. Do you remember Earth?"
And I did not know whether I remembered or not. Vague matters stirred
deep in me, but I could not for certain say they were memories. I asked
yet again:
"Who am I?"
The voice had a note of triumph. "You do not know that. It is as well,
for this will be a birth and beginning of your destined leadership on
Dondromogon."
"Destined—leadership—" I began to repeat, and fell silent. I had
need to think. The voice was telling me that I had been snatched from
worlds away, for a specified purpose here on whatever windswept planet
Dondromogon might be. "Birth and beginning—destined leadership—"
Fantastic! And yet, for all I could say to the contrary, unvarnishedly
true.
"Dondromogon?" I mumbled. "The name is strange to me."
"It is a world the size of your native one," came words of information.
"Around a star it spins, light-years away from the world of your
birth. One face of Dondromogon ever looks to the light and heat,
wherefore its metals run in glowing seas. The other face is ever away
in cold darkness, with its air freezing into solid chunks. But because
Dondromogon wavers on its axis, there are two lunes of its surface
which from time to time shift from night to day. These are habitable."
My eyes were tight shut against the dust, but they saw in imagination
such a planet—one-half incandescent, one-half pitchy black. From pole
to pole on opposite sides ran the two twilight zones, widest at the
equators like the outer rind of two slices of melon. Of course, such
areas, between the hot and cold hemispheres, would be buffeted by
mighty gales ... the voice was to be heard again:
"War is fought between the two strips of habitable ground. War,
unceasing, bitter, with no quarter asked, given or expected.
Dondromogon was found and settled long ago, by adventurers from afar.
Now come invaders, to reap the benefits of discovery and toil." A
pause. "You find that thought unpleasant? You wish to right that
wrong?"
"Anyone would wish that," I replied. "But how—"
"You are going to ask how you were brought here. That is the mystery
of the
Masters
." The voice became grand. "Suffice it that you were
needed, and that the time was ripe. There is a proper time, like a
proper place, for each thing and each happening. Now, go to your
destiny."
I rose on my knees, shielding my face from the buffeting wind by
lifting a forearm. Somewhere through the murky clouds showed a dim
blocky silhouette, a building of sorts.
The voice spoke no more. I had not the time to wonder about it. I got
to my feet, bent double to keep from being blown over, and staggered
toward the promised haven.
I reached it, groped along until I found a door. There was no latch,
handle or entry button, and I pounded heavily on the massive panels.
The door opened from within, and I was blown inside, to fall sprawling.
I struck my forehead upon a floor of stone or concrete, and so was
half-stunned, but still I could distinguish something like the sound
of agitated voices. Then I felt myself grasped, by both shoulders,
and drawn roughly erect. The touch restored my senses, and I wrenched
myself violently free.
What had seized me? That was my first wonder. On this strange world
called Dondromogon, what manner of intelligent life bade defiance to
heat and cold and storm, and built these stout structures, and now laid
hands—were they hands indeed?—upon me? I swung around, setting my
back to a solid wall.
My first glance showed me that my companions were creatures like
myself—two-legged, fair-skinned men, shorter and slighter than I, but
clad in metal-faced garments and wearing weapons in their girdles. I
saw that each bore a swordlike device with a curved guard, set in a
narrow sheath as long as my arm. Each also had a shorter weapon, with
a curved stock to fit the palm of the hand, borne snugly in a holster.
With such arms I had a faint sense of familiarity.
"Who are you, and where are you from?" said one of the two, a
broad-faced middle-aged fellow. "Don't lie any more than you can help."
I felt a stirring of the hair on my neck, but kept my voice mild and
level: "Why should I lie? Especially as I don't know who I am, or where
I'm from, or anything that has happened longer ago than just a moment.
I woke up out there in the dust storm, and I managed to come here for
shelter."
"He's a Newcomer spy," quoth the other. "Let's put him under arrest."
"And leave this gate unguarded?" demanded the other. "Sound the
signal," and he jerked his head toward a system of levers and gauges on
the wall beside the door-jamb.
"There's a bigger reward for capture than for warning," objected
his friend in turn, "and whoever comes to take this man will claim
'capture.' I'll guard here, and you take him in, then we'll divide—"
"No. Yours is the idea. I'll guard and you take him in." The second man
studied me apprehensively. "He's big, and looks strong, even without
weapons."
"Don't be afraid," I urged. "I'll make no resistance, if you'll only
conduct me to your commander. I can show him that I'm no spy or enemy."
Both stared narrowly. "No spy? No enemy?" asked the broad-faced one who
had first spoken. Then, to his comrade: "No reward, then."
"I think there'll be a reward," was the rejoinder, and the second man's
hand stole to the sword-weapon. With a whispering rasp it cleared from
its scabbard. "If he's dead, we get pay for both warning and capture—"
His thumb touched a button at the pommel of the hilt. The dull blade
suddenly glowed like heated iron, and from it crackled and pulsed
little rainbow rays.
There was no time to think or plan or ponder. I moved in, with a
knowing speed that surprised me as much as the two guards. Catching the
fellow's weapon wrist, I clamped it firmly and bent it back and around.
He whimpered and swore, and his glowing sword dropped. Its radiant
blade almost fell on my naked foot. Before the clang of its fall was
through echoing, I had caught it up, and set the point within inches of
its owner's unprotected face.
"Quiet, or I'll roast you," I told him.
The other had drawn a weapon of his own, a pistol-form arrangement.
I turned on him, but too late. He pressed the trigger, and from the
muzzle came—not a projectile but a flying, spouting filament of cord
that seemed to spring on me like a long thin snake and to fasten coil
after coil around my body. The stuff that gushed from the gun-muzzle
seemed plastic in form, but hardened so quickly upon contact with the
air, it bound me like wire. Half a dozen adroit motions of the fellow's
gun hand, and my arms were caught to my body. I dropped my sword to
prevent it burning me, and tried to break away, but my bonds were too
much for me.
"Let me out of this," I growled, and kicked at the man with my still
unbound foot. He snapped a half-hitch on my ankle, and threw me
heavily. Triumphant laughter came from both adversaries. Then:
"What's this?"
The challenge was clear, rich, authoritative. Someone else had come,
from a rearward door into the stone-walled vestibule where the
encounter was taking place.
A woman this time, not of great height, and robust but not heavy. She
was dressed for vigorous action in dark slacks with buskins to make
them snug around ankles and calves, a jerkin of stout material that was
faced with metal armor plates and left bare her round, strong arms. A
gold-worked fillet bound her tawny hair back from a rosy, bold-featured
face—a nose that was positively regal, a mouth short and firm but not
hard, and blue eyes that just now burned and questioned. She wore a
holstered pistol, and a cross-belt supported several instruments of a
kind I could not remember seeing before. A crimson cloak gave color and
dignity to her costume, and plainly she was someone of position, for
both the men stiffened to attention.
"A spy," one ventured. "He pushed in, claimed he was no enemy, then
tried to attack—"
"They lie," I broke in, very conscious of my naked helplessness before
her regard. "They wanted to kill me and be rewarded for a false story
of vigilance. I only defended myself."
"Get him on his feet," the young woman said, and the two guards
obeyed. Then her eyes studied me again. "Gods! What a mountain of a
man!" she exclaimed. "Can you walk, stranger?"
"Barely, with these bonds."
"Then manage to do so." She flung off her cloak and draped it over my
nakedness. "Walk along beside me. No tricks, and I promise you fair
hearing."
We went through the door by which she had entered, into a corridor
beyond. It was lighted by small, brilliant bulbs at regular intervals.
Beyond, it gave into several passages. She chose one of them and
conducted me along. "You are surely not of us," she commented. "Men I
have seen who are heavier than you, but none taller. Whence came you?"
I remembered the strange voice that had instructed me. "I am from a
far world," I replied. "It is called—yes, Earth. Beyond that, I know
nothing. Memory left me."
"The story is a strange one," she commented. "And your name?"
"I do not know that, either. Who are you?"
"Doriza—a gentlewoman of the guard. My inspection tour brought me by
chance to where you fought my outposts. But it is not for you to ask
questions. Enter here."
We passed through another door, and I found myself in an office. A man
in richly-embossed armor platings sat there. He had a fringe of pale
beard, and his eyes were bluer than the gentlewoman Doriza's.
She made a gesture of salute, hand at shoulder height, and reported the
matter. He nodded for her to fall back to a corner.
"Stranger," he said to me, "can you think of no better tale to tell
than you now offer?"
"I tell the truth," was my reply, not very gracious.
"You will have to prove that," he admonished me.
"What proof have I?" I demanded. "On this world of yours—Dondromogon,
isn't it called?—I'm no more than an hour old. Accident or shock
has taken my memory. Let me have a medical examination. A scientist
probably can tell what happened to put me in such a condition."
"I am a scientist," offered Doriza, and came forward. Her eyes met
mine, suddenly flickered and lowered. "His gaze," she muttered.
The officer at the table was touching a button. An attendant appeared,
received an order, and vanished again. In a few moments two other
men came—one a heavily armed officer of rank, the other an elderly,
bearded fellow in a voluminous robe that enfolded him in most dignified
manner.
This latter man opened wide his clear old eyes at sight of me.
"The stranger of the prophecy!" he cried, in a voice that made us all
jump.
The officer rose from behind the table. "Are you totally mad, Sporr?
You mystic doctors are too apt to become fuddled—"
"But it is, it is!" The graybeard flourished a thin hand at me. "Look
at him, you of little faith! Your mind dwells so much on material
strength that you lose touch with the spiritual—"
He broke off, and wheeled on the attendant who had led him in. "To my
study," he commanded. "On the shelf behind my desk, bring the great
gold-bound book that is third from the right." Then he turned back,
and bowed toward me. "Surely you are Yandro, the Conquering Stranger,"
he said, intoning as if in formal prayer. "Pardon these short-sighted
ones—deign to save us from our enemies—"
The girl Doriza spoke to the officer: "If Sporr speaks truth, and he
generally does, you have committed a blasphemy."
The other made a little grimace. "This may be Yandro, though I'm a
plain soldier and follow the classics very little. The First Comers are
souls to worship, not to study. If indeed he is Yandro," and he was
most respectful, "he will appreciate, like a good military mind, my
caution against possible impostors."
"Who might Yandro be?" I demanded, very uncomfortable in my bonds and
loose draperies.
Old Sporr almost crowed. "You see? If he was a true imposter, he would
come equipped with all plausible knowledge. As it is—"
"As it is, he may remember that the Conquering Stranger is foretold
to come with no memory of anything," supplied the officer. "Score one
against you, Sporr. You should have been able to instruct me, not I
you."
The attendant reentered, with a big book in his hands. It looked
old and well-thumbed, with dim gold traceries on its binding. Sporr
snatched it, and turned to a brightly colored picture. He looked once,
his beard gaped, and he dropped to his knees.
"Happy, happy the day," he jabbered, "that I was spared to see our
great champion come among us in the flesh, as was foretold of ancient
time by the First Comers!"
Doriza and the officer crossed to his side, snatching the book. Their
bright heads bent above it. Doriza was first to speak. "It is very
like," she half-stammered.
The officer faced me, with a sort of baffled respect.
"I still say you will understand my caution," he addressed me, with
real respect and shyness this time. "If you are Yandro himself, you can
prove it. The prophecy even sketches a thumb-print—" And he held the
book toward me.
It contained a full-page likeness, in color, of myself wrapped in a
scarlet robe. Under this was considerable printed description, and to
one side a thumb-print, or a drawing of one, in black.
"Behold," Doriza was saying, "matters which even expert identification
men take into thought. The ears in the picture are like the ears of the
real man—"
"That could be plastic surgery," rejoined the officer. "Such things are
artfully done by the Newcomers, and the red mantle he wears more easily
assumed."
Doriza shook her head. "That happens to be my cloak. I gave it to him
because he was naked, and not for any treasonable masquerade. But the
thumb-print—"
"Oh, yes, the thumb-print," I repeated wearily. "By all means, study my
thumbs, if you'll first take these bonds off of me."
"Bonds," mumbled old Sporr. He got creakily up from his knees and
bustled to me. From under his robe he produced a pouch, and took out a
pencil-sized rod. Gingerly opening the red mantle, he touched my tether
in several places with the glowing end of the rod. The coils dropped
away from my grateful body and limbs. I thrust out my hands.
"Thumb-prints?" I offered.
Sporr had produced something else, a little vial of dark pigment. He
carefully anointed one of my thumbs, and pressed it to the page. All
three gazed.
"The same," said Doriza.
And they were all on their knees before me.
"Forgive me, great Yandro," said the officer thickly. "I did not know."
"Get up," I bade them. "I want to hear why I was first bound, and now
worshipped."
II
They rose, but stood off respectfully. The officer spoke first. "I am
Rohbar, field commander of this defense position," he said with crisp
respect. "Sporr is a mystic doctor, full of godly wisdom. Doriza,
a junior officer and chief of the guard. And you—how could you
know?—are sent by the First Comers to save us from our enemies."
"Enemies?" I repeated.
"The Newcomers," supplemented Doriza. "They have taken the "Other Side"
of Dondromogon, and would take our side as well. We defend ourselves
at the poles. Now," and her voice rang joyously, "you will lead us to
defeat and crush them utterly!"
"Not naked like this," I said, and laughed. I must have sounded
foolish, but it had its effect.
"Follow me, deign to follow me," Sporr said. "Your clothing, your
quarters, your destiny, all await you."
We went out by the door at the rear, and Sporr respectfully gestured me
upon a metal-plated platform. Standing beside me, he tinkered with a
lever. We dropped smoothly away into a dark corridor, past level after
level of light and sound.
"Our cities are below ground," he quavered. "Whipped by winds above,
we must scrabble in the depths for life's necessities—chemicals to
transmute into food, to weave into clothing, to weld into tools and
weapons—"
The mention of food brought to me the thought that I was hungry. I said
as much, even as our elevator platform came to the lowest level and
stopped.
"I have arranged for that," Sporr began, then fell silent, fingers
combing his beard in embarrassment.
"Arranged food for me?" I prompted sharply. "As if you know I had come?
What—"
"Pardon, great Yandro," babbled Sporr. "I was saying that I arranged
food, as always, for whatever guest should come. Please follow."
We entered a new small chamber, where a table was set with dishes of
porcelain-like plastic. Sporr held a chair for me, and waited on me
with the utmost gingerly respect. The food was a pungent and filling
jelly, a little bundle of transparent leaves or scraps like cellophane
and tasting of spice, and a tumbler of pink juice. I felt refreshed and
satisfied, and thanked Sporr, who led me on to the next room.
"Behold!" he said, with a dramatic gesture. "Your garments, even as
they have been preserved against your coming!"
It was a sleeping chamber, with a cot made fast to the wall, a metal
locker or cupboard, with a glass door through which showed the garments
of which Sporr spoke.
The door closed softly behind me—I was left alone.
Knowing that it was expected of me, I went to the locker and opened
the door. The garments inside were old, I could see, but well kept and
serviceable. I studied their type, and my hands, if not my mind, seemed
familiar with them.
There was a kiltlike item, belted at the waist and falling to
mid-thigh. A resilient band at the top, with a series of belt-holes,
made it adaptable to my own body or to any other. Then came an upper
garment, a long strip of soft, close-woven fabric that spiralled
around the torso from hip to armpit, the end looping over the left
shoulder and giving full play to the arms. A gold-worked fillet bound
the brows and swept back my longish hair, knotting at the nape of the
neck. The only fitted articles were a pair of shoes, metal-soled and
soft-uppered, that went on well enough and ran cross-garters up to
below the knee, like buskins. The case also held a platinum chain for
the neck, a belt-bag, and a handsome sword, with clips to fasten them
in place. These things, too, I donned, and closed the glass door.
The light struck it at such an angle as to make it serve for a
full-length mirror. With some curiosity I gazed at my image.
The close-fitting costume was rich and dark, with bright colors only
for edgings and minor accessories. I myself—and it was as if I saw my
body for the first time—towered rather bluffly, with great breadth
of chest and shoulder, and legs robust enough to carry such bulk. The
face was square but haggard, as if from some toil or pain which was now
wiped from my recollection. That nose had been even bigger than it was
now, but a fracture had shortened it somewhat. The eyes were deep set
and dark and moody—small wonder!—the chin heavy, the mouth made grim
by a scar at one corner. Black, shaggy hair hung down like brackets.
All told, I looked like a proper person for physical labor, or even
fierce fighting—but surely no inspirational leader or savior of a
distressed people.
I took the military cloak which Doriza had lent me and slung it over my
shoulders. Turning, I clanked out on my metal-soled shoes.
Sporr was waiting in the room where I had eaten. His eyes widened at
sight of me, something like a grin of triumph flashed through his
beard. Then he bowed, supple and humble, his palms together.
"It is indeed Yandro, our great chief," he mumbled. Then he turned and
crossed the room. A sort of mouthpiece sprouted from the wall.
"I announce," he intoned into it. "I announce, I, Sporr, the reader and
fore-teller of wisdom. Yandro is with us, he awaits his partners and
friends. Let them meet him in the audience hall."
Facing me again, he motioned most respectfully toward the door to the
hall. I moved to open it, and he followed, muttering.
Outside stood Doriza. Her blue eyes met mine, and her lips moved to
frame a word. Then, suddenly, she was on her knee, catching my hand and
kissing it.
"I serve Yandro," she vowed tremulously. "Now and forever—and happy
that I was fated to live when he returned for the rescue of all
Dondromogon."
"Please get up," I bade her, trying not to sound as embarrassed as I
felt. "Come with me. There is still much that I do not understand."
"I am Yandro's orderly and helper," she said. Rising, she ranged
herself at my left hand. "Will Yandro come this way? He will be awaited
in the audience hall."
It seemed to me then that the corridors were vast and mixed as a
labyrinth, but Doriza guided me without the slightest hesitation past
one tangled crossway after another. My questions she answered with a
mixture of awe and brightness.
"It is necessary that we live like this," she explained. "The hot air
of Dondromogon's sunlit face is ever rising, and the cold air from
the dark side comes rushing under to fill the vacuum. Naturally, our
strip of twilight country is never free of winds too high and fierce to
fight. No crops can grow outside, no domestic animals flourish. We must
pen ourselves away from the sky and soil, with stout walls and heavy
sunken parapets. Our deep mines afford every element for necessities of
life."
I looked at my garments, and hers. There were various kinds of fabric,
which I now saw plainly to be synthetic. "The other side, where those
you call the Newcomers dwell and fight," I reminded. "Is it also
windswept? Why can two people not join forces and face toil and nature
together? They should fight, not each other, but the elements."
Doriza had no answer that time, but Sporr spoke up behind us: "Great
Yandro is wise as well as powerful. But the Newcomers do not want to
help, not even to conquer. They want to obliterate us. There is nothing
to do—not for lifetimes—but to fight them back at the two poles."
We came to a main corridor. It had a line of armed guards, but no
pedestrians or vehicles, though I thought I caught a murmur of far-off
traffic. Doriza paused before a great portal, closed by a curtainlike
sheet of dull metal. She spoke into a mouthpiece:
"Doriza, gentlewoman of the guard, conducts Yandro, the Conquering
Stranger, to greet his lieutenants!"
I have said that the portal was closed by a curtainlike metal sheet;
and like a curtain it lifted, letting us through into the auditorium.
That spacious chamber had rows of benches, with galleries above, that
might have seated a thousand. However, only a dozen or so were present,
on metal chairs ranged across the stage upon which we entered. They
were all men but two, and wore robes of black, plum-purple or red. At
sight of me, they rose together, most respectfully. They looked at me,
and I looked at them.
My first thought was, that if these were people of authority and trust
in the nation I seemed destined to save, my work was cut out for me.
Not that they really seemed stupid—none had the look, or the
subsequent action, of stupidity. But they were not pleasant. Their
dozen pairs of eyes fixed me with some steadiness, but with no
frankness anywhere. One man had a round, greedy-seeming face. Another
was too narrow and cunning to look it. Of the women, one was nearly
as tall as I and nobly proportioned, with hair of a red that would be
inspiring were it not so blatantly dyed. The other was a little wisp of
a brunette, with teeth too big for her scarlet mouth and bright eyes
like some sort of a rodent. They all wore jewelry. Too much jewelry.
My mind flew back to the two scrubby, venial guardsmen who had first
welcomed me; to stuffy Rohbar, the commander; to Sporr, spry and clever
enough, but somehow unwholesome; Doriza—no, she was not like these
others, who may have lived too long in their earth-buried shelters. And
Doriza now spoke to the gathering:
"Yandro, folk of the Council! He deigns to give you audience."
"
Yandro!
"
They all spoke the name in chorus, and bowed toward me.
Silence then, a silence which evidently I must break. I broke it:
"Friends, I am among you with no more memory or knowledge than an
infant. I hear wonderful things, of which I seem to be the center. Are
they true?"
"The tenth part of the wonders which concern mighty Yandro have not
been told," intoned Sporr, ducking his bearded head in a bow, but
fixing me with his wise old eyes.
One of the group, called Council by Doriza, now moved a pace forward.
He was the greedy-faced man, short but plump, and very conscious of
the dignified folds of his purple robe. One carefully-tended hand
brushed back his ginger-brown hair, then toyed with a little moustache.
"I am Gederr, senior of this Council," he purred. "If Yandro permits, I
will speak simply. Our hopes have been raised by Yandro's return—the
return presaged of old by those who could see the future, and more
recently by the death in battle of the Newcomer champion, called Barak."
"Barak!" I repeated. "I—I—" And I paused. When I had to learn my own
name, how could it be that I sensed memory of another's name?
"Barak was a brute—mighty, but a brute." Thus Gederr continued.
"Weapons in his hands were the instruments of fate. His hands alone
caused fear and ruin. But it pleased our fortune-bringing stars to
encompass his destruction." He grinned, and licked his full lips. "Now,
even as they are without their battle-leader, so we have ours."
"You honor me," I told him. "Yet I still know little. It seems that I
am expected to aid and lead and save the people of this world called
Dondromogon. But I must know them before I can help."
Gederr turned his eyes upon the woman with the red hair, and gestured
to her "Tell him, Elonie." Then he faced me. "Have we Yandro's
permission to sit?"
"By all means," I granted, a little impatiently, and sat down myself.
The others followed suit—the Council on their range of chairs, Doriza
on a bench near me, Sporr somewhere behind. The woman called Elonie
remained upon her sandalled feet, great eyes the color of deep green
water fixed upon me.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/3/0/9/63097//63097-h//63097-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | Who is Sporr and what is his authority in calling the narrator Yandro?
| 63097_4CW2KAPS_6 | [
"He is a mystic in touch with faith, in charge of the materialization of gods.\n",
"He is a mystic in touch with the spiritual realm, in charge of prophecies. \n",
"He is a mystic in touch with the material space, in charge of prophecies. \n",
"He is a mystic in touch with what is Good, in charge of the rational realm. \n"
] | 2 | 2 | [
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63,097 | 63097_4CW2KAPS | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Warrior of Two Worlds | 1954.0 | Wellman, Manly Wade | Science fiction; War stories; Adventure stories; PS; Prophecies -- Fiction | Warrior of Two Worlds
By MANLY WADE WELLMAN
He was the man of two planets, drawn through
the blackness of space to save a nation from
ruthless invaders. He was Yandro, the
Stranger of the Prophecy—and he found that
he was destined to fight both sides.
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Planet Stories Summer 1944.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
My senses came to me slowly and somehow shyly, as if not sure of their
way or welcome. I felt first—pressure on my brow and chest, as if I
lay face downward; then the tug and buffet of a strong, probing wind,
insistent but not cold, upon my naked skin. Closing my hands, I felt
them dig into coarse dirt. I turned my face downwind and opened my
eyes. There was little to see, so thick was the dust cloud around me.
Words formed themselves on my thick tongue, words that must have been
spoken by so many reviving unfortunates through the ages:
"Where am I?"
And at once there was an answer:
"
You lie upon the world Dondromogon.
"
I knew the language of that answer, but where it came from—above,
beneath, or indeed within me—I could not say. I lifted a hand, and
knuckled dust from my eyes.
"How did I get here?" I demanded of the speaker.
"It was ordered—by the Masters of the Worlds—that you should be
brought from your own home planet, called Earth in the System of the
star called Sun. Do you remember Earth?"
And I did not know whether I remembered or not. Vague matters stirred
deep in me, but I could not for certain say they were memories. I asked
yet again:
"Who am I?"
The voice had a note of triumph. "You do not know that. It is as well,
for this will be a birth and beginning of your destined leadership on
Dondromogon."
"Destined—leadership—" I began to repeat, and fell silent. I had
need to think. The voice was telling me that I had been snatched from
worlds away, for a specified purpose here on whatever windswept planet
Dondromogon might be. "Birth and beginning—destined leadership—"
Fantastic! And yet, for all I could say to the contrary, unvarnishedly
true.
"Dondromogon?" I mumbled. "The name is strange to me."
"It is a world the size of your native one," came words of information.
"Around a star it spins, light-years away from the world of your
birth. One face of Dondromogon ever looks to the light and heat,
wherefore its metals run in glowing seas. The other face is ever away
in cold darkness, with its air freezing into solid chunks. But because
Dondromogon wavers on its axis, there are two lunes of its surface
which from time to time shift from night to day. These are habitable."
My eyes were tight shut against the dust, but they saw in imagination
such a planet—one-half incandescent, one-half pitchy black. From pole
to pole on opposite sides ran the two twilight zones, widest at the
equators like the outer rind of two slices of melon. Of course, such
areas, between the hot and cold hemispheres, would be buffeted by
mighty gales ... the voice was to be heard again:
"War is fought between the two strips of habitable ground. War,
unceasing, bitter, with no quarter asked, given or expected.
Dondromogon was found and settled long ago, by adventurers from afar.
Now come invaders, to reap the benefits of discovery and toil." A
pause. "You find that thought unpleasant? You wish to right that
wrong?"
"Anyone would wish that," I replied. "But how—"
"You are going to ask how you were brought here. That is the mystery
of the
Masters
." The voice became grand. "Suffice it that you were
needed, and that the time was ripe. There is a proper time, like a
proper place, for each thing and each happening. Now, go to your
destiny."
I rose on my knees, shielding my face from the buffeting wind by
lifting a forearm. Somewhere through the murky clouds showed a dim
blocky silhouette, a building of sorts.
The voice spoke no more. I had not the time to wonder about it. I got
to my feet, bent double to keep from being blown over, and staggered
toward the promised haven.
I reached it, groped along until I found a door. There was no latch,
handle or entry button, and I pounded heavily on the massive panels.
The door opened from within, and I was blown inside, to fall sprawling.
I struck my forehead upon a floor of stone or concrete, and so was
half-stunned, but still I could distinguish something like the sound
of agitated voices. Then I felt myself grasped, by both shoulders,
and drawn roughly erect. The touch restored my senses, and I wrenched
myself violently free.
What had seized me? That was my first wonder. On this strange world
called Dondromogon, what manner of intelligent life bade defiance to
heat and cold and storm, and built these stout structures, and now laid
hands—were they hands indeed?—upon me? I swung around, setting my
back to a solid wall.
My first glance showed me that my companions were creatures like
myself—two-legged, fair-skinned men, shorter and slighter than I, but
clad in metal-faced garments and wearing weapons in their girdles. I
saw that each bore a swordlike device with a curved guard, set in a
narrow sheath as long as my arm. Each also had a shorter weapon, with
a curved stock to fit the palm of the hand, borne snugly in a holster.
With such arms I had a faint sense of familiarity.
"Who are you, and where are you from?" said one of the two, a
broad-faced middle-aged fellow. "Don't lie any more than you can help."
I felt a stirring of the hair on my neck, but kept my voice mild and
level: "Why should I lie? Especially as I don't know who I am, or where
I'm from, or anything that has happened longer ago than just a moment.
I woke up out there in the dust storm, and I managed to come here for
shelter."
"He's a Newcomer spy," quoth the other. "Let's put him under arrest."
"And leave this gate unguarded?" demanded the other. "Sound the
signal," and he jerked his head toward a system of levers and gauges on
the wall beside the door-jamb.
"There's a bigger reward for capture than for warning," objected
his friend in turn, "and whoever comes to take this man will claim
'capture.' I'll guard here, and you take him in, then we'll divide—"
"No. Yours is the idea. I'll guard and you take him in." The second man
studied me apprehensively. "He's big, and looks strong, even without
weapons."
"Don't be afraid," I urged. "I'll make no resistance, if you'll only
conduct me to your commander. I can show him that I'm no spy or enemy."
Both stared narrowly. "No spy? No enemy?" asked the broad-faced one who
had first spoken. Then, to his comrade: "No reward, then."
"I think there'll be a reward," was the rejoinder, and the second man's
hand stole to the sword-weapon. With a whispering rasp it cleared from
its scabbard. "If he's dead, we get pay for both warning and capture—"
His thumb touched a button at the pommel of the hilt. The dull blade
suddenly glowed like heated iron, and from it crackled and pulsed
little rainbow rays.
There was no time to think or plan or ponder. I moved in, with a
knowing speed that surprised me as much as the two guards. Catching the
fellow's weapon wrist, I clamped it firmly and bent it back and around.
He whimpered and swore, and his glowing sword dropped. Its radiant
blade almost fell on my naked foot. Before the clang of its fall was
through echoing, I had caught it up, and set the point within inches of
its owner's unprotected face.
"Quiet, or I'll roast you," I told him.
The other had drawn a weapon of his own, a pistol-form arrangement.
I turned on him, but too late. He pressed the trigger, and from the
muzzle came—not a projectile but a flying, spouting filament of cord
that seemed to spring on me like a long thin snake and to fasten coil
after coil around my body. The stuff that gushed from the gun-muzzle
seemed plastic in form, but hardened so quickly upon contact with the
air, it bound me like wire. Half a dozen adroit motions of the fellow's
gun hand, and my arms were caught to my body. I dropped my sword to
prevent it burning me, and tried to break away, but my bonds were too
much for me.
"Let me out of this," I growled, and kicked at the man with my still
unbound foot. He snapped a half-hitch on my ankle, and threw me
heavily. Triumphant laughter came from both adversaries. Then:
"What's this?"
The challenge was clear, rich, authoritative. Someone else had come,
from a rearward door into the stone-walled vestibule where the
encounter was taking place.
A woman this time, not of great height, and robust but not heavy. She
was dressed for vigorous action in dark slacks with buskins to make
them snug around ankles and calves, a jerkin of stout material that was
faced with metal armor plates and left bare her round, strong arms. A
gold-worked fillet bound her tawny hair back from a rosy, bold-featured
face—a nose that was positively regal, a mouth short and firm but not
hard, and blue eyes that just now burned and questioned. She wore a
holstered pistol, and a cross-belt supported several instruments of a
kind I could not remember seeing before. A crimson cloak gave color and
dignity to her costume, and plainly she was someone of position, for
both the men stiffened to attention.
"A spy," one ventured. "He pushed in, claimed he was no enemy, then
tried to attack—"
"They lie," I broke in, very conscious of my naked helplessness before
her regard. "They wanted to kill me and be rewarded for a false story
of vigilance. I only defended myself."
"Get him on his feet," the young woman said, and the two guards
obeyed. Then her eyes studied me again. "Gods! What a mountain of a
man!" she exclaimed. "Can you walk, stranger?"
"Barely, with these bonds."
"Then manage to do so." She flung off her cloak and draped it over my
nakedness. "Walk along beside me. No tricks, and I promise you fair
hearing."
We went through the door by which she had entered, into a corridor
beyond. It was lighted by small, brilliant bulbs at regular intervals.
Beyond, it gave into several passages. She chose one of them and
conducted me along. "You are surely not of us," she commented. "Men I
have seen who are heavier than you, but none taller. Whence came you?"
I remembered the strange voice that had instructed me. "I am from a
far world," I replied. "It is called—yes, Earth. Beyond that, I know
nothing. Memory left me."
"The story is a strange one," she commented. "And your name?"
"I do not know that, either. Who are you?"
"Doriza—a gentlewoman of the guard. My inspection tour brought me by
chance to where you fought my outposts. But it is not for you to ask
questions. Enter here."
We passed through another door, and I found myself in an office. A man
in richly-embossed armor platings sat there. He had a fringe of pale
beard, and his eyes were bluer than the gentlewoman Doriza's.
She made a gesture of salute, hand at shoulder height, and reported the
matter. He nodded for her to fall back to a corner.
"Stranger," he said to me, "can you think of no better tale to tell
than you now offer?"
"I tell the truth," was my reply, not very gracious.
"You will have to prove that," he admonished me.
"What proof have I?" I demanded. "On this world of yours—Dondromogon,
isn't it called?—I'm no more than an hour old. Accident or shock
has taken my memory. Let me have a medical examination. A scientist
probably can tell what happened to put me in such a condition."
"I am a scientist," offered Doriza, and came forward. Her eyes met
mine, suddenly flickered and lowered. "His gaze," she muttered.
The officer at the table was touching a button. An attendant appeared,
received an order, and vanished again. In a few moments two other
men came—one a heavily armed officer of rank, the other an elderly,
bearded fellow in a voluminous robe that enfolded him in most dignified
manner.
This latter man opened wide his clear old eyes at sight of me.
"The stranger of the prophecy!" he cried, in a voice that made us all
jump.
The officer rose from behind the table. "Are you totally mad, Sporr?
You mystic doctors are too apt to become fuddled—"
"But it is, it is!" The graybeard flourished a thin hand at me. "Look
at him, you of little faith! Your mind dwells so much on material
strength that you lose touch with the spiritual—"
He broke off, and wheeled on the attendant who had led him in. "To my
study," he commanded. "On the shelf behind my desk, bring the great
gold-bound book that is third from the right." Then he turned back,
and bowed toward me. "Surely you are Yandro, the Conquering Stranger,"
he said, intoning as if in formal prayer. "Pardon these short-sighted
ones—deign to save us from our enemies—"
The girl Doriza spoke to the officer: "If Sporr speaks truth, and he
generally does, you have committed a blasphemy."
The other made a little grimace. "This may be Yandro, though I'm a
plain soldier and follow the classics very little. The First Comers are
souls to worship, not to study. If indeed he is Yandro," and he was
most respectful, "he will appreciate, like a good military mind, my
caution against possible impostors."
"Who might Yandro be?" I demanded, very uncomfortable in my bonds and
loose draperies.
Old Sporr almost crowed. "You see? If he was a true imposter, he would
come equipped with all plausible knowledge. As it is—"
"As it is, he may remember that the Conquering Stranger is foretold
to come with no memory of anything," supplied the officer. "Score one
against you, Sporr. You should have been able to instruct me, not I
you."
The attendant reentered, with a big book in his hands. It looked
old and well-thumbed, with dim gold traceries on its binding. Sporr
snatched it, and turned to a brightly colored picture. He looked once,
his beard gaped, and he dropped to his knees.
"Happy, happy the day," he jabbered, "that I was spared to see our
great champion come among us in the flesh, as was foretold of ancient
time by the First Comers!"
Doriza and the officer crossed to his side, snatching the book. Their
bright heads bent above it. Doriza was first to speak. "It is very
like," she half-stammered.
The officer faced me, with a sort of baffled respect.
"I still say you will understand my caution," he addressed me, with
real respect and shyness this time. "If you are Yandro himself, you can
prove it. The prophecy even sketches a thumb-print—" And he held the
book toward me.
It contained a full-page likeness, in color, of myself wrapped in a
scarlet robe. Under this was considerable printed description, and to
one side a thumb-print, or a drawing of one, in black.
"Behold," Doriza was saying, "matters which even expert identification
men take into thought. The ears in the picture are like the ears of the
real man—"
"That could be plastic surgery," rejoined the officer. "Such things are
artfully done by the Newcomers, and the red mantle he wears more easily
assumed."
Doriza shook her head. "That happens to be my cloak. I gave it to him
because he was naked, and not for any treasonable masquerade. But the
thumb-print—"
"Oh, yes, the thumb-print," I repeated wearily. "By all means, study my
thumbs, if you'll first take these bonds off of me."
"Bonds," mumbled old Sporr. He got creakily up from his knees and
bustled to me. From under his robe he produced a pouch, and took out a
pencil-sized rod. Gingerly opening the red mantle, he touched my tether
in several places with the glowing end of the rod. The coils dropped
away from my grateful body and limbs. I thrust out my hands.
"Thumb-prints?" I offered.
Sporr had produced something else, a little vial of dark pigment. He
carefully anointed one of my thumbs, and pressed it to the page. All
three gazed.
"The same," said Doriza.
And they were all on their knees before me.
"Forgive me, great Yandro," said the officer thickly. "I did not know."
"Get up," I bade them. "I want to hear why I was first bound, and now
worshipped."
II
They rose, but stood off respectfully. The officer spoke first. "I am
Rohbar, field commander of this defense position," he said with crisp
respect. "Sporr is a mystic doctor, full of godly wisdom. Doriza,
a junior officer and chief of the guard. And you—how could you
know?—are sent by the First Comers to save us from our enemies."
"Enemies?" I repeated.
"The Newcomers," supplemented Doriza. "They have taken the "Other Side"
of Dondromogon, and would take our side as well. We defend ourselves
at the poles. Now," and her voice rang joyously, "you will lead us to
defeat and crush them utterly!"
"Not naked like this," I said, and laughed. I must have sounded
foolish, but it had its effect.
"Follow me, deign to follow me," Sporr said. "Your clothing, your
quarters, your destiny, all await you."
We went out by the door at the rear, and Sporr respectfully gestured me
upon a metal-plated platform. Standing beside me, he tinkered with a
lever. We dropped smoothly away into a dark corridor, past level after
level of light and sound.
"Our cities are below ground," he quavered. "Whipped by winds above,
we must scrabble in the depths for life's necessities—chemicals to
transmute into food, to weave into clothing, to weld into tools and
weapons—"
The mention of food brought to me the thought that I was hungry. I said
as much, even as our elevator platform came to the lowest level and
stopped.
"I have arranged for that," Sporr began, then fell silent, fingers
combing his beard in embarrassment.
"Arranged food for me?" I prompted sharply. "As if you know I had come?
What—"
"Pardon, great Yandro," babbled Sporr. "I was saying that I arranged
food, as always, for whatever guest should come. Please follow."
We entered a new small chamber, where a table was set with dishes of
porcelain-like plastic. Sporr held a chair for me, and waited on me
with the utmost gingerly respect. The food was a pungent and filling
jelly, a little bundle of transparent leaves or scraps like cellophane
and tasting of spice, and a tumbler of pink juice. I felt refreshed and
satisfied, and thanked Sporr, who led me on to the next room.
"Behold!" he said, with a dramatic gesture. "Your garments, even as
they have been preserved against your coming!"
It was a sleeping chamber, with a cot made fast to the wall, a metal
locker or cupboard, with a glass door through which showed the garments
of which Sporr spoke.
The door closed softly behind me—I was left alone.
Knowing that it was expected of me, I went to the locker and opened
the door. The garments inside were old, I could see, but well kept and
serviceable. I studied their type, and my hands, if not my mind, seemed
familiar with them.
There was a kiltlike item, belted at the waist and falling to
mid-thigh. A resilient band at the top, with a series of belt-holes,
made it adaptable to my own body or to any other. Then came an upper
garment, a long strip of soft, close-woven fabric that spiralled
around the torso from hip to armpit, the end looping over the left
shoulder and giving full play to the arms. A gold-worked fillet bound
the brows and swept back my longish hair, knotting at the nape of the
neck. The only fitted articles were a pair of shoes, metal-soled and
soft-uppered, that went on well enough and ran cross-garters up to
below the knee, like buskins. The case also held a platinum chain for
the neck, a belt-bag, and a handsome sword, with clips to fasten them
in place. These things, too, I donned, and closed the glass door.
The light struck it at such an angle as to make it serve for a
full-length mirror. With some curiosity I gazed at my image.
The close-fitting costume was rich and dark, with bright colors only
for edgings and minor accessories. I myself—and it was as if I saw my
body for the first time—towered rather bluffly, with great breadth
of chest and shoulder, and legs robust enough to carry such bulk. The
face was square but haggard, as if from some toil or pain which was now
wiped from my recollection. That nose had been even bigger than it was
now, but a fracture had shortened it somewhat. The eyes were deep set
and dark and moody—small wonder!—the chin heavy, the mouth made grim
by a scar at one corner. Black, shaggy hair hung down like brackets.
All told, I looked like a proper person for physical labor, or even
fierce fighting—but surely no inspirational leader or savior of a
distressed people.
I took the military cloak which Doriza had lent me and slung it over my
shoulders. Turning, I clanked out on my metal-soled shoes.
Sporr was waiting in the room where I had eaten. His eyes widened at
sight of me, something like a grin of triumph flashed through his
beard. Then he bowed, supple and humble, his palms together.
"It is indeed Yandro, our great chief," he mumbled. Then he turned and
crossed the room. A sort of mouthpiece sprouted from the wall.
"I announce," he intoned into it. "I announce, I, Sporr, the reader and
fore-teller of wisdom. Yandro is with us, he awaits his partners and
friends. Let them meet him in the audience hall."
Facing me again, he motioned most respectfully toward the door to the
hall. I moved to open it, and he followed, muttering.
Outside stood Doriza. Her blue eyes met mine, and her lips moved to
frame a word. Then, suddenly, she was on her knee, catching my hand and
kissing it.
"I serve Yandro," she vowed tremulously. "Now and forever—and happy
that I was fated to live when he returned for the rescue of all
Dondromogon."
"Please get up," I bade her, trying not to sound as embarrassed as I
felt. "Come with me. There is still much that I do not understand."
"I am Yandro's orderly and helper," she said. Rising, she ranged
herself at my left hand. "Will Yandro come this way? He will be awaited
in the audience hall."
It seemed to me then that the corridors were vast and mixed as a
labyrinth, but Doriza guided me without the slightest hesitation past
one tangled crossway after another. My questions she answered with a
mixture of awe and brightness.
"It is necessary that we live like this," she explained. "The hot air
of Dondromogon's sunlit face is ever rising, and the cold air from
the dark side comes rushing under to fill the vacuum. Naturally, our
strip of twilight country is never free of winds too high and fierce to
fight. No crops can grow outside, no domestic animals flourish. We must
pen ourselves away from the sky and soil, with stout walls and heavy
sunken parapets. Our deep mines afford every element for necessities of
life."
I looked at my garments, and hers. There were various kinds of fabric,
which I now saw plainly to be synthetic. "The other side, where those
you call the Newcomers dwell and fight," I reminded. "Is it also
windswept? Why can two people not join forces and face toil and nature
together? They should fight, not each other, but the elements."
Doriza had no answer that time, but Sporr spoke up behind us: "Great
Yandro is wise as well as powerful. But the Newcomers do not want to
help, not even to conquer. They want to obliterate us. There is nothing
to do—not for lifetimes—but to fight them back at the two poles."
We came to a main corridor. It had a line of armed guards, but no
pedestrians or vehicles, though I thought I caught a murmur of far-off
traffic. Doriza paused before a great portal, closed by a curtainlike
sheet of dull metal. She spoke into a mouthpiece:
"Doriza, gentlewoman of the guard, conducts Yandro, the Conquering
Stranger, to greet his lieutenants!"
I have said that the portal was closed by a curtainlike metal sheet;
and like a curtain it lifted, letting us through into the auditorium.
That spacious chamber had rows of benches, with galleries above, that
might have seated a thousand. However, only a dozen or so were present,
on metal chairs ranged across the stage upon which we entered. They
were all men but two, and wore robes of black, plum-purple or red. At
sight of me, they rose together, most respectfully. They looked at me,
and I looked at them.
My first thought was, that if these were people of authority and trust
in the nation I seemed destined to save, my work was cut out for me.
Not that they really seemed stupid—none had the look, or the
subsequent action, of stupidity. But they were not pleasant. Their
dozen pairs of eyes fixed me with some steadiness, but with no
frankness anywhere. One man had a round, greedy-seeming face. Another
was too narrow and cunning to look it. Of the women, one was nearly
as tall as I and nobly proportioned, with hair of a red that would be
inspiring were it not so blatantly dyed. The other was a little wisp of
a brunette, with teeth too big for her scarlet mouth and bright eyes
like some sort of a rodent. They all wore jewelry. Too much jewelry.
My mind flew back to the two scrubby, venial guardsmen who had first
welcomed me; to stuffy Rohbar, the commander; to Sporr, spry and clever
enough, but somehow unwholesome; Doriza—no, she was not like these
others, who may have lived too long in their earth-buried shelters. And
Doriza now spoke to the gathering:
"Yandro, folk of the Council! He deigns to give you audience."
"
Yandro!
"
They all spoke the name in chorus, and bowed toward me.
Silence then, a silence which evidently I must break. I broke it:
"Friends, I am among you with no more memory or knowledge than an
infant. I hear wonderful things, of which I seem to be the center. Are
they true?"
"The tenth part of the wonders which concern mighty Yandro have not
been told," intoned Sporr, ducking his bearded head in a bow, but
fixing me with his wise old eyes.
One of the group, called Council by Doriza, now moved a pace forward.
He was the greedy-faced man, short but plump, and very conscious of
the dignified folds of his purple robe. One carefully-tended hand
brushed back his ginger-brown hair, then toyed with a little moustache.
"I am Gederr, senior of this Council," he purred. "If Yandro permits, I
will speak simply. Our hopes have been raised by Yandro's return—the
return presaged of old by those who could see the future, and more
recently by the death in battle of the Newcomer champion, called Barak."
"Barak!" I repeated. "I—I—" And I paused. When I had to learn my own
name, how could it be that I sensed memory of another's name?
"Barak was a brute—mighty, but a brute." Thus Gederr continued.
"Weapons in his hands were the instruments of fate. His hands alone
caused fear and ruin. But it pleased our fortune-bringing stars to
encompass his destruction." He grinned, and licked his full lips. "Now,
even as they are without their battle-leader, so we have ours."
"You honor me," I told him. "Yet I still know little. It seems that I
am expected to aid and lead and save the people of this world called
Dondromogon. But I must know them before I can help."
Gederr turned his eyes upon the woman with the red hair, and gestured
to her "Tell him, Elonie." Then he faced me. "Have we Yandro's
permission to sit?"
"By all means," I granted, a little impatiently, and sat down myself.
The others followed suit—the Council on their range of chairs, Doriza
on a bench near me, Sporr somewhere behind. The woman called Elonie
remained upon her sandalled feet, great eyes the color of deep green
water fixed upon me.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/3/0/9/63097//63097-h//63097-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | What is the meaning of Dondromogon’s two extreme hemispheres?
| 63097_4CW2KAPS_7 | [
"It causes its people to develop two vastly different cultures, creating social tension.\n",
"It causes its people to search for prophets, martyrs, and heroes, symbolizing the schizophrenia of the planet’s inhabitants. \n",
"It causes its people to live underground, giving the story its setting. \n",
"It causes its inhabitant groups to fight over what amount of the planet is habitable, the two extremes symbolizing the split between peoples. \n"
] | 4 | 4 | [
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63,097 | 63097_4CW2KAPS | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Warrior of Two Worlds | 1954.0 | Wellman, Manly Wade | Science fiction; War stories; Adventure stories; PS; Prophecies -- Fiction | Warrior of Two Worlds
By MANLY WADE WELLMAN
He was the man of two planets, drawn through
the blackness of space to save a nation from
ruthless invaders. He was Yandro, the
Stranger of the Prophecy—and he found that
he was destined to fight both sides.
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Planet Stories Summer 1944.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
My senses came to me slowly and somehow shyly, as if not sure of their
way or welcome. I felt first—pressure on my brow and chest, as if I
lay face downward; then the tug and buffet of a strong, probing wind,
insistent but not cold, upon my naked skin. Closing my hands, I felt
them dig into coarse dirt. I turned my face downwind and opened my
eyes. There was little to see, so thick was the dust cloud around me.
Words formed themselves on my thick tongue, words that must have been
spoken by so many reviving unfortunates through the ages:
"Where am I?"
And at once there was an answer:
"
You lie upon the world Dondromogon.
"
I knew the language of that answer, but where it came from—above,
beneath, or indeed within me—I could not say. I lifted a hand, and
knuckled dust from my eyes.
"How did I get here?" I demanded of the speaker.
"It was ordered—by the Masters of the Worlds—that you should be
brought from your own home planet, called Earth in the System of the
star called Sun. Do you remember Earth?"
And I did not know whether I remembered or not. Vague matters stirred
deep in me, but I could not for certain say they were memories. I asked
yet again:
"Who am I?"
The voice had a note of triumph. "You do not know that. It is as well,
for this will be a birth and beginning of your destined leadership on
Dondromogon."
"Destined—leadership—" I began to repeat, and fell silent. I had
need to think. The voice was telling me that I had been snatched from
worlds away, for a specified purpose here on whatever windswept planet
Dondromogon might be. "Birth and beginning—destined leadership—"
Fantastic! And yet, for all I could say to the contrary, unvarnishedly
true.
"Dondromogon?" I mumbled. "The name is strange to me."
"It is a world the size of your native one," came words of information.
"Around a star it spins, light-years away from the world of your
birth. One face of Dondromogon ever looks to the light and heat,
wherefore its metals run in glowing seas. The other face is ever away
in cold darkness, with its air freezing into solid chunks. But because
Dondromogon wavers on its axis, there are two lunes of its surface
which from time to time shift from night to day. These are habitable."
My eyes were tight shut against the dust, but they saw in imagination
such a planet—one-half incandescent, one-half pitchy black. From pole
to pole on opposite sides ran the two twilight zones, widest at the
equators like the outer rind of two slices of melon. Of course, such
areas, between the hot and cold hemispheres, would be buffeted by
mighty gales ... the voice was to be heard again:
"War is fought between the two strips of habitable ground. War,
unceasing, bitter, with no quarter asked, given or expected.
Dondromogon was found and settled long ago, by adventurers from afar.
Now come invaders, to reap the benefits of discovery and toil." A
pause. "You find that thought unpleasant? You wish to right that
wrong?"
"Anyone would wish that," I replied. "But how—"
"You are going to ask how you were brought here. That is the mystery
of the
Masters
." The voice became grand. "Suffice it that you were
needed, and that the time was ripe. There is a proper time, like a
proper place, for each thing and each happening. Now, go to your
destiny."
I rose on my knees, shielding my face from the buffeting wind by
lifting a forearm. Somewhere through the murky clouds showed a dim
blocky silhouette, a building of sorts.
The voice spoke no more. I had not the time to wonder about it. I got
to my feet, bent double to keep from being blown over, and staggered
toward the promised haven.
I reached it, groped along until I found a door. There was no latch,
handle or entry button, and I pounded heavily on the massive panels.
The door opened from within, and I was blown inside, to fall sprawling.
I struck my forehead upon a floor of stone or concrete, and so was
half-stunned, but still I could distinguish something like the sound
of agitated voices. Then I felt myself grasped, by both shoulders,
and drawn roughly erect. The touch restored my senses, and I wrenched
myself violently free.
What had seized me? That was my first wonder. On this strange world
called Dondromogon, what manner of intelligent life bade defiance to
heat and cold and storm, and built these stout structures, and now laid
hands—were they hands indeed?—upon me? I swung around, setting my
back to a solid wall.
My first glance showed me that my companions were creatures like
myself—two-legged, fair-skinned men, shorter and slighter than I, but
clad in metal-faced garments and wearing weapons in their girdles. I
saw that each bore a swordlike device with a curved guard, set in a
narrow sheath as long as my arm. Each also had a shorter weapon, with
a curved stock to fit the palm of the hand, borne snugly in a holster.
With such arms I had a faint sense of familiarity.
"Who are you, and where are you from?" said one of the two, a
broad-faced middle-aged fellow. "Don't lie any more than you can help."
I felt a stirring of the hair on my neck, but kept my voice mild and
level: "Why should I lie? Especially as I don't know who I am, or where
I'm from, or anything that has happened longer ago than just a moment.
I woke up out there in the dust storm, and I managed to come here for
shelter."
"He's a Newcomer spy," quoth the other. "Let's put him under arrest."
"And leave this gate unguarded?" demanded the other. "Sound the
signal," and he jerked his head toward a system of levers and gauges on
the wall beside the door-jamb.
"There's a bigger reward for capture than for warning," objected
his friend in turn, "and whoever comes to take this man will claim
'capture.' I'll guard here, and you take him in, then we'll divide—"
"No. Yours is the idea. I'll guard and you take him in." The second man
studied me apprehensively. "He's big, and looks strong, even without
weapons."
"Don't be afraid," I urged. "I'll make no resistance, if you'll only
conduct me to your commander. I can show him that I'm no spy or enemy."
Both stared narrowly. "No spy? No enemy?" asked the broad-faced one who
had first spoken. Then, to his comrade: "No reward, then."
"I think there'll be a reward," was the rejoinder, and the second man's
hand stole to the sword-weapon. With a whispering rasp it cleared from
its scabbard. "If he's dead, we get pay for both warning and capture—"
His thumb touched a button at the pommel of the hilt. The dull blade
suddenly glowed like heated iron, and from it crackled and pulsed
little rainbow rays.
There was no time to think or plan or ponder. I moved in, with a
knowing speed that surprised me as much as the two guards. Catching the
fellow's weapon wrist, I clamped it firmly and bent it back and around.
He whimpered and swore, and his glowing sword dropped. Its radiant
blade almost fell on my naked foot. Before the clang of its fall was
through echoing, I had caught it up, and set the point within inches of
its owner's unprotected face.
"Quiet, or I'll roast you," I told him.
The other had drawn a weapon of his own, a pistol-form arrangement.
I turned on him, but too late. He pressed the trigger, and from the
muzzle came—not a projectile but a flying, spouting filament of cord
that seemed to spring on me like a long thin snake and to fasten coil
after coil around my body. The stuff that gushed from the gun-muzzle
seemed plastic in form, but hardened so quickly upon contact with the
air, it bound me like wire. Half a dozen adroit motions of the fellow's
gun hand, and my arms were caught to my body. I dropped my sword to
prevent it burning me, and tried to break away, but my bonds were too
much for me.
"Let me out of this," I growled, and kicked at the man with my still
unbound foot. He snapped a half-hitch on my ankle, and threw me
heavily. Triumphant laughter came from both adversaries. Then:
"What's this?"
The challenge was clear, rich, authoritative. Someone else had come,
from a rearward door into the stone-walled vestibule where the
encounter was taking place.
A woman this time, not of great height, and robust but not heavy. She
was dressed for vigorous action in dark slacks with buskins to make
them snug around ankles and calves, a jerkin of stout material that was
faced with metal armor plates and left bare her round, strong arms. A
gold-worked fillet bound her tawny hair back from a rosy, bold-featured
face—a nose that was positively regal, a mouth short and firm but not
hard, and blue eyes that just now burned and questioned. She wore a
holstered pistol, and a cross-belt supported several instruments of a
kind I could not remember seeing before. A crimson cloak gave color and
dignity to her costume, and plainly she was someone of position, for
both the men stiffened to attention.
"A spy," one ventured. "He pushed in, claimed he was no enemy, then
tried to attack—"
"They lie," I broke in, very conscious of my naked helplessness before
her regard. "They wanted to kill me and be rewarded for a false story
of vigilance. I only defended myself."
"Get him on his feet," the young woman said, and the two guards
obeyed. Then her eyes studied me again. "Gods! What a mountain of a
man!" she exclaimed. "Can you walk, stranger?"
"Barely, with these bonds."
"Then manage to do so." She flung off her cloak and draped it over my
nakedness. "Walk along beside me. No tricks, and I promise you fair
hearing."
We went through the door by which she had entered, into a corridor
beyond. It was lighted by small, brilliant bulbs at regular intervals.
Beyond, it gave into several passages. She chose one of them and
conducted me along. "You are surely not of us," she commented. "Men I
have seen who are heavier than you, but none taller. Whence came you?"
I remembered the strange voice that had instructed me. "I am from a
far world," I replied. "It is called—yes, Earth. Beyond that, I know
nothing. Memory left me."
"The story is a strange one," she commented. "And your name?"
"I do not know that, either. Who are you?"
"Doriza—a gentlewoman of the guard. My inspection tour brought me by
chance to where you fought my outposts. But it is not for you to ask
questions. Enter here."
We passed through another door, and I found myself in an office. A man
in richly-embossed armor platings sat there. He had a fringe of pale
beard, and his eyes were bluer than the gentlewoman Doriza's.
She made a gesture of salute, hand at shoulder height, and reported the
matter. He nodded for her to fall back to a corner.
"Stranger," he said to me, "can you think of no better tale to tell
than you now offer?"
"I tell the truth," was my reply, not very gracious.
"You will have to prove that," he admonished me.
"What proof have I?" I demanded. "On this world of yours—Dondromogon,
isn't it called?—I'm no more than an hour old. Accident or shock
has taken my memory. Let me have a medical examination. A scientist
probably can tell what happened to put me in such a condition."
"I am a scientist," offered Doriza, and came forward. Her eyes met
mine, suddenly flickered and lowered. "His gaze," she muttered.
The officer at the table was touching a button. An attendant appeared,
received an order, and vanished again. In a few moments two other
men came—one a heavily armed officer of rank, the other an elderly,
bearded fellow in a voluminous robe that enfolded him in most dignified
manner.
This latter man opened wide his clear old eyes at sight of me.
"The stranger of the prophecy!" he cried, in a voice that made us all
jump.
The officer rose from behind the table. "Are you totally mad, Sporr?
You mystic doctors are too apt to become fuddled—"
"But it is, it is!" The graybeard flourished a thin hand at me. "Look
at him, you of little faith! Your mind dwells so much on material
strength that you lose touch with the spiritual—"
He broke off, and wheeled on the attendant who had led him in. "To my
study," he commanded. "On the shelf behind my desk, bring the great
gold-bound book that is third from the right." Then he turned back,
and bowed toward me. "Surely you are Yandro, the Conquering Stranger,"
he said, intoning as if in formal prayer. "Pardon these short-sighted
ones—deign to save us from our enemies—"
The girl Doriza spoke to the officer: "If Sporr speaks truth, and he
generally does, you have committed a blasphemy."
The other made a little grimace. "This may be Yandro, though I'm a
plain soldier and follow the classics very little. The First Comers are
souls to worship, not to study. If indeed he is Yandro," and he was
most respectful, "he will appreciate, like a good military mind, my
caution against possible impostors."
"Who might Yandro be?" I demanded, very uncomfortable in my bonds and
loose draperies.
Old Sporr almost crowed. "You see? If he was a true imposter, he would
come equipped with all plausible knowledge. As it is—"
"As it is, he may remember that the Conquering Stranger is foretold
to come with no memory of anything," supplied the officer. "Score one
against you, Sporr. You should have been able to instruct me, not I
you."
The attendant reentered, with a big book in his hands. It looked
old and well-thumbed, with dim gold traceries on its binding. Sporr
snatched it, and turned to a brightly colored picture. He looked once,
his beard gaped, and he dropped to his knees.
"Happy, happy the day," he jabbered, "that I was spared to see our
great champion come among us in the flesh, as was foretold of ancient
time by the First Comers!"
Doriza and the officer crossed to his side, snatching the book. Their
bright heads bent above it. Doriza was first to speak. "It is very
like," she half-stammered.
The officer faced me, with a sort of baffled respect.
"I still say you will understand my caution," he addressed me, with
real respect and shyness this time. "If you are Yandro himself, you can
prove it. The prophecy even sketches a thumb-print—" And he held the
book toward me.
It contained a full-page likeness, in color, of myself wrapped in a
scarlet robe. Under this was considerable printed description, and to
one side a thumb-print, or a drawing of one, in black.
"Behold," Doriza was saying, "matters which even expert identification
men take into thought. The ears in the picture are like the ears of the
real man—"
"That could be plastic surgery," rejoined the officer. "Such things are
artfully done by the Newcomers, and the red mantle he wears more easily
assumed."
Doriza shook her head. "That happens to be my cloak. I gave it to him
because he was naked, and not for any treasonable masquerade. But the
thumb-print—"
"Oh, yes, the thumb-print," I repeated wearily. "By all means, study my
thumbs, if you'll first take these bonds off of me."
"Bonds," mumbled old Sporr. He got creakily up from his knees and
bustled to me. From under his robe he produced a pouch, and took out a
pencil-sized rod. Gingerly opening the red mantle, he touched my tether
in several places with the glowing end of the rod. The coils dropped
away from my grateful body and limbs. I thrust out my hands.
"Thumb-prints?" I offered.
Sporr had produced something else, a little vial of dark pigment. He
carefully anointed one of my thumbs, and pressed it to the page. All
three gazed.
"The same," said Doriza.
And they were all on their knees before me.
"Forgive me, great Yandro," said the officer thickly. "I did not know."
"Get up," I bade them. "I want to hear why I was first bound, and now
worshipped."
II
They rose, but stood off respectfully. The officer spoke first. "I am
Rohbar, field commander of this defense position," he said with crisp
respect. "Sporr is a mystic doctor, full of godly wisdom. Doriza,
a junior officer and chief of the guard. And you—how could you
know?—are sent by the First Comers to save us from our enemies."
"Enemies?" I repeated.
"The Newcomers," supplemented Doriza. "They have taken the "Other Side"
of Dondromogon, and would take our side as well. We defend ourselves
at the poles. Now," and her voice rang joyously, "you will lead us to
defeat and crush them utterly!"
"Not naked like this," I said, and laughed. I must have sounded
foolish, but it had its effect.
"Follow me, deign to follow me," Sporr said. "Your clothing, your
quarters, your destiny, all await you."
We went out by the door at the rear, and Sporr respectfully gestured me
upon a metal-plated platform. Standing beside me, he tinkered with a
lever. We dropped smoothly away into a dark corridor, past level after
level of light and sound.
"Our cities are below ground," he quavered. "Whipped by winds above,
we must scrabble in the depths for life's necessities—chemicals to
transmute into food, to weave into clothing, to weld into tools and
weapons—"
The mention of food brought to me the thought that I was hungry. I said
as much, even as our elevator platform came to the lowest level and
stopped.
"I have arranged for that," Sporr began, then fell silent, fingers
combing his beard in embarrassment.
"Arranged food for me?" I prompted sharply. "As if you know I had come?
What—"
"Pardon, great Yandro," babbled Sporr. "I was saying that I arranged
food, as always, for whatever guest should come. Please follow."
We entered a new small chamber, where a table was set with dishes of
porcelain-like plastic. Sporr held a chair for me, and waited on me
with the utmost gingerly respect. The food was a pungent and filling
jelly, a little bundle of transparent leaves or scraps like cellophane
and tasting of spice, and a tumbler of pink juice. I felt refreshed and
satisfied, and thanked Sporr, who led me on to the next room.
"Behold!" he said, with a dramatic gesture. "Your garments, even as
they have been preserved against your coming!"
It was a sleeping chamber, with a cot made fast to the wall, a metal
locker or cupboard, with a glass door through which showed the garments
of which Sporr spoke.
The door closed softly behind me—I was left alone.
Knowing that it was expected of me, I went to the locker and opened
the door. The garments inside were old, I could see, but well kept and
serviceable. I studied their type, and my hands, if not my mind, seemed
familiar with them.
There was a kiltlike item, belted at the waist and falling to
mid-thigh. A resilient band at the top, with a series of belt-holes,
made it adaptable to my own body or to any other. Then came an upper
garment, a long strip of soft, close-woven fabric that spiralled
around the torso from hip to armpit, the end looping over the left
shoulder and giving full play to the arms. A gold-worked fillet bound
the brows and swept back my longish hair, knotting at the nape of the
neck. The only fitted articles were a pair of shoes, metal-soled and
soft-uppered, that went on well enough and ran cross-garters up to
below the knee, like buskins. The case also held a platinum chain for
the neck, a belt-bag, and a handsome sword, with clips to fasten them
in place. These things, too, I donned, and closed the glass door.
The light struck it at such an angle as to make it serve for a
full-length mirror. With some curiosity I gazed at my image.
The close-fitting costume was rich and dark, with bright colors only
for edgings and minor accessories. I myself—and it was as if I saw my
body for the first time—towered rather bluffly, with great breadth
of chest and shoulder, and legs robust enough to carry such bulk. The
face was square but haggard, as if from some toil or pain which was now
wiped from my recollection. That nose had been even bigger than it was
now, but a fracture had shortened it somewhat. The eyes were deep set
and dark and moody—small wonder!—the chin heavy, the mouth made grim
by a scar at one corner. Black, shaggy hair hung down like brackets.
All told, I looked like a proper person for physical labor, or even
fierce fighting—but surely no inspirational leader or savior of a
distressed people.
I took the military cloak which Doriza had lent me and slung it over my
shoulders. Turning, I clanked out on my metal-soled shoes.
Sporr was waiting in the room where I had eaten. His eyes widened at
sight of me, something like a grin of triumph flashed through his
beard. Then he bowed, supple and humble, his palms together.
"It is indeed Yandro, our great chief," he mumbled. Then he turned and
crossed the room. A sort of mouthpiece sprouted from the wall.
"I announce," he intoned into it. "I announce, I, Sporr, the reader and
fore-teller of wisdom. Yandro is with us, he awaits his partners and
friends. Let them meet him in the audience hall."
Facing me again, he motioned most respectfully toward the door to the
hall. I moved to open it, and he followed, muttering.
Outside stood Doriza. Her blue eyes met mine, and her lips moved to
frame a word. Then, suddenly, she was on her knee, catching my hand and
kissing it.
"I serve Yandro," she vowed tremulously. "Now and forever—and happy
that I was fated to live when he returned for the rescue of all
Dondromogon."
"Please get up," I bade her, trying not to sound as embarrassed as I
felt. "Come with me. There is still much that I do not understand."
"I am Yandro's orderly and helper," she said. Rising, she ranged
herself at my left hand. "Will Yandro come this way? He will be awaited
in the audience hall."
It seemed to me then that the corridors were vast and mixed as a
labyrinth, but Doriza guided me without the slightest hesitation past
one tangled crossway after another. My questions she answered with a
mixture of awe and brightness.
"It is necessary that we live like this," she explained. "The hot air
of Dondromogon's sunlit face is ever rising, and the cold air from
the dark side comes rushing under to fill the vacuum. Naturally, our
strip of twilight country is never free of winds too high and fierce to
fight. No crops can grow outside, no domestic animals flourish. We must
pen ourselves away from the sky and soil, with stout walls and heavy
sunken parapets. Our deep mines afford every element for necessities of
life."
I looked at my garments, and hers. There were various kinds of fabric,
which I now saw plainly to be synthetic. "The other side, where those
you call the Newcomers dwell and fight," I reminded. "Is it also
windswept? Why can two people not join forces and face toil and nature
together? They should fight, not each other, but the elements."
Doriza had no answer that time, but Sporr spoke up behind us: "Great
Yandro is wise as well as powerful. But the Newcomers do not want to
help, not even to conquer. They want to obliterate us. There is nothing
to do—not for lifetimes—but to fight them back at the two poles."
We came to a main corridor. It had a line of armed guards, but no
pedestrians or vehicles, though I thought I caught a murmur of far-off
traffic. Doriza paused before a great portal, closed by a curtainlike
sheet of dull metal. She spoke into a mouthpiece:
"Doriza, gentlewoman of the guard, conducts Yandro, the Conquering
Stranger, to greet his lieutenants!"
I have said that the portal was closed by a curtainlike metal sheet;
and like a curtain it lifted, letting us through into the auditorium.
That spacious chamber had rows of benches, with galleries above, that
might have seated a thousand. However, only a dozen or so were present,
on metal chairs ranged across the stage upon which we entered. They
were all men but two, and wore robes of black, plum-purple or red. At
sight of me, they rose together, most respectfully. They looked at me,
and I looked at them.
My first thought was, that if these were people of authority and trust
in the nation I seemed destined to save, my work was cut out for me.
Not that they really seemed stupid—none had the look, or the
subsequent action, of stupidity. But they were not pleasant. Their
dozen pairs of eyes fixed me with some steadiness, but with no
frankness anywhere. One man had a round, greedy-seeming face. Another
was too narrow and cunning to look it. Of the women, one was nearly
as tall as I and nobly proportioned, with hair of a red that would be
inspiring were it not so blatantly dyed. The other was a little wisp of
a brunette, with teeth too big for her scarlet mouth and bright eyes
like some sort of a rodent. They all wore jewelry. Too much jewelry.
My mind flew back to the two scrubby, venial guardsmen who had first
welcomed me; to stuffy Rohbar, the commander; to Sporr, spry and clever
enough, but somehow unwholesome; Doriza—no, she was not like these
others, who may have lived too long in their earth-buried shelters. And
Doriza now spoke to the gathering:
"Yandro, folk of the Council! He deigns to give you audience."
"
Yandro!
"
They all spoke the name in chorus, and bowed toward me.
Silence then, a silence which evidently I must break. I broke it:
"Friends, I am among you with no more memory or knowledge than an
infant. I hear wonderful things, of which I seem to be the center. Are
they true?"
"The tenth part of the wonders which concern mighty Yandro have not
been told," intoned Sporr, ducking his bearded head in a bow, but
fixing me with his wise old eyes.
One of the group, called Council by Doriza, now moved a pace forward.
He was the greedy-faced man, short but plump, and very conscious of
the dignified folds of his purple robe. One carefully-tended hand
brushed back his ginger-brown hair, then toyed with a little moustache.
"I am Gederr, senior of this Council," he purred. "If Yandro permits, I
will speak simply. Our hopes have been raised by Yandro's return—the
return presaged of old by those who could see the future, and more
recently by the death in battle of the Newcomer champion, called Barak."
"Barak!" I repeated. "I—I—" And I paused. When I had to learn my own
name, how could it be that I sensed memory of another's name?
"Barak was a brute—mighty, but a brute." Thus Gederr continued.
"Weapons in his hands were the instruments of fate. His hands alone
caused fear and ruin. But it pleased our fortune-bringing stars to
encompass his destruction." He grinned, and licked his full lips. "Now,
even as they are without their battle-leader, so we have ours."
"You honor me," I told him. "Yet I still know little. It seems that I
am expected to aid and lead and save the people of this world called
Dondromogon. But I must know them before I can help."
Gederr turned his eyes upon the woman with the red hair, and gestured
to her "Tell him, Elonie." Then he faced me. "Have we Yandro's
permission to sit?"
"By all means," I granted, a little impatiently, and sat down myself.
The others followed suit—the Council on their range of chairs, Doriza
on a bench near me, Sporr somewhere behind. The woman called Elonie
remained upon her sandalled feet, great eyes the color of deep green
water fixed upon me.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/3/0/9/63097//63097-h//63097-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | How do people live on Dondromogon? What is an example of a repercussion its people suffer as a result of its extreme temperatures?
| 63097_4CW2KAPS_8 | [
"They have to battle the extreme heat and extreme cold. Because of these intense temperatures people suffer, wars often start out of general agitation. \n",
"The live deep in the ground. They can only survive above ground for a short period, so they have to find what they need and quickly bring it back underground. \n",
"The live deep in the ground. They have to find all necessities for life, such as food, deep within the mines they dug to survive. \n",
"They live in a great temple, exactly on the twilight line between the light and dark side of their planet. They have to find all necessities for life inside. \n"
] | 3 | 3 | [
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63,097 | 63097_4CW2KAPS | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Warrior of Two Worlds | 1954.0 | Wellman, Manly Wade | Science fiction; War stories; Adventure stories; PS; Prophecies -- Fiction | Warrior of Two Worlds
By MANLY WADE WELLMAN
He was the man of two planets, drawn through
the blackness of space to save a nation from
ruthless invaders. He was Yandro, the
Stranger of the Prophecy—and he found that
he was destined to fight both sides.
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Planet Stories Summer 1944.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
My senses came to me slowly and somehow shyly, as if not sure of their
way or welcome. I felt first—pressure on my brow and chest, as if I
lay face downward; then the tug and buffet of a strong, probing wind,
insistent but not cold, upon my naked skin. Closing my hands, I felt
them dig into coarse dirt. I turned my face downwind and opened my
eyes. There was little to see, so thick was the dust cloud around me.
Words formed themselves on my thick tongue, words that must have been
spoken by so many reviving unfortunates through the ages:
"Where am I?"
And at once there was an answer:
"
You lie upon the world Dondromogon.
"
I knew the language of that answer, but where it came from—above,
beneath, or indeed within me—I could not say. I lifted a hand, and
knuckled dust from my eyes.
"How did I get here?" I demanded of the speaker.
"It was ordered—by the Masters of the Worlds—that you should be
brought from your own home planet, called Earth in the System of the
star called Sun. Do you remember Earth?"
And I did not know whether I remembered or not. Vague matters stirred
deep in me, but I could not for certain say they were memories. I asked
yet again:
"Who am I?"
The voice had a note of triumph. "You do not know that. It is as well,
for this will be a birth and beginning of your destined leadership on
Dondromogon."
"Destined—leadership—" I began to repeat, and fell silent. I had
need to think. The voice was telling me that I had been snatched from
worlds away, for a specified purpose here on whatever windswept planet
Dondromogon might be. "Birth and beginning—destined leadership—"
Fantastic! And yet, for all I could say to the contrary, unvarnishedly
true.
"Dondromogon?" I mumbled. "The name is strange to me."
"It is a world the size of your native one," came words of information.
"Around a star it spins, light-years away from the world of your
birth. One face of Dondromogon ever looks to the light and heat,
wherefore its metals run in glowing seas. The other face is ever away
in cold darkness, with its air freezing into solid chunks. But because
Dondromogon wavers on its axis, there are two lunes of its surface
which from time to time shift from night to day. These are habitable."
My eyes were tight shut against the dust, but they saw in imagination
such a planet—one-half incandescent, one-half pitchy black. From pole
to pole on opposite sides ran the two twilight zones, widest at the
equators like the outer rind of two slices of melon. Of course, such
areas, between the hot and cold hemispheres, would be buffeted by
mighty gales ... the voice was to be heard again:
"War is fought between the two strips of habitable ground. War,
unceasing, bitter, with no quarter asked, given or expected.
Dondromogon was found and settled long ago, by adventurers from afar.
Now come invaders, to reap the benefits of discovery and toil." A
pause. "You find that thought unpleasant? You wish to right that
wrong?"
"Anyone would wish that," I replied. "But how—"
"You are going to ask how you were brought here. That is the mystery
of the
Masters
." The voice became grand. "Suffice it that you were
needed, and that the time was ripe. There is a proper time, like a
proper place, for each thing and each happening. Now, go to your
destiny."
I rose on my knees, shielding my face from the buffeting wind by
lifting a forearm. Somewhere through the murky clouds showed a dim
blocky silhouette, a building of sorts.
The voice spoke no more. I had not the time to wonder about it. I got
to my feet, bent double to keep from being blown over, and staggered
toward the promised haven.
I reached it, groped along until I found a door. There was no latch,
handle or entry button, and I pounded heavily on the massive panels.
The door opened from within, and I was blown inside, to fall sprawling.
I struck my forehead upon a floor of stone or concrete, and so was
half-stunned, but still I could distinguish something like the sound
of agitated voices. Then I felt myself grasped, by both shoulders,
and drawn roughly erect. The touch restored my senses, and I wrenched
myself violently free.
What had seized me? That was my first wonder. On this strange world
called Dondromogon, what manner of intelligent life bade defiance to
heat and cold and storm, and built these stout structures, and now laid
hands—were they hands indeed?—upon me? I swung around, setting my
back to a solid wall.
My first glance showed me that my companions were creatures like
myself—two-legged, fair-skinned men, shorter and slighter than I, but
clad in metal-faced garments and wearing weapons in their girdles. I
saw that each bore a swordlike device with a curved guard, set in a
narrow sheath as long as my arm. Each also had a shorter weapon, with
a curved stock to fit the palm of the hand, borne snugly in a holster.
With such arms I had a faint sense of familiarity.
"Who are you, and where are you from?" said one of the two, a
broad-faced middle-aged fellow. "Don't lie any more than you can help."
I felt a stirring of the hair on my neck, but kept my voice mild and
level: "Why should I lie? Especially as I don't know who I am, or where
I'm from, or anything that has happened longer ago than just a moment.
I woke up out there in the dust storm, and I managed to come here for
shelter."
"He's a Newcomer spy," quoth the other. "Let's put him under arrest."
"And leave this gate unguarded?" demanded the other. "Sound the
signal," and he jerked his head toward a system of levers and gauges on
the wall beside the door-jamb.
"There's a bigger reward for capture than for warning," objected
his friend in turn, "and whoever comes to take this man will claim
'capture.' I'll guard here, and you take him in, then we'll divide—"
"No. Yours is the idea. I'll guard and you take him in." The second man
studied me apprehensively. "He's big, and looks strong, even without
weapons."
"Don't be afraid," I urged. "I'll make no resistance, if you'll only
conduct me to your commander. I can show him that I'm no spy or enemy."
Both stared narrowly. "No spy? No enemy?" asked the broad-faced one who
had first spoken. Then, to his comrade: "No reward, then."
"I think there'll be a reward," was the rejoinder, and the second man's
hand stole to the sword-weapon. With a whispering rasp it cleared from
its scabbard. "If he's dead, we get pay for both warning and capture—"
His thumb touched a button at the pommel of the hilt. The dull blade
suddenly glowed like heated iron, and from it crackled and pulsed
little rainbow rays.
There was no time to think or plan or ponder. I moved in, with a
knowing speed that surprised me as much as the two guards. Catching the
fellow's weapon wrist, I clamped it firmly and bent it back and around.
He whimpered and swore, and his glowing sword dropped. Its radiant
blade almost fell on my naked foot. Before the clang of its fall was
through echoing, I had caught it up, and set the point within inches of
its owner's unprotected face.
"Quiet, or I'll roast you," I told him.
The other had drawn a weapon of his own, a pistol-form arrangement.
I turned on him, but too late. He pressed the trigger, and from the
muzzle came—not a projectile but a flying, spouting filament of cord
that seemed to spring on me like a long thin snake and to fasten coil
after coil around my body. The stuff that gushed from the gun-muzzle
seemed plastic in form, but hardened so quickly upon contact with the
air, it bound me like wire. Half a dozen adroit motions of the fellow's
gun hand, and my arms were caught to my body. I dropped my sword to
prevent it burning me, and tried to break away, but my bonds were too
much for me.
"Let me out of this," I growled, and kicked at the man with my still
unbound foot. He snapped a half-hitch on my ankle, and threw me
heavily. Triumphant laughter came from both adversaries. Then:
"What's this?"
The challenge was clear, rich, authoritative. Someone else had come,
from a rearward door into the stone-walled vestibule where the
encounter was taking place.
A woman this time, not of great height, and robust but not heavy. She
was dressed for vigorous action in dark slacks with buskins to make
them snug around ankles and calves, a jerkin of stout material that was
faced with metal armor plates and left bare her round, strong arms. A
gold-worked fillet bound her tawny hair back from a rosy, bold-featured
face—a nose that was positively regal, a mouth short and firm but not
hard, and blue eyes that just now burned and questioned. She wore a
holstered pistol, and a cross-belt supported several instruments of a
kind I could not remember seeing before. A crimson cloak gave color and
dignity to her costume, and plainly she was someone of position, for
both the men stiffened to attention.
"A spy," one ventured. "He pushed in, claimed he was no enemy, then
tried to attack—"
"They lie," I broke in, very conscious of my naked helplessness before
her regard. "They wanted to kill me and be rewarded for a false story
of vigilance. I only defended myself."
"Get him on his feet," the young woman said, and the two guards
obeyed. Then her eyes studied me again. "Gods! What a mountain of a
man!" she exclaimed. "Can you walk, stranger?"
"Barely, with these bonds."
"Then manage to do so." She flung off her cloak and draped it over my
nakedness. "Walk along beside me. No tricks, and I promise you fair
hearing."
We went through the door by which she had entered, into a corridor
beyond. It was lighted by small, brilliant bulbs at regular intervals.
Beyond, it gave into several passages. She chose one of them and
conducted me along. "You are surely not of us," she commented. "Men I
have seen who are heavier than you, but none taller. Whence came you?"
I remembered the strange voice that had instructed me. "I am from a
far world," I replied. "It is called—yes, Earth. Beyond that, I know
nothing. Memory left me."
"The story is a strange one," she commented. "And your name?"
"I do not know that, either. Who are you?"
"Doriza—a gentlewoman of the guard. My inspection tour brought me by
chance to where you fought my outposts. But it is not for you to ask
questions. Enter here."
We passed through another door, and I found myself in an office. A man
in richly-embossed armor platings sat there. He had a fringe of pale
beard, and his eyes were bluer than the gentlewoman Doriza's.
She made a gesture of salute, hand at shoulder height, and reported the
matter. He nodded for her to fall back to a corner.
"Stranger," he said to me, "can you think of no better tale to tell
than you now offer?"
"I tell the truth," was my reply, not very gracious.
"You will have to prove that," he admonished me.
"What proof have I?" I demanded. "On this world of yours—Dondromogon,
isn't it called?—I'm no more than an hour old. Accident or shock
has taken my memory. Let me have a medical examination. A scientist
probably can tell what happened to put me in such a condition."
"I am a scientist," offered Doriza, and came forward. Her eyes met
mine, suddenly flickered and lowered. "His gaze," she muttered.
The officer at the table was touching a button. An attendant appeared,
received an order, and vanished again. In a few moments two other
men came—one a heavily armed officer of rank, the other an elderly,
bearded fellow in a voluminous robe that enfolded him in most dignified
manner.
This latter man opened wide his clear old eyes at sight of me.
"The stranger of the prophecy!" he cried, in a voice that made us all
jump.
The officer rose from behind the table. "Are you totally mad, Sporr?
You mystic doctors are too apt to become fuddled—"
"But it is, it is!" The graybeard flourished a thin hand at me. "Look
at him, you of little faith! Your mind dwells so much on material
strength that you lose touch with the spiritual—"
He broke off, and wheeled on the attendant who had led him in. "To my
study," he commanded. "On the shelf behind my desk, bring the great
gold-bound book that is third from the right." Then he turned back,
and bowed toward me. "Surely you are Yandro, the Conquering Stranger,"
he said, intoning as if in formal prayer. "Pardon these short-sighted
ones—deign to save us from our enemies—"
The girl Doriza spoke to the officer: "If Sporr speaks truth, and he
generally does, you have committed a blasphemy."
The other made a little grimace. "This may be Yandro, though I'm a
plain soldier and follow the classics very little. The First Comers are
souls to worship, not to study. If indeed he is Yandro," and he was
most respectful, "he will appreciate, like a good military mind, my
caution against possible impostors."
"Who might Yandro be?" I demanded, very uncomfortable in my bonds and
loose draperies.
Old Sporr almost crowed. "You see? If he was a true imposter, he would
come equipped with all plausible knowledge. As it is—"
"As it is, he may remember that the Conquering Stranger is foretold
to come with no memory of anything," supplied the officer. "Score one
against you, Sporr. You should have been able to instruct me, not I
you."
The attendant reentered, with a big book in his hands. It looked
old and well-thumbed, with dim gold traceries on its binding. Sporr
snatched it, and turned to a brightly colored picture. He looked once,
his beard gaped, and he dropped to his knees.
"Happy, happy the day," he jabbered, "that I was spared to see our
great champion come among us in the flesh, as was foretold of ancient
time by the First Comers!"
Doriza and the officer crossed to his side, snatching the book. Their
bright heads bent above it. Doriza was first to speak. "It is very
like," she half-stammered.
The officer faced me, with a sort of baffled respect.
"I still say you will understand my caution," he addressed me, with
real respect and shyness this time. "If you are Yandro himself, you can
prove it. The prophecy even sketches a thumb-print—" And he held the
book toward me.
It contained a full-page likeness, in color, of myself wrapped in a
scarlet robe. Under this was considerable printed description, and to
one side a thumb-print, or a drawing of one, in black.
"Behold," Doriza was saying, "matters which even expert identification
men take into thought. The ears in the picture are like the ears of the
real man—"
"That could be plastic surgery," rejoined the officer. "Such things are
artfully done by the Newcomers, and the red mantle he wears more easily
assumed."
Doriza shook her head. "That happens to be my cloak. I gave it to him
because he was naked, and not for any treasonable masquerade. But the
thumb-print—"
"Oh, yes, the thumb-print," I repeated wearily. "By all means, study my
thumbs, if you'll first take these bonds off of me."
"Bonds," mumbled old Sporr. He got creakily up from his knees and
bustled to me. From under his robe he produced a pouch, and took out a
pencil-sized rod. Gingerly opening the red mantle, he touched my tether
in several places with the glowing end of the rod. The coils dropped
away from my grateful body and limbs. I thrust out my hands.
"Thumb-prints?" I offered.
Sporr had produced something else, a little vial of dark pigment. He
carefully anointed one of my thumbs, and pressed it to the page. All
three gazed.
"The same," said Doriza.
And they were all on their knees before me.
"Forgive me, great Yandro," said the officer thickly. "I did not know."
"Get up," I bade them. "I want to hear why I was first bound, and now
worshipped."
II
They rose, but stood off respectfully. The officer spoke first. "I am
Rohbar, field commander of this defense position," he said with crisp
respect. "Sporr is a mystic doctor, full of godly wisdom. Doriza,
a junior officer and chief of the guard. And you—how could you
know?—are sent by the First Comers to save us from our enemies."
"Enemies?" I repeated.
"The Newcomers," supplemented Doriza. "They have taken the "Other Side"
of Dondromogon, and would take our side as well. We defend ourselves
at the poles. Now," and her voice rang joyously, "you will lead us to
defeat and crush them utterly!"
"Not naked like this," I said, and laughed. I must have sounded
foolish, but it had its effect.
"Follow me, deign to follow me," Sporr said. "Your clothing, your
quarters, your destiny, all await you."
We went out by the door at the rear, and Sporr respectfully gestured me
upon a metal-plated platform. Standing beside me, he tinkered with a
lever. We dropped smoothly away into a dark corridor, past level after
level of light and sound.
"Our cities are below ground," he quavered. "Whipped by winds above,
we must scrabble in the depths for life's necessities—chemicals to
transmute into food, to weave into clothing, to weld into tools and
weapons—"
The mention of food brought to me the thought that I was hungry. I said
as much, even as our elevator platform came to the lowest level and
stopped.
"I have arranged for that," Sporr began, then fell silent, fingers
combing his beard in embarrassment.
"Arranged food for me?" I prompted sharply. "As if you know I had come?
What—"
"Pardon, great Yandro," babbled Sporr. "I was saying that I arranged
food, as always, for whatever guest should come. Please follow."
We entered a new small chamber, where a table was set with dishes of
porcelain-like plastic. Sporr held a chair for me, and waited on me
with the utmost gingerly respect. The food was a pungent and filling
jelly, a little bundle of transparent leaves or scraps like cellophane
and tasting of spice, and a tumbler of pink juice. I felt refreshed and
satisfied, and thanked Sporr, who led me on to the next room.
"Behold!" he said, with a dramatic gesture. "Your garments, even as
they have been preserved against your coming!"
It was a sleeping chamber, with a cot made fast to the wall, a metal
locker or cupboard, with a glass door through which showed the garments
of which Sporr spoke.
The door closed softly behind me—I was left alone.
Knowing that it was expected of me, I went to the locker and opened
the door. The garments inside were old, I could see, but well kept and
serviceable. I studied their type, and my hands, if not my mind, seemed
familiar with them.
There was a kiltlike item, belted at the waist and falling to
mid-thigh. A resilient band at the top, with a series of belt-holes,
made it adaptable to my own body or to any other. Then came an upper
garment, a long strip of soft, close-woven fabric that spiralled
around the torso from hip to armpit, the end looping over the left
shoulder and giving full play to the arms. A gold-worked fillet bound
the brows and swept back my longish hair, knotting at the nape of the
neck. The only fitted articles were a pair of shoes, metal-soled and
soft-uppered, that went on well enough and ran cross-garters up to
below the knee, like buskins. The case also held a platinum chain for
the neck, a belt-bag, and a handsome sword, with clips to fasten them
in place. These things, too, I donned, and closed the glass door.
The light struck it at such an angle as to make it serve for a
full-length mirror. With some curiosity I gazed at my image.
The close-fitting costume was rich and dark, with bright colors only
for edgings and minor accessories. I myself—and it was as if I saw my
body for the first time—towered rather bluffly, with great breadth
of chest and shoulder, and legs robust enough to carry such bulk. The
face was square but haggard, as if from some toil or pain which was now
wiped from my recollection. That nose had been even bigger than it was
now, but a fracture had shortened it somewhat. The eyes were deep set
and dark and moody—small wonder!—the chin heavy, the mouth made grim
by a scar at one corner. Black, shaggy hair hung down like brackets.
All told, I looked like a proper person for physical labor, or even
fierce fighting—but surely no inspirational leader or savior of a
distressed people.
I took the military cloak which Doriza had lent me and slung it over my
shoulders. Turning, I clanked out on my metal-soled shoes.
Sporr was waiting in the room where I had eaten. His eyes widened at
sight of me, something like a grin of triumph flashed through his
beard. Then he bowed, supple and humble, his palms together.
"It is indeed Yandro, our great chief," he mumbled. Then he turned and
crossed the room. A sort of mouthpiece sprouted from the wall.
"I announce," he intoned into it. "I announce, I, Sporr, the reader and
fore-teller of wisdom. Yandro is with us, he awaits his partners and
friends. Let them meet him in the audience hall."
Facing me again, he motioned most respectfully toward the door to the
hall. I moved to open it, and he followed, muttering.
Outside stood Doriza. Her blue eyes met mine, and her lips moved to
frame a word. Then, suddenly, she was on her knee, catching my hand and
kissing it.
"I serve Yandro," she vowed tremulously. "Now and forever—and happy
that I was fated to live when he returned for the rescue of all
Dondromogon."
"Please get up," I bade her, trying not to sound as embarrassed as I
felt. "Come with me. There is still much that I do not understand."
"I am Yandro's orderly and helper," she said. Rising, she ranged
herself at my left hand. "Will Yandro come this way? He will be awaited
in the audience hall."
It seemed to me then that the corridors were vast and mixed as a
labyrinth, but Doriza guided me without the slightest hesitation past
one tangled crossway after another. My questions she answered with a
mixture of awe and brightness.
"It is necessary that we live like this," she explained. "The hot air
of Dondromogon's sunlit face is ever rising, and the cold air from
the dark side comes rushing under to fill the vacuum. Naturally, our
strip of twilight country is never free of winds too high and fierce to
fight. No crops can grow outside, no domestic animals flourish. We must
pen ourselves away from the sky and soil, with stout walls and heavy
sunken parapets. Our deep mines afford every element for necessities of
life."
I looked at my garments, and hers. There were various kinds of fabric,
which I now saw plainly to be synthetic. "The other side, where those
you call the Newcomers dwell and fight," I reminded. "Is it also
windswept? Why can two people not join forces and face toil and nature
together? They should fight, not each other, but the elements."
Doriza had no answer that time, but Sporr spoke up behind us: "Great
Yandro is wise as well as powerful. But the Newcomers do not want to
help, not even to conquer. They want to obliterate us. There is nothing
to do—not for lifetimes—but to fight them back at the two poles."
We came to a main corridor. It had a line of armed guards, but no
pedestrians or vehicles, though I thought I caught a murmur of far-off
traffic. Doriza paused before a great portal, closed by a curtainlike
sheet of dull metal. She spoke into a mouthpiece:
"Doriza, gentlewoman of the guard, conducts Yandro, the Conquering
Stranger, to greet his lieutenants!"
I have said that the portal was closed by a curtainlike metal sheet;
and like a curtain it lifted, letting us through into the auditorium.
That spacious chamber had rows of benches, with galleries above, that
might have seated a thousand. However, only a dozen or so were present,
on metal chairs ranged across the stage upon which we entered. They
were all men but two, and wore robes of black, plum-purple or red. At
sight of me, they rose together, most respectfully. They looked at me,
and I looked at them.
My first thought was, that if these were people of authority and trust
in the nation I seemed destined to save, my work was cut out for me.
Not that they really seemed stupid—none had the look, or the
subsequent action, of stupidity. But they were not pleasant. Their
dozen pairs of eyes fixed me with some steadiness, but with no
frankness anywhere. One man had a round, greedy-seeming face. Another
was too narrow and cunning to look it. Of the women, one was nearly
as tall as I and nobly proportioned, with hair of a red that would be
inspiring were it not so blatantly dyed. The other was a little wisp of
a brunette, with teeth too big for her scarlet mouth and bright eyes
like some sort of a rodent. They all wore jewelry. Too much jewelry.
My mind flew back to the two scrubby, venial guardsmen who had first
welcomed me; to stuffy Rohbar, the commander; to Sporr, spry and clever
enough, but somehow unwholesome; Doriza—no, she was not like these
others, who may have lived too long in their earth-buried shelters. And
Doriza now spoke to the gathering:
"Yandro, folk of the Council! He deigns to give you audience."
"
Yandro!
"
They all spoke the name in chorus, and bowed toward me.
Silence then, a silence which evidently I must break. I broke it:
"Friends, I am among you with no more memory or knowledge than an
infant. I hear wonderful things, of which I seem to be the center. Are
they true?"
"The tenth part of the wonders which concern mighty Yandro have not
been told," intoned Sporr, ducking his bearded head in a bow, but
fixing me with his wise old eyes.
One of the group, called Council by Doriza, now moved a pace forward.
He was the greedy-faced man, short but plump, and very conscious of
the dignified folds of his purple robe. One carefully-tended hand
brushed back his ginger-brown hair, then toyed with a little moustache.
"I am Gederr, senior of this Council," he purred. "If Yandro permits, I
will speak simply. Our hopes have been raised by Yandro's return—the
return presaged of old by those who could see the future, and more
recently by the death in battle of the Newcomer champion, called Barak."
"Barak!" I repeated. "I—I—" And I paused. When I had to learn my own
name, how could it be that I sensed memory of another's name?
"Barak was a brute—mighty, but a brute." Thus Gederr continued.
"Weapons in his hands were the instruments of fate. His hands alone
caused fear and ruin. But it pleased our fortune-bringing stars to
encompass his destruction." He grinned, and licked his full lips. "Now,
even as they are without their battle-leader, so we have ours."
"You honor me," I told him. "Yet I still know little. It seems that I
am expected to aid and lead and save the people of this world called
Dondromogon. But I must know them before I can help."
Gederr turned his eyes upon the woman with the red hair, and gestured
to her "Tell him, Elonie." Then he faced me. "Have we Yandro's
permission to sit?"
"By all means," I granted, a little impatiently, and sat down myself.
The others followed suit—the Council on their range of chairs, Doriza
on a bench near me, Sporr somewhere behind. The woman called Elonie
remained upon her sandalled feet, great eyes the color of deep green
water fixed upon me.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/3/0/9/63097//63097-h//63097-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | Who is Yandro and what is his relationship to Dandromogon?
| 63097_4CW2KAPS_9 | [
"Yandro is the Conquering Stranger. He is prophesied to conquer Dondromogon. \n",
"Yandro is the Conquering Stranger. He is prophesied to lead the planet Dondromogon. \n",
"Yandro is the Conquering Stranger. He killed and conquered the brute Barak.\n",
"Yandro is the New Prophet. He is said to tell of the destruction of the Newcomers.\n"
] | 2 | 2 | [
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63,097 | 63097_4CW2KAPS | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Warrior of Two Worlds | 1954.0 | Wellman, Manly Wade | Science fiction; War stories; Adventure stories; PS; Prophecies -- Fiction | Warrior of Two Worlds
By MANLY WADE WELLMAN
He was the man of two planets, drawn through
the blackness of space to save a nation from
ruthless invaders. He was Yandro, the
Stranger of the Prophecy—and he found that
he was destined to fight both sides.
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Planet Stories Summer 1944.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
My senses came to me slowly and somehow shyly, as if not sure of their
way or welcome. I felt first—pressure on my brow and chest, as if I
lay face downward; then the tug and buffet of a strong, probing wind,
insistent but not cold, upon my naked skin. Closing my hands, I felt
them dig into coarse dirt. I turned my face downwind and opened my
eyes. There was little to see, so thick was the dust cloud around me.
Words formed themselves on my thick tongue, words that must have been
spoken by so many reviving unfortunates through the ages:
"Where am I?"
And at once there was an answer:
"
You lie upon the world Dondromogon.
"
I knew the language of that answer, but where it came from—above,
beneath, or indeed within me—I could not say. I lifted a hand, and
knuckled dust from my eyes.
"How did I get here?" I demanded of the speaker.
"It was ordered—by the Masters of the Worlds—that you should be
brought from your own home planet, called Earth in the System of the
star called Sun. Do you remember Earth?"
And I did not know whether I remembered or not. Vague matters stirred
deep in me, but I could not for certain say they were memories. I asked
yet again:
"Who am I?"
The voice had a note of triumph. "You do not know that. It is as well,
for this will be a birth and beginning of your destined leadership on
Dondromogon."
"Destined—leadership—" I began to repeat, and fell silent. I had
need to think. The voice was telling me that I had been snatched from
worlds away, for a specified purpose here on whatever windswept planet
Dondromogon might be. "Birth and beginning—destined leadership—"
Fantastic! And yet, for all I could say to the contrary, unvarnishedly
true.
"Dondromogon?" I mumbled. "The name is strange to me."
"It is a world the size of your native one," came words of information.
"Around a star it spins, light-years away from the world of your
birth. One face of Dondromogon ever looks to the light and heat,
wherefore its metals run in glowing seas. The other face is ever away
in cold darkness, with its air freezing into solid chunks. But because
Dondromogon wavers on its axis, there are two lunes of its surface
which from time to time shift from night to day. These are habitable."
My eyes were tight shut against the dust, but they saw in imagination
such a planet—one-half incandescent, one-half pitchy black. From pole
to pole on opposite sides ran the two twilight zones, widest at the
equators like the outer rind of two slices of melon. Of course, such
areas, between the hot and cold hemispheres, would be buffeted by
mighty gales ... the voice was to be heard again:
"War is fought between the two strips of habitable ground. War,
unceasing, bitter, with no quarter asked, given or expected.
Dondromogon was found and settled long ago, by adventurers from afar.
Now come invaders, to reap the benefits of discovery and toil." A
pause. "You find that thought unpleasant? You wish to right that
wrong?"
"Anyone would wish that," I replied. "But how—"
"You are going to ask how you were brought here. That is the mystery
of the
Masters
." The voice became grand. "Suffice it that you were
needed, and that the time was ripe. There is a proper time, like a
proper place, for each thing and each happening. Now, go to your
destiny."
I rose on my knees, shielding my face from the buffeting wind by
lifting a forearm. Somewhere through the murky clouds showed a dim
blocky silhouette, a building of sorts.
The voice spoke no more. I had not the time to wonder about it. I got
to my feet, bent double to keep from being blown over, and staggered
toward the promised haven.
I reached it, groped along until I found a door. There was no latch,
handle or entry button, and I pounded heavily on the massive panels.
The door opened from within, and I was blown inside, to fall sprawling.
I struck my forehead upon a floor of stone or concrete, and so was
half-stunned, but still I could distinguish something like the sound
of agitated voices. Then I felt myself grasped, by both shoulders,
and drawn roughly erect. The touch restored my senses, and I wrenched
myself violently free.
What had seized me? That was my first wonder. On this strange world
called Dondromogon, what manner of intelligent life bade defiance to
heat and cold and storm, and built these stout structures, and now laid
hands—were they hands indeed?—upon me? I swung around, setting my
back to a solid wall.
My first glance showed me that my companions were creatures like
myself—two-legged, fair-skinned men, shorter and slighter than I, but
clad in metal-faced garments and wearing weapons in their girdles. I
saw that each bore a swordlike device with a curved guard, set in a
narrow sheath as long as my arm. Each also had a shorter weapon, with
a curved stock to fit the palm of the hand, borne snugly in a holster.
With such arms I had a faint sense of familiarity.
"Who are you, and where are you from?" said one of the two, a
broad-faced middle-aged fellow. "Don't lie any more than you can help."
I felt a stirring of the hair on my neck, but kept my voice mild and
level: "Why should I lie? Especially as I don't know who I am, or where
I'm from, or anything that has happened longer ago than just a moment.
I woke up out there in the dust storm, and I managed to come here for
shelter."
"He's a Newcomer spy," quoth the other. "Let's put him under arrest."
"And leave this gate unguarded?" demanded the other. "Sound the
signal," and he jerked his head toward a system of levers and gauges on
the wall beside the door-jamb.
"There's a bigger reward for capture than for warning," objected
his friend in turn, "and whoever comes to take this man will claim
'capture.' I'll guard here, and you take him in, then we'll divide—"
"No. Yours is the idea. I'll guard and you take him in." The second man
studied me apprehensively. "He's big, and looks strong, even without
weapons."
"Don't be afraid," I urged. "I'll make no resistance, if you'll only
conduct me to your commander. I can show him that I'm no spy or enemy."
Both stared narrowly. "No spy? No enemy?" asked the broad-faced one who
had first spoken. Then, to his comrade: "No reward, then."
"I think there'll be a reward," was the rejoinder, and the second man's
hand stole to the sword-weapon. With a whispering rasp it cleared from
its scabbard. "If he's dead, we get pay for both warning and capture—"
His thumb touched a button at the pommel of the hilt. The dull blade
suddenly glowed like heated iron, and from it crackled and pulsed
little rainbow rays.
There was no time to think or plan or ponder. I moved in, with a
knowing speed that surprised me as much as the two guards. Catching the
fellow's weapon wrist, I clamped it firmly and bent it back and around.
He whimpered and swore, and his glowing sword dropped. Its radiant
blade almost fell on my naked foot. Before the clang of its fall was
through echoing, I had caught it up, and set the point within inches of
its owner's unprotected face.
"Quiet, or I'll roast you," I told him.
The other had drawn a weapon of his own, a pistol-form arrangement.
I turned on him, but too late. He pressed the trigger, and from the
muzzle came—not a projectile but a flying, spouting filament of cord
that seemed to spring on me like a long thin snake and to fasten coil
after coil around my body. The stuff that gushed from the gun-muzzle
seemed plastic in form, but hardened so quickly upon contact with the
air, it bound me like wire. Half a dozen adroit motions of the fellow's
gun hand, and my arms were caught to my body. I dropped my sword to
prevent it burning me, and tried to break away, but my bonds were too
much for me.
"Let me out of this," I growled, and kicked at the man with my still
unbound foot. He snapped a half-hitch on my ankle, and threw me
heavily. Triumphant laughter came from both adversaries. Then:
"What's this?"
The challenge was clear, rich, authoritative. Someone else had come,
from a rearward door into the stone-walled vestibule where the
encounter was taking place.
A woman this time, not of great height, and robust but not heavy. She
was dressed for vigorous action in dark slacks with buskins to make
them snug around ankles and calves, a jerkin of stout material that was
faced with metal armor plates and left bare her round, strong arms. A
gold-worked fillet bound her tawny hair back from a rosy, bold-featured
face—a nose that was positively regal, a mouth short and firm but not
hard, and blue eyes that just now burned and questioned. She wore a
holstered pistol, and a cross-belt supported several instruments of a
kind I could not remember seeing before. A crimson cloak gave color and
dignity to her costume, and plainly she was someone of position, for
both the men stiffened to attention.
"A spy," one ventured. "He pushed in, claimed he was no enemy, then
tried to attack—"
"They lie," I broke in, very conscious of my naked helplessness before
her regard. "They wanted to kill me and be rewarded for a false story
of vigilance. I only defended myself."
"Get him on his feet," the young woman said, and the two guards
obeyed. Then her eyes studied me again. "Gods! What a mountain of a
man!" she exclaimed. "Can you walk, stranger?"
"Barely, with these bonds."
"Then manage to do so." She flung off her cloak and draped it over my
nakedness. "Walk along beside me. No tricks, and I promise you fair
hearing."
We went through the door by which she had entered, into a corridor
beyond. It was lighted by small, brilliant bulbs at regular intervals.
Beyond, it gave into several passages. She chose one of them and
conducted me along. "You are surely not of us," she commented. "Men I
have seen who are heavier than you, but none taller. Whence came you?"
I remembered the strange voice that had instructed me. "I am from a
far world," I replied. "It is called—yes, Earth. Beyond that, I know
nothing. Memory left me."
"The story is a strange one," she commented. "And your name?"
"I do not know that, either. Who are you?"
"Doriza—a gentlewoman of the guard. My inspection tour brought me by
chance to where you fought my outposts. But it is not for you to ask
questions. Enter here."
We passed through another door, and I found myself in an office. A man
in richly-embossed armor platings sat there. He had a fringe of pale
beard, and his eyes were bluer than the gentlewoman Doriza's.
She made a gesture of salute, hand at shoulder height, and reported the
matter. He nodded for her to fall back to a corner.
"Stranger," he said to me, "can you think of no better tale to tell
than you now offer?"
"I tell the truth," was my reply, not very gracious.
"You will have to prove that," he admonished me.
"What proof have I?" I demanded. "On this world of yours—Dondromogon,
isn't it called?—I'm no more than an hour old. Accident or shock
has taken my memory. Let me have a medical examination. A scientist
probably can tell what happened to put me in such a condition."
"I am a scientist," offered Doriza, and came forward. Her eyes met
mine, suddenly flickered and lowered. "His gaze," she muttered.
The officer at the table was touching a button. An attendant appeared,
received an order, and vanished again. In a few moments two other
men came—one a heavily armed officer of rank, the other an elderly,
bearded fellow in a voluminous robe that enfolded him in most dignified
manner.
This latter man opened wide his clear old eyes at sight of me.
"The stranger of the prophecy!" he cried, in a voice that made us all
jump.
The officer rose from behind the table. "Are you totally mad, Sporr?
You mystic doctors are too apt to become fuddled—"
"But it is, it is!" The graybeard flourished a thin hand at me. "Look
at him, you of little faith! Your mind dwells so much on material
strength that you lose touch with the spiritual—"
He broke off, and wheeled on the attendant who had led him in. "To my
study," he commanded. "On the shelf behind my desk, bring the great
gold-bound book that is third from the right." Then he turned back,
and bowed toward me. "Surely you are Yandro, the Conquering Stranger,"
he said, intoning as if in formal prayer. "Pardon these short-sighted
ones—deign to save us from our enemies—"
The girl Doriza spoke to the officer: "If Sporr speaks truth, and he
generally does, you have committed a blasphemy."
The other made a little grimace. "This may be Yandro, though I'm a
plain soldier and follow the classics very little. The First Comers are
souls to worship, not to study. If indeed he is Yandro," and he was
most respectful, "he will appreciate, like a good military mind, my
caution against possible impostors."
"Who might Yandro be?" I demanded, very uncomfortable in my bonds and
loose draperies.
Old Sporr almost crowed. "You see? If he was a true imposter, he would
come equipped with all plausible knowledge. As it is—"
"As it is, he may remember that the Conquering Stranger is foretold
to come with no memory of anything," supplied the officer. "Score one
against you, Sporr. You should have been able to instruct me, not I
you."
The attendant reentered, with a big book in his hands. It looked
old and well-thumbed, with dim gold traceries on its binding. Sporr
snatched it, and turned to a brightly colored picture. He looked once,
his beard gaped, and he dropped to his knees.
"Happy, happy the day," he jabbered, "that I was spared to see our
great champion come among us in the flesh, as was foretold of ancient
time by the First Comers!"
Doriza and the officer crossed to his side, snatching the book. Their
bright heads bent above it. Doriza was first to speak. "It is very
like," she half-stammered.
The officer faced me, with a sort of baffled respect.
"I still say you will understand my caution," he addressed me, with
real respect and shyness this time. "If you are Yandro himself, you can
prove it. The prophecy even sketches a thumb-print—" And he held the
book toward me.
It contained a full-page likeness, in color, of myself wrapped in a
scarlet robe. Under this was considerable printed description, and to
one side a thumb-print, or a drawing of one, in black.
"Behold," Doriza was saying, "matters which even expert identification
men take into thought. The ears in the picture are like the ears of the
real man—"
"That could be plastic surgery," rejoined the officer. "Such things are
artfully done by the Newcomers, and the red mantle he wears more easily
assumed."
Doriza shook her head. "That happens to be my cloak. I gave it to him
because he was naked, and not for any treasonable masquerade. But the
thumb-print—"
"Oh, yes, the thumb-print," I repeated wearily. "By all means, study my
thumbs, if you'll first take these bonds off of me."
"Bonds," mumbled old Sporr. He got creakily up from his knees and
bustled to me. From under his robe he produced a pouch, and took out a
pencil-sized rod. Gingerly opening the red mantle, he touched my tether
in several places with the glowing end of the rod. The coils dropped
away from my grateful body and limbs. I thrust out my hands.
"Thumb-prints?" I offered.
Sporr had produced something else, a little vial of dark pigment. He
carefully anointed one of my thumbs, and pressed it to the page. All
three gazed.
"The same," said Doriza.
And they were all on their knees before me.
"Forgive me, great Yandro," said the officer thickly. "I did not know."
"Get up," I bade them. "I want to hear why I was first bound, and now
worshipped."
II
They rose, but stood off respectfully. The officer spoke first. "I am
Rohbar, field commander of this defense position," he said with crisp
respect. "Sporr is a mystic doctor, full of godly wisdom. Doriza,
a junior officer and chief of the guard. And you—how could you
know?—are sent by the First Comers to save us from our enemies."
"Enemies?" I repeated.
"The Newcomers," supplemented Doriza. "They have taken the "Other Side"
of Dondromogon, and would take our side as well. We defend ourselves
at the poles. Now," and her voice rang joyously, "you will lead us to
defeat and crush them utterly!"
"Not naked like this," I said, and laughed. I must have sounded
foolish, but it had its effect.
"Follow me, deign to follow me," Sporr said. "Your clothing, your
quarters, your destiny, all await you."
We went out by the door at the rear, and Sporr respectfully gestured me
upon a metal-plated platform. Standing beside me, he tinkered with a
lever. We dropped smoothly away into a dark corridor, past level after
level of light and sound.
"Our cities are below ground," he quavered. "Whipped by winds above,
we must scrabble in the depths for life's necessities—chemicals to
transmute into food, to weave into clothing, to weld into tools and
weapons—"
The mention of food brought to me the thought that I was hungry. I said
as much, even as our elevator platform came to the lowest level and
stopped.
"I have arranged for that," Sporr began, then fell silent, fingers
combing his beard in embarrassment.
"Arranged food for me?" I prompted sharply. "As if you know I had come?
What—"
"Pardon, great Yandro," babbled Sporr. "I was saying that I arranged
food, as always, for whatever guest should come. Please follow."
We entered a new small chamber, where a table was set with dishes of
porcelain-like plastic. Sporr held a chair for me, and waited on me
with the utmost gingerly respect. The food was a pungent and filling
jelly, a little bundle of transparent leaves or scraps like cellophane
and tasting of spice, and a tumbler of pink juice. I felt refreshed and
satisfied, and thanked Sporr, who led me on to the next room.
"Behold!" he said, with a dramatic gesture. "Your garments, even as
they have been preserved against your coming!"
It was a sleeping chamber, with a cot made fast to the wall, a metal
locker or cupboard, with a glass door through which showed the garments
of which Sporr spoke.
The door closed softly behind me—I was left alone.
Knowing that it was expected of me, I went to the locker and opened
the door. The garments inside were old, I could see, but well kept and
serviceable. I studied their type, and my hands, if not my mind, seemed
familiar with them.
There was a kiltlike item, belted at the waist and falling to
mid-thigh. A resilient band at the top, with a series of belt-holes,
made it adaptable to my own body or to any other. Then came an upper
garment, a long strip of soft, close-woven fabric that spiralled
around the torso from hip to armpit, the end looping over the left
shoulder and giving full play to the arms. A gold-worked fillet bound
the brows and swept back my longish hair, knotting at the nape of the
neck. The only fitted articles were a pair of shoes, metal-soled and
soft-uppered, that went on well enough and ran cross-garters up to
below the knee, like buskins. The case also held a platinum chain for
the neck, a belt-bag, and a handsome sword, with clips to fasten them
in place. These things, too, I donned, and closed the glass door.
The light struck it at such an angle as to make it serve for a
full-length mirror. With some curiosity I gazed at my image.
The close-fitting costume was rich and dark, with bright colors only
for edgings and minor accessories. I myself—and it was as if I saw my
body for the first time—towered rather bluffly, with great breadth
of chest and shoulder, and legs robust enough to carry such bulk. The
face was square but haggard, as if from some toil or pain which was now
wiped from my recollection. That nose had been even bigger than it was
now, but a fracture had shortened it somewhat. The eyes were deep set
and dark and moody—small wonder!—the chin heavy, the mouth made grim
by a scar at one corner. Black, shaggy hair hung down like brackets.
All told, I looked like a proper person for physical labor, or even
fierce fighting—but surely no inspirational leader or savior of a
distressed people.
I took the military cloak which Doriza had lent me and slung it over my
shoulders. Turning, I clanked out on my metal-soled shoes.
Sporr was waiting in the room where I had eaten. His eyes widened at
sight of me, something like a grin of triumph flashed through his
beard. Then he bowed, supple and humble, his palms together.
"It is indeed Yandro, our great chief," he mumbled. Then he turned and
crossed the room. A sort of mouthpiece sprouted from the wall.
"I announce," he intoned into it. "I announce, I, Sporr, the reader and
fore-teller of wisdom. Yandro is with us, he awaits his partners and
friends. Let them meet him in the audience hall."
Facing me again, he motioned most respectfully toward the door to the
hall. I moved to open it, and he followed, muttering.
Outside stood Doriza. Her blue eyes met mine, and her lips moved to
frame a word. Then, suddenly, she was on her knee, catching my hand and
kissing it.
"I serve Yandro," she vowed tremulously. "Now and forever—and happy
that I was fated to live when he returned for the rescue of all
Dondromogon."
"Please get up," I bade her, trying not to sound as embarrassed as I
felt. "Come with me. There is still much that I do not understand."
"I am Yandro's orderly and helper," she said. Rising, she ranged
herself at my left hand. "Will Yandro come this way? He will be awaited
in the audience hall."
It seemed to me then that the corridors were vast and mixed as a
labyrinth, but Doriza guided me without the slightest hesitation past
one tangled crossway after another. My questions she answered with a
mixture of awe and brightness.
"It is necessary that we live like this," she explained. "The hot air
of Dondromogon's sunlit face is ever rising, and the cold air from
the dark side comes rushing under to fill the vacuum. Naturally, our
strip of twilight country is never free of winds too high and fierce to
fight. No crops can grow outside, no domestic animals flourish. We must
pen ourselves away from the sky and soil, with stout walls and heavy
sunken parapets. Our deep mines afford every element for necessities of
life."
I looked at my garments, and hers. There were various kinds of fabric,
which I now saw plainly to be synthetic. "The other side, where those
you call the Newcomers dwell and fight," I reminded. "Is it also
windswept? Why can two people not join forces and face toil and nature
together? They should fight, not each other, but the elements."
Doriza had no answer that time, but Sporr spoke up behind us: "Great
Yandro is wise as well as powerful. But the Newcomers do not want to
help, not even to conquer. They want to obliterate us. There is nothing
to do—not for lifetimes—but to fight them back at the two poles."
We came to a main corridor. It had a line of armed guards, but no
pedestrians or vehicles, though I thought I caught a murmur of far-off
traffic. Doriza paused before a great portal, closed by a curtainlike
sheet of dull metal. She spoke into a mouthpiece:
"Doriza, gentlewoman of the guard, conducts Yandro, the Conquering
Stranger, to greet his lieutenants!"
I have said that the portal was closed by a curtainlike metal sheet;
and like a curtain it lifted, letting us through into the auditorium.
That spacious chamber had rows of benches, with galleries above, that
might have seated a thousand. However, only a dozen or so were present,
on metal chairs ranged across the stage upon which we entered. They
were all men but two, and wore robes of black, plum-purple or red. At
sight of me, they rose together, most respectfully. They looked at me,
and I looked at them.
My first thought was, that if these were people of authority and trust
in the nation I seemed destined to save, my work was cut out for me.
Not that they really seemed stupid—none had the look, or the
subsequent action, of stupidity. But they were not pleasant. Their
dozen pairs of eyes fixed me with some steadiness, but with no
frankness anywhere. One man had a round, greedy-seeming face. Another
was too narrow and cunning to look it. Of the women, one was nearly
as tall as I and nobly proportioned, with hair of a red that would be
inspiring were it not so blatantly dyed. The other was a little wisp of
a brunette, with teeth too big for her scarlet mouth and bright eyes
like some sort of a rodent. They all wore jewelry. Too much jewelry.
My mind flew back to the two scrubby, venial guardsmen who had first
welcomed me; to stuffy Rohbar, the commander; to Sporr, spry and clever
enough, but somehow unwholesome; Doriza—no, she was not like these
others, who may have lived too long in their earth-buried shelters. And
Doriza now spoke to the gathering:
"Yandro, folk of the Council! He deigns to give you audience."
"
Yandro!
"
They all spoke the name in chorus, and bowed toward me.
Silence then, a silence which evidently I must break. I broke it:
"Friends, I am among you with no more memory or knowledge than an
infant. I hear wonderful things, of which I seem to be the center. Are
they true?"
"The tenth part of the wonders which concern mighty Yandro have not
been told," intoned Sporr, ducking his bearded head in a bow, but
fixing me with his wise old eyes.
One of the group, called Council by Doriza, now moved a pace forward.
He was the greedy-faced man, short but plump, and very conscious of
the dignified folds of his purple robe. One carefully-tended hand
brushed back his ginger-brown hair, then toyed with a little moustache.
"I am Gederr, senior of this Council," he purred. "If Yandro permits, I
will speak simply. Our hopes have been raised by Yandro's return—the
return presaged of old by those who could see the future, and more
recently by the death in battle of the Newcomer champion, called Barak."
"Barak!" I repeated. "I—I—" And I paused. When I had to learn my own
name, how could it be that I sensed memory of another's name?
"Barak was a brute—mighty, but a brute." Thus Gederr continued.
"Weapons in his hands were the instruments of fate. His hands alone
caused fear and ruin. But it pleased our fortune-bringing stars to
encompass his destruction." He grinned, and licked his full lips. "Now,
even as they are without their battle-leader, so we have ours."
"You honor me," I told him. "Yet I still know little. It seems that I
am expected to aid and lead and save the people of this world called
Dondromogon. But I must know them before I can help."
Gederr turned his eyes upon the woman with the red hair, and gestured
to her "Tell him, Elonie." Then he faced me. "Have we Yandro's
permission to sit?"
"By all means," I granted, a little impatiently, and sat down myself.
The others followed suit—the Council on their range of chairs, Doriza
on a bench near me, Sporr somewhere behind. The woman called Elonie
remained upon her sandalled feet, great eyes the color of deep green
water fixed upon me.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/3/0/9/63097//63097-h//63097-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | What is the meaning of the garments given to the narrator?
| 63097_4CW2KAPS_10 | [
"It shows the reader that Yandro is preparing to fight Barak. \n",
"It shows the reader that the narrator is going to play the part of Yandro, but not believe in it. \n",
"It shows the reader that the narrator is becoming Yandro. \n",
"It shows the reader that all Dondromogon prophecies are true. \n"
] | 3 | 3 | [
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60,515 | 60515_4ZLFFIZT | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Homecoming | 1958.0 | Hidalgo, Miguel | Veterans -- United States -- Fiction; Husband and wife -- Fiction; PS; Post-apocalyptic fiction; Science fiction; Short stories | HOMECOMING
BY MIGUEL HIDALGO
What lasts forever? Does love?
Does death?... Nothing lasts
forever.... Not even forever
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of If Science Fiction, April 1958.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
The large horse plodded slowly over the shifting sand.
The rider was of medium size, with huge, strong hands and seemingly
hollow eyes. Strange eyes, alive and aflame. They had no place in
the dust-caked, tired body, yet there they were, seeking, always
seeking—searching the clear horizon, and never seeming to find what
they sought.
The horse moved faster now. They were nearing a river; the water would
be welcome on tired bodies and dry throats. He spurred his horse,
and when they reached the water's edge, he dismounted and unsaddled
the horse. Then both man and horse plunged headlong into the waiting
torrent, deep into the cool embrace of the clear liquid. They soaked it
into their pores and drank deeply of it, feeling life going once more
through their veins. Satisfied, they lifted themselves from the water,
and the man lay down on the yellow sand of the river bank to sleep.
When he awoke, the sun was almost setting. The bright shafts of red
light spilled across the sky, making the mountains silent scarlet
shadows on the face of the rippling water. Quickly he gathered
driftwood, and built a small fire. From his pack he removed some of
the coffee he had found in one of the ruined cities. He brought water
from the river in the battered coffee-pot he had salvaged, and while he
waited for it to boil, he went to his horse, Conqueror, stroking his
mane and whispering in his ear. Then he led him silently to a grassy
slope where he hobbled him and left him for the night.
In the fading light, he ate the hard beef jerky and drank the scalding
coffee. Refreshed and momentarily content, he sat staring into the
dying fire, seeing the bright glowing coals as living fingers clutching
at the wood in consuming embrace, taking all and returning nothing but
ashes.
Slowly his eyelids yielded. His body sagged, and blood seemed to fill
his brain, bathing it in a gentle, warm flood.
He slept. His brain slept.
But the portion of his brain called memory stirred. It was all alone;
all else was at rest. Images began to appear, drawn from inexhaustible
files, wherein are kept all thoughts, past, present, and future....
It was the night before he was to go overseas. World War III had been
declared, and he had enlisted, receiving his old rank of captain. He
was with his wife in the living room of their home. They had put the
children to bed—their sons—and now sat on the couch, watching the
blazing fire. It was then that he had showed it to her.
"I've got something to tell you, and something to show you."
He had removed the box from his pocket and opened it. And heard her cry
of surprised joy.
"Oh, a ring, and it's a diamond, too!" she cried in her rich, happy
voice which always seemed to send a thrill through his body.
"It's for you; so long as you wear it, I'll come back, even from the
dead, if need be. Read the inscription."
She held the ring up to the light and read aloud, "It is forever."
Then she had slipped the ring on her finger and her arms around him.
He held her very close, feeling the warmth from her body flowing into
his and making him oblivious to everything except that she was there in
his arms and that he was sinking deep, deep into a familiar sea, where
he had been many times before but each time found something new and
unexplored, some vastly different emotion he could never quite explain.
"Wait!" she cried. "I've something for you, too."
She took off the locket she wore about her neck and held it up to the
shimmering light, letting it spin at the end of its chain. It caught
the shadows of the fire and reflected them, greatly magnified, over the
room. It was in the shape of a star, encrusted with emeralds, with one
large ruby in the center. When he opened it, he found a picture of her
in one side, and in the other a picture of the children. He took her in
his arms again, and loosened her long, black hair, burying his face in
it for a moment. Then he kissed her, and instantly was drawn down into
the abyss which seemed to have no beginning or any end.
The next morning had been bleak and gray. The mist clung to the wet,
sodden ground, and the air was heavy in his lungs. He had driven off
in the jeep the army had sent for him, watching her there on the porch
until the mist swirled around her feet and she ran back into the house
and slammed the door. His cold fingers found the locket, making a
little bulge under his uniform, and the touch of it seemed to warm the
blood in his veins.
Three days later they had landed in Spain, merged with another
division, then crossed the Pyrenees into France, and finally to Paris
where the fighting had begun. Already the city was a silent graveyard,
littered with the rubble of towers and cathedrals which had once been
great.
Three years later they were on the road to Moscow. Over a thousand
miles lay behind, a dead man on every foot of those miles. Yet victory
was near. The Russians had not yet used the H-bomb; the threat of
annihilation by the retaliation forces had been too great.
He had done well in the war, and had been decorated many times for
bravery in action. Now he felt the victory that seemed to be in the
air, and he had wished it would come quickly, so that he might return
to her. Home. The very feel of the word was everything a battle-weary
soldier needed to make him fight harder and live longer.
Suddenly he had become aware of a droning, wooshing sound above him. It
grew louder and louder until he knew what it was.
"Heavy bombers!" The alarm had sounded, and the men had headed for
their foxholes.
But the planes had passed over, the sun glinting on their bellies,
reflecting a blinding light. They were bound for bigger, more important
targets. When the all-clear had sounded, the men clambered from their
shelters. An icy wind swept the field, bringing with it clouds which
covered the sun. A strange fear had gripped him then....
Across the Atlantic, over the pole, via Alaska, the great bombers
flew. In cities, great and small, the air raid sirens sounded, high
screaming noises which had jarred the people from sleep in time to die.
The defending planes roared into the sky to intercept the on-rushing
bombers. The horrendous battle split the universe. Many bombers fell,
victims of fanatical suicide planes, or of missiles that streaked
across the sky which none could escape.
But too many bombers got through, dropping their deadly cargo upon the
helpless cities. And not all the prayers or entreaties to any God had
stopped their carnage. First there had been the red flashes that melted
buildings into molten streams, and then the great triple-mushroom cloud
filled with the poisonous gases that the wind swept away to other
cities, where men had not died quickly and mercifully, but had rotted
away, leaving shreds of putrid flesh behind to mark the places where
they had crawled.
The retaliatory forces had roared away to bomb the Russian cities. Few,
if any, had returned. Too much blood and life were on their hands.
Those who had remained alive had found a resting place on the crown
of some distant mountain. Others had preferred the silent peaceful
sea, where flesh stayed not long on bones, and only darting fishes and
merciful beams of filtered light found their aluminum coffins.
The war had ended.
To no avail. Neither side had won. Most of the cities and the majority
of the population of both countries had been destroyed. Even their
governments had vanished, leaving a silent nothingness. The armies that
remained were without leaders, without sources of supplies, save what
they could forage and beg from an unfriendly people.
They were alone now, a group of tired, battered men, for whom life held
nothing. Their families had long since died, their bodies turned to
dust, their spirits fled on the winds to a new world.
Yet these remnants of an army must return—or at least try. Their
exodus was just beginning. Somehow he had managed to hold together the
few men left from his force. He had always nourished the hope that
she might still be alive. And now that the war was over he had to
return—had to know whether she was still waiting for him.
They had started the long trek. Throughout Europe anarchy reigned. He
and his men were alone. All they could do now was fight. Finally they
reached the seaport city of Calais. With what few men he had left, he
had commandeered a small yacht, and they had taken to the sea.
After months of storms and bad luck, they had been shipwrecked
somewhere off the coast of Mexico. He had managed to swim ashore,
and had been found by a fisherman's family. Many months he had spent
swimming and fishing, recovering his strength, inquiring about the
United States. The Mexicans had spoken with fear of the land across the
Rio Grande. All its great cities had been destroyed, and those that had
been only partially destroyed were devoid of people. The land across
the Rio Grande had become a land of shadows. The winds were poisoned,
and the few people who might have survived, were crazed and maimed by
the blasts. Few men had dared cross the Rio Grande into "El Mundo gris
de Noviembre"—the November world. Those who had, had never returned.
In time he had traveled north until he reached the Rio Grande. He had
waded into the muddy waters and somehow landed on the American side. In
the November world.
It was rightly called. The deserts were long. All plant life had died,
leaving to those once great fertile stretches, nothing but the sad,
temporal beauty that comes with death. No people had he seen. Only the
ruins of what had once been their cities. He had walked through them,
and all that he had seen were the small mutant rodents, and all that he
had heard was the occasional swish of the wind as it whisked along what
might have been dead leaves, but wasn't.
He had been on the trail for a long time. His food was nearly
exhausted. The mountains were just beginning, and he hoped to find food
there. He had not found food, but his luck had been with him. He had
found a horse. Not a normal horse, but a mutation. It was almost twice
as large as a regular horse. Its skin seemed to shimmer and was like
glassy steel to the touch. From the center of its forehead grew a horn,
straight out, as the horn of a unicorn. But most startling of all were
the animal's eyes which seemed to speak—a silent mental speech, which
he could understand. The horse had looked up as he approached it and
seemed to say: "Follow me."
And he had followed. Over a mountain, until they came to a pass, and
finally to a narrow path which led to an old cabin. He had found it
empty, but there were cans of food and a rifle and many shells. He had
remained there a long time—how long he could not tell, for he could
only measure time by the cycles of the sun and the moon. Finally he
had taken the horse, the rifle and what food was left, and once again
started the long journey home.
The farther north he went, the more life seemed to have survived. He
had seen great herds of horses like his own, stampeding across the
plains, and strange birds which he could not identify. Yet he had seen
no human beings.
But he knew he was closer now. Closer to home. He recognized the land.
How, he did not know, for it was much changed. A sensing, perhaps, of
what it had once been. He could not be more than two days' ride away.
Once he was through this desert, he would find her, he would be with
her once again; all would be well, and his long journey would be over.
The images faded. Even memory slept in a flow of warm blood. Body and
mind slept into the shadows of the dawn.
He awoke and stretched the cramped muscles of his body. At the edge of
the water he removed his clothes and stared at himself in the rippling
mirror. His muscles were lean and hard, evenly placed throughout the
length of his frame. A deep ridge ran down the length of his torso,
separating the muscles, making the chest broad. Well satisfied with his
body, he plunged into the cold water, deep down, until he thought his
lungs would burst; then swiftly returned to the clean air, tingling in
every pore. He dried himself and dressed. Conqueror was eating the long
grass near the stream. Quickly he saddled him. No time for breakfast.
He would ride all day and the next night. And he would be home.
Still northward. The hours crawled slower than a dying man. The sun
was a torch that pierced his skin, seeming to melt his bones into a
burning stream within his body. But day at last gave way to night, and
the sun to the moon. The torch became a white pock-marked goddess, with
streaming hair called stars.
In the moonlight he had not seen the crater until he was at its
very edge. Even then he might not have seen it had not the horse
stopped suddenly. The wind swirled through its vast emptiness,
slapping his face with dusty hands. For a moment he thought he heard
voices—mournful, murmuring voices, echoing up from the misty depths.
He turned quickly away and did not look back.
Night paled into day; day burned into night.
There were clouds in the sky now, and a gentle wind caressed the sweat
from his tired body. He stopped. There it was! Barely discernible
through the moonlight, he saw it. Home.
Quickly he dismounted and ran. Now he could see a small light in the
window, and he knew they were there. His breath came in hard ragged
gulps. At the window he peered in, and as his eyes became accustomed
to the inner gloom, he saw how bare the room was. No matter. Now that
he was home he would build new furniture, and the house would be even
better than it had been before.
Then he saw her.
She was sitting motionless in a straight wooden chair beside the
fireplace, the feeble light cast by the embers veiling her in mauve
shadows. He waited, wondering if she were.... Presently she stirred
like a restless child in sleep, then moved from the chair to the pile
of wood near the hearth, and replenished the fire. The wood caught
quickly, sending up long tongues of flame, and forming a bright pool of
light around her.
His blood froze. The creature illuminated by the firelight was a
monster. Large greasy scales covered its face and arms, and there was
no hair on its head. Its gums were toothless cavities in a sunken,
mumbling mouth. The eyes, turned momentarily toward the window, were
empty of life.
"No, no!" he cried soundlessly.
This was not his house. In his delirium he had only imagined he had
found it. He had been searching so long. He would go on searching.
He was turning wearily away from the window when the movement of the
creature beside the fire held his attention. It had taken a ring from
one skeleton-like finger and stood, turning the ring slowly as if
trying to decipher some inscription inside it.
He knew then. He had come home.
Slowly he moved toward the door. A great weakness was upon him. His
feet were stones, reluctant to leave the earth. His body was a weed,
shriveled by thirst. He grasped the doorknob and clung to it, looking
up at the night sky and trying to draw strength from the wind that
passed over him. It was no use. There was no strength. Only fear—a
kind of fear he had never known.
He fumbled at his throat, his fingers crawling like cold worms around
his neck until he found the locket and the clasp which had held it
safely through endless nightmare days and nights. He slipped the clasp
and the locket fell into his waiting hand. As one in a dream, he opened
it, and stared at the pictures, now in the dim moonlight no longer
faces of those he loved, but grey ghosts from the past. Even the ruby
had lost its glow. What had once been living fire was now a dull glob
of darkness.
"Nothing is forever!" He thought he had shouted the words, but only a
thin sound, the sound of leaves ruffled by the wind, came back to him.
He closed the locket and fastened the clasp, and hung it on the
doorknob. It moved slowly in the wind, back and forth, like a pendulum.
"Forever—forever. Only death is forever." He could have sworn he heard
the words.
He ran. Away from the house. To the large horse with a horn in the
center of its forehead, like a unicorn. Once in the saddle, the spurt
of strength left him. His shoulders slumped, his head dropped onto his
chest.
Conqueror trotted away, the sound of his hooves echoing hollowly in the
vast emptiness.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/0/5/1/60515//60515-h//60515-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | How can the description the protagonist’s eyes as “aflame” be understood as symbolic?
| 60515_4ZLFFIZT_1 | [
"It is symbolic for his drive to win the war. \n",
"It is symbolic for his drive to find shelter.\n",
"It is symbolic for his drive to return home to his wife.\n",
"It is symbolic for his drive to cross the Rio Grande. \n"
] | 3 | 3 | [
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60,515 | 60515_4ZLFFIZT | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Homecoming | 1958.0 | Hidalgo, Miguel | Veterans -- United States -- Fiction; Husband and wife -- Fiction; PS; Post-apocalyptic fiction; Science fiction; Short stories | HOMECOMING
BY MIGUEL HIDALGO
What lasts forever? Does love?
Does death?... Nothing lasts
forever.... Not even forever
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of If Science Fiction, April 1958.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
The large horse plodded slowly over the shifting sand.
The rider was of medium size, with huge, strong hands and seemingly
hollow eyes. Strange eyes, alive and aflame. They had no place in
the dust-caked, tired body, yet there they were, seeking, always
seeking—searching the clear horizon, and never seeming to find what
they sought.
The horse moved faster now. They were nearing a river; the water would
be welcome on tired bodies and dry throats. He spurred his horse,
and when they reached the water's edge, he dismounted and unsaddled
the horse. Then both man and horse plunged headlong into the waiting
torrent, deep into the cool embrace of the clear liquid. They soaked it
into their pores and drank deeply of it, feeling life going once more
through their veins. Satisfied, they lifted themselves from the water,
and the man lay down on the yellow sand of the river bank to sleep.
When he awoke, the sun was almost setting. The bright shafts of red
light spilled across the sky, making the mountains silent scarlet
shadows on the face of the rippling water. Quickly he gathered
driftwood, and built a small fire. From his pack he removed some of
the coffee he had found in one of the ruined cities. He brought water
from the river in the battered coffee-pot he had salvaged, and while he
waited for it to boil, he went to his horse, Conqueror, stroking his
mane and whispering in his ear. Then he led him silently to a grassy
slope where he hobbled him and left him for the night.
In the fading light, he ate the hard beef jerky and drank the scalding
coffee. Refreshed and momentarily content, he sat staring into the
dying fire, seeing the bright glowing coals as living fingers clutching
at the wood in consuming embrace, taking all and returning nothing but
ashes.
Slowly his eyelids yielded. His body sagged, and blood seemed to fill
his brain, bathing it in a gentle, warm flood.
He slept. His brain slept.
But the portion of his brain called memory stirred. It was all alone;
all else was at rest. Images began to appear, drawn from inexhaustible
files, wherein are kept all thoughts, past, present, and future....
It was the night before he was to go overseas. World War III had been
declared, and he had enlisted, receiving his old rank of captain. He
was with his wife in the living room of their home. They had put the
children to bed—their sons—and now sat on the couch, watching the
blazing fire. It was then that he had showed it to her.
"I've got something to tell you, and something to show you."
He had removed the box from his pocket and opened it. And heard her cry
of surprised joy.
"Oh, a ring, and it's a diamond, too!" she cried in her rich, happy
voice which always seemed to send a thrill through his body.
"It's for you; so long as you wear it, I'll come back, even from the
dead, if need be. Read the inscription."
She held the ring up to the light and read aloud, "It is forever."
Then she had slipped the ring on her finger and her arms around him.
He held her very close, feeling the warmth from her body flowing into
his and making him oblivious to everything except that she was there in
his arms and that he was sinking deep, deep into a familiar sea, where
he had been many times before but each time found something new and
unexplored, some vastly different emotion he could never quite explain.
"Wait!" she cried. "I've something for you, too."
She took off the locket she wore about her neck and held it up to the
shimmering light, letting it spin at the end of its chain. It caught
the shadows of the fire and reflected them, greatly magnified, over the
room. It was in the shape of a star, encrusted with emeralds, with one
large ruby in the center. When he opened it, he found a picture of her
in one side, and in the other a picture of the children. He took her in
his arms again, and loosened her long, black hair, burying his face in
it for a moment. Then he kissed her, and instantly was drawn down into
the abyss which seemed to have no beginning or any end.
The next morning had been bleak and gray. The mist clung to the wet,
sodden ground, and the air was heavy in his lungs. He had driven off
in the jeep the army had sent for him, watching her there on the porch
until the mist swirled around her feet and she ran back into the house
and slammed the door. His cold fingers found the locket, making a
little bulge under his uniform, and the touch of it seemed to warm the
blood in his veins.
Three days later they had landed in Spain, merged with another
division, then crossed the Pyrenees into France, and finally to Paris
where the fighting had begun. Already the city was a silent graveyard,
littered with the rubble of towers and cathedrals which had once been
great.
Three years later they were on the road to Moscow. Over a thousand
miles lay behind, a dead man on every foot of those miles. Yet victory
was near. The Russians had not yet used the H-bomb; the threat of
annihilation by the retaliation forces had been too great.
He had done well in the war, and had been decorated many times for
bravery in action. Now he felt the victory that seemed to be in the
air, and he had wished it would come quickly, so that he might return
to her. Home. The very feel of the word was everything a battle-weary
soldier needed to make him fight harder and live longer.
Suddenly he had become aware of a droning, wooshing sound above him. It
grew louder and louder until he knew what it was.
"Heavy bombers!" The alarm had sounded, and the men had headed for
their foxholes.
But the planes had passed over, the sun glinting on their bellies,
reflecting a blinding light. They were bound for bigger, more important
targets. When the all-clear had sounded, the men clambered from their
shelters. An icy wind swept the field, bringing with it clouds which
covered the sun. A strange fear had gripped him then....
Across the Atlantic, over the pole, via Alaska, the great bombers
flew. In cities, great and small, the air raid sirens sounded, high
screaming noises which had jarred the people from sleep in time to die.
The defending planes roared into the sky to intercept the on-rushing
bombers. The horrendous battle split the universe. Many bombers fell,
victims of fanatical suicide planes, or of missiles that streaked
across the sky which none could escape.
But too many bombers got through, dropping their deadly cargo upon the
helpless cities. And not all the prayers or entreaties to any God had
stopped their carnage. First there had been the red flashes that melted
buildings into molten streams, and then the great triple-mushroom cloud
filled with the poisonous gases that the wind swept away to other
cities, where men had not died quickly and mercifully, but had rotted
away, leaving shreds of putrid flesh behind to mark the places where
they had crawled.
The retaliatory forces had roared away to bomb the Russian cities. Few,
if any, had returned. Too much blood and life were on their hands.
Those who had remained alive had found a resting place on the crown
of some distant mountain. Others had preferred the silent peaceful
sea, where flesh stayed not long on bones, and only darting fishes and
merciful beams of filtered light found their aluminum coffins.
The war had ended.
To no avail. Neither side had won. Most of the cities and the majority
of the population of both countries had been destroyed. Even their
governments had vanished, leaving a silent nothingness. The armies that
remained were without leaders, without sources of supplies, save what
they could forage and beg from an unfriendly people.
They were alone now, a group of tired, battered men, for whom life held
nothing. Their families had long since died, their bodies turned to
dust, their spirits fled on the winds to a new world.
Yet these remnants of an army must return—or at least try. Their
exodus was just beginning. Somehow he had managed to hold together the
few men left from his force. He had always nourished the hope that
she might still be alive. And now that the war was over he had to
return—had to know whether she was still waiting for him.
They had started the long trek. Throughout Europe anarchy reigned. He
and his men were alone. All they could do now was fight. Finally they
reached the seaport city of Calais. With what few men he had left, he
had commandeered a small yacht, and they had taken to the sea.
After months of storms and bad luck, they had been shipwrecked
somewhere off the coast of Mexico. He had managed to swim ashore,
and had been found by a fisherman's family. Many months he had spent
swimming and fishing, recovering his strength, inquiring about the
United States. The Mexicans had spoken with fear of the land across the
Rio Grande. All its great cities had been destroyed, and those that had
been only partially destroyed were devoid of people. The land across
the Rio Grande had become a land of shadows. The winds were poisoned,
and the few people who might have survived, were crazed and maimed by
the blasts. Few men had dared cross the Rio Grande into "El Mundo gris
de Noviembre"—the November world. Those who had, had never returned.
In time he had traveled north until he reached the Rio Grande. He had
waded into the muddy waters and somehow landed on the American side. In
the November world.
It was rightly called. The deserts were long. All plant life had died,
leaving to those once great fertile stretches, nothing but the sad,
temporal beauty that comes with death. No people had he seen. Only the
ruins of what had once been their cities. He had walked through them,
and all that he had seen were the small mutant rodents, and all that he
had heard was the occasional swish of the wind as it whisked along what
might have been dead leaves, but wasn't.
He had been on the trail for a long time. His food was nearly
exhausted. The mountains were just beginning, and he hoped to find food
there. He had not found food, but his luck had been with him. He had
found a horse. Not a normal horse, but a mutation. It was almost twice
as large as a regular horse. Its skin seemed to shimmer and was like
glassy steel to the touch. From the center of its forehead grew a horn,
straight out, as the horn of a unicorn. But most startling of all were
the animal's eyes which seemed to speak—a silent mental speech, which
he could understand. The horse had looked up as he approached it and
seemed to say: "Follow me."
And he had followed. Over a mountain, until they came to a pass, and
finally to a narrow path which led to an old cabin. He had found it
empty, but there were cans of food and a rifle and many shells. He had
remained there a long time—how long he could not tell, for he could
only measure time by the cycles of the sun and the moon. Finally he
had taken the horse, the rifle and what food was left, and once again
started the long journey home.
The farther north he went, the more life seemed to have survived. He
had seen great herds of horses like his own, stampeding across the
plains, and strange birds which he could not identify. Yet he had seen
no human beings.
But he knew he was closer now. Closer to home. He recognized the land.
How, he did not know, for it was much changed. A sensing, perhaps, of
what it had once been. He could not be more than two days' ride away.
Once he was through this desert, he would find her, he would be with
her once again; all would be well, and his long journey would be over.
The images faded. Even memory slept in a flow of warm blood. Body and
mind slept into the shadows of the dawn.
He awoke and stretched the cramped muscles of his body. At the edge of
the water he removed his clothes and stared at himself in the rippling
mirror. His muscles were lean and hard, evenly placed throughout the
length of his frame. A deep ridge ran down the length of his torso,
separating the muscles, making the chest broad. Well satisfied with his
body, he plunged into the cold water, deep down, until he thought his
lungs would burst; then swiftly returned to the clean air, tingling in
every pore. He dried himself and dressed. Conqueror was eating the long
grass near the stream. Quickly he saddled him. No time for breakfast.
He would ride all day and the next night. And he would be home.
Still northward. The hours crawled slower than a dying man. The sun
was a torch that pierced his skin, seeming to melt his bones into a
burning stream within his body. But day at last gave way to night, and
the sun to the moon. The torch became a white pock-marked goddess, with
streaming hair called stars.
In the moonlight he had not seen the crater until he was at its
very edge. Even then he might not have seen it had not the horse
stopped suddenly. The wind swirled through its vast emptiness,
slapping his face with dusty hands. For a moment he thought he heard
voices—mournful, murmuring voices, echoing up from the misty depths.
He turned quickly away and did not look back.
Night paled into day; day burned into night.
There were clouds in the sky now, and a gentle wind caressed the sweat
from his tired body. He stopped. There it was! Barely discernible
through the moonlight, he saw it. Home.
Quickly he dismounted and ran. Now he could see a small light in the
window, and he knew they were there. His breath came in hard ragged
gulps. At the window he peered in, and as his eyes became accustomed
to the inner gloom, he saw how bare the room was. No matter. Now that
he was home he would build new furniture, and the house would be even
better than it had been before.
Then he saw her.
She was sitting motionless in a straight wooden chair beside the
fireplace, the feeble light cast by the embers veiling her in mauve
shadows. He waited, wondering if she were.... Presently she stirred
like a restless child in sleep, then moved from the chair to the pile
of wood near the hearth, and replenished the fire. The wood caught
quickly, sending up long tongues of flame, and forming a bright pool of
light around her.
His blood froze. The creature illuminated by the firelight was a
monster. Large greasy scales covered its face and arms, and there was
no hair on its head. Its gums were toothless cavities in a sunken,
mumbling mouth. The eyes, turned momentarily toward the window, were
empty of life.
"No, no!" he cried soundlessly.
This was not his house. In his delirium he had only imagined he had
found it. He had been searching so long. He would go on searching.
He was turning wearily away from the window when the movement of the
creature beside the fire held his attention. It had taken a ring from
one skeleton-like finger and stood, turning the ring slowly as if
trying to decipher some inscription inside it.
He knew then. He had come home.
Slowly he moved toward the door. A great weakness was upon him. His
feet were stones, reluctant to leave the earth. His body was a weed,
shriveled by thirst. He grasped the doorknob and clung to it, looking
up at the night sky and trying to draw strength from the wind that
passed over him. It was no use. There was no strength. Only fear—a
kind of fear he had never known.
He fumbled at his throat, his fingers crawling like cold worms around
his neck until he found the locket and the clasp which had held it
safely through endless nightmare days and nights. He slipped the clasp
and the locket fell into his waiting hand. As one in a dream, he opened
it, and stared at the pictures, now in the dim moonlight no longer
faces of those he loved, but grey ghosts from the past. Even the ruby
had lost its glow. What had once been living fire was now a dull glob
of darkness.
"Nothing is forever!" He thought he had shouted the words, but only a
thin sound, the sound of leaves ruffled by the wind, came back to him.
He closed the locket and fastened the clasp, and hung it on the
doorknob. It moved slowly in the wind, back and forth, like a pendulum.
"Forever—forever. Only death is forever." He could have sworn he heard
the words.
He ran. Away from the house. To the large horse with a horn in the
center of its forehead, like a unicorn. Once in the saddle, the spurt
of strength left him. His shoulders slumped, his head dropped onto his
chest.
Conqueror trotted away, the sound of his hooves echoing hollowly in the
vast emptiness.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/0/5/1/60515//60515-h//60515-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | Who is the protagonist of the story and what is their main objective?
| 60515_4ZLFFIZT_2 | [
"An ex soldier who fought in World War III, looking for his children who have gone missing. \n",
"An ex soldier who fought in World War II, traveling home to his wife and children. \n",
"An ex soldier who fought in World War III, traveling home to his wife. \n",
"An ex soldier who fought in World War III, looking to avenge his wife’s death. \n"
] | 3 | 3 | [
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60,515 | 60515_4ZLFFIZT | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Homecoming | 1958.0 | Hidalgo, Miguel | Veterans -- United States -- Fiction; Husband and wife -- Fiction; PS; Post-apocalyptic fiction; Science fiction; Short stories | HOMECOMING
BY MIGUEL HIDALGO
What lasts forever? Does love?
Does death?... Nothing lasts
forever.... Not even forever
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of If Science Fiction, April 1958.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
The large horse plodded slowly over the shifting sand.
The rider was of medium size, with huge, strong hands and seemingly
hollow eyes. Strange eyes, alive and aflame. They had no place in
the dust-caked, tired body, yet there they were, seeking, always
seeking—searching the clear horizon, and never seeming to find what
they sought.
The horse moved faster now. They were nearing a river; the water would
be welcome on tired bodies and dry throats. He spurred his horse,
and when they reached the water's edge, he dismounted and unsaddled
the horse. Then both man and horse plunged headlong into the waiting
torrent, deep into the cool embrace of the clear liquid. They soaked it
into their pores and drank deeply of it, feeling life going once more
through their veins. Satisfied, they lifted themselves from the water,
and the man lay down on the yellow sand of the river bank to sleep.
When he awoke, the sun was almost setting. The bright shafts of red
light spilled across the sky, making the mountains silent scarlet
shadows on the face of the rippling water. Quickly he gathered
driftwood, and built a small fire. From his pack he removed some of
the coffee he had found in one of the ruined cities. He brought water
from the river in the battered coffee-pot he had salvaged, and while he
waited for it to boil, he went to his horse, Conqueror, stroking his
mane and whispering in his ear. Then he led him silently to a grassy
slope where he hobbled him and left him for the night.
In the fading light, he ate the hard beef jerky and drank the scalding
coffee. Refreshed and momentarily content, he sat staring into the
dying fire, seeing the bright glowing coals as living fingers clutching
at the wood in consuming embrace, taking all and returning nothing but
ashes.
Slowly his eyelids yielded. His body sagged, and blood seemed to fill
his brain, bathing it in a gentle, warm flood.
He slept. His brain slept.
But the portion of his brain called memory stirred. It was all alone;
all else was at rest. Images began to appear, drawn from inexhaustible
files, wherein are kept all thoughts, past, present, and future....
It was the night before he was to go overseas. World War III had been
declared, and he had enlisted, receiving his old rank of captain. He
was with his wife in the living room of their home. They had put the
children to bed—their sons—and now sat on the couch, watching the
blazing fire. It was then that he had showed it to her.
"I've got something to tell you, and something to show you."
He had removed the box from his pocket and opened it. And heard her cry
of surprised joy.
"Oh, a ring, and it's a diamond, too!" she cried in her rich, happy
voice which always seemed to send a thrill through his body.
"It's for you; so long as you wear it, I'll come back, even from the
dead, if need be. Read the inscription."
She held the ring up to the light and read aloud, "It is forever."
Then she had slipped the ring on her finger and her arms around him.
He held her very close, feeling the warmth from her body flowing into
his and making him oblivious to everything except that she was there in
his arms and that he was sinking deep, deep into a familiar sea, where
he had been many times before but each time found something new and
unexplored, some vastly different emotion he could never quite explain.
"Wait!" she cried. "I've something for you, too."
She took off the locket she wore about her neck and held it up to the
shimmering light, letting it spin at the end of its chain. It caught
the shadows of the fire and reflected them, greatly magnified, over the
room. It was in the shape of a star, encrusted with emeralds, with one
large ruby in the center. When he opened it, he found a picture of her
in one side, and in the other a picture of the children. He took her in
his arms again, and loosened her long, black hair, burying his face in
it for a moment. Then he kissed her, and instantly was drawn down into
the abyss which seemed to have no beginning or any end.
The next morning had been bleak and gray. The mist clung to the wet,
sodden ground, and the air was heavy in his lungs. He had driven off
in the jeep the army had sent for him, watching her there on the porch
until the mist swirled around her feet and she ran back into the house
and slammed the door. His cold fingers found the locket, making a
little bulge under his uniform, and the touch of it seemed to warm the
blood in his veins.
Three days later they had landed in Spain, merged with another
division, then crossed the Pyrenees into France, and finally to Paris
where the fighting had begun. Already the city was a silent graveyard,
littered with the rubble of towers and cathedrals which had once been
great.
Three years later they were on the road to Moscow. Over a thousand
miles lay behind, a dead man on every foot of those miles. Yet victory
was near. The Russians had not yet used the H-bomb; the threat of
annihilation by the retaliation forces had been too great.
He had done well in the war, and had been decorated many times for
bravery in action. Now he felt the victory that seemed to be in the
air, and he had wished it would come quickly, so that he might return
to her. Home. The very feel of the word was everything a battle-weary
soldier needed to make him fight harder and live longer.
Suddenly he had become aware of a droning, wooshing sound above him. It
grew louder and louder until he knew what it was.
"Heavy bombers!" The alarm had sounded, and the men had headed for
their foxholes.
But the planes had passed over, the sun glinting on their bellies,
reflecting a blinding light. They were bound for bigger, more important
targets. When the all-clear had sounded, the men clambered from their
shelters. An icy wind swept the field, bringing with it clouds which
covered the sun. A strange fear had gripped him then....
Across the Atlantic, over the pole, via Alaska, the great bombers
flew. In cities, great and small, the air raid sirens sounded, high
screaming noises which had jarred the people from sleep in time to die.
The defending planes roared into the sky to intercept the on-rushing
bombers. The horrendous battle split the universe. Many bombers fell,
victims of fanatical suicide planes, or of missiles that streaked
across the sky which none could escape.
But too many bombers got through, dropping their deadly cargo upon the
helpless cities. And not all the prayers or entreaties to any God had
stopped their carnage. First there had been the red flashes that melted
buildings into molten streams, and then the great triple-mushroom cloud
filled with the poisonous gases that the wind swept away to other
cities, where men had not died quickly and mercifully, but had rotted
away, leaving shreds of putrid flesh behind to mark the places where
they had crawled.
The retaliatory forces had roared away to bomb the Russian cities. Few,
if any, had returned. Too much blood and life were on their hands.
Those who had remained alive had found a resting place on the crown
of some distant mountain. Others had preferred the silent peaceful
sea, where flesh stayed not long on bones, and only darting fishes and
merciful beams of filtered light found their aluminum coffins.
The war had ended.
To no avail. Neither side had won. Most of the cities and the majority
of the population of both countries had been destroyed. Even their
governments had vanished, leaving a silent nothingness. The armies that
remained were without leaders, without sources of supplies, save what
they could forage and beg from an unfriendly people.
They were alone now, a group of tired, battered men, for whom life held
nothing. Their families had long since died, their bodies turned to
dust, their spirits fled on the winds to a new world.
Yet these remnants of an army must return—or at least try. Their
exodus was just beginning. Somehow he had managed to hold together the
few men left from his force. He had always nourished the hope that
she might still be alive. And now that the war was over he had to
return—had to know whether she was still waiting for him.
They had started the long trek. Throughout Europe anarchy reigned. He
and his men were alone. All they could do now was fight. Finally they
reached the seaport city of Calais. With what few men he had left, he
had commandeered a small yacht, and they had taken to the sea.
After months of storms and bad luck, they had been shipwrecked
somewhere off the coast of Mexico. He had managed to swim ashore,
and had been found by a fisherman's family. Many months he had spent
swimming and fishing, recovering his strength, inquiring about the
United States. The Mexicans had spoken with fear of the land across the
Rio Grande. All its great cities had been destroyed, and those that had
been only partially destroyed were devoid of people. The land across
the Rio Grande had become a land of shadows. The winds were poisoned,
and the few people who might have survived, were crazed and maimed by
the blasts. Few men had dared cross the Rio Grande into "El Mundo gris
de Noviembre"—the November world. Those who had, had never returned.
In time he had traveled north until he reached the Rio Grande. He had
waded into the muddy waters and somehow landed on the American side. In
the November world.
It was rightly called. The deserts were long. All plant life had died,
leaving to those once great fertile stretches, nothing but the sad,
temporal beauty that comes with death. No people had he seen. Only the
ruins of what had once been their cities. He had walked through them,
and all that he had seen were the small mutant rodents, and all that he
had heard was the occasional swish of the wind as it whisked along what
might have been dead leaves, but wasn't.
He had been on the trail for a long time. His food was nearly
exhausted. The mountains were just beginning, and he hoped to find food
there. He had not found food, but his luck had been with him. He had
found a horse. Not a normal horse, but a mutation. It was almost twice
as large as a regular horse. Its skin seemed to shimmer and was like
glassy steel to the touch. From the center of its forehead grew a horn,
straight out, as the horn of a unicorn. But most startling of all were
the animal's eyes which seemed to speak—a silent mental speech, which
he could understand. The horse had looked up as he approached it and
seemed to say: "Follow me."
And he had followed. Over a mountain, until they came to a pass, and
finally to a narrow path which led to an old cabin. He had found it
empty, but there were cans of food and a rifle and many shells. He had
remained there a long time—how long he could not tell, for he could
only measure time by the cycles of the sun and the moon. Finally he
had taken the horse, the rifle and what food was left, and once again
started the long journey home.
The farther north he went, the more life seemed to have survived. He
had seen great herds of horses like his own, stampeding across the
plains, and strange birds which he could not identify. Yet he had seen
no human beings.
But he knew he was closer now. Closer to home. He recognized the land.
How, he did not know, for it was much changed. A sensing, perhaps, of
what it had once been. He could not be more than two days' ride away.
Once he was through this desert, he would find her, he would be with
her once again; all would be well, and his long journey would be over.
The images faded. Even memory slept in a flow of warm blood. Body and
mind slept into the shadows of the dawn.
He awoke and stretched the cramped muscles of his body. At the edge of
the water he removed his clothes and stared at himself in the rippling
mirror. His muscles were lean and hard, evenly placed throughout the
length of his frame. A deep ridge ran down the length of his torso,
separating the muscles, making the chest broad. Well satisfied with his
body, he plunged into the cold water, deep down, until he thought his
lungs would burst; then swiftly returned to the clean air, tingling in
every pore. He dried himself and dressed. Conqueror was eating the long
grass near the stream. Quickly he saddled him. No time for breakfast.
He would ride all day and the next night. And he would be home.
Still northward. The hours crawled slower than a dying man. The sun
was a torch that pierced his skin, seeming to melt his bones into a
burning stream within his body. But day at last gave way to night, and
the sun to the moon. The torch became a white pock-marked goddess, with
streaming hair called stars.
In the moonlight he had not seen the crater until he was at its
very edge. Even then he might not have seen it had not the horse
stopped suddenly. The wind swirled through its vast emptiness,
slapping his face with dusty hands. For a moment he thought he heard
voices—mournful, murmuring voices, echoing up from the misty depths.
He turned quickly away and did not look back.
Night paled into day; day burned into night.
There were clouds in the sky now, and a gentle wind caressed the sweat
from his tired body. He stopped. There it was! Barely discernible
through the moonlight, he saw it. Home.
Quickly he dismounted and ran. Now he could see a small light in the
window, and he knew they were there. His breath came in hard ragged
gulps. At the window he peered in, and as his eyes became accustomed
to the inner gloom, he saw how bare the room was. No matter. Now that
he was home he would build new furniture, and the house would be even
better than it had been before.
Then he saw her.
She was sitting motionless in a straight wooden chair beside the
fireplace, the feeble light cast by the embers veiling her in mauve
shadows. He waited, wondering if she were.... Presently she stirred
like a restless child in sleep, then moved from the chair to the pile
of wood near the hearth, and replenished the fire. The wood caught
quickly, sending up long tongues of flame, and forming a bright pool of
light around her.
His blood froze. The creature illuminated by the firelight was a
monster. Large greasy scales covered its face and arms, and there was
no hair on its head. Its gums were toothless cavities in a sunken,
mumbling mouth. The eyes, turned momentarily toward the window, were
empty of life.
"No, no!" he cried soundlessly.
This was not his house. In his delirium he had only imagined he had
found it. He had been searching so long. He would go on searching.
He was turning wearily away from the window when the movement of the
creature beside the fire held his attention. It had taken a ring from
one skeleton-like finger and stood, turning the ring slowly as if
trying to decipher some inscription inside it.
He knew then. He had come home.
Slowly he moved toward the door. A great weakness was upon him. His
feet were stones, reluctant to leave the earth. His body was a weed,
shriveled by thirst. He grasped the doorknob and clung to it, looking
up at the night sky and trying to draw strength from the wind that
passed over him. It was no use. There was no strength. Only fear—a
kind of fear he had never known.
He fumbled at his throat, his fingers crawling like cold worms around
his neck until he found the locket and the clasp which had held it
safely through endless nightmare days and nights. He slipped the clasp
and the locket fell into his waiting hand. As one in a dream, he opened
it, and stared at the pictures, now in the dim moonlight no longer
faces of those he loved, but grey ghosts from the past. Even the ruby
had lost its glow. What had once been living fire was now a dull glob
of darkness.
"Nothing is forever!" He thought he had shouted the words, but only a
thin sound, the sound of leaves ruffled by the wind, came back to him.
He closed the locket and fastened the clasp, and hung it on the
doorknob. It moved slowly in the wind, back and forth, like a pendulum.
"Forever—forever. Only death is forever." He could have sworn he heard
the words.
He ran. Away from the house. To the large horse with a horn in the
center of its forehead, like a unicorn. Once in the saddle, the spurt
of strength left him. His shoulders slumped, his head dropped onto his
chest.
Conqueror trotted away, the sound of his hooves echoing hollowly in the
vast emptiness.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/0/5/1/60515//60515-h//60515-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | Why does the protagonist want to get back to his wife?
| 60515_4ZLFFIZT_3 | [
"He promised that he would return home after the Americans won the war.\n",
"He promised that his love is “forever” and that he would return from the war.\n",
"He promised that his love is “forever” and that he would take her to Europe once the war ended. \n",
"He promised that he would return the locket she lent him for the war. \n"
] | 2 | 2 | [
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60,515 | 60515_4ZLFFIZT | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Homecoming | 1958.0 | Hidalgo, Miguel | Veterans -- United States -- Fiction; Husband and wife -- Fiction; PS; Post-apocalyptic fiction; Science fiction; Short stories | HOMECOMING
BY MIGUEL HIDALGO
What lasts forever? Does love?
Does death?... Nothing lasts
forever.... Not even forever
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of If Science Fiction, April 1958.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
The large horse plodded slowly over the shifting sand.
The rider was of medium size, with huge, strong hands and seemingly
hollow eyes. Strange eyes, alive and aflame. They had no place in
the dust-caked, tired body, yet there they were, seeking, always
seeking—searching the clear horizon, and never seeming to find what
they sought.
The horse moved faster now. They were nearing a river; the water would
be welcome on tired bodies and dry throats. He spurred his horse,
and when they reached the water's edge, he dismounted and unsaddled
the horse. Then both man and horse plunged headlong into the waiting
torrent, deep into the cool embrace of the clear liquid. They soaked it
into their pores and drank deeply of it, feeling life going once more
through their veins. Satisfied, they lifted themselves from the water,
and the man lay down on the yellow sand of the river bank to sleep.
When he awoke, the sun was almost setting. The bright shafts of red
light spilled across the sky, making the mountains silent scarlet
shadows on the face of the rippling water. Quickly he gathered
driftwood, and built a small fire. From his pack he removed some of
the coffee he had found in one of the ruined cities. He brought water
from the river in the battered coffee-pot he had salvaged, and while he
waited for it to boil, he went to his horse, Conqueror, stroking his
mane and whispering in his ear. Then he led him silently to a grassy
slope where he hobbled him and left him for the night.
In the fading light, he ate the hard beef jerky and drank the scalding
coffee. Refreshed and momentarily content, he sat staring into the
dying fire, seeing the bright glowing coals as living fingers clutching
at the wood in consuming embrace, taking all and returning nothing but
ashes.
Slowly his eyelids yielded. His body sagged, and blood seemed to fill
his brain, bathing it in a gentle, warm flood.
He slept. His brain slept.
But the portion of his brain called memory stirred. It was all alone;
all else was at rest. Images began to appear, drawn from inexhaustible
files, wherein are kept all thoughts, past, present, and future....
It was the night before he was to go overseas. World War III had been
declared, and he had enlisted, receiving his old rank of captain. He
was with his wife in the living room of their home. They had put the
children to bed—their sons—and now sat on the couch, watching the
blazing fire. It was then that he had showed it to her.
"I've got something to tell you, and something to show you."
He had removed the box from his pocket and opened it. And heard her cry
of surprised joy.
"Oh, a ring, and it's a diamond, too!" she cried in her rich, happy
voice which always seemed to send a thrill through his body.
"It's for you; so long as you wear it, I'll come back, even from the
dead, if need be. Read the inscription."
She held the ring up to the light and read aloud, "It is forever."
Then she had slipped the ring on her finger and her arms around him.
He held her very close, feeling the warmth from her body flowing into
his and making him oblivious to everything except that she was there in
his arms and that he was sinking deep, deep into a familiar sea, where
he had been many times before but each time found something new and
unexplored, some vastly different emotion he could never quite explain.
"Wait!" she cried. "I've something for you, too."
She took off the locket she wore about her neck and held it up to the
shimmering light, letting it spin at the end of its chain. It caught
the shadows of the fire and reflected them, greatly magnified, over the
room. It was in the shape of a star, encrusted with emeralds, with one
large ruby in the center. When he opened it, he found a picture of her
in one side, and in the other a picture of the children. He took her in
his arms again, and loosened her long, black hair, burying his face in
it for a moment. Then he kissed her, and instantly was drawn down into
the abyss which seemed to have no beginning or any end.
The next morning had been bleak and gray. The mist clung to the wet,
sodden ground, and the air was heavy in his lungs. He had driven off
in the jeep the army had sent for him, watching her there on the porch
until the mist swirled around her feet and she ran back into the house
and slammed the door. His cold fingers found the locket, making a
little bulge under his uniform, and the touch of it seemed to warm the
blood in his veins.
Three days later they had landed in Spain, merged with another
division, then crossed the Pyrenees into France, and finally to Paris
where the fighting had begun. Already the city was a silent graveyard,
littered with the rubble of towers and cathedrals which had once been
great.
Three years later they were on the road to Moscow. Over a thousand
miles lay behind, a dead man on every foot of those miles. Yet victory
was near. The Russians had not yet used the H-bomb; the threat of
annihilation by the retaliation forces had been too great.
He had done well in the war, and had been decorated many times for
bravery in action. Now he felt the victory that seemed to be in the
air, and he had wished it would come quickly, so that he might return
to her. Home. The very feel of the word was everything a battle-weary
soldier needed to make him fight harder and live longer.
Suddenly he had become aware of a droning, wooshing sound above him. It
grew louder and louder until he knew what it was.
"Heavy bombers!" The alarm had sounded, and the men had headed for
their foxholes.
But the planes had passed over, the sun glinting on their bellies,
reflecting a blinding light. They were bound for bigger, more important
targets. When the all-clear had sounded, the men clambered from their
shelters. An icy wind swept the field, bringing with it clouds which
covered the sun. A strange fear had gripped him then....
Across the Atlantic, over the pole, via Alaska, the great bombers
flew. In cities, great and small, the air raid sirens sounded, high
screaming noises which had jarred the people from sleep in time to die.
The defending planes roared into the sky to intercept the on-rushing
bombers. The horrendous battle split the universe. Many bombers fell,
victims of fanatical suicide planes, or of missiles that streaked
across the sky which none could escape.
But too many bombers got through, dropping their deadly cargo upon the
helpless cities. And not all the prayers or entreaties to any God had
stopped their carnage. First there had been the red flashes that melted
buildings into molten streams, and then the great triple-mushroom cloud
filled with the poisonous gases that the wind swept away to other
cities, where men had not died quickly and mercifully, but had rotted
away, leaving shreds of putrid flesh behind to mark the places where
they had crawled.
The retaliatory forces had roared away to bomb the Russian cities. Few,
if any, had returned. Too much blood and life were on their hands.
Those who had remained alive had found a resting place on the crown
of some distant mountain. Others had preferred the silent peaceful
sea, where flesh stayed not long on bones, and only darting fishes and
merciful beams of filtered light found their aluminum coffins.
The war had ended.
To no avail. Neither side had won. Most of the cities and the majority
of the population of both countries had been destroyed. Even their
governments had vanished, leaving a silent nothingness. The armies that
remained were without leaders, without sources of supplies, save what
they could forage and beg from an unfriendly people.
They were alone now, a group of tired, battered men, for whom life held
nothing. Their families had long since died, their bodies turned to
dust, their spirits fled on the winds to a new world.
Yet these remnants of an army must return—or at least try. Their
exodus was just beginning. Somehow he had managed to hold together the
few men left from his force. He had always nourished the hope that
she might still be alive. And now that the war was over he had to
return—had to know whether she was still waiting for him.
They had started the long trek. Throughout Europe anarchy reigned. He
and his men were alone. All they could do now was fight. Finally they
reached the seaport city of Calais. With what few men he had left, he
had commandeered a small yacht, and they had taken to the sea.
After months of storms and bad luck, they had been shipwrecked
somewhere off the coast of Mexico. He had managed to swim ashore,
and had been found by a fisherman's family. Many months he had spent
swimming and fishing, recovering his strength, inquiring about the
United States. The Mexicans had spoken with fear of the land across the
Rio Grande. All its great cities had been destroyed, and those that had
been only partially destroyed were devoid of people. The land across
the Rio Grande had become a land of shadows. The winds were poisoned,
and the few people who might have survived, were crazed and maimed by
the blasts. Few men had dared cross the Rio Grande into "El Mundo gris
de Noviembre"—the November world. Those who had, had never returned.
In time he had traveled north until he reached the Rio Grande. He had
waded into the muddy waters and somehow landed on the American side. In
the November world.
It was rightly called. The deserts were long. All plant life had died,
leaving to those once great fertile stretches, nothing but the sad,
temporal beauty that comes with death. No people had he seen. Only the
ruins of what had once been their cities. He had walked through them,
and all that he had seen were the small mutant rodents, and all that he
had heard was the occasional swish of the wind as it whisked along what
might have been dead leaves, but wasn't.
He had been on the trail for a long time. His food was nearly
exhausted. The mountains were just beginning, and he hoped to find food
there. He had not found food, but his luck had been with him. He had
found a horse. Not a normal horse, but a mutation. It was almost twice
as large as a regular horse. Its skin seemed to shimmer and was like
glassy steel to the touch. From the center of its forehead grew a horn,
straight out, as the horn of a unicorn. But most startling of all were
the animal's eyes which seemed to speak—a silent mental speech, which
he could understand. The horse had looked up as he approached it and
seemed to say: "Follow me."
And he had followed. Over a mountain, until they came to a pass, and
finally to a narrow path which led to an old cabin. He had found it
empty, but there were cans of food and a rifle and many shells. He had
remained there a long time—how long he could not tell, for he could
only measure time by the cycles of the sun and the moon. Finally he
had taken the horse, the rifle and what food was left, and once again
started the long journey home.
The farther north he went, the more life seemed to have survived. He
had seen great herds of horses like his own, stampeding across the
plains, and strange birds which he could not identify. Yet he had seen
no human beings.
But he knew he was closer now. Closer to home. He recognized the land.
How, he did not know, for it was much changed. A sensing, perhaps, of
what it had once been. He could not be more than two days' ride away.
Once he was through this desert, he would find her, he would be with
her once again; all would be well, and his long journey would be over.
The images faded. Even memory slept in a flow of warm blood. Body and
mind slept into the shadows of the dawn.
He awoke and stretched the cramped muscles of his body. At the edge of
the water he removed his clothes and stared at himself in the rippling
mirror. His muscles were lean and hard, evenly placed throughout the
length of his frame. A deep ridge ran down the length of his torso,
separating the muscles, making the chest broad. Well satisfied with his
body, he plunged into the cold water, deep down, until he thought his
lungs would burst; then swiftly returned to the clean air, tingling in
every pore. He dried himself and dressed. Conqueror was eating the long
grass near the stream. Quickly he saddled him. No time for breakfast.
He would ride all day and the next night. And he would be home.
Still northward. The hours crawled slower than a dying man. The sun
was a torch that pierced his skin, seeming to melt his bones into a
burning stream within his body. But day at last gave way to night, and
the sun to the moon. The torch became a white pock-marked goddess, with
streaming hair called stars.
In the moonlight he had not seen the crater until he was at its
very edge. Even then he might not have seen it had not the horse
stopped suddenly. The wind swirled through its vast emptiness,
slapping his face with dusty hands. For a moment he thought he heard
voices—mournful, murmuring voices, echoing up from the misty depths.
He turned quickly away and did not look back.
Night paled into day; day burned into night.
There were clouds in the sky now, and a gentle wind caressed the sweat
from his tired body. He stopped. There it was! Barely discernible
through the moonlight, he saw it. Home.
Quickly he dismounted and ran. Now he could see a small light in the
window, and he knew they were there. His breath came in hard ragged
gulps. At the window he peered in, and as his eyes became accustomed
to the inner gloom, he saw how bare the room was. No matter. Now that
he was home he would build new furniture, and the house would be even
better than it had been before.
Then he saw her.
She was sitting motionless in a straight wooden chair beside the
fireplace, the feeble light cast by the embers veiling her in mauve
shadows. He waited, wondering if she were.... Presently she stirred
like a restless child in sleep, then moved from the chair to the pile
of wood near the hearth, and replenished the fire. The wood caught
quickly, sending up long tongues of flame, and forming a bright pool of
light around her.
His blood froze. The creature illuminated by the firelight was a
monster. Large greasy scales covered its face and arms, and there was
no hair on its head. Its gums were toothless cavities in a sunken,
mumbling mouth. The eyes, turned momentarily toward the window, were
empty of life.
"No, no!" he cried soundlessly.
This was not his house. In his delirium he had only imagined he had
found it. He had been searching so long. He would go on searching.
He was turning wearily away from the window when the movement of the
creature beside the fire held his attention. It had taken a ring from
one skeleton-like finger and stood, turning the ring slowly as if
trying to decipher some inscription inside it.
He knew then. He had come home.
Slowly he moved toward the door. A great weakness was upon him. His
feet were stones, reluctant to leave the earth. His body was a weed,
shriveled by thirst. He grasped the doorknob and clung to it, looking
up at the night sky and trying to draw strength from the wind that
passed over him. It was no use. There was no strength. Only fear—a
kind of fear he had never known.
He fumbled at his throat, his fingers crawling like cold worms around
his neck until he found the locket and the clasp which had held it
safely through endless nightmare days and nights. He slipped the clasp
and the locket fell into his waiting hand. As one in a dream, he opened
it, and stared at the pictures, now in the dim moonlight no longer
faces of those he loved, but grey ghosts from the past. Even the ruby
had lost its glow. What had once been living fire was now a dull glob
of darkness.
"Nothing is forever!" He thought he had shouted the words, but only a
thin sound, the sound of leaves ruffled by the wind, came back to him.
He closed the locket and fastened the clasp, and hung it on the
doorknob. It moved slowly in the wind, back and forth, like a pendulum.
"Forever—forever. Only death is forever." He could have sworn he heard
the words.
He ran. Away from the house. To the large horse with a horn in the
center of its forehead, like a unicorn. Once in the saddle, the spurt
of strength left him. His shoulders slumped, his head dropped onto his
chest.
Conqueror trotted away, the sound of his hooves echoing hollowly in the
vast emptiness.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/0/5/1/60515//60515-h//60515-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | What effect do the bombs have on the war?
| 60515_4ZLFFIZT_4 | [
"They end the war but turn the world into a zombie landscape. \n",
"They end he war and restore peace and harmony, even though there are still some stragglers wandering home from the war. \n",
"They end the war, but turn it into a semi-apocalyptic landscape.\n",
"They end the war, but turn the world into tribal groups with strict borders. \n"
] | 3 | 3 | [
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60,515 | 60515_4ZLFFIZT | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Homecoming | 1958.0 | Hidalgo, Miguel | Veterans -- United States -- Fiction; Husband and wife -- Fiction; PS; Post-apocalyptic fiction; Science fiction; Short stories | HOMECOMING
BY MIGUEL HIDALGO
What lasts forever? Does love?
Does death?... Nothing lasts
forever.... Not even forever
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of If Science Fiction, April 1958.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
The large horse plodded slowly over the shifting sand.
The rider was of medium size, with huge, strong hands and seemingly
hollow eyes. Strange eyes, alive and aflame. They had no place in
the dust-caked, tired body, yet there they were, seeking, always
seeking—searching the clear horizon, and never seeming to find what
they sought.
The horse moved faster now. They were nearing a river; the water would
be welcome on tired bodies and dry throats. He spurred his horse,
and when they reached the water's edge, he dismounted and unsaddled
the horse. Then both man and horse plunged headlong into the waiting
torrent, deep into the cool embrace of the clear liquid. They soaked it
into their pores and drank deeply of it, feeling life going once more
through their veins. Satisfied, they lifted themselves from the water,
and the man lay down on the yellow sand of the river bank to sleep.
When he awoke, the sun was almost setting. The bright shafts of red
light spilled across the sky, making the mountains silent scarlet
shadows on the face of the rippling water. Quickly he gathered
driftwood, and built a small fire. From his pack he removed some of
the coffee he had found in one of the ruined cities. He brought water
from the river in the battered coffee-pot he had salvaged, and while he
waited for it to boil, he went to his horse, Conqueror, stroking his
mane and whispering in his ear. Then he led him silently to a grassy
slope where he hobbled him and left him for the night.
In the fading light, he ate the hard beef jerky and drank the scalding
coffee. Refreshed and momentarily content, he sat staring into the
dying fire, seeing the bright glowing coals as living fingers clutching
at the wood in consuming embrace, taking all and returning nothing but
ashes.
Slowly his eyelids yielded. His body sagged, and blood seemed to fill
his brain, bathing it in a gentle, warm flood.
He slept. His brain slept.
But the portion of his brain called memory stirred. It was all alone;
all else was at rest. Images began to appear, drawn from inexhaustible
files, wherein are kept all thoughts, past, present, and future....
It was the night before he was to go overseas. World War III had been
declared, and he had enlisted, receiving his old rank of captain. He
was with his wife in the living room of their home. They had put the
children to bed—their sons—and now sat on the couch, watching the
blazing fire. It was then that he had showed it to her.
"I've got something to tell you, and something to show you."
He had removed the box from his pocket and opened it. And heard her cry
of surprised joy.
"Oh, a ring, and it's a diamond, too!" she cried in her rich, happy
voice which always seemed to send a thrill through his body.
"It's for you; so long as you wear it, I'll come back, even from the
dead, if need be. Read the inscription."
She held the ring up to the light and read aloud, "It is forever."
Then she had slipped the ring on her finger and her arms around him.
He held her very close, feeling the warmth from her body flowing into
his and making him oblivious to everything except that she was there in
his arms and that he was sinking deep, deep into a familiar sea, where
he had been many times before but each time found something new and
unexplored, some vastly different emotion he could never quite explain.
"Wait!" she cried. "I've something for you, too."
She took off the locket she wore about her neck and held it up to the
shimmering light, letting it spin at the end of its chain. It caught
the shadows of the fire and reflected them, greatly magnified, over the
room. It was in the shape of a star, encrusted with emeralds, with one
large ruby in the center. When he opened it, he found a picture of her
in one side, and in the other a picture of the children. He took her in
his arms again, and loosened her long, black hair, burying his face in
it for a moment. Then he kissed her, and instantly was drawn down into
the abyss which seemed to have no beginning or any end.
The next morning had been bleak and gray. The mist clung to the wet,
sodden ground, and the air was heavy in his lungs. He had driven off
in the jeep the army had sent for him, watching her there on the porch
until the mist swirled around her feet and she ran back into the house
and slammed the door. His cold fingers found the locket, making a
little bulge under his uniform, and the touch of it seemed to warm the
blood in his veins.
Three days later they had landed in Spain, merged with another
division, then crossed the Pyrenees into France, and finally to Paris
where the fighting had begun. Already the city was a silent graveyard,
littered with the rubble of towers and cathedrals which had once been
great.
Three years later they were on the road to Moscow. Over a thousand
miles lay behind, a dead man on every foot of those miles. Yet victory
was near. The Russians had not yet used the H-bomb; the threat of
annihilation by the retaliation forces had been too great.
He had done well in the war, and had been decorated many times for
bravery in action. Now he felt the victory that seemed to be in the
air, and he had wished it would come quickly, so that he might return
to her. Home. The very feel of the word was everything a battle-weary
soldier needed to make him fight harder and live longer.
Suddenly he had become aware of a droning, wooshing sound above him. It
grew louder and louder until he knew what it was.
"Heavy bombers!" The alarm had sounded, and the men had headed for
their foxholes.
But the planes had passed over, the sun glinting on their bellies,
reflecting a blinding light. They were bound for bigger, more important
targets. When the all-clear had sounded, the men clambered from their
shelters. An icy wind swept the field, bringing with it clouds which
covered the sun. A strange fear had gripped him then....
Across the Atlantic, over the pole, via Alaska, the great bombers
flew. In cities, great and small, the air raid sirens sounded, high
screaming noises which had jarred the people from sleep in time to die.
The defending planes roared into the sky to intercept the on-rushing
bombers. The horrendous battle split the universe. Many bombers fell,
victims of fanatical suicide planes, or of missiles that streaked
across the sky which none could escape.
But too many bombers got through, dropping their deadly cargo upon the
helpless cities. And not all the prayers or entreaties to any God had
stopped their carnage. First there had been the red flashes that melted
buildings into molten streams, and then the great triple-mushroom cloud
filled with the poisonous gases that the wind swept away to other
cities, where men had not died quickly and mercifully, but had rotted
away, leaving shreds of putrid flesh behind to mark the places where
they had crawled.
The retaliatory forces had roared away to bomb the Russian cities. Few,
if any, had returned. Too much blood and life were on their hands.
Those who had remained alive had found a resting place on the crown
of some distant mountain. Others had preferred the silent peaceful
sea, where flesh stayed not long on bones, and only darting fishes and
merciful beams of filtered light found their aluminum coffins.
The war had ended.
To no avail. Neither side had won. Most of the cities and the majority
of the population of both countries had been destroyed. Even their
governments had vanished, leaving a silent nothingness. The armies that
remained were without leaders, without sources of supplies, save what
they could forage and beg from an unfriendly people.
They were alone now, a group of tired, battered men, for whom life held
nothing. Their families had long since died, their bodies turned to
dust, their spirits fled on the winds to a new world.
Yet these remnants of an army must return—or at least try. Their
exodus was just beginning. Somehow he had managed to hold together the
few men left from his force. He had always nourished the hope that
she might still be alive. And now that the war was over he had to
return—had to know whether she was still waiting for him.
They had started the long trek. Throughout Europe anarchy reigned. He
and his men were alone. All they could do now was fight. Finally they
reached the seaport city of Calais. With what few men he had left, he
had commandeered a small yacht, and they had taken to the sea.
After months of storms and bad luck, they had been shipwrecked
somewhere off the coast of Mexico. He had managed to swim ashore,
and had been found by a fisherman's family. Many months he had spent
swimming and fishing, recovering his strength, inquiring about the
United States. The Mexicans had spoken with fear of the land across the
Rio Grande. All its great cities had been destroyed, and those that had
been only partially destroyed were devoid of people. The land across
the Rio Grande had become a land of shadows. The winds were poisoned,
and the few people who might have survived, were crazed and maimed by
the blasts. Few men had dared cross the Rio Grande into "El Mundo gris
de Noviembre"—the November world. Those who had, had never returned.
In time he had traveled north until he reached the Rio Grande. He had
waded into the muddy waters and somehow landed on the American side. In
the November world.
It was rightly called. The deserts were long. All plant life had died,
leaving to those once great fertile stretches, nothing but the sad,
temporal beauty that comes with death. No people had he seen. Only the
ruins of what had once been their cities. He had walked through them,
and all that he had seen were the small mutant rodents, and all that he
had heard was the occasional swish of the wind as it whisked along what
might have been dead leaves, but wasn't.
He had been on the trail for a long time. His food was nearly
exhausted. The mountains were just beginning, and he hoped to find food
there. He had not found food, but his luck had been with him. He had
found a horse. Not a normal horse, but a mutation. It was almost twice
as large as a regular horse. Its skin seemed to shimmer and was like
glassy steel to the touch. From the center of its forehead grew a horn,
straight out, as the horn of a unicorn. But most startling of all were
the animal's eyes which seemed to speak—a silent mental speech, which
he could understand. The horse had looked up as he approached it and
seemed to say: "Follow me."
And he had followed. Over a mountain, until they came to a pass, and
finally to a narrow path which led to an old cabin. He had found it
empty, but there were cans of food and a rifle and many shells. He had
remained there a long time—how long he could not tell, for he could
only measure time by the cycles of the sun and the moon. Finally he
had taken the horse, the rifle and what food was left, and once again
started the long journey home.
The farther north he went, the more life seemed to have survived. He
had seen great herds of horses like his own, stampeding across the
plains, and strange birds which he could not identify. Yet he had seen
no human beings.
But he knew he was closer now. Closer to home. He recognized the land.
How, he did not know, for it was much changed. A sensing, perhaps, of
what it had once been. He could not be more than two days' ride away.
Once he was through this desert, he would find her, he would be with
her once again; all would be well, and his long journey would be over.
The images faded. Even memory slept in a flow of warm blood. Body and
mind slept into the shadows of the dawn.
He awoke and stretched the cramped muscles of his body. At the edge of
the water he removed his clothes and stared at himself in the rippling
mirror. His muscles were lean and hard, evenly placed throughout the
length of his frame. A deep ridge ran down the length of his torso,
separating the muscles, making the chest broad. Well satisfied with his
body, he plunged into the cold water, deep down, until he thought his
lungs would burst; then swiftly returned to the clean air, tingling in
every pore. He dried himself and dressed. Conqueror was eating the long
grass near the stream. Quickly he saddled him. No time for breakfast.
He would ride all day and the next night. And he would be home.
Still northward. The hours crawled slower than a dying man. The sun
was a torch that pierced his skin, seeming to melt his bones into a
burning stream within his body. But day at last gave way to night, and
the sun to the moon. The torch became a white pock-marked goddess, with
streaming hair called stars.
In the moonlight he had not seen the crater until he was at its
very edge. Even then he might not have seen it had not the horse
stopped suddenly. The wind swirled through its vast emptiness,
slapping his face with dusty hands. For a moment he thought he heard
voices—mournful, murmuring voices, echoing up from the misty depths.
He turned quickly away and did not look back.
Night paled into day; day burned into night.
There were clouds in the sky now, and a gentle wind caressed the sweat
from his tired body. He stopped. There it was! Barely discernible
through the moonlight, he saw it. Home.
Quickly he dismounted and ran. Now he could see a small light in the
window, and he knew they were there. His breath came in hard ragged
gulps. At the window he peered in, and as his eyes became accustomed
to the inner gloom, he saw how bare the room was. No matter. Now that
he was home he would build new furniture, and the house would be even
better than it had been before.
Then he saw her.
She was sitting motionless in a straight wooden chair beside the
fireplace, the feeble light cast by the embers veiling her in mauve
shadows. He waited, wondering if she were.... Presently she stirred
like a restless child in sleep, then moved from the chair to the pile
of wood near the hearth, and replenished the fire. The wood caught
quickly, sending up long tongues of flame, and forming a bright pool of
light around her.
His blood froze. The creature illuminated by the firelight was a
monster. Large greasy scales covered its face and arms, and there was
no hair on its head. Its gums were toothless cavities in a sunken,
mumbling mouth. The eyes, turned momentarily toward the window, were
empty of life.
"No, no!" he cried soundlessly.
This was not his house. In his delirium he had only imagined he had
found it. He had been searching so long. He would go on searching.
He was turning wearily away from the window when the movement of the
creature beside the fire held his attention. It had taken a ring from
one skeleton-like finger and stood, turning the ring slowly as if
trying to decipher some inscription inside it.
He knew then. He had come home.
Slowly he moved toward the door. A great weakness was upon him. His
feet were stones, reluctant to leave the earth. His body was a weed,
shriveled by thirst. He grasped the doorknob and clung to it, looking
up at the night sky and trying to draw strength from the wind that
passed over him. It was no use. There was no strength. Only fear—a
kind of fear he had never known.
He fumbled at his throat, his fingers crawling like cold worms around
his neck until he found the locket and the clasp which had held it
safely through endless nightmare days and nights. He slipped the clasp
and the locket fell into his waiting hand. As one in a dream, he opened
it, and stared at the pictures, now in the dim moonlight no longer
faces of those he loved, but grey ghosts from the past. Even the ruby
had lost its glow. What had once been living fire was now a dull glob
of darkness.
"Nothing is forever!" He thought he had shouted the words, but only a
thin sound, the sound of leaves ruffled by the wind, came back to him.
He closed the locket and fastened the clasp, and hung it on the
doorknob. It moved slowly in the wind, back and forth, like a pendulum.
"Forever—forever. Only death is forever." He could have sworn he heard
the words.
He ran. Away from the house. To the large horse with a horn in the
center of its forehead, like a unicorn. Once in the saddle, the spurt
of strength left him. His shoulders slumped, his head dropped onto his
chest.
Conqueror trotted away, the sound of his hooves echoing hollowly in the
vast emptiness.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/0/5/1/60515//60515-h//60515-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | Who shows the protagonist the food and the rifle?
| 60515_4ZLFFIZT_5 | [
"A conquerer \n",
"He found them himself \n",
"A member of his battalion \n",
"His horse \n"
] | 4 | 4 | [
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60,515 | 60515_4ZLFFIZT | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Homecoming | 1958.0 | Hidalgo, Miguel | Veterans -- United States -- Fiction; Husband and wife -- Fiction; PS; Post-apocalyptic fiction; Science fiction; Short stories | HOMECOMING
BY MIGUEL HIDALGO
What lasts forever? Does love?
Does death?... Nothing lasts
forever.... Not even forever
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of If Science Fiction, April 1958.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
The large horse plodded slowly over the shifting sand.
The rider was of medium size, with huge, strong hands and seemingly
hollow eyes. Strange eyes, alive and aflame. They had no place in
the dust-caked, tired body, yet there they were, seeking, always
seeking—searching the clear horizon, and never seeming to find what
they sought.
The horse moved faster now. They were nearing a river; the water would
be welcome on tired bodies and dry throats. He spurred his horse,
and when they reached the water's edge, he dismounted and unsaddled
the horse. Then both man and horse plunged headlong into the waiting
torrent, deep into the cool embrace of the clear liquid. They soaked it
into their pores and drank deeply of it, feeling life going once more
through their veins. Satisfied, they lifted themselves from the water,
and the man lay down on the yellow sand of the river bank to sleep.
When he awoke, the sun was almost setting. The bright shafts of red
light spilled across the sky, making the mountains silent scarlet
shadows on the face of the rippling water. Quickly he gathered
driftwood, and built a small fire. From his pack he removed some of
the coffee he had found in one of the ruined cities. He brought water
from the river in the battered coffee-pot he had salvaged, and while he
waited for it to boil, he went to his horse, Conqueror, stroking his
mane and whispering in his ear. Then he led him silently to a grassy
slope where he hobbled him and left him for the night.
In the fading light, he ate the hard beef jerky and drank the scalding
coffee. Refreshed and momentarily content, he sat staring into the
dying fire, seeing the bright glowing coals as living fingers clutching
at the wood in consuming embrace, taking all and returning nothing but
ashes.
Slowly his eyelids yielded. His body sagged, and blood seemed to fill
his brain, bathing it in a gentle, warm flood.
He slept. His brain slept.
But the portion of his brain called memory stirred. It was all alone;
all else was at rest. Images began to appear, drawn from inexhaustible
files, wherein are kept all thoughts, past, present, and future....
It was the night before he was to go overseas. World War III had been
declared, and he had enlisted, receiving his old rank of captain. He
was with his wife in the living room of their home. They had put the
children to bed—their sons—and now sat on the couch, watching the
blazing fire. It was then that he had showed it to her.
"I've got something to tell you, and something to show you."
He had removed the box from his pocket and opened it. And heard her cry
of surprised joy.
"Oh, a ring, and it's a diamond, too!" she cried in her rich, happy
voice which always seemed to send a thrill through his body.
"It's for you; so long as you wear it, I'll come back, even from the
dead, if need be. Read the inscription."
She held the ring up to the light and read aloud, "It is forever."
Then she had slipped the ring on her finger and her arms around him.
He held her very close, feeling the warmth from her body flowing into
his and making him oblivious to everything except that she was there in
his arms and that he was sinking deep, deep into a familiar sea, where
he had been many times before but each time found something new and
unexplored, some vastly different emotion he could never quite explain.
"Wait!" she cried. "I've something for you, too."
She took off the locket she wore about her neck and held it up to the
shimmering light, letting it spin at the end of its chain. It caught
the shadows of the fire and reflected them, greatly magnified, over the
room. It was in the shape of a star, encrusted with emeralds, with one
large ruby in the center. When he opened it, he found a picture of her
in one side, and in the other a picture of the children. He took her in
his arms again, and loosened her long, black hair, burying his face in
it for a moment. Then he kissed her, and instantly was drawn down into
the abyss which seemed to have no beginning or any end.
The next morning had been bleak and gray. The mist clung to the wet,
sodden ground, and the air was heavy in his lungs. He had driven off
in the jeep the army had sent for him, watching her there on the porch
until the mist swirled around her feet and she ran back into the house
and slammed the door. His cold fingers found the locket, making a
little bulge under his uniform, and the touch of it seemed to warm the
blood in his veins.
Three days later they had landed in Spain, merged with another
division, then crossed the Pyrenees into France, and finally to Paris
where the fighting had begun. Already the city was a silent graveyard,
littered with the rubble of towers and cathedrals which had once been
great.
Three years later they were on the road to Moscow. Over a thousand
miles lay behind, a dead man on every foot of those miles. Yet victory
was near. The Russians had not yet used the H-bomb; the threat of
annihilation by the retaliation forces had been too great.
He had done well in the war, and had been decorated many times for
bravery in action. Now he felt the victory that seemed to be in the
air, and he had wished it would come quickly, so that he might return
to her. Home. The very feel of the word was everything a battle-weary
soldier needed to make him fight harder and live longer.
Suddenly he had become aware of a droning, wooshing sound above him. It
grew louder and louder until he knew what it was.
"Heavy bombers!" The alarm had sounded, and the men had headed for
their foxholes.
But the planes had passed over, the sun glinting on their bellies,
reflecting a blinding light. They were bound for bigger, more important
targets. When the all-clear had sounded, the men clambered from their
shelters. An icy wind swept the field, bringing with it clouds which
covered the sun. A strange fear had gripped him then....
Across the Atlantic, over the pole, via Alaska, the great bombers
flew. In cities, great and small, the air raid sirens sounded, high
screaming noises which had jarred the people from sleep in time to die.
The defending planes roared into the sky to intercept the on-rushing
bombers. The horrendous battle split the universe. Many bombers fell,
victims of fanatical suicide planes, or of missiles that streaked
across the sky which none could escape.
But too many bombers got through, dropping their deadly cargo upon the
helpless cities. And not all the prayers or entreaties to any God had
stopped their carnage. First there had been the red flashes that melted
buildings into molten streams, and then the great triple-mushroom cloud
filled with the poisonous gases that the wind swept away to other
cities, where men had not died quickly and mercifully, but had rotted
away, leaving shreds of putrid flesh behind to mark the places where
they had crawled.
The retaliatory forces had roared away to bomb the Russian cities. Few,
if any, had returned. Too much blood and life were on their hands.
Those who had remained alive had found a resting place on the crown
of some distant mountain. Others had preferred the silent peaceful
sea, where flesh stayed not long on bones, and only darting fishes and
merciful beams of filtered light found their aluminum coffins.
The war had ended.
To no avail. Neither side had won. Most of the cities and the majority
of the population of both countries had been destroyed. Even their
governments had vanished, leaving a silent nothingness. The armies that
remained were without leaders, without sources of supplies, save what
they could forage and beg from an unfriendly people.
They were alone now, a group of tired, battered men, for whom life held
nothing. Their families had long since died, their bodies turned to
dust, their spirits fled on the winds to a new world.
Yet these remnants of an army must return—or at least try. Their
exodus was just beginning. Somehow he had managed to hold together the
few men left from his force. He had always nourished the hope that
she might still be alive. And now that the war was over he had to
return—had to know whether she was still waiting for him.
They had started the long trek. Throughout Europe anarchy reigned. He
and his men were alone. All they could do now was fight. Finally they
reached the seaport city of Calais. With what few men he had left, he
had commandeered a small yacht, and they had taken to the sea.
After months of storms and bad luck, they had been shipwrecked
somewhere off the coast of Mexico. He had managed to swim ashore,
and had been found by a fisherman's family. Many months he had spent
swimming and fishing, recovering his strength, inquiring about the
United States. The Mexicans had spoken with fear of the land across the
Rio Grande. All its great cities had been destroyed, and those that had
been only partially destroyed were devoid of people. The land across
the Rio Grande had become a land of shadows. The winds were poisoned,
and the few people who might have survived, were crazed and maimed by
the blasts. Few men had dared cross the Rio Grande into "El Mundo gris
de Noviembre"—the November world. Those who had, had never returned.
In time he had traveled north until he reached the Rio Grande. He had
waded into the muddy waters and somehow landed on the American side. In
the November world.
It was rightly called. The deserts were long. All plant life had died,
leaving to those once great fertile stretches, nothing but the sad,
temporal beauty that comes with death. No people had he seen. Only the
ruins of what had once been their cities. He had walked through them,
and all that he had seen were the small mutant rodents, and all that he
had heard was the occasional swish of the wind as it whisked along what
might have been dead leaves, but wasn't.
He had been on the trail for a long time. His food was nearly
exhausted. The mountains were just beginning, and he hoped to find food
there. He had not found food, but his luck had been with him. He had
found a horse. Not a normal horse, but a mutation. It was almost twice
as large as a regular horse. Its skin seemed to shimmer and was like
glassy steel to the touch. From the center of its forehead grew a horn,
straight out, as the horn of a unicorn. But most startling of all were
the animal's eyes which seemed to speak—a silent mental speech, which
he could understand. The horse had looked up as he approached it and
seemed to say: "Follow me."
And he had followed. Over a mountain, until they came to a pass, and
finally to a narrow path which led to an old cabin. He had found it
empty, but there were cans of food and a rifle and many shells. He had
remained there a long time—how long he could not tell, for he could
only measure time by the cycles of the sun and the moon. Finally he
had taken the horse, the rifle and what food was left, and once again
started the long journey home.
The farther north he went, the more life seemed to have survived. He
had seen great herds of horses like his own, stampeding across the
plains, and strange birds which he could not identify. Yet he had seen
no human beings.
But he knew he was closer now. Closer to home. He recognized the land.
How, he did not know, for it was much changed. A sensing, perhaps, of
what it had once been. He could not be more than two days' ride away.
Once he was through this desert, he would find her, he would be with
her once again; all would be well, and his long journey would be over.
The images faded. Even memory slept in a flow of warm blood. Body and
mind slept into the shadows of the dawn.
He awoke and stretched the cramped muscles of his body. At the edge of
the water he removed his clothes and stared at himself in the rippling
mirror. His muscles were lean and hard, evenly placed throughout the
length of his frame. A deep ridge ran down the length of his torso,
separating the muscles, making the chest broad. Well satisfied with his
body, he plunged into the cold water, deep down, until he thought his
lungs would burst; then swiftly returned to the clean air, tingling in
every pore. He dried himself and dressed. Conqueror was eating the long
grass near the stream. Quickly he saddled him. No time for breakfast.
He would ride all day and the next night. And he would be home.
Still northward. The hours crawled slower than a dying man. The sun
was a torch that pierced his skin, seeming to melt his bones into a
burning stream within his body. But day at last gave way to night, and
the sun to the moon. The torch became a white pock-marked goddess, with
streaming hair called stars.
In the moonlight he had not seen the crater until he was at its
very edge. Even then he might not have seen it had not the horse
stopped suddenly. The wind swirled through its vast emptiness,
slapping his face with dusty hands. For a moment he thought he heard
voices—mournful, murmuring voices, echoing up from the misty depths.
He turned quickly away and did not look back.
Night paled into day; day burned into night.
There were clouds in the sky now, and a gentle wind caressed the sweat
from his tired body. He stopped. There it was! Barely discernible
through the moonlight, he saw it. Home.
Quickly he dismounted and ran. Now he could see a small light in the
window, and he knew they were there. His breath came in hard ragged
gulps. At the window he peered in, and as his eyes became accustomed
to the inner gloom, he saw how bare the room was. No matter. Now that
he was home he would build new furniture, and the house would be even
better than it had been before.
Then he saw her.
She was sitting motionless in a straight wooden chair beside the
fireplace, the feeble light cast by the embers veiling her in mauve
shadows. He waited, wondering if she were.... Presently she stirred
like a restless child in sleep, then moved from the chair to the pile
of wood near the hearth, and replenished the fire. The wood caught
quickly, sending up long tongues of flame, and forming a bright pool of
light around her.
His blood froze. The creature illuminated by the firelight was a
monster. Large greasy scales covered its face and arms, and there was
no hair on its head. Its gums were toothless cavities in a sunken,
mumbling mouth. The eyes, turned momentarily toward the window, were
empty of life.
"No, no!" he cried soundlessly.
This was not his house. In his delirium he had only imagined he had
found it. He had been searching so long. He would go on searching.
He was turning wearily away from the window when the movement of the
creature beside the fire held his attention. It had taken a ring from
one skeleton-like finger and stood, turning the ring slowly as if
trying to decipher some inscription inside it.
He knew then. He had come home.
Slowly he moved toward the door. A great weakness was upon him. His
feet were stones, reluctant to leave the earth. His body was a weed,
shriveled by thirst. He grasped the doorknob and clung to it, looking
up at the night sky and trying to draw strength from the wind that
passed over him. It was no use. There was no strength. Only fear—a
kind of fear he had never known.
He fumbled at his throat, his fingers crawling like cold worms around
his neck until he found the locket and the clasp which had held it
safely through endless nightmare days and nights. He slipped the clasp
and the locket fell into his waiting hand. As one in a dream, he opened
it, and stared at the pictures, now in the dim moonlight no longer
faces of those he loved, but grey ghosts from the past. Even the ruby
had lost its glow. What had once been living fire was now a dull glob
of darkness.
"Nothing is forever!" He thought he had shouted the words, but only a
thin sound, the sound of leaves ruffled by the wind, came back to him.
He closed the locket and fastened the clasp, and hung it on the
doorknob. It moved slowly in the wind, back and forth, like a pendulum.
"Forever—forever. Only death is forever." He could have sworn he heard
the words.
He ran. Away from the house. To the large horse with a horn in the
center of its forehead, like a unicorn. Once in the saddle, the spurt
of strength left him. His shoulders slumped, his head dropped onto his
chest.
Conqueror trotted away, the sound of his hooves echoing hollowly in the
vast emptiness.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/0/5/1/60515//60515-h//60515-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | How does the war affect the protagonist’s relationship with his wife?
| 60515_4ZLFFIZT_6 | [
"She waits at home like they planned, greeting them lovingly. \n",
"She is transformed into a monster, striking fear in the protagonist. \n",
"She is killed during the war, her body nowhere to be found. \n",
"She patiently waits for him at home. \n"
] | 2 | 2 | [
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60,515 | 60515_4ZLFFIZT | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Homecoming | 1958.0 | Hidalgo, Miguel | Veterans -- United States -- Fiction; Husband and wife -- Fiction; PS; Post-apocalyptic fiction; Science fiction; Short stories | HOMECOMING
BY MIGUEL HIDALGO
What lasts forever? Does love?
Does death?... Nothing lasts
forever.... Not even forever
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of If Science Fiction, April 1958.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
The large horse plodded slowly over the shifting sand.
The rider was of medium size, with huge, strong hands and seemingly
hollow eyes. Strange eyes, alive and aflame. They had no place in
the dust-caked, tired body, yet there they were, seeking, always
seeking—searching the clear horizon, and never seeming to find what
they sought.
The horse moved faster now. They were nearing a river; the water would
be welcome on tired bodies and dry throats. He spurred his horse,
and when they reached the water's edge, he dismounted and unsaddled
the horse. Then both man and horse plunged headlong into the waiting
torrent, deep into the cool embrace of the clear liquid. They soaked it
into their pores and drank deeply of it, feeling life going once more
through their veins. Satisfied, they lifted themselves from the water,
and the man lay down on the yellow sand of the river bank to sleep.
When he awoke, the sun was almost setting. The bright shafts of red
light spilled across the sky, making the mountains silent scarlet
shadows on the face of the rippling water. Quickly he gathered
driftwood, and built a small fire. From his pack he removed some of
the coffee he had found in one of the ruined cities. He brought water
from the river in the battered coffee-pot he had salvaged, and while he
waited for it to boil, he went to his horse, Conqueror, stroking his
mane and whispering in his ear. Then he led him silently to a grassy
slope where he hobbled him and left him for the night.
In the fading light, he ate the hard beef jerky and drank the scalding
coffee. Refreshed and momentarily content, he sat staring into the
dying fire, seeing the bright glowing coals as living fingers clutching
at the wood in consuming embrace, taking all and returning nothing but
ashes.
Slowly his eyelids yielded. His body sagged, and blood seemed to fill
his brain, bathing it in a gentle, warm flood.
He slept. His brain slept.
But the portion of his brain called memory stirred. It was all alone;
all else was at rest. Images began to appear, drawn from inexhaustible
files, wherein are kept all thoughts, past, present, and future....
It was the night before he was to go overseas. World War III had been
declared, and he had enlisted, receiving his old rank of captain. He
was with his wife in the living room of their home. They had put the
children to bed—their sons—and now sat on the couch, watching the
blazing fire. It was then that he had showed it to her.
"I've got something to tell you, and something to show you."
He had removed the box from his pocket and opened it. And heard her cry
of surprised joy.
"Oh, a ring, and it's a diamond, too!" she cried in her rich, happy
voice which always seemed to send a thrill through his body.
"It's for you; so long as you wear it, I'll come back, even from the
dead, if need be. Read the inscription."
She held the ring up to the light and read aloud, "It is forever."
Then she had slipped the ring on her finger and her arms around him.
He held her very close, feeling the warmth from her body flowing into
his and making him oblivious to everything except that she was there in
his arms and that he was sinking deep, deep into a familiar sea, where
he had been many times before but each time found something new and
unexplored, some vastly different emotion he could never quite explain.
"Wait!" she cried. "I've something for you, too."
She took off the locket she wore about her neck and held it up to the
shimmering light, letting it spin at the end of its chain. It caught
the shadows of the fire and reflected them, greatly magnified, over the
room. It was in the shape of a star, encrusted with emeralds, with one
large ruby in the center. When he opened it, he found a picture of her
in one side, and in the other a picture of the children. He took her in
his arms again, and loosened her long, black hair, burying his face in
it for a moment. Then he kissed her, and instantly was drawn down into
the abyss which seemed to have no beginning or any end.
The next morning had been bleak and gray. The mist clung to the wet,
sodden ground, and the air was heavy in his lungs. He had driven off
in the jeep the army had sent for him, watching her there on the porch
until the mist swirled around her feet and she ran back into the house
and slammed the door. His cold fingers found the locket, making a
little bulge under his uniform, and the touch of it seemed to warm the
blood in his veins.
Three days later they had landed in Spain, merged with another
division, then crossed the Pyrenees into France, and finally to Paris
where the fighting had begun. Already the city was a silent graveyard,
littered with the rubble of towers and cathedrals which had once been
great.
Three years later they were on the road to Moscow. Over a thousand
miles lay behind, a dead man on every foot of those miles. Yet victory
was near. The Russians had not yet used the H-bomb; the threat of
annihilation by the retaliation forces had been too great.
He had done well in the war, and had been decorated many times for
bravery in action. Now he felt the victory that seemed to be in the
air, and he had wished it would come quickly, so that he might return
to her. Home. The very feel of the word was everything a battle-weary
soldier needed to make him fight harder and live longer.
Suddenly he had become aware of a droning, wooshing sound above him. It
grew louder and louder until he knew what it was.
"Heavy bombers!" The alarm had sounded, and the men had headed for
their foxholes.
But the planes had passed over, the sun glinting on their bellies,
reflecting a blinding light. They were bound for bigger, more important
targets. When the all-clear had sounded, the men clambered from their
shelters. An icy wind swept the field, bringing with it clouds which
covered the sun. A strange fear had gripped him then....
Across the Atlantic, over the pole, via Alaska, the great bombers
flew. In cities, great and small, the air raid sirens sounded, high
screaming noises which had jarred the people from sleep in time to die.
The defending planes roared into the sky to intercept the on-rushing
bombers. The horrendous battle split the universe. Many bombers fell,
victims of fanatical suicide planes, or of missiles that streaked
across the sky which none could escape.
But too many bombers got through, dropping their deadly cargo upon the
helpless cities. And not all the prayers or entreaties to any God had
stopped their carnage. First there had been the red flashes that melted
buildings into molten streams, and then the great triple-mushroom cloud
filled with the poisonous gases that the wind swept away to other
cities, where men had not died quickly and mercifully, but had rotted
away, leaving shreds of putrid flesh behind to mark the places where
they had crawled.
The retaliatory forces had roared away to bomb the Russian cities. Few,
if any, had returned. Too much blood and life were on their hands.
Those who had remained alive had found a resting place on the crown
of some distant mountain. Others had preferred the silent peaceful
sea, where flesh stayed not long on bones, and only darting fishes and
merciful beams of filtered light found their aluminum coffins.
The war had ended.
To no avail. Neither side had won. Most of the cities and the majority
of the population of both countries had been destroyed. Even their
governments had vanished, leaving a silent nothingness. The armies that
remained were without leaders, without sources of supplies, save what
they could forage and beg from an unfriendly people.
They were alone now, a group of tired, battered men, for whom life held
nothing. Their families had long since died, their bodies turned to
dust, their spirits fled on the winds to a new world.
Yet these remnants of an army must return—or at least try. Their
exodus was just beginning. Somehow he had managed to hold together the
few men left from his force. He had always nourished the hope that
she might still be alive. And now that the war was over he had to
return—had to know whether she was still waiting for him.
They had started the long trek. Throughout Europe anarchy reigned. He
and his men were alone. All they could do now was fight. Finally they
reached the seaport city of Calais. With what few men he had left, he
had commandeered a small yacht, and they had taken to the sea.
After months of storms and bad luck, they had been shipwrecked
somewhere off the coast of Mexico. He had managed to swim ashore,
and had been found by a fisherman's family. Many months he had spent
swimming and fishing, recovering his strength, inquiring about the
United States. The Mexicans had spoken with fear of the land across the
Rio Grande. All its great cities had been destroyed, and those that had
been only partially destroyed were devoid of people. The land across
the Rio Grande had become a land of shadows. The winds were poisoned,
and the few people who might have survived, were crazed and maimed by
the blasts. Few men had dared cross the Rio Grande into "El Mundo gris
de Noviembre"—the November world. Those who had, had never returned.
In time he had traveled north until he reached the Rio Grande. He had
waded into the muddy waters and somehow landed on the American side. In
the November world.
It was rightly called. The deserts were long. All plant life had died,
leaving to those once great fertile stretches, nothing but the sad,
temporal beauty that comes with death. No people had he seen. Only the
ruins of what had once been their cities. He had walked through them,
and all that he had seen were the small mutant rodents, and all that he
had heard was the occasional swish of the wind as it whisked along what
might have been dead leaves, but wasn't.
He had been on the trail for a long time. His food was nearly
exhausted. The mountains were just beginning, and he hoped to find food
there. He had not found food, but his luck had been with him. He had
found a horse. Not a normal horse, but a mutation. It was almost twice
as large as a regular horse. Its skin seemed to shimmer and was like
glassy steel to the touch. From the center of its forehead grew a horn,
straight out, as the horn of a unicorn. But most startling of all were
the animal's eyes which seemed to speak—a silent mental speech, which
he could understand. The horse had looked up as he approached it and
seemed to say: "Follow me."
And he had followed. Over a mountain, until they came to a pass, and
finally to a narrow path which led to an old cabin. He had found it
empty, but there were cans of food and a rifle and many shells. He had
remained there a long time—how long he could not tell, for he could
only measure time by the cycles of the sun and the moon. Finally he
had taken the horse, the rifle and what food was left, and once again
started the long journey home.
The farther north he went, the more life seemed to have survived. He
had seen great herds of horses like his own, stampeding across the
plains, and strange birds which he could not identify. Yet he had seen
no human beings.
But he knew he was closer now. Closer to home. He recognized the land.
How, he did not know, for it was much changed. A sensing, perhaps, of
what it had once been. He could not be more than two days' ride away.
Once he was through this desert, he would find her, he would be with
her once again; all would be well, and his long journey would be over.
The images faded. Even memory slept in a flow of warm blood. Body and
mind slept into the shadows of the dawn.
He awoke and stretched the cramped muscles of his body. At the edge of
the water he removed his clothes and stared at himself in the rippling
mirror. His muscles were lean and hard, evenly placed throughout the
length of his frame. A deep ridge ran down the length of his torso,
separating the muscles, making the chest broad. Well satisfied with his
body, he plunged into the cold water, deep down, until he thought his
lungs would burst; then swiftly returned to the clean air, tingling in
every pore. He dried himself and dressed. Conqueror was eating the long
grass near the stream. Quickly he saddled him. No time for breakfast.
He would ride all day and the next night. And he would be home.
Still northward. The hours crawled slower than a dying man. The sun
was a torch that pierced his skin, seeming to melt his bones into a
burning stream within his body. But day at last gave way to night, and
the sun to the moon. The torch became a white pock-marked goddess, with
streaming hair called stars.
In the moonlight he had not seen the crater until he was at its
very edge. Even then he might not have seen it had not the horse
stopped suddenly. The wind swirled through its vast emptiness,
slapping his face with dusty hands. For a moment he thought he heard
voices—mournful, murmuring voices, echoing up from the misty depths.
He turned quickly away and did not look back.
Night paled into day; day burned into night.
There were clouds in the sky now, and a gentle wind caressed the sweat
from his tired body. He stopped. There it was! Barely discernible
through the moonlight, he saw it. Home.
Quickly he dismounted and ran. Now he could see a small light in the
window, and he knew they were there. His breath came in hard ragged
gulps. At the window he peered in, and as his eyes became accustomed
to the inner gloom, he saw how bare the room was. No matter. Now that
he was home he would build new furniture, and the house would be even
better than it had been before.
Then he saw her.
She was sitting motionless in a straight wooden chair beside the
fireplace, the feeble light cast by the embers veiling her in mauve
shadows. He waited, wondering if she were.... Presently she stirred
like a restless child in sleep, then moved from the chair to the pile
of wood near the hearth, and replenished the fire. The wood caught
quickly, sending up long tongues of flame, and forming a bright pool of
light around her.
His blood froze. The creature illuminated by the firelight was a
monster. Large greasy scales covered its face and arms, and there was
no hair on its head. Its gums were toothless cavities in a sunken,
mumbling mouth. The eyes, turned momentarily toward the window, were
empty of life.
"No, no!" he cried soundlessly.
This was not his house. In his delirium he had only imagined he had
found it. He had been searching so long. He would go on searching.
He was turning wearily away from the window when the movement of the
creature beside the fire held his attention. It had taken a ring from
one skeleton-like finger and stood, turning the ring slowly as if
trying to decipher some inscription inside it.
He knew then. He had come home.
Slowly he moved toward the door. A great weakness was upon him. His
feet were stones, reluctant to leave the earth. His body was a weed,
shriveled by thirst. He grasped the doorknob and clung to it, looking
up at the night sky and trying to draw strength from the wind that
passed over him. It was no use. There was no strength. Only fear—a
kind of fear he had never known.
He fumbled at his throat, his fingers crawling like cold worms around
his neck until he found the locket and the clasp which had held it
safely through endless nightmare days and nights. He slipped the clasp
and the locket fell into his waiting hand. As one in a dream, he opened
it, and stared at the pictures, now in the dim moonlight no longer
faces of those he loved, but grey ghosts from the past. Even the ruby
had lost its glow. What had once been living fire was now a dull glob
of darkness.
"Nothing is forever!" He thought he had shouted the words, but only a
thin sound, the sound of leaves ruffled by the wind, came back to him.
He closed the locket and fastened the clasp, and hung it on the
doorknob. It moved slowly in the wind, back and forth, like a pendulum.
"Forever—forever. Only death is forever." He could have sworn he heard
the words.
He ran. Away from the house. To the large horse with a horn in the
center of its forehead, like a unicorn. Once in the saddle, the spurt
of strength left him. His shoulders slumped, his head dropped onto his
chest.
Conqueror trotted away, the sound of his hooves echoing hollowly in the
vast emptiness.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/0/5/1/60515//60515-h//60515-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | What happens to Europe after the bombs?
| 60515_4ZLFFIZT_7 | [
"It becomes anarchic, with essentially no governments left. \n",
"It becomes anarchic, with nothing but gangs to officially end what is left of the war. \n",
"It falls to Russia, becoming a wasteland in the wake of its bombing. \n",
"It becomes a festering wasteland. All living things dead. \n"
] | 1 | 1 | [
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60,515 | 60515_4ZLFFIZT | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Homecoming | 1958.0 | Hidalgo, Miguel | Veterans -- United States -- Fiction; Husband and wife -- Fiction; PS; Post-apocalyptic fiction; Science fiction; Short stories | HOMECOMING
BY MIGUEL HIDALGO
What lasts forever? Does love?
Does death?... Nothing lasts
forever.... Not even forever
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of If Science Fiction, April 1958.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
The large horse plodded slowly over the shifting sand.
The rider was of medium size, with huge, strong hands and seemingly
hollow eyes. Strange eyes, alive and aflame. They had no place in
the dust-caked, tired body, yet there they were, seeking, always
seeking—searching the clear horizon, and never seeming to find what
they sought.
The horse moved faster now. They were nearing a river; the water would
be welcome on tired bodies and dry throats. He spurred his horse,
and when they reached the water's edge, he dismounted and unsaddled
the horse. Then both man and horse plunged headlong into the waiting
torrent, deep into the cool embrace of the clear liquid. They soaked it
into their pores and drank deeply of it, feeling life going once more
through their veins. Satisfied, they lifted themselves from the water,
and the man lay down on the yellow sand of the river bank to sleep.
When he awoke, the sun was almost setting. The bright shafts of red
light spilled across the sky, making the mountains silent scarlet
shadows on the face of the rippling water. Quickly he gathered
driftwood, and built a small fire. From his pack he removed some of
the coffee he had found in one of the ruined cities. He brought water
from the river in the battered coffee-pot he had salvaged, and while he
waited for it to boil, he went to his horse, Conqueror, stroking his
mane and whispering in his ear. Then he led him silently to a grassy
slope where he hobbled him and left him for the night.
In the fading light, he ate the hard beef jerky and drank the scalding
coffee. Refreshed and momentarily content, he sat staring into the
dying fire, seeing the bright glowing coals as living fingers clutching
at the wood in consuming embrace, taking all and returning nothing but
ashes.
Slowly his eyelids yielded. His body sagged, and blood seemed to fill
his brain, bathing it in a gentle, warm flood.
He slept. His brain slept.
But the portion of his brain called memory stirred. It was all alone;
all else was at rest. Images began to appear, drawn from inexhaustible
files, wherein are kept all thoughts, past, present, and future....
It was the night before he was to go overseas. World War III had been
declared, and he had enlisted, receiving his old rank of captain. He
was with his wife in the living room of their home. They had put the
children to bed—their sons—and now sat on the couch, watching the
blazing fire. It was then that he had showed it to her.
"I've got something to tell you, and something to show you."
He had removed the box from his pocket and opened it. And heard her cry
of surprised joy.
"Oh, a ring, and it's a diamond, too!" she cried in her rich, happy
voice which always seemed to send a thrill through his body.
"It's for you; so long as you wear it, I'll come back, even from the
dead, if need be. Read the inscription."
She held the ring up to the light and read aloud, "It is forever."
Then she had slipped the ring on her finger and her arms around him.
He held her very close, feeling the warmth from her body flowing into
his and making him oblivious to everything except that she was there in
his arms and that he was sinking deep, deep into a familiar sea, where
he had been many times before but each time found something new and
unexplored, some vastly different emotion he could never quite explain.
"Wait!" she cried. "I've something for you, too."
She took off the locket she wore about her neck and held it up to the
shimmering light, letting it spin at the end of its chain. It caught
the shadows of the fire and reflected them, greatly magnified, over the
room. It was in the shape of a star, encrusted with emeralds, with one
large ruby in the center. When he opened it, he found a picture of her
in one side, and in the other a picture of the children. He took her in
his arms again, and loosened her long, black hair, burying his face in
it for a moment. Then he kissed her, and instantly was drawn down into
the abyss which seemed to have no beginning or any end.
The next morning had been bleak and gray. The mist clung to the wet,
sodden ground, and the air was heavy in his lungs. He had driven off
in the jeep the army had sent for him, watching her there on the porch
until the mist swirled around her feet and she ran back into the house
and slammed the door. His cold fingers found the locket, making a
little bulge under his uniform, and the touch of it seemed to warm the
blood in his veins.
Three days later they had landed in Spain, merged with another
division, then crossed the Pyrenees into France, and finally to Paris
where the fighting had begun. Already the city was a silent graveyard,
littered with the rubble of towers and cathedrals which had once been
great.
Three years later they were on the road to Moscow. Over a thousand
miles lay behind, a dead man on every foot of those miles. Yet victory
was near. The Russians had not yet used the H-bomb; the threat of
annihilation by the retaliation forces had been too great.
He had done well in the war, and had been decorated many times for
bravery in action. Now he felt the victory that seemed to be in the
air, and he had wished it would come quickly, so that he might return
to her. Home. The very feel of the word was everything a battle-weary
soldier needed to make him fight harder and live longer.
Suddenly he had become aware of a droning, wooshing sound above him. It
grew louder and louder until he knew what it was.
"Heavy bombers!" The alarm had sounded, and the men had headed for
their foxholes.
But the planes had passed over, the sun glinting on their bellies,
reflecting a blinding light. They were bound for bigger, more important
targets. When the all-clear had sounded, the men clambered from their
shelters. An icy wind swept the field, bringing with it clouds which
covered the sun. A strange fear had gripped him then....
Across the Atlantic, over the pole, via Alaska, the great bombers
flew. In cities, great and small, the air raid sirens sounded, high
screaming noises which had jarred the people from sleep in time to die.
The defending planes roared into the sky to intercept the on-rushing
bombers. The horrendous battle split the universe. Many bombers fell,
victims of fanatical suicide planes, or of missiles that streaked
across the sky which none could escape.
But too many bombers got through, dropping their deadly cargo upon the
helpless cities. And not all the prayers or entreaties to any God had
stopped their carnage. First there had been the red flashes that melted
buildings into molten streams, and then the great triple-mushroom cloud
filled with the poisonous gases that the wind swept away to other
cities, where men had not died quickly and mercifully, but had rotted
away, leaving shreds of putrid flesh behind to mark the places where
they had crawled.
The retaliatory forces had roared away to bomb the Russian cities. Few,
if any, had returned. Too much blood and life were on their hands.
Those who had remained alive had found a resting place on the crown
of some distant mountain. Others had preferred the silent peaceful
sea, where flesh stayed not long on bones, and only darting fishes and
merciful beams of filtered light found their aluminum coffins.
The war had ended.
To no avail. Neither side had won. Most of the cities and the majority
of the population of both countries had been destroyed. Even their
governments had vanished, leaving a silent nothingness. The armies that
remained were without leaders, without sources of supplies, save what
they could forage and beg from an unfriendly people.
They were alone now, a group of tired, battered men, for whom life held
nothing. Their families had long since died, their bodies turned to
dust, their spirits fled on the winds to a new world.
Yet these remnants of an army must return—or at least try. Their
exodus was just beginning. Somehow he had managed to hold together the
few men left from his force. He had always nourished the hope that
she might still be alive. And now that the war was over he had to
return—had to know whether she was still waiting for him.
They had started the long trek. Throughout Europe anarchy reigned. He
and his men were alone. All they could do now was fight. Finally they
reached the seaport city of Calais. With what few men he had left, he
had commandeered a small yacht, and they had taken to the sea.
After months of storms and bad luck, they had been shipwrecked
somewhere off the coast of Mexico. He had managed to swim ashore,
and had been found by a fisherman's family. Many months he had spent
swimming and fishing, recovering his strength, inquiring about the
United States. The Mexicans had spoken with fear of the land across the
Rio Grande. All its great cities had been destroyed, and those that had
been only partially destroyed were devoid of people. The land across
the Rio Grande had become a land of shadows. The winds were poisoned,
and the few people who might have survived, were crazed and maimed by
the blasts. Few men had dared cross the Rio Grande into "El Mundo gris
de Noviembre"—the November world. Those who had, had never returned.
In time he had traveled north until he reached the Rio Grande. He had
waded into the muddy waters and somehow landed on the American side. In
the November world.
It was rightly called. The deserts were long. All plant life had died,
leaving to those once great fertile stretches, nothing but the sad,
temporal beauty that comes with death. No people had he seen. Only the
ruins of what had once been their cities. He had walked through them,
and all that he had seen were the small mutant rodents, and all that he
had heard was the occasional swish of the wind as it whisked along what
might have been dead leaves, but wasn't.
He had been on the trail for a long time. His food was nearly
exhausted. The mountains were just beginning, and he hoped to find food
there. He had not found food, but his luck had been with him. He had
found a horse. Not a normal horse, but a mutation. It was almost twice
as large as a regular horse. Its skin seemed to shimmer and was like
glassy steel to the touch. From the center of its forehead grew a horn,
straight out, as the horn of a unicorn. But most startling of all were
the animal's eyes which seemed to speak—a silent mental speech, which
he could understand. The horse had looked up as he approached it and
seemed to say: "Follow me."
And he had followed. Over a mountain, until they came to a pass, and
finally to a narrow path which led to an old cabin. He had found it
empty, but there were cans of food and a rifle and many shells. He had
remained there a long time—how long he could not tell, for he could
only measure time by the cycles of the sun and the moon. Finally he
had taken the horse, the rifle and what food was left, and once again
started the long journey home.
The farther north he went, the more life seemed to have survived. He
had seen great herds of horses like his own, stampeding across the
plains, and strange birds which he could not identify. Yet he had seen
no human beings.
But he knew he was closer now. Closer to home. He recognized the land.
How, he did not know, for it was much changed. A sensing, perhaps, of
what it had once been. He could not be more than two days' ride away.
Once he was through this desert, he would find her, he would be with
her once again; all would be well, and his long journey would be over.
The images faded. Even memory slept in a flow of warm blood. Body and
mind slept into the shadows of the dawn.
He awoke and stretched the cramped muscles of his body. At the edge of
the water he removed his clothes and stared at himself in the rippling
mirror. His muscles were lean and hard, evenly placed throughout the
length of his frame. A deep ridge ran down the length of his torso,
separating the muscles, making the chest broad. Well satisfied with his
body, he plunged into the cold water, deep down, until he thought his
lungs would burst; then swiftly returned to the clean air, tingling in
every pore. He dried himself and dressed. Conqueror was eating the long
grass near the stream. Quickly he saddled him. No time for breakfast.
He would ride all day and the next night. And he would be home.
Still northward. The hours crawled slower than a dying man. The sun
was a torch that pierced his skin, seeming to melt his bones into a
burning stream within his body. But day at last gave way to night, and
the sun to the moon. The torch became a white pock-marked goddess, with
streaming hair called stars.
In the moonlight he had not seen the crater until he was at its
very edge. Even then he might not have seen it had not the horse
stopped suddenly. The wind swirled through its vast emptiness,
slapping his face with dusty hands. For a moment he thought he heard
voices—mournful, murmuring voices, echoing up from the misty depths.
He turned quickly away and did not look back.
Night paled into day; day burned into night.
There were clouds in the sky now, and a gentle wind caressed the sweat
from his tired body. He stopped. There it was! Barely discernible
through the moonlight, he saw it. Home.
Quickly he dismounted and ran. Now he could see a small light in the
window, and he knew they were there. His breath came in hard ragged
gulps. At the window he peered in, and as his eyes became accustomed
to the inner gloom, he saw how bare the room was. No matter. Now that
he was home he would build new furniture, and the house would be even
better than it had been before.
Then he saw her.
She was sitting motionless in a straight wooden chair beside the
fireplace, the feeble light cast by the embers veiling her in mauve
shadows. He waited, wondering if she were.... Presently she stirred
like a restless child in sleep, then moved from the chair to the pile
of wood near the hearth, and replenished the fire. The wood caught
quickly, sending up long tongues of flame, and forming a bright pool of
light around her.
His blood froze. The creature illuminated by the firelight was a
monster. Large greasy scales covered its face and arms, and there was
no hair on its head. Its gums were toothless cavities in a sunken,
mumbling mouth. The eyes, turned momentarily toward the window, were
empty of life.
"No, no!" he cried soundlessly.
This was not his house. In his delirium he had only imagined he had
found it. He had been searching so long. He would go on searching.
He was turning wearily away from the window when the movement of the
creature beside the fire held his attention. It had taken a ring from
one skeleton-like finger and stood, turning the ring slowly as if
trying to decipher some inscription inside it.
He knew then. He had come home.
Slowly he moved toward the door. A great weakness was upon him. His
feet were stones, reluctant to leave the earth. His body was a weed,
shriveled by thirst. He grasped the doorknob and clung to it, looking
up at the night sky and trying to draw strength from the wind that
passed over him. It was no use. There was no strength. Only fear—a
kind of fear he had never known.
He fumbled at his throat, his fingers crawling like cold worms around
his neck until he found the locket and the clasp which had held it
safely through endless nightmare days and nights. He slipped the clasp
and the locket fell into his waiting hand. As one in a dream, he opened
it, and stared at the pictures, now in the dim moonlight no longer
faces of those he loved, but grey ghosts from the past. Even the ruby
had lost its glow. What had once been living fire was now a dull glob
of darkness.
"Nothing is forever!" He thought he had shouted the words, but only a
thin sound, the sound of leaves ruffled by the wind, came back to him.
He closed the locket and fastened the clasp, and hung it on the
doorknob. It moved slowly in the wind, back and forth, like a pendulum.
"Forever—forever. Only death is forever." He could have sworn he heard
the words.
He ran. Away from the house. To the large horse with a horn in the
center of its forehead, like a unicorn. Once in the saddle, the spurt
of strength left him. His shoulders slumped, his head dropped onto his
chest.
Conqueror trotted away, the sound of his hooves echoing hollowly in the
vast emptiness.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/0/5/1/60515//60515-h//60515-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | How does the meaning of the engraved ring change throughout the story?
| 60515_4ZLFFIZT_8 | [
"At first it is a declaration of everlasting love, but soon shows that its pledge exists\npast death, becoming a haunting symbol of how love can bleed into death. \n",
"At first it is a declaration of everlasting love, but soon shows that its pledge exists\npast death, becoming a haunting symbol what can happen when love isn’t returned home. \n",
"At first it is a declaration of everlasting marriage, but soon shows that its pledge even exists in war, becoming a symbol of how love can survive death and overcome all trials. \n",
"At first it is a declaration of commitment, but soon shows that its pledge exists in death, becoming a haunting symbol of how love doesn’t last forever. \n\n"
] | 1 | 4 | [
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60,515 | 60515_4ZLFFIZT | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Homecoming | 1958.0 | Hidalgo, Miguel | Veterans -- United States -- Fiction; Husband and wife -- Fiction; PS; Post-apocalyptic fiction; Science fiction; Short stories | HOMECOMING
BY MIGUEL HIDALGO
What lasts forever? Does love?
Does death?... Nothing lasts
forever.... Not even forever
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of If Science Fiction, April 1958.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
The large horse plodded slowly over the shifting sand.
The rider was of medium size, with huge, strong hands and seemingly
hollow eyes. Strange eyes, alive and aflame. They had no place in
the dust-caked, tired body, yet there they were, seeking, always
seeking—searching the clear horizon, and never seeming to find what
they sought.
The horse moved faster now. They were nearing a river; the water would
be welcome on tired bodies and dry throats. He spurred his horse,
and when they reached the water's edge, he dismounted and unsaddled
the horse. Then both man and horse plunged headlong into the waiting
torrent, deep into the cool embrace of the clear liquid. They soaked it
into their pores and drank deeply of it, feeling life going once more
through their veins. Satisfied, they lifted themselves from the water,
and the man lay down on the yellow sand of the river bank to sleep.
When he awoke, the sun was almost setting. The bright shafts of red
light spilled across the sky, making the mountains silent scarlet
shadows on the face of the rippling water. Quickly he gathered
driftwood, and built a small fire. From his pack he removed some of
the coffee he had found in one of the ruined cities. He brought water
from the river in the battered coffee-pot he had salvaged, and while he
waited for it to boil, he went to his horse, Conqueror, stroking his
mane and whispering in his ear. Then he led him silently to a grassy
slope where he hobbled him and left him for the night.
In the fading light, he ate the hard beef jerky and drank the scalding
coffee. Refreshed and momentarily content, he sat staring into the
dying fire, seeing the bright glowing coals as living fingers clutching
at the wood in consuming embrace, taking all and returning nothing but
ashes.
Slowly his eyelids yielded. His body sagged, and blood seemed to fill
his brain, bathing it in a gentle, warm flood.
He slept. His brain slept.
But the portion of his brain called memory stirred. It was all alone;
all else was at rest. Images began to appear, drawn from inexhaustible
files, wherein are kept all thoughts, past, present, and future....
It was the night before he was to go overseas. World War III had been
declared, and he had enlisted, receiving his old rank of captain. He
was with his wife in the living room of their home. They had put the
children to bed—their sons—and now sat on the couch, watching the
blazing fire. It was then that he had showed it to her.
"I've got something to tell you, and something to show you."
He had removed the box from his pocket and opened it. And heard her cry
of surprised joy.
"Oh, a ring, and it's a diamond, too!" she cried in her rich, happy
voice which always seemed to send a thrill through his body.
"It's for you; so long as you wear it, I'll come back, even from the
dead, if need be. Read the inscription."
She held the ring up to the light and read aloud, "It is forever."
Then she had slipped the ring on her finger and her arms around him.
He held her very close, feeling the warmth from her body flowing into
his and making him oblivious to everything except that she was there in
his arms and that he was sinking deep, deep into a familiar sea, where
he had been many times before but each time found something new and
unexplored, some vastly different emotion he could never quite explain.
"Wait!" she cried. "I've something for you, too."
She took off the locket she wore about her neck and held it up to the
shimmering light, letting it spin at the end of its chain. It caught
the shadows of the fire and reflected them, greatly magnified, over the
room. It was in the shape of a star, encrusted with emeralds, with one
large ruby in the center. When he opened it, he found a picture of her
in one side, and in the other a picture of the children. He took her in
his arms again, and loosened her long, black hair, burying his face in
it for a moment. Then he kissed her, and instantly was drawn down into
the abyss which seemed to have no beginning or any end.
The next morning had been bleak and gray. The mist clung to the wet,
sodden ground, and the air was heavy in his lungs. He had driven off
in the jeep the army had sent for him, watching her there on the porch
until the mist swirled around her feet and she ran back into the house
and slammed the door. His cold fingers found the locket, making a
little bulge under his uniform, and the touch of it seemed to warm the
blood in his veins.
Three days later they had landed in Spain, merged with another
division, then crossed the Pyrenees into France, and finally to Paris
where the fighting had begun. Already the city was a silent graveyard,
littered with the rubble of towers and cathedrals which had once been
great.
Three years later they were on the road to Moscow. Over a thousand
miles lay behind, a dead man on every foot of those miles. Yet victory
was near. The Russians had not yet used the H-bomb; the threat of
annihilation by the retaliation forces had been too great.
He had done well in the war, and had been decorated many times for
bravery in action. Now he felt the victory that seemed to be in the
air, and he had wished it would come quickly, so that he might return
to her. Home. The very feel of the word was everything a battle-weary
soldier needed to make him fight harder and live longer.
Suddenly he had become aware of a droning, wooshing sound above him. It
grew louder and louder until he knew what it was.
"Heavy bombers!" The alarm had sounded, and the men had headed for
their foxholes.
But the planes had passed over, the sun glinting on their bellies,
reflecting a blinding light. They were bound for bigger, more important
targets. When the all-clear had sounded, the men clambered from their
shelters. An icy wind swept the field, bringing with it clouds which
covered the sun. A strange fear had gripped him then....
Across the Atlantic, over the pole, via Alaska, the great bombers
flew. In cities, great and small, the air raid sirens sounded, high
screaming noises which had jarred the people from sleep in time to die.
The defending planes roared into the sky to intercept the on-rushing
bombers. The horrendous battle split the universe. Many bombers fell,
victims of fanatical suicide planes, or of missiles that streaked
across the sky which none could escape.
But too many bombers got through, dropping their deadly cargo upon the
helpless cities. And not all the prayers or entreaties to any God had
stopped their carnage. First there had been the red flashes that melted
buildings into molten streams, and then the great triple-mushroom cloud
filled with the poisonous gases that the wind swept away to other
cities, where men had not died quickly and mercifully, but had rotted
away, leaving shreds of putrid flesh behind to mark the places where
they had crawled.
The retaliatory forces had roared away to bomb the Russian cities. Few,
if any, had returned. Too much blood and life were on their hands.
Those who had remained alive had found a resting place on the crown
of some distant mountain. Others had preferred the silent peaceful
sea, where flesh stayed not long on bones, and only darting fishes and
merciful beams of filtered light found their aluminum coffins.
The war had ended.
To no avail. Neither side had won. Most of the cities and the majority
of the population of both countries had been destroyed. Even their
governments had vanished, leaving a silent nothingness. The armies that
remained were without leaders, without sources of supplies, save what
they could forage and beg from an unfriendly people.
They were alone now, a group of tired, battered men, for whom life held
nothing. Their families had long since died, their bodies turned to
dust, their spirits fled on the winds to a new world.
Yet these remnants of an army must return—or at least try. Their
exodus was just beginning. Somehow he had managed to hold together the
few men left from his force. He had always nourished the hope that
she might still be alive. And now that the war was over he had to
return—had to know whether she was still waiting for him.
They had started the long trek. Throughout Europe anarchy reigned. He
and his men were alone. All they could do now was fight. Finally they
reached the seaport city of Calais. With what few men he had left, he
had commandeered a small yacht, and they had taken to the sea.
After months of storms and bad luck, they had been shipwrecked
somewhere off the coast of Mexico. He had managed to swim ashore,
and had been found by a fisherman's family. Many months he had spent
swimming and fishing, recovering his strength, inquiring about the
United States. The Mexicans had spoken with fear of the land across the
Rio Grande. All its great cities had been destroyed, and those that had
been only partially destroyed were devoid of people. The land across
the Rio Grande had become a land of shadows. The winds were poisoned,
and the few people who might have survived, were crazed and maimed by
the blasts. Few men had dared cross the Rio Grande into "El Mundo gris
de Noviembre"—the November world. Those who had, had never returned.
In time he had traveled north until he reached the Rio Grande. He had
waded into the muddy waters and somehow landed on the American side. In
the November world.
It was rightly called. The deserts were long. All plant life had died,
leaving to those once great fertile stretches, nothing but the sad,
temporal beauty that comes with death. No people had he seen. Only the
ruins of what had once been their cities. He had walked through them,
and all that he had seen were the small mutant rodents, and all that he
had heard was the occasional swish of the wind as it whisked along what
might have been dead leaves, but wasn't.
He had been on the trail for a long time. His food was nearly
exhausted. The mountains were just beginning, and he hoped to find food
there. He had not found food, but his luck had been with him. He had
found a horse. Not a normal horse, but a mutation. It was almost twice
as large as a regular horse. Its skin seemed to shimmer and was like
glassy steel to the touch. From the center of its forehead grew a horn,
straight out, as the horn of a unicorn. But most startling of all were
the animal's eyes which seemed to speak—a silent mental speech, which
he could understand. The horse had looked up as he approached it and
seemed to say: "Follow me."
And he had followed. Over a mountain, until they came to a pass, and
finally to a narrow path which led to an old cabin. He had found it
empty, but there were cans of food and a rifle and many shells. He had
remained there a long time—how long he could not tell, for he could
only measure time by the cycles of the sun and the moon. Finally he
had taken the horse, the rifle and what food was left, and once again
started the long journey home.
The farther north he went, the more life seemed to have survived. He
had seen great herds of horses like his own, stampeding across the
plains, and strange birds which he could not identify. Yet he had seen
no human beings.
But he knew he was closer now. Closer to home. He recognized the land.
How, he did not know, for it was much changed. A sensing, perhaps, of
what it had once been. He could not be more than two days' ride away.
Once he was through this desert, he would find her, he would be with
her once again; all would be well, and his long journey would be over.
The images faded. Even memory slept in a flow of warm blood. Body and
mind slept into the shadows of the dawn.
He awoke and stretched the cramped muscles of his body. At the edge of
the water he removed his clothes and stared at himself in the rippling
mirror. His muscles were lean and hard, evenly placed throughout the
length of his frame. A deep ridge ran down the length of his torso,
separating the muscles, making the chest broad. Well satisfied with his
body, he plunged into the cold water, deep down, until he thought his
lungs would burst; then swiftly returned to the clean air, tingling in
every pore. He dried himself and dressed. Conqueror was eating the long
grass near the stream. Quickly he saddled him. No time for breakfast.
He would ride all day and the next night. And he would be home.
Still northward. The hours crawled slower than a dying man. The sun
was a torch that pierced his skin, seeming to melt his bones into a
burning stream within his body. But day at last gave way to night, and
the sun to the moon. The torch became a white pock-marked goddess, with
streaming hair called stars.
In the moonlight he had not seen the crater until he was at its
very edge. Even then he might not have seen it had not the horse
stopped suddenly. The wind swirled through its vast emptiness,
slapping his face with dusty hands. For a moment he thought he heard
voices—mournful, murmuring voices, echoing up from the misty depths.
He turned quickly away and did not look back.
Night paled into day; day burned into night.
There were clouds in the sky now, and a gentle wind caressed the sweat
from his tired body. He stopped. There it was! Barely discernible
through the moonlight, he saw it. Home.
Quickly he dismounted and ran. Now he could see a small light in the
window, and he knew they were there. His breath came in hard ragged
gulps. At the window he peered in, and as his eyes became accustomed
to the inner gloom, he saw how bare the room was. No matter. Now that
he was home he would build new furniture, and the house would be even
better than it had been before.
Then he saw her.
She was sitting motionless in a straight wooden chair beside the
fireplace, the feeble light cast by the embers veiling her in mauve
shadows. He waited, wondering if she were.... Presently she stirred
like a restless child in sleep, then moved from the chair to the pile
of wood near the hearth, and replenished the fire. The wood caught
quickly, sending up long tongues of flame, and forming a bright pool of
light around her.
His blood froze. The creature illuminated by the firelight was a
monster. Large greasy scales covered its face and arms, and there was
no hair on its head. Its gums were toothless cavities in a sunken,
mumbling mouth. The eyes, turned momentarily toward the window, were
empty of life.
"No, no!" he cried soundlessly.
This was not his house. In his delirium he had only imagined he had
found it. He had been searching so long. He would go on searching.
He was turning wearily away from the window when the movement of the
creature beside the fire held his attention. It had taken a ring from
one skeleton-like finger and stood, turning the ring slowly as if
trying to decipher some inscription inside it.
He knew then. He had come home.
Slowly he moved toward the door. A great weakness was upon him. His
feet were stones, reluctant to leave the earth. His body was a weed,
shriveled by thirst. He grasped the doorknob and clung to it, looking
up at the night sky and trying to draw strength from the wind that
passed over him. It was no use. There was no strength. Only fear—a
kind of fear he had never known.
He fumbled at his throat, his fingers crawling like cold worms around
his neck until he found the locket and the clasp which had held it
safely through endless nightmare days and nights. He slipped the clasp
and the locket fell into his waiting hand. As one in a dream, he opened
it, and stared at the pictures, now in the dim moonlight no longer
faces of those he loved, but grey ghosts from the past. Even the ruby
had lost its glow. What had once been living fire was now a dull glob
of darkness.
"Nothing is forever!" He thought he had shouted the words, but only a
thin sound, the sound of leaves ruffled by the wind, came back to him.
He closed the locket and fastened the clasp, and hung it on the
doorknob. It moved slowly in the wind, back and forth, like a pendulum.
"Forever—forever. Only death is forever." He could have sworn he heard
the words.
He ran. Away from the house. To the large horse with a horn in the
center of its forehead, like a unicorn. Once in the saddle, the spurt
of strength left him. His shoulders slumped, his head dropped onto his
chest.
Conqueror trotted away, the sound of his hooves echoing hollowly in the
vast emptiness.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/0/5/1/60515//60515-h//60515-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | What part of the narrator is responsible for the story’s exposition?
| 60515_4ZLFFIZT_9 | [
"His war experience. \n",
"His memory. \n",
"His heart. \n",
"His love for his wife. \n"
] | 2 | 2 | [
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] | 1 |
60,515 | 60515_4ZLFFIZT | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | Homecoming | 1958.0 | Hidalgo, Miguel | Veterans -- United States -- Fiction; Husband and wife -- Fiction; PS; Post-apocalyptic fiction; Science fiction; Short stories | HOMECOMING
BY MIGUEL HIDALGO
What lasts forever? Does love?
Does death?... Nothing lasts
forever.... Not even forever
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of If Science Fiction, April 1958.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
The large horse plodded slowly over the shifting sand.
The rider was of medium size, with huge, strong hands and seemingly
hollow eyes. Strange eyes, alive and aflame. They had no place in
the dust-caked, tired body, yet there they were, seeking, always
seeking—searching the clear horizon, and never seeming to find what
they sought.
The horse moved faster now. They were nearing a river; the water would
be welcome on tired bodies and dry throats. He spurred his horse,
and when they reached the water's edge, he dismounted and unsaddled
the horse. Then both man and horse plunged headlong into the waiting
torrent, deep into the cool embrace of the clear liquid. They soaked it
into their pores and drank deeply of it, feeling life going once more
through their veins. Satisfied, they lifted themselves from the water,
and the man lay down on the yellow sand of the river bank to sleep.
When he awoke, the sun was almost setting. The bright shafts of red
light spilled across the sky, making the mountains silent scarlet
shadows on the face of the rippling water. Quickly he gathered
driftwood, and built a small fire. From his pack he removed some of
the coffee he had found in one of the ruined cities. He brought water
from the river in the battered coffee-pot he had salvaged, and while he
waited for it to boil, he went to his horse, Conqueror, stroking his
mane and whispering in his ear. Then he led him silently to a grassy
slope where he hobbled him and left him for the night.
In the fading light, he ate the hard beef jerky and drank the scalding
coffee. Refreshed and momentarily content, he sat staring into the
dying fire, seeing the bright glowing coals as living fingers clutching
at the wood in consuming embrace, taking all and returning nothing but
ashes.
Slowly his eyelids yielded. His body sagged, and blood seemed to fill
his brain, bathing it in a gentle, warm flood.
He slept. His brain slept.
But the portion of his brain called memory stirred. It was all alone;
all else was at rest. Images began to appear, drawn from inexhaustible
files, wherein are kept all thoughts, past, present, and future....
It was the night before he was to go overseas. World War III had been
declared, and he had enlisted, receiving his old rank of captain. He
was with his wife in the living room of their home. They had put the
children to bed—their sons—and now sat on the couch, watching the
blazing fire. It was then that he had showed it to her.
"I've got something to tell you, and something to show you."
He had removed the box from his pocket and opened it. And heard her cry
of surprised joy.
"Oh, a ring, and it's a diamond, too!" she cried in her rich, happy
voice which always seemed to send a thrill through his body.
"It's for you; so long as you wear it, I'll come back, even from the
dead, if need be. Read the inscription."
She held the ring up to the light and read aloud, "It is forever."
Then she had slipped the ring on her finger and her arms around him.
He held her very close, feeling the warmth from her body flowing into
his and making him oblivious to everything except that she was there in
his arms and that he was sinking deep, deep into a familiar sea, where
he had been many times before but each time found something new and
unexplored, some vastly different emotion he could never quite explain.
"Wait!" she cried. "I've something for you, too."
She took off the locket she wore about her neck and held it up to the
shimmering light, letting it spin at the end of its chain. It caught
the shadows of the fire and reflected them, greatly magnified, over the
room. It was in the shape of a star, encrusted with emeralds, with one
large ruby in the center. When he opened it, he found a picture of her
in one side, and in the other a picture of the children. He took her in
his arms again, and loosened her long, black hair, burying his face in
it for a moment. Then he kissed her, and instantly was drawn down into
the abyss which seemed to have no beginning or any end.
The next morning had been bleak and gray. The mist clung to the wet,
sodden ground, and the air was heavy in his lungs. He had driven off
in the jeep the army had sent for him, watching her there on the porch
until the mist swirled around her feet and she ran back into the house
and slammed the door. His cold fingers found the locket, making a
little bulge under his uniform, and the touch of it seemed to warm the
blood in his veins.
Three days later they had landed in Spain, merged with another
division, then crossed the Pyrenees into France, and finally to Paris
where the fighting had begun. Already the city was a silent graveyard,
littered with the rubble of towers and cathedrals which had once been
great.
Three years later they were on the road to Moscow. Over a thousand
miles lay behind, a dead man on every foot of those miles. Yet victory
was near. The Russians had not yet used the H-bomb; the threat of
annihilation by the retaliation forces had been too great.
He had done well in the war, and had been decorated many times for
bravery in action. Now he felt the victory that seemed to be in the
air, and he had wished it would come quickly, so that he might return
to her. Home. The very feel of the word was everything a battle-weary
soldier needed to make him fight harder and live longer.
Suddenly he had become aware of a droning, wooshing sound above him. It
grew louder and louder until he knew what it was.
"Heavy bombers!" The alarm had sounded, and the men had headed for
their foxholes.
But the planes had passed over, the sun glinting on their bellies,
reflecting a blinding light. They were bound for bigger, more important
targets. When the all-clear had sounded, the men clambered from their
shelters. An icy wind swept the field, bringing with it clouds which
covered the sun. A strange fear had gripped him then....
Across the Atlantic, over the pole, via Alaska, the great bombers
flew. In cities, great and small, the air raid sirens sounded, high
screaming noises which had jarred the people from sleep in time to die.
The defending planes roared into the sky to intercept the on-rushing
bombers. The horrendous battle split the universe. Many bombers fell,
victims of fanatical suicide planes, or of missiles that streaked
across the sky which none could escape.
But too many bombers got through, dropping their deadly cargo upon the
helpless cities. And not all the prayers or entreaties to any God had
stopped their carnage. First there had been the red flashes that melted
buildings into molten streams, and then the great triple-mushroom cloud
filled with the poisonous gases that the wind swept away to other
cities, where men had not died quickly and mercifully, but had rotted
away, leaving shreds of putrid flesh behind to mark the places where
they had crawled.
The retaliatory forces had roared away to bomb the Russian cities. Few,
if any, had returned. Too much blood and life were on their hands.
Those who had remained alive had found a resting place on the crown
of some distant mountain. Others had preferred the silent peaceful
sea, where flesh stayed not long on bones, and only darting fishes and
merciful beams of filtered light found their aluminum coffins.
The war had ended.
To no avail. Neither side had won. Most of the cities and the majority
of the population of both countries had been destroyed. Even their
governments had vanished, leaving a silent nothingness. The armies that
remained were without leaders, without sources of supplies, save what
they could forage and beg from an unfriendly people.
They were alone now, a group of tired, battered men, for whom life held
nothing. Their families had long since died, their bodies turned to
dust, their spirits fled on the winds to a new world.
Yet these remnants of an army must return—or at least try. Their
exodus was just beginning. Somehow he had managed to hold together the
few men left from his force. He had always nourished the hope that
she might still be alive. And now that the war was over he had to
return—had to know whether she was still waiting for him.
They had started the long trek. Throughout Europe anarchy reigned. He
and his men were alone. All they could do now was fight. Finally they
reached the seaport city of Calais. With what few men he had left, he
had commandeered a small yacht, and they had taken to the sea.
After months of storms and bad luck, they had been shipwrecked
somewhere off the coast of Mexico. He had managed to swim ashore,
and had been found by a fisherman's family. Many months he had spent
swimming and fishing, recovering his strength, inquiring about the
United States. The Mexicans had spoken with fear of the land across the
Rio Grande. All its great cities had been destroyed, and those that had
been only partially destroyed were devoid of people. The land across
the Rio Grande had become a land of shadows. The winds were poisoned,
and the few people who might have survived, were crazed and maimed by
the blasts. Few men had dared cross the Rio Grande into "El Mundo gris
de Noviembre"—the November world. Those who had, had never returned.
In time he had traveled north until he reached the Rio Grande. He had
waded into the muddy waters and somehow landed on the American side. In
the November world.
It was rightly called. The deserts were long. All plant life had died,
leaving to those once great fertile stretches, nothing but the sad,
temporal beauty that comes with death. No people had he seen. Only the
ruins of what had once been their cities. He had walked through them,
and all that he had seen were the small mutant rodents, and all that he
had heard was the occasional swish of the wind as it whisked along what
might have been dead leaves, but wasn't.
He had been on the trail for a long time. His food was nearly
exhausted. The mountains were just beginning, and he hoped to find food
there. He had not found food, but his luck had been with him. He had
found a horse. Not a normal horse, but a mutation. It was almost twice
as large as a regular horse. Its skin seemed to shimmer and was like
glassy steel to the touch. From the center of its forehead grew a horn,
straight out, as the horn of a unicorn. But most startling of all were
the animal's eyes which seemed to speak—a silent mental speech, which
he could understand. The horse had looked up as he approached it and
seemed to say: "Follow me."
And he had followed. Over a mountain, until they came to a pass, and
finally to a narrow path which led to an old cabin. He had found it
empty, but there were cans of food and a rifle and many shells. He had
remained there a long time—how long he could not tell, for he could
only measure time by the cycles of the sun and the moon. Finally he
had taken the horse, the rifle and what food was left, and once again
started the long journey home.
The farther north he went, the more life seemed to have survived. He
had seen great herds of horses like his own, stampeding across the
plains, and strange birds which he could not identify. Yet he had seen
no human beings.
But he knew he was closer now. Closer to home. He recognized the land.
How, he did not know, for it was much changed. A sensing, perhaps, of
what it had once been. He could not be more than two days' ride away.
Once he was through this desert, he would find her, he would be with
her once again; all would be well, and his long journey would be over.
The images faded. Even memory slept in a flow of warm blood. Body and
mind slept into the shadows of the dawn.
He awoke and stretched the cramped muscles of his body. At the edge of
the water he removed his clothes and stared at himself in the rippling
mirror. His muscles were lean and hard, evenly placed throughout the
length of his frame. A deep ridge ran down the length of his torso,
separating the muscles, making the chest broad. Well satisfied with his
body, he plunged into the cold water, deep down, until he thought his
lungs would burst; then swiftly returned to the clean air, tingling in
every pore. He dried himself and dressed. Conqueror was eating the long
grass near the stream. Quickly he saddled him. No time for breakfast.
He would ride all day and the next night. And he would be home.
Still northward. The hours crawled slower than a dying man. The sun
was a torch that pierced his skin, seeming to melt his bones into a
burning stream within his body. But day at last gave way to night, and
the sun to the moon. The torch became a white pock-marked goddess, with
streaming hair called stars.
In the moonlight he had not seen the crater until he was at its
very edge. Even then he might not have seen it had not the horse
stopped suddenly. The wind swirled through its vast emptiness,
slapping his face with dusty hands. For a moment he thought he heard
voices—mournful, murmuring voices, echoing up from the misty depths.
He turned quickly away and did not look back.
Night paled into day; day burned into night.
There were clouds in the sky now, and a gentle wind caressed the sweat
from his tired body. He stopped. There it was! Barely discernible
through the moonlight, he saw it. Home.
Quickly he dismounted and ran. Now he could see a small light in the
window, and he knew they were there. His breath came in hard ragged
gulps. At the window he peered in, and as his eyes became accustomed
to the inner gloom, he saw how bare the room was. No matter. Now that
he was home he would build new furniture, and the house would be even
better than it had been before.
Then he saw her.
She was sitting motionless in a straight wooden chair beside the
fireplace, the feeble light cast by the embers veiling her in mauve
shadows. He waited, wondering if she were.... Presently she stirred
like a restless child in sleep, then moved from the chair to the pile
of wood near the hearth, and replenished the fire. The wood caught
quickly, sending up long tongues of flame, and forming a bright pool of
light around her.
His blood froze. The creature illuminated by the firelight was a
monster. Large greasy scales covered its face and arms, and there was
no hair on its head. Its gums were toothless cavities in a sunken,
mumbling mouth. The eyes, turned momentarily toward the window, were
empty of life.
"No, no!" he cried soundlessly.
This was not his house. In his delirium he had only imagined he had
found it. He had been searching so long. He would go on searching.
He was turning wearily away from the window when the movement of the
creature beside the fire held his attention. It had taken a ring from
one skeleton-like finger and stood, turning the ring slowly as if
trying to decipher some inscription inside it.
He knew then. He had come home.
Slowly he moved toward the door. A great weakness was upon him. His
feet were stones, reluctant to leave the earth. His body was a weed,
shriveled by thirst. He grasped the doorknob and clung to it, looking
up at the night sky and trying to draw strength from the wind that
passed over him. It was no use. There was no strength. Only fear—a
kind of fear he had never known.
He fumbled at his throat, his fingers crawling like cold worms around
his neck until he found the locket and the clasp which had held it
safely through endless nightmare days and nights. He slipped the clasp
and the locket fell into his waiting hand. As one in a dream, he opened
it, and stared at the pictures, now in the dim moonlight no longer
faces of those he loved, but grey ghosts from the past. Even the ruby
had lost its glow. What had once been living fire was now a dull glob
of darkness.
"Nothing is forever!" He thought he had shouted the words, but only a
thin sound, the sound of leaves ruffled by the wind, came back to him.
He closed the locket and fastened the clasp, and hung it on the
doorknob. It moved slowly in the wind, back and forth, like a pendulum.
"Forever—forever. Only death is forever." He could have sworn he heard
the words.
He ran. Away from the house. To the large horse with a horn in the
center of its forehead, like a unicorn. Once in the saddle, the spurt
of strength left him. His shoulders slumped, his head dropped onto his
chest.
Conqueror trotted away, the sound of his hooves echoing hollowly in the
vast emptiness.
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/0/5/1/60515//60515-h//60515-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | What is the double meaning of the ring’s engraving, “It Is Forever.”
| 60515_4ZLFFIZT_10 | [
"Forever in marriage; forever after death. \n",
"Forever in life; forever undead. \n",
"Forever in life; forever in war. \n",
"Forever in war; forever after. \n"
] | 2 | 1 | [
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61,213 | 61213_UY49ALLO | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | The 64-Square Madhouse | 1951.0 | Leiber, Fritz | PS; Science fiction; Computers -- Fiction; Journalists -- Fiction; Chess -- Tournaments -- Fiction | THE 64-SQUARE MADHOUSE
by FRITZ LEIBER
The machine was not perfect. It
could be tricked. It could make
mistakes. And—it could learn!
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of If Science Fiction, May 1962.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
Silently, so as not to shock anyone with illusions about well dressed
young women, Sandra Lea Grayling cursed the day she had persuaded the
Chicago Space Mirror
that there would be all sorts of human interest
stories to be picked up at the first international grandmaster chess
tournament in which an electronic computing machine was entered.
Not that there weren't enough humans around, it was the interest that
was in doubt. The large hall was crammed with energetic dark-suited
men of whom a disproportionately large number were bald, wore glasses,
were faintly untidy and indefinably shabby, had Slavic or Scandinavian
features, and talked foreign languages.
They yakked interminably. The only ones who didn't were scurrying
individuals with the eager-zombie look of officials.
Chess sets were everywhere—big ones on tables, still bigger
diagram-type electric ones on walls, small peg-in sets dragged from
side pockets and manipulated rapidly as part of the conversational
ritual and still smaller folding sets in which the pieces were the tiny
magnetized disks used for playing in free-fall.
There were signs featuring largely mysterious combinations of letters:
FIDE, WBM, USCF, USSF, USSR and UNESCO. Sandra felt fairly sure about
the last three.
The many clocks, bedside table size, would have struck a familiar
note except that they had little red flags and wheels sprinkled over
their faces and they were all in pairs, two clocks to a case. That
Siamese-twin clocks should be essential to a chess tournament struck
Sandra as a particularly maddening circumstance.
Her last assignment had been to interview the pilot pair riding the
first American manned circum-lunar satellite—and the five alternate
pairs who hadn't made the flight. This tournament hall seemed to Sandra
much further out of the world.
Overheard scraps of conversation in reasonably intelligible English
were not particularly helpful. Samples:
"They say the Machine has been programmed to play nothing but pure
Barcza System and Indian Defenses—and the Dragon Formation if anyone
pushes the King Pawn."
"Hah! In that case...."
"The Russians have come with ten trunkfuls of prepared variations and
they'll gang up on the Machine at adjournments. What can one New Jersey
computer do against four Russian grandmasters?"
"I heard the Russians have been programmed—with hypnotic cramming and
somno-briefing. Votbinnik had a nervous breakdown."
"Why, the Machine hasn't even a
Haupturnier
or an intercollegiate
won. It'll over its head be playing."
"Yes, but maybe like Capa at San Sebastian or Morphy or Willie Angler
at New York. The Russians will look like potzers."
"Have you studied the scores of the match between Moon Base and
Circum-Terra?"
"Not worth the trouble. The play was feeble. Barely Expert Rating."
Sandra's chief difficulty was that she knew absolutely nothing about
the game of chess—a point that she had slid over in conferring with
the powers at the
Space Mirror
, but that now had begun to weigh on
her. How wonderful it would be, she dreamed, to walk out this minute,
find a quiet bar and get pie-eyed in an evil, ladylike way.
"Perhaps mademoiselle would welcome a drink?"
"You're durn tootin' she would!" Sandra replied in a rush, and then
looked down apprehensively at the person who had read her thoughts.
It was a small sprightly elderly man who looked like a somewhat
thinned down Peter Lorre—there was that same impression of the happy
Slavic elf. What was left of his white hair was cut very short,
making a silvery nap. His pince-nez had quite thick lenses. But in
sharp contrast to the somberly clad men around them, he was wearing
a pearl-gray suit of almost exactly the same shade as Sandra's—a
circumstance that created for her the illusion that they were fellow
conspirators.
"Hey, wait a minute," she protested just the same. He had already taken
her arm and was piloting her toward the nearest flight of low wide
stairs. "How did you know I wanted a drink?"
"I could see that mademoiselle was having difficulty swallowing," he
replied, keeping them moving. "Pardon me for feasting my eyes on your
lovely throat."
"I didn't suppose they'd serve drinks here."
"But of course." They were already mounting the stairs. "What would
chess be without coffee or schnapps?"
"Okay, lead on," Sandra said. "You're the doctor."
"Doctor?" He smiled widely. "You know, I like being called that."
"Then the name is yours as long as you want it—Doc."
Meanwhile the happy little man had edged them into the first of a small
cluster of tables, where a dark-suited jabbering trio was just rising.
He snapped his fingers and hissed through his teeth. A white-aproned
waiter materialized.
"For myself black coffee," he said. "For mademoiselle rhine wine and
seltzer?"
"That'd go fine." Sandra leaned back. "Confidentially, Doc, I was
having trouble swallowing ... well, just about everything here."
He nodded. "You are not the first to be shocked and horrified by
chess," he assured her. "It is a curse of the intellect. It is a game
for lunatics—or else it creates them. But what brings a sane and
beautiful young lady to this 64-square madhouse?"
Sandra briefly told him her story and her predicament. By the time they
were served, Doc had absorbed the one and assessed the other.
"You have one great advantage," he told her. "You know nothing
whatsoever of chess—so you will be able to write about it
understandably for your readers." He swallowed half his demitasse and
smacked his lips. "As for the Machine—you
do
know, I suppose, that
it is not a humanoid metal robot, walking about clanking and squeaking
like a late medieval knight in armor?"
"Yes, Doc, but...." Sandra found difficulty in phrasing the question.
"Wait." He lifted a finger. "I think I know what you're going to ask.
You want to know why, if the Machine works at all, it doesn't work
perfectly, so that it always wins and there is no contest. Right?"
Sandra grinned and nodded. Doc's ability to interpret her mind was as
comforting as the bubbly, mildly astringent mixture she was sipping.
He removed his pince-nez, massaged the bridge of his nose and replaced
them.
"If you had," he said, "a billion computers all as fast as the Machine,
it would take them all the time there ever will be in the universe just
to play through all the possible games of chess, not to mention the
time needed to classify those games into branching families of wins for
White, wins for Black and draws, and the additional time required to
trace out chains of key-moves leading always to wins. So the Machine
can't play chess like God. What the Machine can do is examine all the
likely lines of play for about eight moves ahead—that is, four moves
each for White and Black—and then decide which is the best move on the
basis of capturing enemy pieces, working toward checkmate, establishing
a powerful central position and so on."
"That sounds like the way a man would play a game," Sandra observed.
"Look ahead a little way and try to make a plan. You know, like getting
out trumps in bridge or setting up a finesse."
"Exactly!" Doc beamed at her approvingly. "The Machine
is
like a
man. A rather peculiar and not exactly pleasant man. A man who always
abides by sound principles, who is utterly incapable of flights of
genius, but who never makes a mistake. You see, you are finding human
interest already, even in the Machine."
Sandra nodded. "Does a human chess player—a grandmaster, I mean—ever
look eight moves ahead in a game?"
"Most assuredly he does! In crucial situations, say where there's a
chance of winning at once by trapping the enemy king, he examines
many more moves ahead than that—thirty or forty even. The Machine
is probably programmed to recognize such situations and do something
of the same sort, though we can't be sure from the information World
Business Machines has released. But in most chess positions the
possibilities are so very nearly unlimited that even a grandmaster can
only look a very few moves ahead and must rely on his judgment and
experience and artistry. The equivalent of those in the Machine is the
directions fed into it before it plays a game."
"You mean the programming?"
"Indeed yes! The programming is the crux of the problem of the
chess-playing computer. The first practical model, reported by
Bernstein and Roberts of IBM in 1958 and which looked four moves
ahead, was programmed so that it had a greedy worried tendency to grab
at enemy pieces and to retreat its own whenever they were attacked. It
had a personality like that of a certain kind of chess-playing dub—a
dull-brained woodpusher afraid to take the slightest risk of losing
material—but a dub who could almost always beat an utter novice.
The WBM machine here in the hall operates about a million times as
fast. Don't ask me how, I'm no physicist, but it depends on the new
transistors and something they call hypervelocity, which in turn
depends on keeping parts of the Machine at a temperature near absolute
zero. However, the result is that the Machine can see eight moves ahead
and is capable of being programmed much more craftily."
"A million times as fast as the first machine, you say, Doc? And yet it
only sees twice as many moves ahead?" Sandra objected.
"There is a geometrical progression involved there," he told her
with a smile. "Believe me, eight moves ahead is a lot of moves when
you remember that the Machine is errorlessly examining every one of
thousands of variations. Flesh-and-blood chess masters have lost games
by blunders they could have avoided by looking only one or two moves
ahead. The Machine will make no such oversights. Once again, you see,
you have the human factor, in this case working for the Machine."
"Savilly, I have been looking allplace for you!"
A stocky, bull-faced man with a great bristling shock of black,
gray-flecked hair had halted abruptly by their table. He bent over Doc
and began to whisper explosively in a guttural foreign tongue.
Sandra's gaze traveled beyond the balustrade. Now that she could look
down at it, the central hall seemed less confusedly crowded. In the
middle, toward the far end, were five small tables spaced rather widely
apart and with a chessboard and men and one of the Siamese clocks set
out on each. To either side of the hall were tiers of temporary seats,
about half of them occupied. There were at least as many more people
still wandering about.
On the far wall was a big electric scoreboard and also, above the
corresponding tables, five large dully glassy chessboards, the White
squares in light gray, the Black squares in dark.
One of the five wall chessboards was considerably larger than the other
four—the one above the Machine.
Sandra looked with quickening interest at the console of the Machine—a
bank of keys and some half-dozen panels of rows and rows of tiny
telltale lights, all dark at the moment. A thick red velvet cord on
little brass standards ran around the Machine at a distance of about
ten feet. Inside the cord were only a few gray-smocked men. Two of
them had just laid a black cable to the nearest chess table and were
attaching it to the Siamese clock.
Sandra tried to think of a being who always checked everything, but
only within limits beyond which his thoughts never ventured, and who
never made a mistake....
"Miss Grayling! May I present to you Igor Jandorf."
She turned back quickly with a smile and a nod.
"I should tell you, Igor," Doc continued, "that Miss Grayling
represents a large and influential Midwestern newspaper. Perhaps you
have a message for her readers."
The shock-headed man's eyes flashed. "I most certainly do!" At that
moment the waiter arrived with a second coffee and wine-and-seltzer.
Jandorf seized Doc's new demitasse, drained it, set it back on the tray
with a flourish and drew himself up.
"Tell your readers, Miss Grayling," he proclaimed, fiercely arching his
eyebrows at her and actually slapping his chest, "that I, Igor Jandorf,
will defeat the Machine by the living force of my human personality!
Already I have offered to play it an informal game blindfold—I, who
have played 50 blindfold games simultaneously! Its owners refuse me. I
have challenged it also to a few games of rapid-transit—an offer no
true grandmaster would dare ignore. Again they refuse me. I predict
that the Machine will play like a great oaf—at least against
me
.
Repeat: I, Igor Jandorf, by the living force of my human personality,
will defeat the Machine. Do you have that? You can remember it?"
"Oh yes," Sandra assured him, "but there are some other questions I
very much want to ask you, Mr. Jandorf."
"I am sorry, Miss Grayling, but I must clear my mind now. In ten
minutes they start the clocks."
While Sandra arranged for an interview with Jandorf after the day's
playing session, Doc reordered his coffee.
"One expects it of Jandorf," he explained to Sandra with a philosophic
shrug when the shock-headed man was gone. "At least he didn't take your
wine-and-seltzer. Or did he? One tip I have for you: don't call a chess
master Mister, call him Master. They all eat it up."
"Gee, Doc, I don't know how to thank you for everything. I hope I
haven't offended Mis—Master Jandorf so that he doesn't—"
"Don't worry about that. Wild horses couldn't keep Jandorf away from a
press interview. You know, his rapid-transit challenge was cunning.
That's a minor variety of chess where each player gets only ten seconds
to make a move. Which I don't suppose would give the Machine time to
look three moves ahead. Chess players would say that the Machine has a
very slow sight of the board. This tournament is being played at the
usual international rate of 15 moves an hour, and—"
"Is that why they've got all those crazy clocks?" Sandra interrupted.
"Oh, yes. Chess clocks measure the time each player takes in making his
moves. When a player makes a move he presses a button that shuts his
clock off and turns his opponent's on. If a player uses too much time,
he loses as surely as if he were checkmated. Now since the Machine
will almost certainly be programmed to take an equal amount of time
on successive moves, a rate of 15 moves an hour means it will have 4
minutes a move—and it will need every second of them! Incidentally
it was typical Jandorf bravado to make a point of a blindfold
challenge—just as if the Machine weren't playing blindfold itself. Or
is
the Machine blindfold? How do you think of it?"
"Gosh, I don't know. Say, Doc, is it really true that Master Jandorf
has played 50 games at once blindfolded? I can't believe that."
"Of course not!" Doc assured her. "It was only 49 and he lost two of
those and drew five. Jandorf always exaggerates. It's in his blood."
"He's one of the Russians, isn't he?" Sandra asked. "Igor?"
Doc chuckled. "Not exactly," he said gently. "He is originally a Pole
and now he has Argentinian citizenship. You have a program, don't you?"
Sandra started to hunt through her pocketbook, but just then two lists
of names lit up on the big electric scoreboard.
THE PLAYERS
William Angler, USA
Bela Grabo, Hungary
Ivan Jal, USSR
Igor Jandorf, Argentina
Dr. S. Krakatower, France
Vassily Lysmov, USSR
The Machine, USA (programmed by Simon Great)
Maxim Serek, USSR
Moses Sherevsky, USA
Mikhail Votbinnik, USSR
Tournament Director
: Dr. Jan Vanderhoef
FIRST ROUND PAIRINGS
Sherevsky vs. Serek
Jal vs. Angler
Jandorf vs. Votbinnik
Lysmov vs. Krakatower
Grabo vs. Machine
"Cripes, Doc, they all sound like they were Russians," Sandra said
after a bit. "Except this Willie Angler. Oh, he's the boy wonder,
isn't he?"
Doc nodded. "Not such a boy any longer, though. He's.... Well, speak of
the Devil's children.... Miss Grayling, I have the honor of presenting
to you the only grandmaster ever to have been ex-chess-champion of the
United States while still technically a minor—Master William Augustus
Angler."
A tall, sharply-dressed young man with a hatchet face pressed the old
man back into his chair.
"How are you, Savvy, old boy old boy?" he demanded. "Still chasing the
girls, I see."
"Please, Willie, get off me."
"Can't take it, huh?" Angler straightened up somewhat. "Hey waiter!
Where's that chocolate malt? I don't want it
next
year. About that
ex-
, though. I was swindled, Savvy. I was robbed."
"Willie!" Doc said with some asperity. "Miss Grayling is a journalist.
She would like to have a statement from you as to how you will play
against the Machine."
Angler grinned and shook his head sadly. "Poor old Machine," he said.
"I don't know why they take so much trouble polishing up that pile of
tin just so that I can give it a hit in the head. I got a hatful of
moves it'll burn out all its tubes trying to answer. And if it gets too
fresh, how about you and me giving its low-temperature section the
hotfoot, Savvy? The money WBM's putting up is okay, though. That first
prize will just fit the big hole in my bank account."
"I know you haven't the time now, Master Angler," Sandra said rapidly,
"but if after the playing session you could grant me—"
"Sorry, babe," Angler broke in with a wave of dismissal. "I'm dated up
for two months in advance. Waiter! I'm here, not there!" And he went
charging off.
Doc and Sandra looked at each other and smiled.
"Chess masters aren't exactly humble people, are they?" she said.
Doc's smile became tinged with sad understanding. "You must excuse
them, though," he said. "They really get so little recognition or
recompense. This tournament is an exception. And it takes a great deal
of ego to play greatly."
"I suppose so. So World Business Machines is responsible for this
tournament?"
"Correct. Their advertising department is interested in the prestige.
They want to score a point over their great rival."
"But if the Machine plays badly it will be a black eye for them,"
Sandra pointed out.
"True," Doc agreed thoughtfully. "WBM must feel very sure.... It's
the prize money they've put up, of course, that's brought the world's
greatest players here. Otherwise half of them would be holding off
in the best temperamental-artist style. For chess players the prize
money is fabulous—$35,000, with $15,000 for first place, and all
expenses paid for all players. There's never been anything like it.
Soviet Russia is the only country that has ever supported and rewarded
her best chess players at all adequately. I think the Russian players
are here because UNESCO and FIDE (that's
Federation Internationale
des Echecs
—the international chess organization) are also backing
the tournament. And perhaps because the Kremlin is hungry for a little
prestige now that its space program is sagging."
"But if a Russian doesn't take first place it will be a black eye for
them."
Doc frowned. "True, in a sense.
They
must feel very sure.... Here
they are now."
Four men were crossing the center of the hall, which was clearing,
toward the tables at the other end. Doubtless they just happened to be
going two by two in close formation, but it gave Sandra the feeling of
a phalanx.
"The first two are Lysmov and Votbinnik," Doc told her. "It isn't often
that you see the current champion of the world—Votbinnik—and an
ex-champion arm in arm. There are two other persons in the tournament
who have held that honor—Jal and Vanderhoef the director, way back."
"Will whoever wins this tournament become champion?"
"Oh no. That's decided by two-player matches—a very long
business—after elimination tournaments between leading contenders.
This tournament is a round robin: each player plays one game with every
other player. That means nine rounds."
"Anyway there
are
an awful lot of Russians in the tournament,"
Sandra said, consulting her program. "Four out of ten have USSR after
them. And Bela Grabo, Hungary—that's a satellite. And Sherevsky and
Krakatower are Russian-sounding names."
"The proportion of Soviet to American entries in the tournament
represents pretty fairly the general difference in playing strength
between the two countries," Doc said judiciously. "Chess mastery
moves from land to land with the years. Way back it was the Moslems
and the Hindus and Persians. Then Italy and Spain. A little over a
hundred years ago it was France and England. Then Germany, Austria
and the New World. Now it's Russia—including of course the Russians
who have run away from Russia. But don't think there aren't a lot of
good Anglo-Saxon types who are masters of the first water. In fact,
there are a lot of them here around us, though perhaps you don't
think so. It's just that if you play a lot of chess you get to looking
Russian. Once it probably made you look Italian. Do you see that short
bald-headed man?"
"You mean the one facing the Machine and talking to Jandorf?"
"Yes. Now that's one with a lot of human interest. Moses Sherevsky.
Been champion of the United States many times. A very strict Orthodox
Jew. Can't play chess on Fridays or on Saturdays before sundown." He
chuckled. "Why, there's even a story going around that one rabbi told
Sherevsky it would be unlawful for him to play against the Machine
because it is technically a
golem
—the clay Frankenstein's monster of
Hebrew legend."
Sandra asked, "What about Grabo and Krakatower?"
Doc gave a short scornful laugh. "Krakatower! Don't pay any attention
to
him
. A senile has-been, it's a scandal he's been allowed to play
in this tournament! He must have pulled all sorts of strings. Told them
that his lifelong services to chess had won him the honor and that they
had to have a member of the so-called Old Guard. Maybe he even got down
on his knees and cried—and all the time his eyes on that expense money
and the last-place consolation prize! Yet dreaming schizophrenically
of beating them all! Please, don't get me started on Dirty Old
Krakatower."
"Take it easy, Doc. He sounds like he would make an interesting
article? Can you point him out to me?"
"You can tell him by his long white beard with coffee stains. I don't
see it anywhere, though. Perhaps he's shaved it off for the occasion.
It would be like that antique womanizer to develop senile delusions of
youthfulness."
"And Grabo?" Sandra pressed, suppressing a smile at the intensity of
Doc's animosity.
Doc's eyes grew thoughtful. "About Bela Grabo (why are three out of
four Hungarians named Bela?) I will tell you only this: That he is a
very brilliant player and that the Machine is very lucky to have drawn
him as its first opponent."
He would not amplify his statement. Sandra studied the Scoreboard again.
"This Simon Great who's down as programming the Machine. He's a famous
physicist, I suppose?"
"By no means. That was the trouble with some of the early chess-playing
machines—they were programmed by scientists. No, Simon Great is a
psychologist who at one time was a leading contender for the world's
chess championship. I think WBM was surprisingly shrewd to pick him
for the programming job. Let me tell you—No, better yet—"
Doc shot to his feet, stretched an arm on high and called out sharply,
"Simon!"
A man some four tables away waved back and a moment later came over.
"What is it, Savilly?" he asked. "There's hardly any time, you know."
The newcomer was of middle height, compact of figure and feature, with
graying hair cut short and combed sharply back.
Doc spoke his piece for Sandra.
Simon Great smiled thinly. "Sorry," he said, "But I am making no
predictions and we are giving out no advance information on the
programming of the Machine. As you know, I have had to fight the
Players' Committee tooth and nail on all sorts of points about that
and they have won most of them. I am not permitted to re-program the
Machine at adjournments—only between games (I did insist on that and
get it!) And if the Machine breaks down during a game, its clock keeps
running on it. My men are permitted to make repairs—if they can work
fast enough."
"That makes it very tough on you," Sandra put in. "The Machine isn't
allowed any weaknesses."
Great nodded soberly. "And now I must go. They've almost finished the
count-down, as one of my technicians keeps on calling it. Very pleased
to have met you, Miss Grayling—I'll check with our PR man on that
interview. Be seeing you, Savvy."
The tiers of seats were filled now and the central space almost clear.
Officials were shooing off a few knots of lingerers. Several of the
grandmasters, including all four Russians, were seated at their tables.
Press and company cameras were flashing. The four smaller wallboards
lit up with the pieces in the opening position—white for White and red
for Black. Simon Great stepped over the red velvet cord and more flash
bulbs went off.
"You know, Doc," Sandra said, "I'm a dog to suggest this, but what
if this whole thing were a big fake? What if Simon Great were really
playing the Machine's moves? There would surely be some way for his
electricians to rig—"
Doc laughed happily—and so loudly that some people at the adjoining
tables frowned.
"Miss Grayling, that is a wonderful idea! I will probably steal it for
a short story. I still manage to write and place a few in England.
No, I do not think that is at all likely. WBM would never risk such
a fraud. Great is completely out of practice for actual tournament
play, though not for chess-thinking. The difference in style between
a computer and a man would be evident to any expert. Great's own style
is remembered and would be recognized—though, come to think of it, his
style was often described as being machinelike...." For a moment Doc's
eyes became thoughtful. Then he smiled again. "But no, the idea is
impossible. Vanderhoef as Tournament Director has played two or three
games with the Machine to assure himself that it operates legitimately
and has grandmaster skill."
"Did the Machine beat him?" Sandra asked.
Doc shrugged. "The scores weren't released. It was very hush-hush.
But about your idea, Miss Grayling—did you ever read about Maelzel's
famous chess-playing automaton of the 19th Century? That one too was
supposed to work by machinery (cogs and gears, not electricity) but
actually it had a man hidden inside it—your Edgar Poe exposed the
fraud in a famous article. In
my
story I think the chess robot will
break down while it is being demonstrated to a millionaire purchaser
and the young inventor will have to win its game for it to cover up
and swing the deal. Only the millionaire's daughter, who is really a
better player than either of them ... yes, yes! Your Ambrose Bierce
too wrote a story about a chess-playing robot of the clickety-clank-grr
kind who murdered his creator, crushing him like an iron grizzly bear
when the man won a game from him. Tell me, Miss Grayling, do you find
yourself imagining this Machine putting out angry tendrils to strangle
its opponents, or beaming rays of death and hypnotism at them? I can
imagine...."
While Doc chattered happily on about chess-playing robots and chess
stories, Sandra found herself thinking about him. A writer of some sort
evidently and a terrific chess buff. Perhaps he was an actual medical
doctor. She'd read something about two or three coming over with the
Russian squad. But Doc certainly didn't sound like a Soviet citizen.
He was older than she'd first assumed. She could see that now that
she was listening to him less and looking at him more. Tired, too.
Only his dark-circled eyes shone with unquenchable youth. A useful old
guy, whoever he was. An hour ago she'd been sure she was going to muff
this assignment completely and now she had it laid out cold. For the
umpteenth time in her career Sandra shied away from the guilty thought
that she wasn't a writer at all or even a reporter, she just used
dime-a-dozen female attractiveness to rope a susceptible man (young,
old, American, Russian) and pick his brain....
She realized suddenly that the whole hall had become very quiet.
Doc was the only person still talking and people were again looking at
them disapprovingly. All five wallboards were lit up and the changed
position of a few pieces showed that opening moves had been made on
four of them, including the Machine's. The central space between
the tiers of seats was completely clear now, except for one man
hurrying across it in their direction with the rapid yet quiet, almost
tip-toe walk that seemed to mark all the officials.
Like morticians'
assistants
, she thought. He rapidly mounted the stairs and halted at
the top to look around searchingly. His gaze lighted on their table,
his eyebrows went up, and he made a beeline for Doc. Sandra wondered if
she should warn him that he was about to be shushed.
The official laid a hand on Doc's shoulder. "Sir!" he said agitatedly.
"Do you realize that they've started your clock, Dr. Krakatower?"
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/1/2/1/61213//61213-h//61213-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | What is Sandra reporting on?
| 61213_UY49ALLO_1 | [
"A chess tournament where the old master, Krakatower, will be present. \n",
"A chess-playing machine that is able to beat humans. \n",
"A chess tournament where many chess masters will be present.\n",
"A chess tournament where for the very first time a machine will be taught to play.\n"
] | 2 | 2 | [
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61,213 | 61213_UY49ALLO | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | The 64-Square Madhouse | 1951.0 | Leiber, Fritz | PS; Science fiction; Computers -- Fiction; Journalists -- Fiction; Chess -- Tournaments -- Fiction | THE 64-SQUARE MADHOUSE
by FRITZ LEIBER
The machine was not perfect. It
could be tricked. It could make
mistakes. And—it could learn!
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of If Science Fiction, May 1962.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
Silently, so as not to shock anyone with illusions about well dressed
young women, Sandra Lea Grayling cursed the day she had persuaded the
Chicago Space Mirror
that there would be all sorts of human interest
stories to be picked up at the first international grandmaster chess
tournament in which an electronic computing machine was entered.
Not that there weren't enough humans around, it was the interest that
was in doubt. The large hall was crammed with energetic dark-suited
men of whom a disproportionately large number were bald, wore glasses,
were faintly untidy and indefinably shabby, had Slavic or Scandinavian
features, and talked foreign languages.
They yakked interminably. The only ones who didn't were scurrying
individuals with the eager-zombie look of officials.
Chess sets were everywhere—big ones on tables, still bigger
diagram-type electric ones on walls, small peg-in sets dragged from
side pockets and manipulated rapidly as part of the conversational
ritual and still smaller folding sets in which the pieces were the tiny
magnetized disks used for playing in free-fall.
There were signs featuring largely mysterious combinations of letters:
FIDE, WBM, USCF, USSF, USSR and UNESCO. Sandra felt fairly sure about
the last three.
The many clocks, bedside table size, would have struck a familiar
note except that they had little red flags and wheels sprinkled over
their faces and they were all in pairs, two clocks to a case. That
Siamese-twin clocks should be essential to a chess tournament struck
Sandra as a particularly maddening circumstance.
Her last assignment had been to interview the pilot pair riding the
first American manned circum-lunar satellite—and the five alternate
pairs who hadn't made the flight. This tournament hall seemed to Sandra
much further out of the world.
Overheard scraps of conversation in reasonably intelligible English
were not particularly helpful. Samples:
"They say the Machine has been programmed to play nothing but pure
Barcza System and Indian Defenses—and the Dragon Formation if anyone
pushes the King Pawn."
"Hah! In that case...."
"The Russians have come with ten trunkfuls of prepared variations and
they'll gang up on the Machine at adjournments. What can one New Jersey
computer do against four Russian grandmasters?"
"I heard the Russians have been programmed—with hypnotic cramming and
somno-briefing. Votbinnik had a nervous breakdown."
"Why, the Machine hasn't even a
Haupturnier
or an intercollegiate
won. It'll over its head be playing."
"Yes, but maybe like Capa at San Sebastian or Morphy or Willie Angler
at New York. The Russians will look like potzers."
"Have you studied the scores of the match between Moon Base and
Circum-Terra?"
"Not worth the trouble. The play was feeble. Barely Expert Rating."
Sandra's chief difficulty was that she knew absolutely nothing about
the game of chess—a point that she had slid over in conferring with
the powers at the
Space Mirror
, but that now had begun to weigh on
her. How wonderful it would be, she dreamed, to walk out this minute,
find a quiet bar and get pie-eyed in an evil, ladylike way.
"Perhaps mademoiselle would welcome a drink?"
"You're durn tootin' she would!" Sandra replied in a rush, and then
looked down apprehensively at the person who had read her thoughts.
It was a small sprightly elderly man who looked like a somewhat
thinned down Peter Lorre—there was that same impression of the happy
Slavic elf. What was left of his white hair was cut very short,
making a silvery nap. His pince-nez had quite thick lenses. But in
sharp contrast to the somberly clad men around them, he was wearing
a pearl-gray suit of almost exactly the same shade as Sandra's—a
circumstance that created for her the illusion that they were fellow
conspirators.
"Hey, wait a minute," she protested just the same. He had already taken
her arm and was piloting her toward the nearest flight of low wide
stairs. "How did you know I wanted a drink?"
"I could see that mademoiselle was having difficulty swallowing," he
replied, keeping them moving. "Pardon me for feasting my eyes on your
lovely throat."
"I didn't suppose they'd serve drinks here."
"But of course." They were already mounting the stairs. "What would
chess be without coffee or schnapps?"
"Okay, lead on," Sandra said. "You're the doctor."
"Doctor?" He smiled widely. "You know, I like being called that."
"Then the name is yours as long as you want it—Doc."
Meanwhile the happy little man had edged them into the first of a small
cluster of tables, where a dark-suited jabbering trio was just rising.
He snapped his fingers and hissed through his teeth. A white-aproned
waiter materialized.
"For myself black coffee," he said. "For mademoiselle rhine wine and
seltzer?"
"That'd go fine." Sandra leaned back. "Confidentially, Doc, I was
having trouble swallowing ... well, just about everything here."
He nodded. "You are not the first to be shocked and horrified by
chess," he assured her. "It is a curse of the intellect. It is a game
for lunatics—or else it creates them. But what brings a sane and
beautiful young lady to this 64-square madhouse?"
Sandra briefly told him her story and her predicament. By the time they
were served, Doc had absorbed the one and assessed the other.
"You have one great advantage," he told her. "You know nothing
whatsoever of chess—so you will be able to write about it
understandably for your readers." He swallowed half his demitasse and
smacked his lips. "As for the Machine—you
do
know, I suppose, that
it is not a humanoid metal robot, walking about clanking and squeaking
like a late medieval knight in armor?"
"Yes, Doc, but...." Sandra found difficulty in phrasing the question.
"Wait." He lifted a finger. "I think I know what you're going to ask.
You want to know why, if the Machine works at all, it doesn't work
perfectly, so that it always wins and there is no contest. Right?"
Sandra grinned and nodded. Doc's ability to interpret her mind was as
comforting as the bubbly, mildly astringent mixture she was sipping.
He removed his pince-nez, massaged the bridge of his nose and replaced
them.
"If you had," he said, "a billion computers all as fast as the Machine,
it would take them all the time there ever will be in the universe just
to play through all the possible games of chess, not to mention the
time needed to classify those games into branching families of wins for
White, wins for Black and draws, and the additional time required to
trace out chains of key-moves leading always to wins. So the Machine
can't play chess like God. What the Machine can do is examine all the
likely lines of play for about eight moves ahead—that is, four moves
each for White and Black—and then decide which is the best move on the
basis of capturing enemy pieces, working toward checkmate, establishing
a powerful central position and so on."
"That sounds like the way a man would play a game," Sandra observed.
"Look ahead a little way and try to make a plan. You know, like getting
out trumps in bridge or setting up a finesse."
"Exactly!" Doc beamed at her approvingly. "The Machine
is
like a
man. A rather peculiar and not exactly pleasant man. A man who always
abides by sound principles, who is utterly incapable of flights of
genius, but who never makes a mistake. You see, you are finding human
interest already, even in the Machine."
Sandra nodded. "Does a human chess player—a grandmaster, I mean—ever
look eight moves ahead in a game?"
"Most assuredly he does! In crucial situations, say where there's a
chance of winning at once by trapping the enemy king, he examines
many more moves ahead than that—thirty or forty even. The Machine
is probably programmed to recognize such situations and do something
of the same sort, though we can't be sure from the information World
Business Machines has released. But in most chess positions the
possibilities are so very nearly unlimited that even a grandmaster can
only look a very few moves ahead and must rely on his judgment and
experience and artistry. The equivalent of those in the Machine is the
directions fed into it before it plays a game."
"You mean the programming?"
"Indeed yes! The programming is the crux of the problem of the
chess-playing computer. The first practical model, reported by
Bernstein and Roberts of IBM in 1958 and which looked four moves
ahead, was programmed so that it had a greedy worried tendency to grab
at enemy pieces and to retreat its own whenever they were attacked. It
had a personality like that of a certain kind of chess-playing dub—a
dull-brained woodpusher afraid to take the slightest risk of losing
material—but a dub who could almost always beat an utter novice.
The WBM machine here in the hall operates about a million times as
fast. Don't ask me how, I'm no physicist, but it depends on the new
transistors and something they call hypervelocity, which in turn
depends on keeping parts of the Machine at a temperature near absolute
zero. However, the result is that the Machine can see eight moves ahead
and is capable of being programmed much more craftily."
"A million times as fast as the first machine, you say, Doc? And yet it
only sees twice as many moves ahead?" Sandra objected.
"There is a geometrical progression involved there," he told her
with a smile. "Believe me, eight moves ahead is a lot of moves when
you remember that the Machine is errorlessly examining every one of
thousands of variations. Flesh-and-blood chess masters have lost games
by blunders they could have avoided by looking only one or two moves
ahead. The Machine will make no such oversights. Once again, you see,
you have the human factor, in this case working for the Machine."
"Savilly, I have been looking allplace for you!"
A stocky, bull-faced man with a great bristling shock of black,
gray-flecked hair had halted abruptly by their table. He bent over Doc
and began to whisper explosively in a guttural foreign tongue.
Sandra's gaze traveled beyond the balustrade. Now that she could look
down at it, the central hall seemed less confusedly crowded. In the
middle, toward the far end, were five small tables spaced rather widely
apart and with a chessboard and men and one of the Siamese clocks set
out on each. To either side of the hall were tiers of temporary seats,
about half of them occupied. There were at least as many more people
still wandering about.
On the far wall was a big electric scoreboard and also, above the
corresponding tables, five large dully glassy chessboards, the White
squares in light gray, the Black squares in dark.
One of the five wall chessboards was considerably larger than the other
four—the one above the Machine.
Sandra looked with quickening interest at the console of the Machine—a
bank of keys and some half-dozen panels of rows and rows of tiny
telltale lights, all dark at the moment. A thick red velvet cord on
little brass standards ran around the Machine at a distance of about
ten feet. Inside the cord were only a few gray-smocked men. Two of
them had just laid a black cable to the nearest chess table and were
attaching it to the Siamese clock.
Sandra tried to think of a being who always checked everything, but
only within limits beyond which his thoughts never ventured, and who
never made a mistake....
"Miss Grayling! May I present to you Igor Jandorf."
She turned back quickly with a smile and a nod.
"I should tell you, Igor," Doc continued, "that Miss Grayling
represents a large and influential Midwestern newspaper. Perhaps you
have a message for her readers."
The shock-headed man's eyes flashed. "I most certainly do!" At that
moment the waiter arrived with a second coffee and wine-and-seltzer.
Jandorf seized Doc's new demitasse, drained it, set it back on the tray
with a flourish and drew himself up.
"Tell your readers, Miss Grayling," he proclaimed, fiercely arching his
eyebrows at her and actually slapping his chest, "that I, Igor Jandorf,
will defeat the Machine by the living force of my human personality!
Already I have offered to play it an informal game blindfold—I, who
have played 50 blindfold games simultaneously! Its owners refuse me. I
have challenged it also to a few games of rapid-transit—an offer no
true grandmaster would dare ignore. Again they refuse me. I predict
that the Machine will play like a great oaf—at least against
me
.
Repeat: I, Igor Jandorf, by the living force of my human personality,
will defeat the Machine. Do you have that? You can remember it?"
"Oh yes," Sandra assured him, "but there are some other questions I
very much want to ask you, Mr. Jandorf."
"I am sorry, Miss Grayling, but I must clear my mind now. In ten
minutes they start the clocks."
While Sandra arranged for an interview with Jandorf after the day's
playing session, Doc reordered his coffee.
"One expects it of Jandorf," he explained to Sandra with a philosophic
shrug when the shock-headed man was gone. "At least he didn't take your
wine-and-seltzer. Or did he? One tip I have for you: don't call a chess
master Mister, call him Master. They all eat it up."
"Gee, Doc, I don't know how to thank you for everything. I hope I
haven't offended Mis—Master Jandorf so that he doesn't—"
"Don't worry about that. Wild horses couldn't keep Jandorf away from a
press interview. You know, his rapid-transit challenge was cunning.
That's a minor variety of chess where each player gets only ten seconds
to make a move. Which I don't suppose would give the Machine time to
look three moves ahead. Chess players would say that the Machine has a
very slow sight of the board. This tournament is being played at the
usual international rate of 15 moves an hour, and—"
"Is that why they've got all those crazy clocks?" Sandra interrupted.
"Oh, yes. Chess clocks measure the time each player takes in making his
moves. When a player makes a move he presses a button that shuts his
clock off and turns his opponent's on. If a player uses too much time,
he loses as surely as if he were checkmated. Now since the Machine
will almost certainly be programmed to take an equal amount of time
on successive moves, a rate of 15 moves an hour means it will have 4
minutes a move—and it will need every second of them! Incidentally
it was typical Jandorf bravado to make a point of a blindfold
challenge—just as if the Machine weren't playing blindfold itself. Or
is
the Machine blindfold? How do you think of it?"
"Gosh, I don't know. Say, Doc, is it really true that Master Jandorf
has played 50 games at once blindfolded? I can't believe that."
"Of course not!" Doc assured her. "It was only 49 and he lost two of
those and drew five. Jandorf always exaggerates. It's in his blood."
"He's one of the Russians, isn't he?" Sandra asked. "Igor?"
Doc chuckled. "Not exactly," he said gently. "He is originally a Pole
and now he has Argentinian citizenship. You have a program, don't you?"
Sandra started to hunt through her pocketbook, but just then two lists
of names lit up on the big electric scoreboard.
THE PLAYERS
William Angler, USA
Bela Grabo, Hungary
Ivan Jal, USSR
Igor Jandorf, Argentina
Dr. S. Krakatower, France
Vassily Lysmov, USSR
The Machine, USA (programmed by Simon Great)
Maxim Serek, USSR
Moses Sherevsky, USA
Mikhail Votbinnik, USSR
Tournament Director
: Dr. Jan Vanderhoef
FIRST ROUND PAIRINGS
Sherevsky vs. Serek
Jal vs. Angler
Jandorf vs. Votbinnik
Lysmov vs. Krakatower
Grabo vs. Machine
"Cripes, Doc, they all sound like they were Russians," Sandra said
after a bit. "Except this Willie Angler. Oh, he's the boy wonder,
isn't he?"
Doc nodded. "Not such a boy any longer, though. He's.... Well, speak of
the Devil's children.... Miss Grayling, I have the honor of presenting
to you the only grandmaster ever to have been ex-chess-champion of the
United States while still technically a minor—Master William Augustus
Angler."
A tall, sharply-dressed young man with a hatchet face pressed the old
man back into his chair.
"How are you, Savvy, old boy old boy?" he demanded. "Still chasing the
girls, I see."
"Please, Willie, get off me."
"Can't take it, huh?" Angler straightened up somewhat. "Hey waiter!
Where's that chocolate malt? I don't want it
next
year. About that
ex-
, though. I was swindled, Savvy. I was robbed."
"Willie!" Doc said with some asperity. "Miss Grayling is a journalist.
She would like to have a statement from you as to how you will play
against the Machine."
Angler grinned and shook his head sadly. "Poor old Machine," he said.
"I don't know why they take so much trouble polishing up that pile of
tin just so that I can give it a hit in the head. I got a hatful of
moves it'll burn out all its tubes trying to answer. And if it gets too
fresh, how about you and me giving its low-temperature section the
hotfoot, Savvy? The money WBM's putting up is okay, though. That first
prize will just fit the big hole in my bank account."
"I know you haven't the time now, Master Angler," Sandra said rapidly,
"but if after the playing session you could grant me—"
"Sorry, babe," Angler broke in with a wave of dismissal. "I'm dated up
for two months in advance. Waiter! I'm here, not there!" And he went
charging off.
Doc and Sandra looked at each other and smiled.
"Chess masters aren't exactly humble people, are they?" she said.
Doc's smile became tinged with sad understanding. "You must excuse
them, though," he said. "They really get so little recognition or
recompense. This tournament is an exception. And it takes a great deal
of ego to play greatly."
"I suppose so. So World Business Machines is responsible for this
tournament?"
"Correct. Their advertising department is interested in the prestige.
They want to score a point over their great rival."
"But if the Machine plays badly it will be a black eye for them,"
Sandra pointed out.
"True," Doc agreed thoughtfully. "WBM must feel very sure.... It's
the prize money they've put up, of course, that's brought the world's
greatest players here. Otherwise half of them would be holding off
in the best temperamental-artist style. For chess players the prize
money is fabulous—$35,000, with $15,000 for first place, and all
expenses paid for all players. There's never been anything like it.
Soviet Russia is the only country that has ever supported and rewarded
her best chess players at all adequately. I think the Russian players
are here because UNESCO and FIDE (that's
Federation Internationale
des Echecs
—the international chess organization) are also backing
the tournament. And perhaps because the Kremlin is hungry for a little
prestige now that its space program is sagging."
"But if a Russian doesn't take first place it will be a black eye for
them."
Doc frowned. "True, in a sense.
They
must feel very sure.... Here
they are now."
Four men were crossing the center of the hall, which was clearing,
toward the tables at the other end. Doubtless they just happened to be
going two by two in close formation, but it gave Sandra the feeling of
a phalanx.
"The first two are Lysmov and Votbinnik," Doc told her. "It isn't often
that you see the current champion of the world—Votbinnik—and an
ex-champion arm in arm. There are two other persons in the tournament
who have held that honor—Jal and Vanderhoef the director, way back."
"Will whoever wins this tournament become champion?"
"Oh no. That's decided by two-player matches—a very long
business—after elimination tournaments between leading contenders.
This tournament is a round robin: each player plays one game with every
other player. That means nine rounds."
"Anyway there
are
an awful lot of Russians in the tournament,"
Sandra said, consulting her program. "Four out of ten have USSR after
them. And Bela Grabo, Hungary—that's a satellite. And Sherevsky and
Krakatower are Russian-sounding names."
"The proportion of Soviet to American entries in the tournament
represents pretty fairly the general difference in playing strength
between the two countries," Doc said judiciously. "Chess mastery
moves from land to land with the years. Way back it was the Moslems
and the Hindus and Persians. Then Italy and Spain. A little over a
hundred years ago it was France and England. Then Germany, Austria
and the New World. Now it's Russia—including of course the Russians
who have run away from Russia. But don't think there aren't a lot of
good Anglo-Saxon types who are masters of the first water. In fact,
there are a lot of them here around us, though perhaps you don't
think so. It's just that if you play a lot of chess you get to looking
Russian. Once it probably made you look Italian. Do you see that short
bald-headed man?"
"You mean the one facing the Machine and talking to Jandorf?"
"Yes. Now that's one with a lot of human interest. Moses Sherevsky.
Been champion of the United States many times. A very strict Orthodox
Jew. Can't play chess on Fridays or on Saturdays before sundown." He
chuckled. "Why, there's even a story going around that one rabbi told
Sherevsky it would be unlawful for him to play against the Machine
because it is technically a
golem
—the clay Frankenstein's monster of
Hebrew legend."
Sandra asked, "What about Grabo and Krakatower?"
Doc gave a short scornful laugh. "Krakatower! Don't pay any attention
to
him
. A senile has-been, it's a scandal he's been allowed to play
in this tournament! He must have pulled all sorts of strings. Told them
that his lifelong services to chess had won him the honor and that they
had to have a member of the so-called Old Guard. Maybe he even got down
on his knees and cried—and all the time his eyes on that expense money
and the last-place consolation prize! Yet dreaming schizophrenically
of beating them all! Please, don't get me started on Dirty Old
Krakatower."
"Take it easy, Doc. He sounds like he would make an interesting
article? Can you point him out to me?"
"You can tell him by his long white beard with coffee stains. I don't
see it anywhere, though. Perhaps he's shaved it off for the occasion.
It would be like that antique womanizer to develop senile delusions of
youthfulness."
"And Grabo?" Sandra pressed, suppressing a smile at the intensity of
Doc's animosity.
Doc's eyes grew thoughtful. "About Bela Grabo (why are three out of
four Hungarians named Bela?) I will tell you only this: That he is a
very brilliant player and that the Machine is very lucky to have drawn
him as its first opponent."
He would not amplify his statement. Sandra studied the Scoreboard again.
"This Simon Great who's down as programming the Machine. He's a famous
physicist, I suppose?"
"By no means. That was the trouble with some of the early chess-playing
machines—they were programmed by scientists. No, Simon Great is a
psychologist who at one time was a leading contender for the world's
chess championship. I think WBM was surprisingly shrewd to pick him
for the programming job. Let me tell you—No, better yet—"
Doc shot to his feet, stretched an arm on high and called out sharply,
"Simon!"
A man some four tables away waved back and a moment later came over.
"What is it, Savilly?" he asked. "There's hardly any time, you know."
The newcomer was of middle height, compact of figure and feature, with
graying hair cut short and combed sharply back.
Doc spoke his piece for Sandra.
Simon Great smiled thinly. "Sorry," he said, "But I am making no
predictions and we are giving out no advance information on the
programming of the Machine. As you know, I have had to fight the
Players' Committee tooth and nail on all sorts of points about that
and they have won most of them. I am not permitted to re-program the
Machine at adjournments—only between games (I did insist on that and
get it!) And if the Machine breaks down during a game, its clock keeps
running on it. My men are permitted to make repairs—if they can work
fast enough."
"That makes it very tough on you," Sandra put in. "The Machine isn't
allowed any weaknesses."
Great nodded soberly. "And now I must go. They've almost finished the
count-down, as one of my technicians keeps on calling it. Very pleased
to have met you, Miss Grayling—I'll check with our PR man on that
interview. Be seeing you, Savvy."
The tiers of seats were filled now and the central space almost clear.
Officials were shooing off a few knots of lingerers. Several of the
grandmasters, including all four Russians, were seated at their tables.
Press and company cameras were flashing. The four smaller wallboards
lit up with the pieces in the opening position—white for White and red
for Black. Simon Great stepped over the red velvet cord and more flash
bulbs went off.
"You know, Doc," Sandra said, "I'm a dog to suggest this, but what
if this whole thing were a big fake? What if Simon Great were really
playing the Machine's moves? There would surely be some way for his
electricians to rig—"
Doc laughed happily—and so loudly that some people at the adjoining
tables frowned.
"Miss Grayling, that is a wonderful idea! I will probably steal it for
a short story. I still manage to write and place a few in England.
No, I do not think that is at all likely. WBM would never risk such
a fraud. Great is completely out of practice for actual tournament
play, though not for chess-thinking. The difference in style between
a computer and a man would be evident to any expert. Great's own style
is remembered and would be recognized—though, come to think of it, his
style was often described as being machinelike...." For a moment Doc's
eyes became thoughtful. Then he smiled again. "But no, the idea is
impossible. Vanderhoef as Tournament Director has played two or three
games with the Machine to assure himself that it operates legitimately
and has grandmaster skill."
"Did the Machine beat him?" Sandra asked.
Doc shrugged. "The scores weren't released. It was very hush-hush.
But about your idea, Miss Grayling—did you ever read about Maelzel's
famous chess-playing automaton of the 19th Century? That one too was
supposed to work by machinery (cogs and gears, not electricity) but
actually it had a man hidden inside it—your Edgar Poe exposed the
fraud in a famous article. In
my
story I think the chess robot will
break down while it is being demonstrated to a millionaire purchaser
and the young inventor will have to win its game for it to cover up
and swing the deal. Only the millionaire's daughter, who is really a
better player than either of them ... yes, yes! Your Ambrose Bierce
too wrote a story about a chess-playing robot of the clickety-clank-grr
kind who murdered his creator, crushing him like an iron grizzly bear
when the man won a game from him. Tell me, Miss Grayling, do you find
yourself imagining this Machine putting out angry tendrils to strangle
its opponents, or beaming rays of death and hypnotism at them? I can
imagine...."
While Doc chattered happily on about chess-playing robots and chess
stories, Sandra found herself thinking about him. A writer of some sort
evidently and a terrific chess buff. Perhaps he was an actual medical
doctor. She'd read something about two or three coming over with the
Russian squad. But Doc certainly didn't sound like a Soviet citizen.
He was older than she'd first assumed. She could see that now that
she was listening to him less and looking at him more. Tired, too.
Only his dark-circled eyes shone with unquenchable youth. A useful old
guy, whoever he was. An hour ago she'd been sure she was going to muff
this assignment completely and now she had it laid out cold. For the
umpteenth time in her career Sandra shied away from the guilty thought
that she wasn't a writer at all or even a reporter, she just used
dime-a-dozen female attractiveness to rope a susceptible man (young,
old, American, Russian) and pick his brain....
She realized suddenly that the whole hall had become very quiet.
Doc was the only person still talking and people were again looking at
them disapprovingly. All five wallboards were lit up and the changed
position of a few pieces showed that opening moves had been made on
four of them, including the Machine's. The central space between
the tiers of seats was completely clear now, except for one man
hurrying across it in their direction with the rapid yet quiet, almost
tip-toe walk that seemed to mark all the officials.
Like morticians'
assistants
, she thought. He rapidly mounted the stairs and halted at
the top to look around searchingly. His gaze lighted on their table,
his eyebrows went up, and he made a beeline for Doc. Sandra wondered if
she should warn him that he was about to be shushed.
The official laid a hand on Doc's shoulder. "Sir!" he said agitatedly.
"Do you realize that they've started your clock, Dr. Krakatower?"
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/1/2/1/61213//61213-h//61213-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | What role does Doc play in conjunction with Sandra?
| 61213_UY49ALLO_2 | [
"He explains to Sandra that living human personality is key for beating the machine. \n",
"He shows Sandra around the tournament. \n",
"He explains to Sandra how the chess machine works and what the significance of each human chess player is. \n",
"He explains the history of chess scandals to Sandra. \n"
] | 3 | 3 | [
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61,213 | 61213_UY49ALLO | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | The 64-Square Madhouse | 1951.0 | Leiber, Fritz | PS; Science fiction; Computers -- Fiction; Journalists -- Fiction; Chess -- Tournaments -- Fiction | THE 64-SQUARE MADHOUSE
by FRITZ LEIBER
The machine was not perfect. It
could be tricked. It could make
mistakes. And—it could learn!
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of If Science Fiction, May 1962.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
Silently, so as not to shock anyone with illusions about well dressed
young women, Sandra Lea Grayling cursed the day she had persuaded the
Chicago Space Mirror
that there would be all sorts of human interest
stories to be picked up at the first international grandmaster chess
tournament in which an electronic computing machine was entered.
Not that there weren't enough humans around, it was the interest that
was in doubt. The large hall was crammed with energetic dark-suited
men of whom a disproportionately large number were bald, wore glasses,
were faintly untidy and indefinably shabby, had Slavic or Scandinavian
features, and talked foreign languages.
They yakked interminably. The only ones who didn't were scurrying
individuals with the eager-zombie look of officials.
Chess sets were everywhere—big ones on tables, still bigger
diagram-type electric ones on walls, small peg-in sets dragged from
side pockets and manipulated rapidly as part of the conversational
ritual and still smaller folding sets in which the pieces were the tiny
magnetized disks used for playing in free-fall.
There were signs featuring largely mysterious combinations of letters:
FIDE, WBM, USCF, USSF, USSR and UNESCO. Sandra felt fairly sure about
the last three.
The many clocks, bedside table size, would have struck a familiar
note except that they had little red flags and wheels sprinkled over
their faces and they were all in pairs, two clocks to a case. That
Siamese-twin clocks should be essential to a chess tournament struck
Sandra as a particularly maddening circumstance.
Her last assignment had been to interview the pilot pair riding the
first American manned circum-lunar satellite—and the five alternate
pairs who hadn't made the flight. This tournament hall seemed to Sandra
much further out of the world.
Overheard scraps of conversation in reasonably intelligible English
were not particularly helpful. Samples:
"They say the Machine has been programmed to play nothing but pure
Barcza System and Indian Defenses—and the Dragon Formation if anyone
pushes the King Pawn."
"Hah! In that case...."
"The Russians have come with ten trunkfuls of prepared variations and
they'll gang up on the Machine at adjournments. What can one New Jersey
computer do against four Russian grandmasters?"
"I heard the Russians have been programmed—with hypnotic cramming and
somno-briefing. Votbinnik had a nervous breakdown."
"Why, the Machine hasn't even a
Haupturnier
or an intercollegiate
won. It'll over its head be playing."
"Yes, but maybe like Capa at San Sebastian or Morphy or Willie Angler
at New York. The Russians will look like potzers."
"Have you studied the scores of the match between Moon Base and
Circum-Terra?"
"Not worth the trouble. The play was feeble. Barely Expert Rating."
Sandra's chief difficulty was that she knew absolutely nothing about
the game of chess—a point that she had slid over in conferring with
the powers at the
Space Mirror
, but that now had begun to weigh on
her. How wonderful it would be, she dreamed, to walk out this minute,
find a quiet bar and get pie-eyed in an evil, ladylike way.
"Perhaps mademoiselle would welcome a drink?"
"You're durn tootin' she would!" Sandra replied in a rush, and then
looked down apprehensively at the person who had read her thoughts.
It was a small sprightly elderly man who looked like a somewhat
thinned down Peter Lorre—there was that same impression of the happy
Slavic elf. What was left of his white hair was cut very short,
making a silvery nap. His pince-nez had quite thick lenses. But in
sharp contrast to the somberly clad men around them, he was wearing
a pearl-gray suit of almost exactly the same shade as Sandra's—a
circumstance that created for her the illusion that they were fellow
conspirators.
"Hey, wait a minute," she protested just the same. He had already taken
her arm and was piloting her toward the nearest flight of low wide
stairs. "How did you know I wanted a drink?"
"I could see that mademoiselle was having difficulty swallowing," he
replied, keeping them moving. "Pardon me for feasting my eyes on your
lovely throat."
"I didn't suppose they'd serve drinks here."
"But of course." They were already mounting the stairs. "What would
chess be without coffee or schnapps?"
"Okay, lead on," Sandra said. "You're the doctor."
"Doctor?" He smiled widely. "You know, I like being called that."
"Then the name is yours as long as you want it—Doc."
Meanwhile the happy little man had edged them into the first of a small
cluster of tables, where a dark-suited jabbering trio was just rising.
He snapped his fingers and hissed through his teeth. A white-aproned
waiter materialized.
"For myself black coffee," he said. "For mademoiselle rhine wine and
seltzer?"
"That'd go fine." Sandra leaned back. "Confidentially, Doc, I was
having trouble swallowing ... well, just about everything here."
He nodded. "You are not the first to be shocked and horrified by
chess," he assured her. "It is a curse of the intellect. It is a game
for lunatics—or else it creates them. But what brings a sane and
beautiful young lady to this 64-square madhouse?"
Sandra briefly told him her story and her predicament. By the time they
were served, Doc had absorbed the one and assessed the other.
"You have one great advantage," he told her. "You know nothing
whatsoever of chess—so you will be able to write about it
understandably for your readers." He swallowed half his demitasse and
smacked his lips. "As for the Machine—you
do
know, I suppose, that
it is not a humanoid metal robot, walking about clanking and squeaking
like a late medieval knight in armor?"
"Yes, Doc, but...." Sandra found difficulty in phrasing the question.
"Wait." He lifted a finger. "I think I know what you're going to ask.
You want to know why, if the Machine works at all, it doesn't work
perfectly, so that it always wins and there is no contest. Right?"
Sandra grinned and nodded. Doc's ability to interpret her mind was as
comforting as the bubbly, mildly astringent mixture she was sipping.
He removed his pince-nez, massaged the bridge of his nose and replaced
them.
"If you had," he said, "a billion computers all as fast as the Machine,
it would take them all the time there ever will be in the universe just
to play through all the possible games of chess, not to mention the
time needed to classify those games into branching families of wins for
White, wins for Black and draws, and the additional time required to
trace out chains of key-moves leading always to wins. So the Machine
can't play chess like God. What the Machine can do is examine all the
likely lines of play for about eight moves ahead—that is, four moves
each for White and Black—and then decide which is the best move on the
basis of capturing enemy pieces, working toward checkmate, establishing
a powerful central position and so on."
"That sounds like the way a man would play a game," Sandra observed.
"Look ahead a little way and try to make a plan. You know, like getting
out trumps in bridge or setting up a finesse."
"Exactly!" Doc beamed at her approvingly. "The Machine
is
like a
man. A rather peculiar and not exactly pleasant man. A man who always
abides by sound principles, who is utterly incapable of flights of
genius, but who never makes a mistake. You see, you are finding human
interest already, even in the Machine."
Sandra nodded. "Does a human chess player—a grandmaster, I mean—ever
look eight moves ahead in a game?"
"Most assuredly he does! In crucial situations, say where there's a
chance of winning at once by trapping the enemy king, he examines
many more moves ahead than that—thirty or forty even. The Machine
is probably programmed to recognize such situations and do something
of the same sort, though we can't be sure from the information World
Business Machines has released. But in most chess positions the
possibilities are so very nearly unlimited that even a grandmaster can
only look a very few moves ahead and must rely on his judgment and
experience and artistry. The equivalent of those in the Machine is the
directions fed into it before it plays a game."
"You mean the programming?"
"Indeed yes! The programming is the crux of the problem of the
chess-playing computer. The first practical model, reported by
Bernstein and Roberts of IBM in 1958 and which looked four moves
ahead, was programmed so that it had a greedy worried tendency to grab
at enemy pieces and to retreat its own whenever they were attacked. It
had a personality like that of a certain kind of chess-playing dub—a
dull-brained woodpusher afraid to take the slightest risk of losing
material—but a dub who could almost always beat an utter novice.
The WBM machine here in the hall operates about a million times as
fast. Don't ask me how, I'm no physicist, but it depends on the new
transistors and something they call hypervelocity, which in turn
depends on keeping parts of the Machine at a temperature near absolute
zero. However, the result is that the Machine can see eight moves ahead
and is capable of being programmed much more craftily."
"A million times as fast as the first machine, you say, Doc? And yet it
only sees twice as many moves ahead?" Sandra objected.
"There is a geometrical progression involved there," he told her
with a smile. "Believe me, eight moves ahead is a lot of moves when
you remember that the Machine is errorlessly examining every one of
thousands of variations. Flesh-and-blood chess masters have lost games
by blunders they could have avoided by looking only one or two moves
ahead. The Machine will make no such oversights. Once again, you see,
you have the human factor, in this case working for the Machine."
"Savilly, I have been looking allplace for you!"
A stocky, bull-faced man with a great bristling shock of black,
gray-flecked hair had halted abruptly by their table. He bent over Doc
and began to whisper explosively in a guttural foreign tongue.
Sandra's gaze traveled beyond the balustrade. Now that she could look
down at it, the central hall seemed less confusedly crowded. In the
middle, toward the far end, were five small tables spaced rather widely
apart and with a chessboard and men and one of the Siamese clocks set
out on each. To either side of the hall were tiers of temporary seats,
about half of them occupied. There were at least as many more people
still wandering about.
On the far wall was a big electric scoreboard and also, above the
corresponding tables, five large dully glassy chessboards, the White
squares in light gray, the Black squares in dark.
One of the five wall chessboards was considerably larger than the other
four—the one above the Machine.
Sandra looked with quickening interest at the console of the Machine—a
bank of keys and some half-dozen panels of rows and rows of tiny
telltale lights, all dark at the moment. A thick red velvet cord on
little brass standards ran around the Machine at a distance of about
ten feet. Inside the cord were only a few gray-smocked men. Two of
them had just laid a black cable to the nearest chess table and were
attaching it to the Siamese clock.
Sandra tried to think of a being who always checked everything, but
only within limits beyond which his thoughts never ventured, and who
never made a mistake....
"Miss Grayling! May I present to you Igor Jandorf."
She turned back quickly with a smile and a nod.
"I should tell you, Igor," Doc continued, "that Miss Grayling
represents a large and influential Midwestern newspaper. Perhaps you
have a message for her readers."
The shock-headed man's eyes flashed. "I most certainly do!" At that
moment the waiter arrived with a second coffee and wine-and-seltzer.
Jandorf seized Doc's new demitasse, drained it, set it back on the tray
with a flourish and drew himself up.
"Tell your readers, Miss Grayling," he proclaimed, fiercely arching his
eyebrows at her and actually slapping his chest, "that I, Igor Jandorf,
will defeat the Machine by the living force of my human personality!
Already I have offered to play it an informal game blindfold—I, who
have played 50 blindfold games simultaneously! Its owners refuse me. I
have challenged it also to a few games of rapid-transit—an offer no
true grandmaster would dare ignore. Again they refuse me. I predict
that the Machine will play like a great oaf—at least against
me
.
Repeat: I, Igor Jandorf, by the living force of my human personality,
will defeat the Machine. Do you have that? You can remember it?"
"Oh yes," Sandra assured him, "but there are some other questions I
very much want to ask you, Mr. Jandorf."
"I am sorry, Miss Grayling, but I must clear my mind now. In ten
minutes they start the clocks."
While Sandra arranged for an interview with Jandorf after the day's
playing session, Doc reordered his coffee.
"One expects it of Jandorf," he explained to Sandra with a philosophic
shrug when the shock-headed man was gone. "At least he didn't take your
wine-and-seltzer. Or did he? One tip I have for you: don't call a chess
master Mister, call him Master. They all eat it up."
"Gee, Doc, I don't know how to thank you for everything. I hope I
haven't offended Mis—Master Jandorf so that he doesn't—"
"Don't worry about that. Wild horses couldn't keep Jandorf away from a
press interview. You know, his rapid-transit challenge was cunning.
That's a minor variety of chess where each player gets only ten seconds
to make a move. Which I don't suppose would give the Machine time to
look three moves ahead. Chess players would say that the Machine has a
very slow sight of the board. This tournament is being played at the
usual international rate of 15 moves an hour, and—"
"Is that why they've got all those crazy clocks?" Sandra interrupted.
"Oh, yes. Chess clocks measure the time each player takes in making his
moves. When a player makes a move he presses a button that shuts his
clock off and turns his opponent's on. If a player uses too much time,
he loses as surely as if he were checkmated. Now since the Machine
will almost certainly be programmed to take an equal amount of time
on successive moves, a rate of 15 moves an hour means it will have 4
minutes a move—and it will need every second of them! Incidentally
it was typical Jandorf bravado to make a point of a blindfold
challenge—just as if the Machine weren't playing blindfold itself. Or
is
the Machine blindfold? How do you think of it?"
"Gosh, I don't know. Say, Doc, is it really true that Master Jandorf
has played 50 games at once blindfolded? I can't believe that."
"Of course not!" Doc assured her. "It was only 49 and he lost two of
those and drew five. Jandorf always exaggerates. It's in his blood."
"He's one of the Russians, isn't he?" Sandra asked. "Igor?"
Doc chuckled. "Not exactly," he said gently. "He is originally a Pole
and now he has Argentinian citizenship. You have a program, don't you?"
Sandra started to hunt through her pocketbook, but just then two lists
of names lit up on the big electric scoreboard.
THE PLAYERS
William Angler, USA
Bela Grabo, Hungary
Ivan Jal, USSR
Igor Jandorf, Argentina
Dr. S. Krakatower, France
Vassily Lysmov, USSR
The Machine, USA (programmed by Simon Great)
Maxim Serek, USSR
Moses Sherevsky, USA
Mikhail Votbinnik, USSR
Tournament Director
: Dr. Jan Vanderhoef
FIRST ROUND PAIRINGS
Sherevsky vs. Serek
Jal vs. Angler
Jandorf vs. Votbinnik
Lysmov vs. Krakatower
Grabo vs. Machine
"Cripes, Doc, they all sound like they were Russians," Sandra said
after a bit. "Except this Willie Angler. Oh, he's the boy wonder,
isn't he?"
Doc nodded. "Not such a boy any longer, though. He's.... Well, speak of
the Devil's children.... Miss Grayling, I have the honor of presenting
to you the only grandmaster ever to have been ex-chess-champion of the
United States while still technically a minor—Master William Augustus
Angler."
A tall, sharply-dressed young man with a hatchet face pressed the old
man back into his chair.
"How are you, Savvy, old boy old boy?" he demanded. "Still chasing the
girls, I see."
"Please, Willie, get off me."
"Can't take it, huh?" Angler straightened up somewhat. "Hey waiter!
Where's that chocolate malt? I don't want it
next
year. About that
ex-
, though. I was swindled, Savvy. I was robbed."
"Willie!" Doc said with some asperity. "Miss Grayling is a journalist.
She would like to have a statement from you as to how you will play
against the Machine."
Angler grinned and shook his head sadly. "Poor old Machine," he said.
"I don't know why they take so much trouble polishing up that pile of
tin just so that I can give it a hit in the head. I got a hatful of
moves it'll burn out all its tubes trying to answer. And if it gets too
fresh, how about you and me giving its low-temperature section the
hotfoot, Savvy? The money WBM's putting up is okay, though. That first
prize will just fit the big hole in my bank account."
"I know you haven't the time now, Master Angler," Sandra said rapidly,
"but if after the playing session you could grant me—"
"Sorry, babe," Angler broke in with a wave of dismissal. "I'm dated up
for two months in advance. Waiter! I'm here, not there!" And he went
charging off.
Doc and Sandra looked at each other and smiled.
"Chess masters aren't exactly humble people, are they?" she said.
Doc's smile became tinged with sad understanding. "You must excuse
them, though," he said. "They really get so little recognition or
recompense. This tournament is an exception. And it takes a great deal
of ego to play greatly."
"I suppose so. So World Business Machines is responsible for this
tournament?"
"Correct. Their advertising department is interested in the prestige.
They want to score a point over their great rival."
"But if the Machine plays badly it will be a black eye for them,"
Sandra pointed out.
"True," Doc agreed thoughtfully. "WBM must feel very sure.... It's
the prize money they've put up, of course, that's brought the world's
greatest players here. Otherwise half of them would be holding off
in the best temperamental-artist style. For chess players the prize
money is fabulous—$35,000, with $15,000 for first place, and all
expenses paid for all players. There's never been anything like it.
Soviet Russia is the only country that has ever supported and rewarded
her best chess players at all adequately. I think the Russian players
are here because UNESCO and FIDE (that's
Federation Internationale
des Echecs
—the international chess organization) are also backing
the tournament. And perhaps because the Kremlin is hungry for a little
prestige now that its space program is sagging."
"But if a Russian doesn't take first place it will be a black eye for
them."
Doc frowned. "True, in a sense.
They
must feel very sure.... Here
they are now."
Four men were crossing the center of the hall, which was clearing,
toward the tables at the other end. Doubtless they just happened to be
going two by two in close formation, but it gave Sandra the feeling of
a phalanx.
"The first two are Lysmov and Votbinnik," Doc told her. "It isn't often
that you see the current champion of the world—Votbinnik—and an
ex-champion arm in arm. There are two other persons in the tournament
who have held that honor—Jal and Vanderhoef the director, way back."
"Will whoever wins this tournament become champion?"
"Oh no. That's decided by two-player matches—a very long
business—after elimination tournaments between leading contenders.
This tournament is a round robin: each player plays one game with every
other player. That means nine rounds."
"Anyway there
are
an awful lot of Russians in the tournament,"
Sandra said, consulting her program. "Four out of ten have USSR after
them. And Bela Grabo, Hungary—that's a satellite. And Sherevsky and
Krakatower are Russian-sounding names."
"The proportion of Soviet to American entries in the tournament
represents pretty fairly the general difference in playing strength
between the two countries," Doc said judiciously. "Chess mastery
moves from land to land with the years. Way back it was the Moslems
and the Hindus and Persians. Then Italy and Spain. A little over a
hundred years ago it was France and England. Then Germany, Austria
and the New World. Now it's Russia—including of course the Russians
who have run away from Russia. But don't think there aren't a lot of
good Anglo-Saxon types who are masters of the first water. In fact,
there are a lot of them here around us, though perhaps you don't
think so. It's just that if you play a lot of chess you get to looking
Russian. Once it probably made you look Italian. Do you see that short
bald-headed man?"
"You mean the one facing the Machine and talking to Jandorf?"
"Yes. Now that's one with a lot of human interest. Moses Sherevsky.
Been champion of the United States many times. A very strict Orthodox
Jew. Can't play chess on Fridays or on Saturdays before sundown." He
chuckled. "Why, there's even a story going around that one rabbi told
Sherevsky it would be unlawful for him to play against the Machine
because it is technically a
golem
—the clay Frankenstein's monster of
Hebrew legend."
Sandra asked, "What about Grabo and Krakatower?"
Doc gave a short scornful laugh. "Krakatower! Don't pay any attention
to
him
. A senile has-been, it's a scandal he's been allowed to play
in this tournament! He must have pulled all sorts of strings. Told them
that his lifelong services to chess had won him the honor and that they
had to have a member of the so-called Old Guard. Maybe he even got down
on his knees and cried—and all the time his eyes on that expense money
and the last-place consolation prize! Yet dreaming schizophrenically
of beating them all! Please, don't get me started on Dirty Old
Krakatower."
"Take it easy, Doc. He sounds like he would make an interesting
article? Can you point him out to me?"
"You can tell him by his long white beard with coffee stains. I don't
see it anywhere, though. Perhaps he's shaved it off for the occasion.
It would be like that antique womanizer to develop senile delusions of
youthfulness."
"And Grabo?" Sandra pressed, suppressing a smile at the intensity of
Doc's animosity.
Doc's eyes grew thoughtful. "About Bela Grabo (why are three out of
four Hungarians named Bela?) I will tell you only this: That he is a
very brilliant player and that the Machine is very lucky to have drawn
him as its first opponent."
He would not amplify his statement. Sandra studied the Scoreboard again.
"This Simon Great who's down as programming the Machine. He's a famous
physicist, I suppose?"
"By no means. That was the trouble with some of the early chess-playing
machines—they were programmed by scientists. No, Simon Great is a
psychologist who at one time was a leading contender for the world's
chess championship. I think WBM was surprisingly shrewd to pick him
for the programming job. Let me tell you—No, better yet—"
Doc shot to his feet, stretched an arm on high and called out sharply,
"Simon!"
A man some four tables away waved back and a moment later came over.
"What is it, Savilly?" he asked. "There's hardly any time, you know."
The newcomer was of middle height, compact of figure and feature, with
graying hair cut short and combed sharply back.
Doc spoke his piece for Sandra.
Simon Great smiled thinly. "Sorry," he said, "But I am making no
predictions and we are giving out no advance information on the
programming of the Machine. As you know, I have had to fight the
Players' Committee tooth and nail on all sorts of points about that
and they have won most of them. I am not permitted to re-program the
Machine at adjournments—only between games (I did insist on that and
get it!) And if the Machine breaks down during a game, its clock keeps
running on it. My men are permitted to make repairs—if they can work
fast enough."
"That makes it very tough on you," Sandra put in. "The Machine isn't
allowed any weaknesses."
Great nodded soberly. "And now I must go. They've almost finished the
count-down, as one of my technicians keeps on calling it. Very pleased
to have met you, Miss Grayling—I'll check with our PR man on that
interview. Be seeing you, Savvy."
The tiers of seats were filled now and the central space almost clear.
Officials were shooing off a few knots of lingerers. Several of the
grandmasters, including all four Russians, were seated at their tables.
Press and company cameras were flashing. The four smaller wallboards
lit up with the pieces in the opening position—white for White and red
for Black. Simon Great stepped over the red velvet cord and more flash
bulbs went off.
"You know, Doc," Sandra said, "I'm a dog to suggest this, but what
if this whole thing were a big fake? What if Simon Great were really
playing the Machine's moves? There would surely be some way for his
electricians to rig—"
Doc laughed happily—and so loudly that some people at the adjoining
tables frowned.
"Miss Grayling, that is a wonderful idea! I will probably steal it for
a short story. I still manage to write and place a few in England.
No, I do not think that is at all likely. WBM would never risk such
a fraud. Great is completely out of practice for actual tournament
play, though not for chess-thinking. The difference in style between
a computer and a man would be evident to any expert. Great's own style
is remembered and would be recognized—though, come to think of it, his
style was often described as being machinelike...." For a moment Doc's
eyes became thoughtful. Then he smiled again. "But no, the idea is
impossible. Vanderhoef as Tournament Director has played two or three
games with the Machine to assure himself that it operates legitimately
and has grandmaster skill."
"Did the Machine beat him?" Sandra asked.
Doc shrugged. "The scores weren't released. It was very hush-hush.
But about your idea, Miss Grayling—did you ever read about Maelzel's
famous chess-playing automaton of the 19th Century? That one too was
supposed to work by machinery (cogs and gears, not electricity) but
actually it had a man hidden inside it—your Edgar Poe exposed the
fraud in a famous article. In
my
story I think the chess robot will
break down while it is being demonstrated to a millionaire purchaser
and the young inventor will have to win its game for it to cover up
and swing the deal. Only the millionaire's daughter, who is really a
better player than either of them ... yes, yes! Your Ambrose Bierce
too wrote a story about a chess-playing robot of the clickety-clank-grr
kind who murdered his creator, crushing him like an iron grizzly bear
when the man won a game from him. Tell me, Miss Grayling, do you find
yourself imagining this Machine putting out angry tendrils to strangle
its opponents, or beaming rays of death and hypnotism at them? I can
imagine...."
While Doc chattered happily on about chess-playing robots and chess
stories, Sandra found herself thinking about him. A writer of some sort
evidently and a terrific chess buff. Perhaps he was an actual medical
doctor. She'd read something about two or three coming over with the
Russian squad. But Doc certainly didn't sound like a Soviet citizen.
He was older than she'd first assumed. She could see that now that
she was listening to him less and looking at him more. Tired, too.
Only his dark-circled eyes shone with unquenchable youth. A useful old
guy, whoever he was. An hour ago she'd been sure she was going to muff
this assignment completely and now she had it laid out cold. For the
umpteenth time in her career Sandra shied away from the guilty thought
that she wasn't a writer at all or even a reporter, she just used
dime-a-dozen female attractiveness to rope a susceptible man (young,
old, American, Russian) and pick his brain....
She realized suddenly that the whole hall had become very quiet.
Doc was the only person still talking and people were again looking at
them disapprovingly. All five wallboards were lit up and the changed
position of a few pieces showed that opening moves had been made on
four of them, including the Machine's. The central space between
the tiers of seats was completely clear now, except for one man
hurrying across it in their direction with the rapid yet quiet, almost
tip-toe walk that seemed to mark all the officials.
Like morticians'
assistants
, she thought. He rapidly mounted the stairs and halted at
the top to look around searchingly. His gaze lighted on their table,
his eyebrows went up, and he made a beeline for Doc. Sandra wondered if
she should warn him that he was about to be shushed.
The official laid a hand on Doc's shoulder. "Sir!" he said agitatedly.
"Do you realize that they've started your clock, Dr. Krakatower?"
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/1/2/1/61213//61213-h//61213-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | What is the significance of the players’ names?
| 61213_UY49ALLO_3 | [
"The players’ names correspond with which countries won World War II \n",
"The players’ names represent how chess rivals reflect political rivals. \n",
"The players’ names signify the level of competence each chess master has, with American names being the most competent.\n",
"The players’ names correspond with what country has the most chess mastery, with Russian names hold the utmost interest.\n"
] | 4 | 4 | [
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61,213 | 61213_UY49ALLO | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | The 64-Square Madhouse | 1951.0 | Leiber, Fritz | PS; Science fiction; Computers -- Fiction; Journalists -- Fiction; Chess -- Tournaments -- Fiction | THE 64-SQUARE MADHOUSE
by FRITZ LEIBER
The machine was not perfect. It
could be tricked. It could make
mistakes. And—it could learn!
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of If Science Fiction, May 1962.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
Silently, so as not to shock anyone with illusions about well dressed
young women, Sandra Lea Grayling cursed the day she had persuaded the
Chicago Space Mirror
that there would be all sorts of human interest
stories to be picked up at the first international grandmaster chess
tournament in which an electronic computing machine was entered.
Not that there weren't enough humans around, it was the interest that
was in doubt. The large hall was crammed with energetic dark-suited
men of whom a disproportionately large number were bald, wore glasses,
were faintly untidy and indefinably shabby, had Slavic or Scandinavian
features, and talked foreign languages.
They yakked interminably. The only ones who didn't were scurrying
individuals with the eager-zombie look of officials.
Chess sets were everywhere—big ones on tables, still bigger
diagram-type electric ones on walls, small peg-in sets dragged from
side pockets and manipulated rapidly as part of the conversational
ritual and still smaller folding sets in which the pieces were the tiny
magnetized disks used for playing in free-fall.
There were signs featuring largely mysterious combinations of letters:
FIDE, WBM, USCF, USSF, USSR and UNESCO. Sandra felt fairly sure about
the last three.
The many clocks, bedside table size, would have struck a familiar
note except that they had little red flags and wheels sprinkled over
their faces and they were all in pairs, two clocks to a case. That
Siamese-twin clocks should be essential to a chess tournament struck
Sandra as a particularly maddening circumstance.
Her last assignment had been to interview the pilot pair riding the
first American manned circum-lunar satellite—and the five alternate
pairs who hadn't made the flight. This tournament hall seemed to Sandra
much further out of the world.
Overheard scraps of conversation in reasonably intelligible English
were not particularly helpful. Samples:
"They say the Machine has been programmed to play nothing but pure
Barcza System and Indian Defenses—and the Dragon Formation if anyone
pushes the King Pawn."
"Hah! In that case...."
"The Russians have come with ten trunkfuls of prepared variations and
they'll gang up on the Machine at adjournments. What can one New Jersey
computer do against four Russian grandmasters?"
"I heard the Russians have been programmed—with hypnotic cramming and
somno-briefing. Votbinnik had a nervous breakdown."
"Why, the Machine hasn't even a
Haupturnier
or an intercollegiate
won. It'll over its head be playing."
"Yes, but maybe like Capa at San Sebastian or Morphy or Willie Angler
at New York. The Russians will look like potzers."
"Have you studied the scores of the match between Moon Base and
Circum-Terra?"
"Not worth the trouble. The play was feeble. Barely Expert Rating."
Sandra's chief difficulty was that she knew absolutely nothing about
the game of chess—a point that she had slid over in conferring with
the powers at the
Space Mirror
, but that now had begun to weigh on
her. How wonderful it would be, she dreamed, to walk out this minute,
find a quiet bar and get pie-eyed in an evil, ladylike way.
"Perhaps mademoiselle would welcome a drink?"
"You're durn tootin' she would!" Sandra replied in a rush, and then
looked down apprehensively at the person who had read her thoughts.
It was a small sprightly elderly man who looked like a somewhat
thinned down Peter Lorre—there was that same impression of the happy
Slavic elf. What was left of his white hair was cut very short,
making a silvery nap. His pince-nez had quite thick lenses. But in
sharp contrast to the somberly clad men around them, he was wearing
a pearl-gray suit of almost exactly the same shade as Sandra's—a
circumstance that created for her the illusion that they were fellow
conspirators.
"Hey, wait a minute," she protested just the same. He had already taken
her arm and was piloting her toward the nearest flight of low wide
stairs. "How did you know I wanted a drink?"
"I could see that mademoiselle was having difficulty swallowing," he
replied, keeping them moving. "Pardon me for feasting my eyes on your
lovely throat."
"I didn't suppose they'd serve drinks here."
"But of course." They were already mounting the stairs. "What would
chess be without coffee or schnapps?"
"Okay, lead on," Sandra said. "You're the doctor."
"Doctor?" He smiled widely. "You know, I like being called that."
"Then the name is yours as long as you want it—Doc."
Meanwhile the happy little man had edged them into the first of a small
cluster of tables, where a dark-suited jabbering trio was just rising.
He snapped his fingers and hissed through his teeth. A white-aproned
waiter materialized.
"For myself black coffee," he said. "For mademoiselle rhine wine and
seltzer?"
"That'd go fine." Sandra leaned back. "Confidentially, Doc, I was
having trouble swallowing ... well, just about everything here."
He nodded. "You are not the first to be shocked and horrified by
chess," he assured her. "It is a curse of the intellect. It is a game
for lunatics—or else it creates them. But what brings a sane and
beautiful young lady to this 64-square madhouse?"
Sandra briefly told him her story and her predicament. By the time they
were served, Doc had absorbed the one and assessed the other.
"You have one great advantage," he told her. "You know nothing
whatsoever of chess—so you will be able to write about it
understandably for your readers." He swallowed half his demitasse and
smacked his lips. "As for the Machine—you
do
know, I suppose, that
it is not a humanoid metal robot, walking about clanking and squeaking
like a late medieval knight in armor?"
"Yes, Doc, but...." Sandra found difficulty in phrasing the question.
"Wait." He lifted a finger. "I think I know what you're going to ask.
You want to know why, if the Machine works at all, it doesn't work
perfectly, so that it always wins and there is no contest. Right?"
Sandra grinned and nodded. Doc's ability to interpret her mind was as
comforting as the bubbly, mildly astringent mixture she was sipping.
He removed his pince-nez, massaged the bridge of his nose and replaced
them.
"If you had," he said, "a billion computers all as fast as the Machine,
it would take them all the time there ever will be in the universe just
to play through all the possible games of chess, not to mention the
time needed to classify those games into branching families of wins for
White, wins for Black and draws, and the additional time required to
trace out chains of key-moves leading always to wins. So the Machine
can't play chess like God. What the Machine can do is examine all the
likely lines of play for about eight moves ahead—that is, four moves
each for White and Black—and then decide which is the best move on the
basis of capturing enemy pieces, working toward checkmate, establishing
a powerful central position and so on."
"That sounds like the way a man would play a game," Sandra observed.
"Look ahead a little way and try to make a plan. You know, like getting
out trumps in bridge or setting up a finesse."
"Exactly!" Doc beamed at her approvingly. "The Machine
is
like a
man. A rather peculiar and not exactly pleasant man. A man who always
abides by sound principles, who is utterly incapable of flights of
genius, but who never makes a mistake. You see, you are finding human
interest already, even in the Machine."
Sandra nodded. "Does a human chess player—a grandmaster, I mean—ever
look eight moves ahead in a game?"
"Most assuredly he does! In crucial situations, say where there's a
chance of winning at once by trapping the enemy king, he examines
many more moves ahead than that—thirty or forty even. The Machine
is probably programmed to recognize such situations and do something
of the same sort, though we can't be sure from the information World
Business Machines has released. But in most chess positions the
possibilities are so very nearly unlimited that even a grandmaster can
only look a very few moves ahead and must rely on his judgment and
experience and artistry. The equivalent of those in the Machine is the
directions fed into it before it plays a game."
"You mean the programming?"
"Indeed yes! The programming is the crux of the problem of the
chess-playing computer. The first practical model, reported by
Bernstein and Roberts of IBM in 1958 and which looked four moves
ahead, was programmed so that it had a greedy worried tendency to grab
at enemy pieces and to retreat its own whenever they were attacked. It
had a personality like that of a certain kind of chess-playing dub—a
dull-brained woodpusher afraid to take the slightest risk of losing
material—but a dub who could almost always beat an utter novice.
The WBM machine here in the hall operates about a million times as
fast. Don't ask me how, I'm no physicist, but it depends on the new
transistors and something they call hypervelocity, which in turn
depends on keeping parts of the Machine at a temperature near absolute
zero. However, the result is that the Machine can see eight moves ahead
and is capable of being programmed much more craftily."
"A million times as fast as the first machine, you say, Doc? And yet it
only sees twice as many moves ahead?" Sandra objected.
"There is a geometrical progression involved there," he told her
with a smile. "Believe me, eight moves ahead is a lot of moves when
you remember that the Machine is errorlessly examining every one of
thousands of variations. Flesh-and-blood chess masters have lost games
by blunders they could have avoided by looking only one or two moves
ahead. The Machine will make no such oversights. Once again, you see,
you have the human factor, in this case working for the Machine."
"Savilly, I have been looking allplace for you!"
A stocky, bull-faced man with a great bristling shock of black,
gray-flecked hair had halted abruptly by their table. He bent over Doc
and began to whisper explosively in a guttural foreign tongue.
Sandra's gaze traveled beyond the balustrade. Now that she could look
down at it, the central hall seemed less confusedly crowded. In the
middle, toward the far end, were five small tables spaced rather widely
apart and with a chessboard and men and one of the Siamese clocks set
out on each. To either side of the hall were tiers of temporary seats,
about half of them occupied. There were at least as many more people
still wandering about.
On the far wall was a big electric scoreboard and also, above the
corresponding tables, five large dully glassy chessboards, the White
squares in light gray, the Black squares in dark.
One of the five wall chessboards was considerably larger than the other
four—the one above the Machine.
Sandra looked with quickening interest at the console of the Machine—a
bank of keys and some half-dozen panels of rows and rows of tiny
telltale lights, all dark at the moment. A thick red velvet cord on
little brass standards ran around the Machine at a distance of about
ten feet. Inside the cord were only a few gray-smocked men. Two of
them had just laid a black cable to the nearest chess table and were
attaching it to the Siamese clock.
Sandra tried to think of a being who always checked everything, but
only within limits beyond which his thoughts never ventured, and who
never made a mistake....
"Miss Grayling! May I present to you Igor Jandorf."
She turned back quickly with a smile and a nod.
"I should tell you, Igor," Doc continued, "that Miss Grayling
represents a large and influential Midwestern newspaper. Perhaps you
have a message for her readers."
The shock-headed man's eyes flashed. "I most certainly do!" At that
moment the waiter arrived with a second coffee and wine-and-seltzer.
Jandorf seized Doc's new demitasse, drained it, set it back on the tray
with a flourish and drew himself up.
"Tell your readers, Miss Grayling," he proclaimed, fiercely arching his
eyebrows at her and actually slapping his chest, "that I, Igor Jandorf,
will defeat the Machine by the living force of my human personality!
Already I have offered to play it an informal game blindfold—I, who
have played 50 blindfold games simultaneously! Its owners refuse me. I
have challenged it also to a few games of rapid-transit—an offer no
true grandmaster would dare ignore. Again they refuse me. I predict
that the Machine will play like a great oaf—at least against
me
.
Repeat: I, Igor Jandorf, by the living force of my human personality,
will defeat the Machine. Do you have that? You can remember it?"
"Oh yes," Sandra assured him, "but there are some other questions I
very much want to ask you, Mr. Jandorf."
"I am sorry, Miss Grayling, but I must clear my mind now. In ten
minutes they start the clocks."
While Sandra arranged for an interview with Jandorf after the day's
playing session, Doc reordered his coffee.
"One expects it of Jandorf," he explained to Sandra with a philosophic
shrug when the shock-headed man was gone. "At least he didn't take your
wine-and-seltzer. Or did he? One tip I have for you: don't call a chess
master Mister, call him Master. They all eat it up."
"Gee, Doc, I don't know how to thank you for everything. I hope I
haven't offended Mis—Master Jandorf so that he doesn't—"
"Don't worry about that. Wild horses couldn't keep Jandorf away from a
press interview. You know, his rapid-transit challenge was cunning.
That's a minor variety of chess where each player gets only ten seconds
to make a move. Which I don't suppose would give the Machine time to
look three moves ahead. Chess players would say that the Machine has a
very slow sight of the board. This tournament is being played at the
usual international rate of 15 moves an hour, and—"
"Is that why they've got all those crazy clocks?" Sandra interrupted.
"Oh, yes. Chess clocks measure the time each player takes in making his
moves. When a player makes a move he presses a button that shuts his
clock off and turns his opponent's on. If a player uses too much time,
he loses as surely as if he were checkmated. Now since the Machine
will almost certainly be programmed to take an equal amount of time
on successive moves, a rate of 15 moves an hour means it will have 4
minutes a move—and it will need every second of them! Incidentally
it was typical Jandorf bravado to make a point of a blindfold
challenge—just as if the Machine weren't playing blindfold itself. Or
is
the Machine blindfold? How do you think of it?"
"Gosh, I don't know. Say, Doc, is it really true that Master Jandorf
has played 50 games at once blindfolded? I can't believe that."
"Of course not!" Doc assured her. "It was only 49 and he lost two of
those and drew five. Jandorf always exaggerates. It's in his blood."
"He's one of the Russians, isn't he?" Sandra asked. "Igor?"
Doc chuckled. "Not exactly," he said gently. "He is originally a Pole
and now he has Argentinian citizenship. You have a program, don't you?"
Sandra started to hunt through her pocketbook, but just then two lists
of names lit up on the big electric scoreboard.
THE PLAYERS
William Angler, USA
Bela Grabo, Hungary
Ivan Jal, USSR
Igor Jandorf, Argentina
Dr. S. Krakatower, France
Vassily Lysmov, USSR
The Machine, USA (programmed by Simon Great)
Maxim Serek, USSR
Moses Sherevsky, USA
Mikhail Votbinnik, USSR
Tournament Director
: Dr. Jan Vanderhoef
FIRST ROUND PAIRINGS
Sherevsky vs. Serek
Jal vs. Angler
Jandorf vs. Votbinnik
Lysmov vs. Krakatower
Grabo vs. Machine
"Cripes, Doc, they all sound like they were Russians," Sandra said
after a bit. "Except this Willie Angler. Oh, he's the boy wonder,
isn't he?"
Doc nodded. "Not such a boy any longer, though. He's.... Well, speak of
the Devil's children.... Miss Grayling, I have the honor of presenting
to you the only grandmaster ever to have been ex-chess-champion of the
United States while still technically a minor—Master William Augustus
Angler."
A tall, sharply-dressed young man with a hatchet face pressed the old
man back into his chair.
"How are you, Savvy, old boy old boy?" he demanded. "Still chasing the
girls, I see."
"Please, Willie, get off me."
"Can't take it, huh?" Angler straightened up somewhat. "Hey waiter!
Where's that chocolate malt? I don't want it
next
year. About that
ex-
, though. I was swindled, Savvy. I was robbed."
"Willie!" Doc said with some asperity. "Miss Grayling is a journalist.
She would like to have a statement from you as to how you will play
against the Machine."
Angler grinned and shook his head sadly. "Poor old Machine," he said.
"I don't know why they take so much trouble polishing up that pile of
tin just so that I can give it a hit in the head. I got a hatful of
moves it'll burn out all its tubes trying to answer. And if it gets too
fresh, how about you and me giving its low-temperature section the
hotfoot, Savvy? The money WBM's putting up is okay, though. That first
prize will just fit the big hole in my bank account."
"I know you haven't the time now, Master Angler," Sandra said rapidly,
"but if after the playing session you could grant me—"
"Sorry, babe," Angler broke in with a wave of dismissal. "I'm dated up
for two months in advance. Waiter! I'm here, not there!" And he went
charging off.
Doc and Sandra looked at each other and smiled.
"Chess masters aren't exactly humble people, are they?" she said.
Doc's smile became tinged with sad understanding. "You must excuse
them, though," he said. "They really get so little recognition or
recompense. This tournament is an exception. And it takes a great deal
of ego to play greatly."
"I suppose so. So World Business Machines is responsible for this
tournament?"
"Correct. Their advertising department is interested in the prestige.
They want to score a point over their great rival."
"But if the Machine plays badly it will be a black eye for them,"
Sandra pointed out.
"True," Doc agreed thoughtfully. "WBM must feel very sure.... It's
the prize money they've put up, of course, that's brought the world's
greatest players here. Otherwise half of them would be holding off
in the best temperamental-artist style. For chess players the prize
money is fabulous—$35,000, with $15,000 for first place, and all
expenses paid for all players. There's never been anything like it.
Soviet Russia is the only country that has ever supported and rewarded
her best chess players at all adequately. I think the Russian players
are here because UNESCO and FIDE (that's
Federation Internationale
des Echecs
—the international chess organization) are also backing
the tournament. And perhaps because the Kremlin is hungry for a little
prestige now that its space program is sagging."
"But if a Russian doesn't take first place it will be a black eye for
them."
Doc frowned. "True, in a sense.
They
must feel very sure.... Here
they are now."
Four men were crossing the center of the hall, which was clearing,
toward the tables at the other end. Doubtless they just happened to be
going two by two in close formation, but it gave Sandra the feeling of
a phalanx.
"The first two are Lysmov and Votbinnik," Doc told her. "It isn't often
that you see the current champion of the world—Votbinnik—and an
ex-champion arm in arm. There are two other persons in the tournament
who have held that honor—Jal and Vanderhoef the director, way back."
"Will whoever wins this tournament become champion?"
"Oh no. That's decided by two-player matches—a very long
business—after elimination tournaments between leading contenders.
This tournament is a round robin: each player plays one game with every
other player. That means nine rounds."
"Anyway there
are
an awful lot of Russians in the tournament,"
Sandra said, consulting her program. "Four out of ten have USSR after
them. And Bela Grabo, Hungary—that's a satellite. And Sherevsky and
Krakatower are Russian-sounding names."
"The proportion of Soviet to American entries in the tournament
represents pretty fairly the general difference in playing strength
between the two countries," Doc said judiciously. "Chess mastery
moves from land to land with the years. Way back it was the Moslems
and the Hindus and Persians. Then Italy and Spain. A little over a
hundred years ago it was France and England. Then Germany, Austria
and the New World. Now it's Russia—including of course the Russians
who have run away from Russia. But don't think there aren't a lot of
good Anglo-Saxon types who are masters of the first water. In fact,
there are a lot of them here around us, though perhaps you don't
think so. It's just that if you play a lot of chess you get to looking
Russian. Once it probably made you look Italian. Do you see that short
bald-headed man?"
"You mean the one facing the Machine and talking to Jandorf?"
"Yes. Now that's one with a lot of human interest. Moses Sherevsky.
Been champion of the United States many times. A very strict Orthodox
Jew. Can't play chess on Fridays or on Saturdays before sundown." He
chuckled. "Why, there's even a story going around that one rabbi told
Sherevsky it would be unlawful for him to play against the Machine
because it is technically a
golem
—the clay Frankenstein's monster of
Hebrew legend."
Sandra asked, "What about Grabo and Krakatower?"
Doc gave a short scornful laugh. "Krakatower! Don't pay any attention
to
him
. A senile has-been, it's a scandal he's been allowed to play
in this tournament! He must have pulled all sorts of strings. Told them
that his lifelong services to chess had won him the honor and that they
had to have a member of the so-called Old Guard. Maybe he even got down
on his knees and cried—and all the time his eyes on that expense money
and the last-place consolation prize! Yet dreaming schizophrenically
of beating them all! Please, don't get me started on Dirty Old
Krakatower."
"Take it easy, Doc. He sounds like he would make an interesting
article? Can you point him out to me?"
"You can tell him by his long white beard with coffee stains. I don't
see it anywhere, though. Perhaps he's shaved it off for the occasion.
It would be like that antique womanizer to develop senile delusions of
youthfulness."
"And Grabo?" Sandra pressed, suppressing a smile at the intensity of
Doc's animosity.
Doc's eyes grew thoughtful. "About Bela Grabo (why are three out of
four Hungarians named Bela?) I will tell you only this: That he is a
very brilliant player and that the Machine is very lucky to have drawn
him as its first opponent."
He would not amplify his statement. Sandra studied the Scoreboard again.
"This Simon Great who's down as programming the Machine. He's a famous
physicist, I suppose?"
"By no means. That was the trouble with some of the early chess-playing
machines—they were programmed by scientists. No, Simon Great is a
psychologist who at one time was a leading contender for the world's
chess championship. I think WBM was surprisingly shrewd to pick him
for the programming job. Let me tell you—No, better yet—"
Doc shot to his feet, stretched an arm on high and called out sharply,
"Simon!"
A man some four tables away waved back and a moment later came over.
"What is it, Savilly?" he asked. "There's hardly any time, you know."
The newcomer was of middle height, compact of figure and feature, with
graying hair cut short and combed sharply back.
Doc spoke his piece for Sandra.
Simon Great smiled thinly. "Sorry," he said, "But I am making no
predictions and we are giving out no advance information on the
programming of the Machine. As you know, I have had to fight the
Players' Committee tooth and nail on all sorts of points about that
and they have won most of them. I am not permitted to re-program the
Machine at adjournments—only between games (I did insist on that and
get it!) And if the Machine breaks down during a game, its clock keeps
running on it. My men are permitted to make repairs—if they can work
fast enough."
"That makes it very tough on you," Sandra put in. "The Machine isn't
allowed any weaknesses."
Great nodded soberly. "And now I must go. They've almost finished the
count-down, as one of my technicians keeps on calling it. Very pleased
to have met you, Miss Grayling—I'll check with our PR man on that
interview. Be seeing you, Savvy."
The tiers of seats were filled now and the central space almost clear.
Officials were shooing off a few knots of lingerers. Several of the
grandmasters, including all four Russians, were seated at their tables.
Press and company cameras were flashing. The four smaller wallboards
lit up with the pieces in the opening position—white for White and red
for Black. Simon Great stepped over the red velvet cord and more flash
bulbs went off.
"You know, Doc," Sandra said, "I'm a dog to suggest this, but what
if this whole thing were a big fake? What if Simon Great were really
playing the Machine's moves? There would surely be some way for his
electricians to rig—"
Doc laughed happily—and so loudly that some people at the adjoining
tables frowned.
"Miss Grayling, that is a wonderful idea! I will probably steal it for
a short story. I still manage to write and place a few in England.
No, I do not think that is at all likely. WBM would never risk such
a fraud. Great is completely out of practice for actual tournament
play, though not for chess-thinking. The difference in style between
a computer and a man would be evident to any expert. Great's own style
is remembered and would be recognized—though, come to think of it, his
style was often described as being machinelike...." For a moment Doc's
eyes became thoughtful. Then he smiled again. "But no, the idea is
impossible. Vanderhoef as Tournament Director has played two or three
games with the Machine to assure himself that it operates legitimately
and has grandmaster skill."
"Did the Machine beat him?" Sandra asked.
Doc shrugged. "The scores weren't released. It was very hush-hush.
But about your idea, Miss Grayling—did you ever read about Maelzel's
famous chess-playing automaton of the 19th Century? That one too was
supposed to work by machinery (cogs and gears, not electricity) but
actually it had a man hidden inside it—your Edgar Poe exposed the
fraud in a famous article. In
my
story I think the chess robot will
break down while it is being demonstrated to a millionaire purchaser
and the young inventor will have to win its game for it to cover up
and swing the deal. Only the millionaire's daughter, who is really a
better player than either of them ... yes, yes! Your Ambrose Bierce
too wrote a story about a chess-playing robot of the clickety-clank-grr
kind who murdered his creator, crushing him like an iron grizzly bear
when the man won a game from him. Tell me, Miss Grayling, do you find
yourself imagining this Machine putting out angry tendrils to strangle
its opponents, or beaming rays of death and hypnotism at them? I can
imagine...."
While Doc chattered happily on about chess-playing robots and chess
stories, Sandra found herself thinking about him. A writer of some sort
evidently and a terrific chess buff. Perhaps he was an actual medical
doctor. She'd read something about two or three coming over with the
Russian squad. But Doc certainly didn't sound like a Soviet citizen.
He was older than she'd first assumed. She could see that now that
she was listening to him less and looking at him more. Tired, too.
Only his dark-circled eyes shone with unquenchable youth. A useful old
guy, whoever he was. An hour ago she'd been sure she was going to muff
this assignment completely and now she had it laid out cold. For the
umpteenth time in her career Sandra shied away from the guilty thought
that she wasn't a writer at all or even a reporter, she just used
dime-a-dozen female attractiveness to rope a susceptible man (young,
old, American, Russian) and pick his brain....
She realized suddenly that the whole hall had become very quiet.
Doc was the only person still talking and people were again looking at
them disapprovingly. All five wallboards were lit up and the changed
position of a few pieces showed that opening moves had been made on
four of them, including the Machine's. The central space between
the tiers of seats was completely clear now, except for one man
hurrying across it in their direction with the rapid yet quiet, almost
tip-toe walk that seemed to mark all the officials.
Like morticians'
assistants
, she thought. He rapidly mounted the stairs and halted at
the top to look around searchingly. His gaze lighted on their table,
his eyebrows went up, and he made a beeline for Doc. Sandra wondered if
she should warn him that he was about to be shushed.
The official laid a hand on Doc's shoulder. "Sir!" he said agitatedly.
"Do you realize that they've started your clock, Dr. Krakatower?"
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/1/2/1/61213//61213-h//61213-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | How does Sandra meet the chess players?
| 61213_UY49ALLO_4 | [
"Doc explains that she can use her tournament program to meet whichever player she wishes. \n",
"Doc tells her their chess history and introduces her to them as they pass by. \n",
"She uses her female charm to interest each player in an interview.\n",
"She interviews each player in accordance with who Doc is friends with, save for Dr. Krakatower. \n"
] | 2 | 2 | [
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61,213 | 61213_UY49ALLO | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | The 64-Square Madhouse | 1951.0 | Leiber, Fritz | PS; Science fiction; Computers -- Fiction; Journalists -- Fiction; Chess -- Tournaments -- Fiction | THE 64-SQUARE MADHOUSE
by FRITZ LEIBER
The machine was not perfect. It
could be tricked. It could make
mistakes. And—it could learn!
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of If Science Fiction, May 1962.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
Silently, so as not to shock anyone with illusions about well dressed
young women, Sandra Lea Grayling cursed the day she had persuaded the
Chicago Space Mirror
that there would be all sorts of human interest
stories to be picked up at the first international grandmaster chess
tournament in which an electronic computing machine was entered.
Not that there weren't enough humans around, it was the interest that
was in doubt. The large hall was crammed with energetic dark-suited
men of whom a disproportionately large number were bald, wore glasses,
were faintly untidy and indefinably shabby, had Slavic or Scandinavian
features, and talked foreign languages.
They yakked interminably. The only ones who didn't were scurrying
individuals with the eager-zombie look of officials.
Chess sets were everywhere—big ones on tables, still bigger
diagram-type electric ones on walls, small peg-in sets dragged from
side pockets and manipulated rapidly as part of the conversational
ritual and still smaller folding sets in which the pieces were the tiny
magnetized disks used for playing in free-fall.
There were signs featuring largely mysterious combinations of letters:
FIDE, WBM, USCF, USSF, USSR and UNESCO. Sandra felt fairly sure about
the last three.
The many clocks, bedside table size, would have struck a familiar
note except that they had little red flags and wheels sprinkled over
their faces and they were all in pairs, two clocks to a case. That
Siamese-twin clocks should be essential to a chess tournament struck
Sandra as a particularly maddening circumstance.
Her last assignment had been to interview the pilot pair riding the
first American manned circum-lunar satellite—and the five alternate
pairs who hadn't made the flight. This tournament hall seemed to Sandra
much further out of the world.
Overheard scraps of conversation in reasonably intelligible English
were not particularly helpful. Samples:
"They say the Machine has been programmed to play nothing but pure
Barcza System and Indian Defenses—and the Dragon Formation if anyone
pushes the King Pawn."
"Hah! In that case...."
"The Russians have come with ten trunkfuls of prepared variations and
they'll gang up on the Machine at adjournments. What can one New Jersey
computer do against four Russian grandmasters?"
"I heard the Russians have been programmed—with hypnotic cramming and
somno-briefing. Votbinnik had a nervous breakdown."
"Why, the Machine hasn't even a
Haupturnier
or an intercollegiate
won. It'll over its head be playing."
"Yes, but maybe like Capa at San Sebastian or Morphy or Willie Angler
at New York. The Russians will look like potzers."
"Have you studied the scores of the match between Moon Base and
Circum-Terra?"
"Not worth the trouble. The play was feeble. Barely Expert Rating."
Sandra's chief difficulty was that she knew absolutely nothing about
the game of chess—a point that she had slid over in conferring with
the powers at the
Space Mirror
, but that now had begun to weigh on
her. How wonderful it would be, she dreamed, to walk out this minute,
find a quiet bar and get pie-eyed in an evil, ladylike way.
"Perhaps mademoiselle would welcome a drink?"
"You're durn tootin' she would!" Sandra replied in a rush, and then
looked down apprehensively at the person who had read her thoughts.
It was a small sprightly elderly man who looked like a somewhat
thinned down Peter Lorre—there was that same impression of the happy
Slavic elf. What was left of his white hair was cut very short,
making a silvery nap. His pince-nez had quite thick lenses. But in
sharp contrast to the somberly clad men around them, he was wearing
a pearl-gray suit of almost exactly the same shade as Sandra's—a
circumstance that created for her the illusion that they were fellow
conspirators.
"Hey, wait a minute," she protested just the same. He had already taken
her arm and was piloting her toward the nearest flight of low wide
stairs. "How did you know I wanted a drink?"
"I could see that mademoiselle was having difficulty swallowing," he
replied, keeping them moving. "Pardon me for feasting my eyes on your
lovely throat."
"I didn't suppose they'd serve drinks here."
"But of course." They were already mounting the stairs. "What would
chess be without coffee or schnapps?"
"Okay, lead on," Sandra said. "You're the doctor."
"Doctor?" He smiled widely. "You know, I like being called that."
"Then the name is yours as long as you want it—Doc."
Meanwhile the happy little man had edged them into the first of a small
cluster of tables, where a dark-suited jabbering trio was just rising.
He snapped his fingers and hissed through his teeth. A white-aproned
waiter materialized.
"For myself black coffee," he said. "For mademoiselle rhine wine and
seltzer?"
"That'd go fine." Sandra leaned back. "Confidentially, Doc, I was
having trouble swallowing ... well, just about everything here."
He nodded. "You are not the first to be shocked and horrified by
chess," he assured her. "It is a curse of the intellect. It is a game
for lunatics—or else it creates them. But what brings a sane and
beautiful young lady to this 64-square madhouse?"
Sandra briefly told him her story and her predicament. By the time they
were served, Doc had absorbed the one and assessed the other.
"You have one great advantage," he told her. "You know nothing
whatsoever of chess—so you will be able to write about it
understandably for your readers." He swallowed half his demitasse and
smacked his lips. "As for the Machine—you
do
know, I suppose, that
it is not a humanoid metal robot, walking about clanking and squeaking
like a late medieval knight in armor?"
"Yes, Doc, but...." Sandra found difficulty in phrasing the question.
"Wait." He lifted a finger. "I think I know what you're going to ask.
You want to know why, if the Machine works at all, it doesn't work
perfectly, so that it always wins and there is no contest. Right?"
Sandra grinned and nodded. Doc's ability to interpret her mind was as
comforting as the bubbly, mildly astringent mixture she was sipping.
He removed his pince-nez, massaged the bridge of his nose and replaced
them.
"If you had," he said, "a billion computers all as fast as the Machine,
it would take them all the time there ever will be in the universe just
to play through all the possible games of chess, not to mention the
time needed to classify those games into branching families of wins for
White, wins for Black and draws, and the additional time required to
trace out chains of key-moves leading always to wins. So the Machine
can't play chess like God. What the Machine can do is examine all the
likely lines of play for about eight moves ahead—that is, four moves
each for White and Black—and then decide which is the best move on the
basis of capturing enemy pieces, working toward checkmate, establishing
a powerful central position and so on."
"That sounds like the way a man would play a game," Sandra observed.
"Look ahead a little way and try to make a plan. You know, like getting
out trumps in bridge or setting up a finesse."
"Exactly!" Doc beamed at her approvingly. "The Machine
is
like a
man. A rather peculiar and not exactly pleasant man. A man who always
abides by sound principles, who is utterly incapable of flights of
genius, but who never makes a mistake. You see, you are finding human
interest already, even in the Machine."
Sandra nodded. "Does a human chess player—a grandmaster, I mean—ever
look eight moves ahead in a game?"
"Most assuredly he does! In crucial situations, say where there's a
chance of winning at once by trapping the enemy king, he examines
many more moves ahead than that—thirty or forty even. The Machine
is probably programmed to recognize such situations and do something
of the same sort, though we can't be sure from the information World
Business Machines has released. But in most chess positions the
possibilities are so very nearly unlimited that even a grandmaster can
only look a very few moves ahead and must rely on his judgment and
experience and artistry. The equivalent of those in the Machine is the
directions fed into it before it plays a game."
"You mean the programming?"
"Indeed yes! The programming is the crux of the problem of the
chess-playing computer. The first practical model, reported by
Bernstein and Roberts of IBM in 1958 and which looked four moves
ahead, was programmed so that it had a greedy worried tendency to grab
at enemy pieces and to retreat its own whenever they were attacked. It
had a personality like that of a certain kind of chess-playing dub—a
dull-brained woodpusher afraid to take the slightest risk of losing
material—but a dub who could almost always beat an utter novice.
The WBM machine here in the hall operates about a million times as
fast. Don't ask me how, I'm no physicist, but it depends on the new
transistors and something they call hypervelocity, which in turn
depends on keeping parts of the Machine at a temperature near absolute
zero. However, the result is that the Machine can see eight moves ahead
and is capable of being programmed much more craftily."
"A million times as fast as the first machine, you say, Doc? And yet it
only sees twice as many moves ahead?" Sandra objected.
"There is a geometrical progression involved there," he told her
with a smile. "Believe me, eight moves ahead is a lot of moves when
you remember that the Machine is errorlessly examining every one of
thousands of variations. Flesh-and-blood chess masters have lost games
by blunders they could have avoided by looking only one or two moves
ahead. The Machine will make no such oversights. Once again, you see,
you have the human factor, in this case working for the Machine."
"Savilly, I have been looking allplace for you!"
A stocky, bull-faced man with a great bristling shock of black,
gray-flecked hair had halted abruptly by their table. He bent over Doc
and began to whisper explosively in a guttural foreign tongue.
Sandra's gaze traveled beyond the balustrade. Now that she could look
down at it, the central hall seemed less confusedly crowded. In the
middle, toward the far end, were five small tables spaced rather widely
apart and with a chessboard and men and one of the Siamese clocks set
out on each. To either side of the hall were tiers of temporary seats,
about half of them occupied. There were at least as many more people
still wandering about.
On the far wall was a big electric scoreboard and also, above the
corresponding tables, five large dully glassy chessboards, the White
squares in light gray, the Black squares in dark.
One of the five wall chessboards was considerably larger than the other
four—the one above the Machine.
Sandra looked with quickening interest at the console of the Machine—a
bank of keys and some half-dozen panels of rows and rows of tiny
telltale lights, all dark at the moment. A thick red velvet cord on
little brass standards ran around the Machine at a distance of about
ten feet. Inside the cord were only a few gray-smocked men. Two of
them had just laid a black cable to the nearest chess table and were
attaching it to the Siamese clock.
Sandra tried to think of a being who always checked everything, but
only within limits beyond which his thoughts never ventured, and who
never made a mistake....
"Miss Grayling! May I present to you Igor Jandorf."
She turned back quickly with a smile and a nod.
"I should tell you, Igor," Doc continued, "that Miss Grayling
represents a large and influential Midwestern newspaper. Perhaps you
have a message for her readers."
The shock-headed man's eyes flashed. "I most certainly do!" At that
moment the waiter arrived with a second coffee and wine-and-seltzer.
Jandorf seized Doc's new demitasse, drained it, set it back on the tray
with a flourish and drew himself up.
"Tell your readers, Miss Grayling," he proclaimed, fiercely arching his
eyebrows at her and actually slapping his chest, "that I, Igor Jandorf,
will defeat the Machine by the living force of my human personality!
Already I have offered to play it an informal game blindfold—I, who
have played 50 blindfold games simultaneously! Its owners refuse me. I
have challenged it also to a few games of rapid-transit—an offer no
true grandmaster would dare ignore. Again they refuse me. I predict
that the Machine will play like a great oaf—at least against
me
.
Repeat: I, Igor Jandorf, by the living force of my human personality,
will defeat the Machine. Do you have that? You can remember it?"
"Oh yes," Sandra assured him, "but there are some other questions I
very much want to ask you, Mr. Jandorf."
"I am sorry, Miss Grayling, but I must clear my mind now. In ten
minutes they start the clocks."
While Sandra arranged for an interview with Jandorf after the day's
playing session, Doc reordered his coffee.
"One expects it of Jandorf," he explained to Sandra with a philosophic
shrug when the shock-headed man was gone. "At least he didn't take your
wine-and-seltzer. Or did he? One tip I have for you: don't call a chess
master Mister, call him Master. They all eat it up."
"Gee, Doc, I don't know how to thank you for everything. I hope I
haven't offended Mis—Master Jandorf so that he doesn't—"
"Don't worry about that. Wild horses couldn't keep Jandorf away from a
press interview. You know, his rapid-transit challenge was cunning.
That's a minor variety of chess where each player gets only ten seconds
to make a move. Which I don't suppose would give the Machine time to
look three moves ahead. Chess players would say that the Machine has a
very slow sight of the board. This tournament is being played at the
usual international rate of 15 moves an hour, and—"
"Is that why they've got all those crazy clocks?" Sandra interrupted.
"Oh, yes. Chess clocks measure the time each player takes in making his
moves. When a player makes a move he presses a button that shuts his
clock off and turns his opponent's on. If a player uses too much time,
he loses as surely as if he were checkmated. Now since the Machine
will almost certainly be programmed to take an equal amount of time
on successive moves, a rate of 15 moves an hour means it will have 4
minutes a move—and it will need every second of them! Incidentally
it was typical Jandorf bravado to make a point of a blindfold
challenge—just as if the Machine weren't playing blindfold itself. Or
is
the Machine blindfold? How do you think of it?"
"Gosh, I don't know. Say, Doc, is it really true that Master Jandorf
has played 50 games at once blindfolded? I can't believe that."
"Of course not!" Doc assured her. "It was only 49 and he lost two of
those and drew five. Jandorf always exaggerates. It's in his blood."
"He's one of the Russians, isn't he?" Sandra asked. "Igor?"
Doc chuckled. "Not exactly," he said gently. "He is originally a Pole
and now he has Argentinian citizenship. You have a program, don't you?"
Sandra started to hunt through her pocketbook, but just then two lists
of names lit up on the big electric scoreboard.
THE PLAYERS
William Angler, USA
Bela Grabo, Hungary
Ivan Jal, USSR
Igor Jandorf, Argentina
Dr. S. Krakatower, France
Vassily Lysmov, USSR
The Machine, USA (programmed by Simon Great)
Maxim Serek, USSR
Moses Sherevsky, USA
Mikhail Votbinnik, USSR
Tournament Director
: Dr. Jan Vanderhoef
FIRST ROUND PAIRINGS
Sherevsky vs. Serek
Jal vs. Angler
Jandorf vs. Votbinnik
Lysmov vs. Krakatower
Grabo vs. Machine
"Cripes, Doc, they all sound like they were Russians," Sandra said
after a bit. "Except this Willie Angler. Oh, he's the boy wonder,
isn't he?"
Doc nodded. "Not such a boy any longer, though. He's.... Well, speak of
the Devil's children.... Miss Grayling, I have the honor of presenting
to you the only grandmaster ever to have been ex-chess-champion of the
United States while still technically a minor—Master William Augustus
Angler."
A tall, sharply-dressed young man with a hatchet face pressed the old
man back into his chair.
"How are you, Savvy, old boy old boy?" he demanded. "Still chasing the
girls, I see."
"Please, Willie, get off me."
"Can't take it, huh?" Angler straightened up somewhat. "Hey waiter!
Where's that chocolate malt? I don't want it
next
year. About that
ex-
, though. I was swindled, Savvy. I was robbed."
"Willie!" Doc said with some asperity. "Miss Grayling is a journalist.
She would like to have a statement from you as to how you will play
against the Machine."
Angler grinned and shook his head sadly. "Poor old Machine," he said.
"I don't know why they take so much trouble polishing up that pile of
tin just so that I can give it a hit in the head. I got a hatful of
moves it'll burn out all its tubes trying to answer. And if it gets too
fresh, how about you and me giving its low-temperature section the
hotfoot, Savvy? The money WBM's putting up is okay, though. That first
prize will just fit the big hole in my bank account."
"I know you haven't the time now, Master Angler," Sandra said rapidly,
"but if after the playing session you could grant me—"
"Sorry, babe," Angler broke in with a wave of dismissal. "I'm dated up
for two months in advance. Waiter! I'm here, not there!" And he went
charging off.
Doc and Sandra looked at each other and smiled.
"Chess masters aren't exactly humble people, are they?" she said.
Doc's smile became tinged with sad understanding. "You must excuse
them, though," he said. "They really get so little recognition or
recompense. This tournament is an exception. And it takes a great deal
of ego to play greatly."
"I suppose so. So World Business Machines is responsible for this
tournament?"
"Correct. Their advertising department is interested in the prestige.
They want to score a point over their great rival."
"But if the Machine plays badly it will be a black eye for them,"
Sandra pointed out.
"True," Doc agreed thoughtfully. "WBM must feel very sure.... It's
the prize money they've put up, of course, that's brought the world's
greatest players here. Otherwise half of them would be holding off
in the best temperamental-artist style. For chess players the prize
money is fabulous—$35,000, with $15,000 for first place, and all
expenses paid for all players. There's never been anything like it.
Soviet Russia is the only country that has ever supported and rewarded
her best chess players at all adequately. I think the Russian players
are here because UNESCO and FIDE (that's
Federation Internationale
des Echecs
—the international chess organization) are also backing
the tournament. And perhaps because the Kremlin is hungry for a little
prestige now that its space program is sagging."
"But if a Russian doesn't take first place it will be a black eye for
them."
Doc frowned. "True, in a sense.
They
must feel very sure.... Here
they are now."
Four men were crossing the center of the hall, which was clearing,
toward the tables at the other end. Doubtless they just happened to be
going two by two in close formation, but it gave Sandra the feeling of
a phalanx.
"The first two are Lysmov and Votbinnik," Doc told her. "It isn't often
that you see the current champion of the world—Votbinnik—and an
ex-champion arm in arm. There are two other persons in the tournament
who have held that honor—Jal and Vanderhoef the director, way back."
"Will whoever wins this tournament become champion?"
"Oh no. That's decided by two-player matches—a very long
business—after elimination tournaments between leading contenders.
This tournament is a round robin: each player plays one game with every
other player. That means nine rounds."
"Anyway there
are
an awful lot of Russians in the tournament,"
Sandra said, consulting her program. "Four out of ten have USSR after
them. And Bela Grabo, Hungary—that's a satellite. And Sherevsky and
Krakatower are Russian-sounding names."
"The proportion of Soviet to American entries in the tournament
represents pretty fairly the general difference in playing strength
between the two countries," Doc said judiciously. "Chess mastery
moves from land to land with the years. Way back it was the Moslems
and the Hindus and Persians. Then Italy and Spain. A little over a
hundred years ago it was France and England. Then Germany, Austria
and the New World. Now it's Russia—including of course the Russians
who have run away from Russia. But don't think there aren't a lot of
good Anglo-Saxon types who are masters of the first water. In fact,
there are a lot of them here around us, though perhaps you don't
think so. It's just that if you play a lot of chess you get to looking
Russian. Once it probably made you look Italian. Do you see that short
bald-headed man?"
"You mean the one facing the Machine and talking to Jandorf?"
"Yes. Now that's one with a lot of human interest. Moses Sherevsky.
Been champion of the United States many times. A very strict Orthodox
Jew. Can't play chess on Fridays or on Saturdays before sundown." He
chuckled. "Why, there's even a story going around that one rabbi told
Sherevsky it would be unlawful for him to play against the Machine
because it is technically a
golem
—the clay Frankenstein's monster of
Hebrew legend."
Sandra asked, "What about Grabo and Krakatower?"
Doc gave a short scornful laugh. "Krakatower! Don't pay any attention
to
him
. A senile has-been, it's a scandal he's been allowed to play
in this tournament! He must have pulled all sorts of strings. Told them
that his lifelong services to chess had won him the honor and that they
had to have a member of the so-called Old Guard. Maybe he even got down
on his knees and cried—and all the time his eyes on that expense money
and the last-place consolation prize! Yet dreaming schizophrenically
of beating them all! Please, don't get me started on Dirty Old
Krakatower."
"Take it easy, Doc. He sounds like he would make an interesting
article? Can you point him out to me?"
"You can tell him by his long white beard with coffee stains. I don't
see it anywhere, though. Perhaps he's shaved it off for the occasion.
It would be like that antique womanizer to develop senile delusions of
youthfulness."
"And Grabo?" Sandra pressed, suppressing a smile at the intensity of
Doc's animosity.
Doc's eyes grew thoughtful. "About Bela Grabo (why are three out of
four Hungarians named Bela?) I will tell you only this: That he is a
very brilliant player and that the Machine is very lucky to have drawn
him as its first opponent."
He would not amplify his statement. Sandra studied the Scoreboard again.
"This Simon Great who's down as programming the Machine. He's a famous
physicist, I suppose?"
"By no means. That was the trouble with some of the early chess-playing
machines—they were programmed by scientists. No, Simon Great is a
psychologist who at one time was a leading contender for the world's
chess championship. I think WBM was surprisingly shrewd to pick him
for the programming job. Let me tell you—No, better yet—"
Doc shot to his feet, stretched an arm on high and called out sharply,
"Simon!"
A man some four tables away waved back and a moment later came over.
"What is it, Savilly?" he asked. "There's hardly any time, you know."
The newcomer was of middle height, compact of figure and feature, with
graying hair cut short and combed sharply back.
Doc spoke his piece for Sandra.
Simon Great smiled thinly. "Sorry," he said, "But I am making no
predictions and we are giving out no advance information on the
programming of the Machine. As you know, I have had to fight the
Players' Committee tooth and nail on all sorts of points about that
and they have won most of them. I am not permitted to re-program the
Machine at adjournments—only between games (I did insist on that and
get it!) And if the Machine breaks down during a game, its clock keeps
running on it. My men are permitted to make repairs—if they can work
fast enough."
"That makes it very tough on you," Sandra put in. "The Machine isn't
allowed any weaknesses."
Great nodded soberly. "And now I must go. They've almost finished the
count-down, as one of my technicians keeps on calling it. Very pleased
to have met you, Miss Grayling—I'll check with our PR man on that
interview. Be seeing you, Savvy."
The tiers of seats were filled now and the central space almost clear.
Officials were shooing off a few knots of lingerers. Several of the
grandmasters, including all four Russians, were seated at their tables.
Press and company cameras were flashing. The four smaller wallboards
lit up with the pieces in the opening position—white for White and red
for Black. Simon Great stepped over the red velvet cord and more flash
bulbs went off.
"You know, Doc," Sandra said, "I'm a dog to suggest this, but what
if this whole thing were a big fake? What if Simon Great were really
playing the Machine's moves? There would surely be some way for his
electricians to rig—"
Doc laughed happily—and so loudly that some people at the adjoining
tables frowned.
"Miss Grayling, that is a wonderful idea! I will probably steal it for
a short story. I still manage to write and place a few in England.
No, I do not think that is at all likely. WBM would never risk such
a fraud. Great is completely out of practice for actual tournament
play, though not for chess-thinking. The difference in style between
a computer and a man would be evident to any expert. Great's own style
is remembered and would be recognized—though, come to think of it, his
style was often described as being machinelike...." For a moment Doc's
eyes became thoughtful. Then he smiled again. "But no, the idea is
impossible. Vanderhoef as Tournament Director has played two or three
games with the Machine to assure himself that it operates legitimately
and has grandmaster skill."
"Did the Machine beat him?" Sandra asked.
Doc shrugged. "The scores weren't released. It was very hush-hush.
But about your idea, Miss Grayling—did you ever read about Maelzel's
famous chess-playing automaton of the 19th Century? That one too was
supposed to work by machinery (cogs and gears, not electricity) but
actually it had a man hidden inside it—your Edgar Poe exposed the
fraud in a famous article. In
my
story I think the chess robot will
break down while it is being demonstrated to a millionaire purchaser
and the young inventor will have to win its game for it to cover up
and swing the deal. Only the millionaire's daughter, who is really a
better player than either of them ... yes, yes! Your Ambrose Bierce
too wrote a story about a chess-playing robot of the clickety-clank-grr
kind who murdered his creator, crushing him like an iron grizzly bear
when the man won a game from him. Tell me, Miss Grayling, do you find
yourself imagining this Machine putting out angry tendrils to strangle
its opponents, or beaming rays of death and hypnotism at them? I can
imagine...."
While Doc chattered happily on about chess-playing robots and chess
stories, Sandra found herself thinking about him. A writer of some sort
evidently and a terrific chess buff. Perhaps he was an actual medical
doctor. She'd read something about two or three coming over with the
Russian squad. But Doc certainly didn't sound like a Soviet citizen.
He was older than she'd first assumed. She could see that now that
she was listening to him less and looking at him more. Tired, too.
Only his dark-circled eyes shone with unquenchable youth. A useful old
guy, whoever he was. An hour ago she'd been sure she was going to muff
this assignment completely and now she had it laid out cold. For the
umpteenth time in her career Sandra shied away from the guilty thought
that she wasn't a writer at all or even a reporter, she just used
dime-a-dozen female attractiveness to rope a susceptible man (young,
old, American, Russian) and pick his brain....
She realized suddenly that the whole hall had become very quiet.
Doc was the only person still talking and people were again looking at
them disapprovingly. All five wallboards were lit up and the changed
position of a few pieces showed that opening moves had been made on
four of them, including the Machine's. The central space between
the tiers of seats was completely clear now, except for one man
hurrying across it in their direction with the rapid yet quiet, almost
tip-toe walk that seemed to mark all the officials.
Like morticians'
assistants
, she thought. He rapidly mounted the stairs and halted at
the top to look around searchingly. His gaze lighted on their table,
his eyebrows went up, and he made a beeline for Doc. Sandra wondered if
she should warn him that he was about to be shushed.
The official laid a hand on Doc's shoulder. "Sir!" he said agitatedly.
"Do you realize that they've started your clock, Dr. Krakatower?"
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/1/2/1/61213//61213-h//61213-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | Who is putting on the chess tournament? Why?
| 61213_UY49ALLO_5 | [
"WBM—to test the efficacy of their machine. \n",
"Dr. Krakatower—to beat WBM’s chess ma Co own once and for all. \n",
"WBM—to being down Russia’s chess mastery. \n",
"WBM—to test the accuracy of their chess machine’s emotional programming. \n"
] | 1 | 1 | [
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61,213 | 61213_UY49ALLO | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | The 64-Square Madhouse | 1951.0 | Leiber, Fritz | PS; Science fiction; Computers -- Fiction; Journalists -- Fiction; Chess -- Tournaments -- Fiction | THE 64-SQUARE MADHOUSE
by FRITZ LEIBER
The machine was not perfect. It
could be tricked. It could make
mistakes. And—it could learn!
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of If Science Fiction, May 1962.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
Silently, so as not to shock anyone with illusions about well dressed
young women, Sandra Lea Grayling cursed the day she had persuaded the
Chicago Space Mirror
that there would be all sorts of human interest
stories to be picked up at the first international grandmaster chess
tournament in which an electronic computing machine was entered.
Not that there weren't enough humans around, it was the interest that
was in doubt. The large hall was crammed with energetic dark-suited
men of whom a disproportionately large number were bald, wore glasses,
were faintly untidy and indefinably shabby, had Slavic or Scandinavian
features, and talked foreign languages.
They yakked interminably. The only ones who didn't were scurrying
individuals with the eager-zombie look of officials.
Chess sets were everywhere—big ones on tables, still bigger
diagram-type electric ones on walls, small peg-in sets dragged from
side pockets and manipulated rapidly as part of the conversational
ritual and still smaller folding sets in which the pieces were the tiny
magnetized disks used for playing in free-fall.
There were signs featuring largely mysterious combinations of letters:
FIDE, WBM, USCF, USSF, USSR and UNESCO. Sandra felt fairly sure about
the last three.
The many clocks, bedside table size, would have struck a familiar
note except that they had little red flags and wheels sprinkled over
their faces and they were all in pairs, two clocks to a case. That
Siamese-twin clocks should be essential to a chess tournament struck
Sandra as a particularly maddening circumstance.
Her last assignment had been to interview the pilot pair riding the
first American manned circum-lunar satellite—and the five alternate
pairs who hadn't made the flight. This tournament hall seemed to Sandra
much further out of the world.
Overheard scraps of conversation in reasonably intelligible English
were not particularly helpful. Samples:
"They say the Machine has been programmed to play nothing but pure
Barcza System and Indian Defenses—and the Dragon Formation if anyone
pushes the King Pawn."
"Hah! In that case...."
"The Russians have come with ten trunkfuls of prepared variations and
they'll gang up on the Machine at adjournments. What can one New Jersey
computer do against four Russian grandmasters?"
"I heard the Russians have been programmed—with hypnotic cramming and
somno-briefing. Votbinnik had a nervous breakdown."
"Why, the Machine hasn't even a
Haupturnier
or an intercollegiate
won. It'll over its head be playing."
"Yes, but maybe like Capa at San Sebastian or Morphy or Willie Angler
at New York. The Russians will look like potzers."
"Have you studied the scores of the match between Moon Base and
Circum-Terra?"
"Not worth the trouble. The play was feeble. Barely Expert Rating."
Sandra's chief difficulty was that she knew absolutely nothing about
the game of chess—a point that she had slid over in conferring with
the powers at the
Space Mirror
, but that now had begun to weigh on
her. How wonderful it would be, she dreamed, to walk out this minute,
find a quiet bar and get pie-eyed in an evil, ladylike way.
"Perhaps mademoiselle would welcome a drink?"
"You're durn tootin' she would!" Sandra replied in a rush, and then
looked down apprehensively at the person who had read her thoughts.
It was a small sprightly elderly man who looked like a somewhat
thinned down Peter Lorre—there was that same impression of the happy
Slavic elf. What was left of his white hair was cut very short,
making a silvery nap. His pince-nez had quite thick lenses. But in
sharp contrast to the somberly clad men around them, he was wearing
a pearl-gray suit of almost exactly the same shade as Sandra's—a
circumstance that created for her the illusion that they were fellow
conspirators.
"Hey, wait a minute," she protested just the same. He had already taken
her arm and was piloting her toward the nearest flight of low wide
stairs. "How did you know I wanted a drink?"
"I could see that mademoiselle was having difficulty swallowing," he
replied, keeping them moving. "Pardon me for feasting my eyes on your
lovely throat."
"I didn't suppose they'd serve drinks here."
"But of course." They were already mounting the stairs. "What would
chess be without coffee or schnapps?"
"Okay, lead on," Sandra said. "You're the doctor."
"Doctor?" He smiled widely. "You know, I like being called that."
"Then the name is yours as long as you want it—Doc."
Meanwhile the happy little man had edged them into the first of a small
cluster of tables, where a dark-suited jabbering trio was just rising.
He snapped his fingers and hissed through his teeth. A white-aproned
waiter materialized.
"For myself black coffee," he said. "For mademoiselle rhine wine and
seltzer?"
"That'd go fine." Sandra leaned back. "Confidentially, Doc, I was
having trouble swallowing ... well, just about everything here."
He nodded. "You are not the first to be shocked and horrified by
chess," he assured her. "It is a curse of the intellect. It is a game
for lunatics—or else it creates them. But what brings a sane and
beautiful young lady to this 64-square madhouse?"
Sandra briefly told him her story and her predicament. By the time they
were served, Doc had absorbed the one and assessed the other.
"You have one great advantage," he told her. "You know nothing
whatsoever of chess—so you will be able to write about it
understandably for your readers." He swallowed half his demitasse and
smacked his lips. "As for the Machine—you
do
know, I suppose, that
it is not a humanoid metal robot, walking about clanking and squeaking
like a late medieval knight in armor?"
"Yes, Doc, but...." Sandra found difficulty in phrasing the question.
"Wait." He lifted a finger. "I think I know what you're going to ask.
You want to know why, if the Machine works at all, it doesn't work
perfectly, so that it always wins and there is no contest. Right?"
Sandra grinned and nodded. Doc's ability to interpret her mind was as
comforting as the bubbly, mildly astringent mixture she was sipping.
He removed his pince-nez, massaged the bridge of his nose and replaced
them.
"If you had," he said, "a billion computers all as fast as the Machine,
it would take them all the time there ever will be in the universe just
to play through all the possible games of chess, not to mention the
time needed to classify those games into branching families of wins for
White, wins for Black and draws, and the additional time required to
trace out chains of key-moves leading always to wins. So the Machine
can't play chess like God. What the Machine can do is examine all the
likely lines of play for about eight moves ahead—that is, four moves
each for White and Black—and then decide which is the best move on the
basis of capturing enemy pieces, working toward checkmate, establishing
a powerful central position and so on."
"That sounds like the way a man would play a game," Sandra observed.
"Look ahead a little way and try to make a plan. You know, like getting
out trumps in bridge or setting up a finesse."
"Exactly!" Doc beamed at her approvingly. "The Machine
is
like a
man. A rather peculiar and not exactly pleasant man. A man who always
abides by sound principles, who is utterly incapable of flights of
genius, but who never makes a mistake. You see, you are finding human
interest already, even in the Machine."
Sandra nodded. "Does a human chess player—a grandmaster, I mean—ever
look eight moves ahead in a game?"
"Most assuredly he does! In crucial situations, say where there's a
chance of winning at once by trapping the enemy king, he examines
many more moves ahead than that—thirty or forty even. The Machine
is probably programmed to recognize such situations and do something
of the same sort, though we can't be sure from the information World
Business Machines has released. But in most chess positions the
possibilities are so very nearly unlimited that even a grandmaster can
only look a very few moves ahead and must rely on his judgment and
experience and artistry. The equivalent of those in the Machine is the
directions fed into it before it plays a game."
"You mean the programming?"
"Indeed yes! The programming is the crux of the problem of the
chess-playing computer. The first practical model, reported by
Bernstein and Roberts of IBM in 1958 and which looked four moves
ahead, was programmed so that it had a greedy worried tendency to grab
at enemy pieces and to retreat its own whenever they were attacked. It
had a personality like that of a certain kind of chess-playing dub—a
dull-brained woodpusher afraid to take the slightest risk of losing
material—but a dub who could almost always beat an utter novice.
The WBM machine here in the hall operates about a million times as
fast. Don't ask me how, I'm no physicist, but it depends on the new
transistors and something they call hypervelocity, which in turn
depends on keeping parts of the Machine at a temperature near absolute
zero. However, the result is that the Machine can see eight moves ahead
and is capable of being programmed much more craftily."
"A million times as fast as the first machine, you say, Doc? And yet it
only sees twice as many moves ahead?" Sandra objected.
"There is a geometrical progression involved there," he told her
with a smile. "Believe me, eight moves ahead is a lot of moves when
you remember that the Machine is errorlessly examining every one of
thousands of variations. Flesh-and-blood chess masters have lost games
by blunders they could have avoided by looking only one or two moves
ahead. The Machine will make no such oversights. Once again, you see,
you have the human factor, in this case working for the Machine."
"Savilly, I have been looking allplace for you!"
A stocky, bull-faced man with a great bristling shock of black,
gray-flecked hair had halted abruptly by their table. He bent over Doc
and began to whisper explosively in a guttural foreign tongue.
Sandra's gaze traveled beyond the balustrade. Now that she could look
down at it, the central hall seemed less confusedly crowded. In the
middle, toward the far end, were five small tables spaced rather widely
apart and with a chessboard and men and one of the Siamese clocks set
out on each. To either side of the hall were tiers of temporary seats,
about half of them occupied. There were at least as many more people
still wandering about.
On the far wall was a big electric scoreboard and also, above the
corresponding tables, five large dully glassy chessboards, the White
squares in light gray, the Black squares in dark.
One of the five wall chessboards was considerably larger than the other
four—the one above the Machine.
Sandra looked with quickening interest at the console of the Machine—a
bank of keys and some half-dozen panels of rows and rows of tiny
telltale lights, all dark at the moment. A thick red velvet cord on
little brass standards ran around the Machine at a distance of about
ten feet. Inside the cord were only a few gray-smocked men. Two of
them had just laid a black cable to the nearest chess table and were
attaching it to the Siamese clock.
Sandra tried to think of a being who always checked everything, but
only within limits beyond which his thoughts never ventured, and who
never made a mistake....
"Miss Grayling! May I present to you Igor Jandorf."
She turned back quickly with a smile and a nod.
"I should tell you, Igor," Doc continued, "that Miss Grayling
represents a large and influential Midwestern newspaper. Perhaps you
have a message for her readers."
The shock-headed man's eyes flashed. "I most certainly do!" At that
moment the waiter arrived with a second coffee and wine-and-seltzer.
Jandorf seized Doc's new demitasse, drained it, set it back on the tray
with a flourish and drew himself up.
"Tell your readers, Miss Grayling," he proclaimed, fiercely arching his
eyebrows at her and actually slapping his chest, "that I, Igor Jandorf,
will defeat the Machine by the living force of my human personality!
Already I have offered to play it an informal game blindfold—I, who
have played 50 blindfold games simultaneously! Its owners refuse me. I
have challenged it also to a few games of rapid-transit—an offer no
true grandmaster would dare ignore. Again they refuse me. I predict
that the Machine will play like a great oaf—at least against
me
.
Repeat: I, Igor Jandorf, by the living force of my human personality,
will defeat the Machine. Do you have that? You can remember it?"
"Oh yes," Sandra assured him, "but there are some other questions I
very much want to ask you, Mr. Jandorf."
"I am sorry, Miss Grayling, but I must clear my mind now. In ten
minutes they start the clocks."
While Sandra arranged for an interview with Jandorf after the day's
playing session, Doc reordered his coffee.
"One expects it of Jandorf," he explained to Sandra with a philosophic
shrug when the shock-headed man was gone. "At least he didn't take your
wine-and-seltzer. Or did he? One tip I have for you: don't call a chess
master Mister, call him Master. They all eat it up."
"Gee, Doc, I don't know how to thank you for everything. I hope I
haven't offended Mis—Master Jandorf so that he doesn't—"
"Don't worry about that. Wild horses couldn't keep Jandorf away from a
press interview. You know, his rapid-transit challenge was cunning.
That's a minor variety of chess where each player gets only ten seconds
to make a move. Which I don't suppose would give the Machine time to
look three moves ahead. Chess players would say that the Machine has a
very slow sight of the board. This tournament is being played at the
usual international rate of 15 moves an hour, and—"
"Is that why they've got all those crazy clocks?" Sandra interrupted.
"Oh, yes. Chess clocks measure the time each player takes in making his
moves. When a player makes a move he presses a button that shuts his
clock off and turns his opponent's on. If a player uses too much time,
he loses as surely as if he were checkmated. Now since the Machine
will almost certainly be programmed to take an equal amount of time
on successive moves, a rate of 15 moves an hour means it will have 4
minutes a move—and it will need every second of them! Incidentally
it was typical Jandorf bravado to make a point of a blindfold
challenge—just as if the Machine weren't playing blindfold itself. Or
is
the Machine blindfold? How do you think of it?"
"Gosh, I don't know. Say, Doc, is it really true that Master Jandorf
has played 50 games at once blindfolded? I can't believe that."
"Of course not!" Doc assured her. "It was only 49 and he lost two of
those and drew five. Jandorf always exaggerates. It's in his blood."
"He's one of the Russians, isn't he?" Sandra asked. "Igor?"
Doc chuckled. "Not exactly," he said gently. "He is originally a Pole
and now he has Argentinian citizenship. You have a program, don't you?"
Sandra started to hunt through her pocketbook, but just then two lists
of names lit up on the big electric scoreboard.
THE PLAYERS
William Angler, USA
Bela Grabo, Hungary
Ivan Jal, USSR
Igor Jandorf, Argentina
Dr. S. Krakatower, France
Vassily Lysmov, USSR
The Machine, USA (programmed by Simon Great)
Maxim Serek, USSR
Moses Sherevsky, USA
Mikhail Votbinnik, USSR
Tournament Director
: Dr. Jan Vanderhoef
FIRST ROUND PAIRINGS
Sherevsky vs. Serek
Jal vs. Angler
Jandorf vs. Votbinnik
Lysmov vs. Krakatower
Grabo vs. Machine
"Cripes, Doc, they all sound like they were Russians," Sandra said
after a bit. "Except this Willie Angler. Oh, he's the boy wonder,
isn't he?"
Doc nodded. "Not such a boy any longer, though. He's.... Well, speak of
the Devil's children.... Miss Grayling, I have the honor of presenting
to you the only grandmaster ever to have been ex-chess-champion of the
United States while still technically a minor—Master William Augustus
Angler."
A tall, sharply-dressed young man with a hatchet face pressed the old
man back into his chair.
"How are you, Savvy, old boy old boy?" he demanded. "Still chasing the
girls, I see."
"Please, Willie, get off me."
"Can't take it, huh?" Angler straightened up somewhat. "Hey waiter!
Where's that chocolate malt? I don't want it
next
year. About that
ex-
, though. I was swindled, Savvy. I was robbed."
"Willie!" Doc said with some asperity. "Miss Grayling is a journalist.
She would like to have a statement from you as to how you will play
against the Machine."
Angler grinned and shook his head sadly. "Poor old Machine," he said.
"I don't know why they take so much trouble polishing up that pile of
tin just so that I can give it a hit in the head. I got a hatful of
moves it'll burn out all its tubes trying to answer. And if it gets too
fresh, how about you and me giving its low-temperature section the
hotfoot, Savvy? The money WBM's putting up is okay, though. That first
prize will just fit the big hole in my bank account."
"I know you haven't the time now, Master Angler," Sandra said rapidly,
"but if after the playing session you could grant me—"
"Sorry, babe," Angler broke in with a wave of dismissal. "I'm dated up
for two months in advance. Waiter! I'm here, not there!" And he went
charging off.
Doc and Sandra looked at each other and smiled.
"Chess masters aren't exactly humble people, are they?" she said.
Doc's smile became tinged with sad understanding. "You must excuse
them, though," he said. "They really get so little recognition or
recompense. This tournament is an exception. And it takes a great deal
of ego to play greatly."
"I suppose so. So World Business Machines is responsible for this
tournament?"
"Correct. Their advertising department is interested in the prestige.
They want to score a point over their great rival."
"But if the Machine plays badly it will be a black eye for them,"
Sandra pointed out.
"True," Doc agreed thoughtfully. "WBM must feel very sure.... It's
the prize money they've put up, of course, that's brought the world's
greatest players here. Otherwise half of them would be holding off
in the best temperamental-artist style. For chess players the prize
money is fabulous—$35,000, with $15,000 for first place, and all
expenses paid for all players. There's never been anything like it.
Soviet Russia is the only country that has ever supported and rewarded
her best chess players at all adequately. I think the Russian players
are here because UNESCO and FIDE (that's
Federation Internationale
des Echecs
—the international chess organization) are also backing
the tournament. And perhaps because the Kremlin is hungry for a little
prestige now that its space program is sagging."
"But if a Russian doesn't take first place it will be a black eye for
them."
Doc frowned. "True, in a sense.
They
must feel very sure.... Here
they are now."
Four men were crossing the center of the hall, which was clearing,
toward the tables at the other end. Doubtless they just happened to be
going two by two in close formation, but it gave Sandra the feeling of
a phalanx.
"The first two are Lysmov and Votbinnik," Doc told her. "It isn't often
that you see the current champion of the world—Votbinnik—and an
ex-champion arm in arm. There are two other persons in the tournament
who have held that honor—Jal and Vanderhoef the director, way back."
"Will whoever wins this tournament become champion?"
"Oh no. That's decided by two-player matches—a very long
business—after elimination tournaments between leading contenders.
This tournament is a round robin: each player plays one game with every
other player. That means nine rounds."
"Anyway there
are
an awful lot of Russians in the tournament,"
Sandra said, consulting her program. "Four out of ten have USSR after
them. And Bela Grabo, Hungary—that's a satellite. And Sherevsky and
Krakatower are Russian-sounding names."
"The proportion of Soviet to American entries in the tournament
represents pretty fairly the general difference in playing strength
between the two countries," Doc said judiciously. "Chess mastery
moves from land to land with the years. Way back it was the Moslems
and the Hindus and Persians. Then Italy and Spain. A little over a
hundred years ago it was France and England. Then Germany, Austria
and the New World. Now it's Russia—including of course the Russians
who have run away from Russia. But don't think there aren't a lot of
good Anglo-Saxon types who are masters of the first water. In fact,
there are a lot of them here around us, though perhaps you don't
think so. It's just that if you play a lot of chess you get to looking
Russian. Once it probably made you look Italian. Do you see that short
bald-headed man?"
"You mean the one facing the Machine and talking to Jandorf?"
"Yes. Now that's one with a lot of human interest. Moses Sherevsky.
Been champion of the United States many times. A very strict Orthodox
Jew. Can't play chess on Fridays or on Saturdays before sundown." He
chuckled. "Why, there's even a story going around that one rabbi told
Sherevsky it would be unlawful for him to play against the Machine
because it is technically a
golem
—the clay Frankenstein's monster of
Hebrew legend."
Sandra asked, "What about Grabo and Krakatower?"
Doc gave a short scornful laugh. "Krakatower! Don't pay any attention
to
him
. A senile has-been, it's a scandal he's been allowed to play
in this tournament! He must have pulled all sorts of strings. Told them
that his lifelong services to chess had won him the honor and that they
had to have a member of the so-called Old Guard. Maybe he even got down
on his knees and cried—and all the time his eyes on that expense money
and the last-place consolation prize! Yet dreaming schizophrenically
of beating them all! Please, don't get me started on Dirty Old
Krakatower."
"Take it easy, Doc. He sounds like he would make an interesting
article? Can you point him out to me?"
"You can tell him by his long white beard with coffee stains. I don't
see it anywhere, though. Perhaps he's shaved it off for the occasion.
It would be like that antique womanizer to develop senile delusions of
youthfulness."
"And Grabo?" Sandra pressed, suppressing a smile at the intensity of
Doc's animosity.
Doc's eyes grew thoughtful. "About Bela Grabo (why are three out of
four Hungarians named Bela?) I will tell you only this: That he is a
very brilliant player and that the Machine is very lucky to have drawn
him as its first opponent."
He would not amplify his statement. Sandra studied the Scoreboard again.
"This Simon Great who's down as programming the Machine. He's a famous
physicist, I suppose?"
"By no means. That was the trouble with some of the early chess-playing
machines—they were programmed by scientists. No, Simon Great is a
psychologist who at one time was a leading contender for the world's
chess championship. I think WBM was surprisingly shrewd to pick him
for the programming job. Let me tell you—No, better yet—"
Doc shot to his feet, stretched an arm on high and called out sharply,
"Simon!"
A man some four tables away waved back and a moment later came over.
"What is it, Savilly?" he asked. "There's hardly any time, you know."
The newcomer was of middle height, compact of figure and feature, with
graying hair cut short and combed sharply back.
Doc spoke his piece for Sandra.
Simon Great smiled thinly. "Sorry," he said, "But I am making no
predictions and we are giving out no advance information on the
programming of the Machine. As you know, I have had to fight the
Players' Committee tooth and nail on all sorts of points about that
and they have won most of them. I am not permitted to re-program the
Machine at adjournments—only between games (I did insist on that and
get it!) And if the Machine breaks down during a game, its clock keeps
running on it. My men are permitted to make repairs—if they can work
fast enough."
"That makes it very tough on you," Sandra put in. "The Machine isn't
allowed any weaknesses."
Great nodded soberly. "And now I must go. They've almost finished the
count-down, as one of my technicians keeps on calling it. Very pleased
to have met you, Miss Grayling—I'll check with our PR man on that
interview. Be seeing you, Savvy."
The tiers of seats were filled now and the central space almost clear.
Officials were shooing off a few knots of lingerers. Several of the
grandmasters, including all four Russians, were seated at their tables.
Press and company cameras were flashing. The four smaller wallboards
lit up with the pieces in the opening position—white for White and red
for Black. Simon Great stepped over the red velvet cord and more flash
bulbs went off.
"You know, Doc," Sandra said, "I'm a dog to suggest this, but what
if this whole thing were a big fake? What if Simon Great were really
playing the Machine's moves? There would surely be some way for his
electricians to rig—"
Doc laughed happily—and so loudly that some people at the adjoining
tables frowned.
"Miss Grayling, that is a wonderful idea! I will probably steal it for
a short story. I still manage to write and place a few in England.
No, I do not think that is at all likely. WBM would never risk such
a fraud. Great is completely out of practice for actual tournament
play, though not for chess-thinking. The difference in style between
a computer and a man would be evident to any expert. Great's own style
is remembered and would be recognized—though, come to think of it, his
style was often described as being machinelike...." For a moment Doc's
eyes became thoughtful. Then he smiled again. "But no, the idea is
impossible. Vanderhoef as Tournament Director has played two or three
games with the Machine to assure himself that it operates legitimately
and has grandmaster skill."
"Did the Machine beat him?" Sandra asked.
Doc shrugged. "The scores weren't released. It was very hush-hush.
But about your idea, Miss Grayling—did you ever read about Maelzel's
famous chess-playing automaton of the 19th Century? That one too was
supposed to work by machinery (cogs and gears, not electricity) but
actually it had a man hidden inside it—your Edgar Poe exposed the
fraud in a famous article. In
my
story I think the chess robot will
break down while it is being demonstrated to a millionaire purchaser
and the young inventor will have to win its game for it to cover up
and swing the deal. Only the millionaire's daughter, who is really a
better player than either of them ... yes, yes! Your Ambrose Bierce
too wrote a story about a chess-playing robot of the clickety-clank-grr
kind who murdered his creator, crushing him like an iron grizzly bear
when the man won a game from him. Tell me, Miss Grayling, do you find
yourself imagining this Machine putting out angry tendrils to strangle
its opponents, or beaming rays of death and hypnotism at them? I can
imagine...."
While Doc chattered happily on about chess-playing robots and chess
stories, Sandra found herself thinking about him. A writer of some sort
evidently and a terrific chess buff. Perhaps he was an actual medical
doctor. She'd read something about two or three coming over with the
Russian squad. But Doc certainly didn't sound like a Soviet citizen.
He was older than she'd first assumed. She could see that now that
she was listening to him less and looking at him more. Tired, too.
Only his dark-circled eyes shone with unquenchable youth. A useful old
guy, whoever he was. An hour ago she'd been sure she was going to muff
this assignment completely and now she had it laid out cold. For the
umpteenth time in her career Sandra shied away from the guilty thought
that she wasn't a writer at all or even a reporter, she just used
dime-a-dozen female attractiveness to rope a susceptible man (young,
old, American, Russian) and pick his brain....
She realized suddenly that the whole hall had become very quiet.
Doc was the only person still talking and people were again looking at
them disapprovingly. All five wallboards were lit up and the changed
position of a few pieces showed that opening moves had been made on
four of them, including the Machine's. The central space between
the tiers of seats was completely clear now, except for one man
hurrying across it in their direction with the rapid yet quiet, almost
tip-toe walk that seemed to mark all the officials.
Like morticians'
assistants
, she thought. He rapidly mounted the stairs and halted at
the top to look around searchingly. His gaze lighted on their table,
his eyebrows went up, and he made a beeline for Doc. Sandra wondered if
she should warn him that he was about to be shushed.
The official laid a hand on Doc's shoulder. "Sir!" he said agitatedly.
"Do you realize that they've started your clock, Dr. Krakatower?"
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/1/2/1/61213//61213-h//61213-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | What is the significance of Sandra persuading her paper into letting her write human interest stories? How does this affect the text’s composition?
| 61213_UY49ALLO_6 | [
"The human interest stories—i.e., Sandra’s interviews—provide the story’s central irony. The fact that humans cannot defeat the machine shows that the real interest is not human, but robotic.\n",
"The human interest stories provide a structure for the story to sit on. As she watches each player challenge the machine, it becomes more and more apparent that human personality cannot win. \n",
"-The human interest stories provide a structure for the story to sit on. As Doc introduces her to each chess player, their backstories help to unpack the significance of the chess tournament. \n",
"The human interest stories—i.e., Sandra’s interviews—provide a red herring for the story’s central goal, which is to hide the fact of Dr. Krakatower’s ability to beat the WBM machine. \n"
] | 3 | 3 | [
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61,213 | 61213_UY49ALLO | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | The 64-Square Madhouse | 1951.0 | Leiber, Fritz | PS; Science fiction; Computers -- Fiction; Journalists -- Fiction; Chess -- Tournaments -- Fiction | THE 64-SQUARE MADHOUSE
by FRITZ LEIBER
The machine was not perfect. It
could be tricked. It could make
mistakes. And—it could learn!
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of If Science Fiction, May 1962.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
Silently, so as not to shock anyone with illusions about well dressed
young women, Sandra Lea Grayling cursed the day she had persuaded the
Chicago Space Mirror
that there would be all sorts of human interest
stories to be picked up at the first international grandmaster chess
tournament in which an electronic computing machine was entered.
Not that there weren't enough humans around, it was the interest that
was in doubt. The large hall was crammed with energetic dark-suited
men of whom a disproportionately large number were bald, wore glasses,
were faintly untidy and indefinably shabby, had Slavic or Scandinavian
features, and talked foreign languages.
They yakked interminably. The only ones who didn't were scurrying
individuals with the eager-zombie look of officials.
Chess sets were everywhere—big ones on tables, still bigger
diagram-type electric ones on walls, small peg-in sets dragged from
side pockets and manipulated rapidly as part of the conversational
ritual and still smaller folding sets in which the pieces were the tiny
magnetized disks used for playing in free-fall.
There were signs featuring largely mysterious combinations of letters:
FIDE, WBM, USCF, USSF, USSR and UNESCO. Sandra felt fairly sure about
the last three.
The many clocks, bedside table size, would have struck a familiar
note except that they had little red flags and wheels sprinkled over
their faces and they were all in pairs, two clocks to a case. That
Siamese-twin clocks should be essential to a chess tournament struck
Sandra as a particularly maddening circumstance.
Her last assignment had been to interview the pilot pair riding the
first American manned circum-lunar satellite—and the five alternate
pairs who hadn't made the flight. This tournament hall seemed to Sandra
much further out of the world.
Overheard scraps of conversation in reasonably intelligible English
were not particularly helpful. Samples:
"They say the Machine has been programmed to play nothing but pure
Barcza System and Indian Defenses—and the Dragon Formation if anyone
pushes the King Pawn."
"Hah! In that case...."
"The Russians have come with ten trunkfuls of prepared variations and
they'll gang up on the Machine at adjournments. What can one New Jersey
computer do against four Russian grandmasters?"
"I heard the Russians have been programmed—with hypnotic cramming and
somno-briefing. Votbinnik had a nervous breakdown."
"Why, the Machine hasn't even a
Haupturnier
or an intercollegiate
won. It'll over its head be playing."
"Yes, but maybe like Capa at San Sebastian or Morphy or Willie Angler
at New York. The Russians will look like potzers."
"Have you studied the scores of the match between Moon Base and
Circum-Terra?"
"Not worth the trouble. The play was feeble. Barely Expert Rating."
Sandra's chief difficulty was that she knew absolutely nothing about
the game of chess—a point that she had slid over in conferring with
the powers at the
Space Mirror
, but that now had begun to weigh on
her. How wonderful it would be, she dreamed, to walk out this minute,
find a quiet bar and get pie-eyed in an evil, ladylike way.
"Perhaps mademoiselle would welcome a drink?"
"You're durn tootin' she would!" Sandra replied in a rush, and then
looked down apprehensively at the person who had read her thoughts.
It was a small sprightly elderly man who looked like a somewhat
thinned down Peter Lorre—there was that same impression of the happy
Slavic elf. What was left of his white hair was cut very short,
making a silvery nap. His pince-nez had quite thick lenses. But in
sharp contrast to the somberly clad men around them, he was wearing
a pearl-gray suit of almost exactly the same shade as Sandra's—a
circumstance that created for her the illusion that they were fellow
conspirators.
"Hey, wait a minute," she protested just the same. He had already taken
her arm and was piloting her toward the nearest flight of low wide
stairs. "How did you know I wanted a drink?"
"I could see that mademoiselle was having difficulty swallowing," he
replied, keeping them moving. "Pardon me for feasting my eyes on your
lovely throat."
"I didn't suppose they'd serve drinks here."
"But of course." They were already mounting the stairs. "What would
chess be without coffee or schnapps?"
"Okay, lead on," Sandra said. "You're the doctor."
"Doctor?" He smiled widely. "You know, I like being called that."
"Then the name is yours as long as you want it—Doc."
Meanwhile the happy little man had edged them into the first of a small
cluster of tables, where a dark-suited jabbering trio was just rising.
He snapped his fingers and hissed through his teeth. A white-aproned
waiter materialized.
"For myself black coffee," he said. "For mademoiselle rhine wine and
seltzer?"
"That'd go fine." Sandra leaned back. "Confidentially, Doc, I was
having trouble swallowing ... well, just about everything here."
He nodded. "You are not the first to be shocked and horrified by
chess," he assured her. "It is a curse of the intellect. It is a game
for lunatics—or else it creates them. But what brings a sane and
beautiful young lady to this 64-square madhouse?"
Sandra briefly told him her story and her predicament. By the time they
were served, Doc had absorbed the one and assessed the other.
"You have one great advantage," he told her. "You know nothing
whatsoever of chess—so you will be able to write about it
understandably for your readers." He swallowed half his demitasse and
smacked his lips. "As for the Machine—you
do
know, I suppose, that
it is not a humanoid metal robot, walking about clanking and squeaking
like a late medieval knight in armor?"
"Yes, Doc, but...." Sandra found difficulty in phrasing the question.
"Wait." He lifted a finger. "I think I know what you're going to ask.
You want to know why, if the Machine works at all, it doesn't work
perfectly, so that it always wins and there is no contest. Right?"
Sandra grinned and nodded. Doc's ability to interpret her mind was as
comforting as the bubbly, mildly astringent mixture she was sipping.
He removed his pince-nez, massaged the bridge of his nose and replaced
them.
"If you had," he said, "a billion computers all as fast as the Machine,
it would take them all the time there ever will be in the universe just
to play through all the possible games of chess, not to mention the
time needed to classify those games into branching families of wins for
White, wins for Black and draws, and the additional time required to
trace out chains of key-moves leading always to wins. So the Machine
can't play chess like God. What the Machine can do is examine all the
likely lines of play for about eight moves ahead—that is, four moves
each for White and Black—and then decide which is the best move on the
basis of capturing enemy pieces, working toward checkmate, establishing
a powerful central position and so on."
"That sounds like the way a man would play a game," Sandra observed.
"Look ahead a little way and try to make a plan. You know, like getting
out trumps in bridge or setting up a finesse."
"Exactly!" Doc beamed at her approvingly. "The Machine
is
like a
man. A rather peculiar and not exactly pleasant man. A man who always
abides by sound principles, who is utterly incapable of flights of
genius, but who never makes a mistake. You see, you are finding human
interest already, even in the Machine."
Sandra nodded. "Does a human chess player—a grandmaster, I mean—ever
look eight moves ahead in a game?"
"Most assuredly he does! In crucial situations, say where there's a
chance of winning at once by trapping the enemy king, he examines
many more moves ahead than that—thirty or forty even. The Machine
is probably programmed to recognize such situations and do something
of the same sort, though we can't be sure from the information World
Business Machines has released. But in most chess positions the
possibilities are so very nearly unlimited that even a grandmaster can
only look a very few moves ahead and must rely on his judgment and
experience and artistry. The equivalent of those in the Machine is the
directions fed into it before it plays a game."
"You mean the programming?"
"Indeed yes! The programming is the crux of the problem of the
chess-playing computer. The first practical model, reported by
Bernstein and Roberts of IBM in 1958 and which looked four moves
ahead, was programmed so that it had a greedy worried tendency to grab
at enemy pieces and to retreat its own whenever they were attacked. It
had a personality like that of a certain kind of chess-playing dub—a
dull-brained woodpusher afraid to take the slightest risk of losing
material—but a dub who could almost always beat an utter novice.
The WBM machine here in the hall operates about a million times as
fast. Don't ask me how, I'm no physicist, but it depends on the new
transistors and something they call hypervelocity, which in turn
depends on keeping parts of the Machine at a temperature near absolute
zero. However, the result is that the Machine can see eight moves ahead
and is capable of being programmed much more craftily."
"A million times as fast as the first machine, you say, Doc? And yet it
only sees twice as many moves ahead?" Sandra objected.
"There is a geometrical progression involved there," he told her
with a smile. "Believe me, eight moves ahead is a lot of moves when
you remember that the Machine is errorlessly examining every one of
thousands of variations. Flesh-and-blood chess masters have lost games
by blunders they could have avoided by looking only one or two moves
ahead. The Machine will make no such oversights. Once again, you see,
you have the human factor, in this case working for the Machine."
"Savilly, I have been looking allplace for you!"
A stocky, bull-faced man with a great bristling shock of black,
gray-flecked hair had halted abruptly by their table. He bent over Doc
and began to whisper explosively in a guttural foreign tongue.
Sandra's gaze traveled beyond the balustrade. Now that she could look
down at it, the central hall seemed less confusedly crowded. In the
middle, toward the far end, were five small tables spaced rather widely
apart and with a chessboard and men and one of the Siamese clocks set
out on each. To either side of the hall were tiers of temporary seats,
about half of them occupied. There were at least as many more people
still wandering about.
On the far wall was a big electric scoreboard and also, above the
corresponding tables, five large dully glassy chessboards, the White
squares in light gray, the Black squares in dark.
One of the five wall chessboards was considerably larger than the other
four—the one above the Machine.
Sandra looked with quickening interest at the console of the Machine—a
bank of keys and some half-dozen panels of rows and rows of tiny
telltale lights, all dark at the moment. A thick red velvet cord on
little brass standards ran around the Machine at a distance of about
ten feet. Inside the cord were only a few gray-smocked men. Two of
them had just laid a black cable to the nearest chess table and were
attaching it to the Siamese clock.
Sandra tried to think of a being who always checked everything, but
only within limits beyond which his thoughts never ventured, and who
never made a mistake....
"Miss Grayling! May I present to you Igor Jandorf."
She turned back quickly with a smile and a nod.
"I should tell you, Igor," Doc continued, "that Miss Grayling
represents a large and influential Midwestern newspaper. Perhaps you
have a message for her readers."
The shock-headed man's eyes flashed. "I most certainly do!" At that
moment the waiter arrived with a second coffee and wine-and-seltzer.
Jandorf seized Doc's new demitasse, drained it, set it back on the tray
with a flourish and drew himself up.
"Tell your readers, Miss Grayling," he proclaimed, fiercely arching his
eyebrows at her and actually slapping his chest, "that I, Igor Jandorf,
will defeat the Machine by the living force of my human personality!
Already I have offered to play it an informal game blindfold—I, who
have played 50 blindfold games simultaneously! Its owners refuse me. I
have challenged it also to a few games of rapid-transit—an offer no
true grandmaster would dare ignore. Again they refuse me. I predict
that the Machine will play like a great oaf—at least against
me
.
Repeat: I, Igor Jandorf, by the living force of my human personality,
will defeat the Machine. Do you have that? You can remember it?"
"Oh yes," Sandra assured him, "but there are some other questions I
very much want to ask you, Mr. Jandorf."
"I am sorry, Miss Grayling, but I must clear my mind now. In ten
minutes they start the clocks."
While Sandra arranged for an interview with Jandorf after the day's
playing session, Doc reordered his coffee.
"One expects it of Jandorf," he explained to Sandra with a philosophic
shrug when the shock-headed man was gone. "At least he didn't take your
wine-and-seltzer. Or did he? One tip I have for you: don't call a chess
master Mister, call him Master. They all eat it up."
"Gee, Doc, I don't know how to thank you for everything. I hope I
haven't offended Mis—Master Jandorf so that he doesn't—"
"Don't worry about that. Wild horses couldn't keep Jandorf away from a
press interview. You know, his rapid-transit challenge was cunning.
That's a minor variety of chess where each player gets only ten seconds
to make a move. Which I don't suppose would give the Machine time to
look three moves ahead. Chess players would say that the Machine has a
very slow sight of the board. This tournament is being played at the
usual international rate of 15 moves an hour, and—"
"Is that why they've got all those crazy clocks?" Sandra interrupted.
"Oh, yes. Chess clocks measure the time each player takes in making his
moves. When a player makes a move he presses a button that shuts his
clock off and turns his opponent's on. If a player uses too much time,
he loses as surely as if he were checkmated. Now since the Machine
will almost certainly be programmed to take an equal amount of time
on successive moves, a rate of 15 moves an hour means it will have 4
minutes a move—and it will need every second of them! Incidentally
it was typical Jandorf bravado to make a point of a blindfold
challenge—just as if the Machine weren't playing blindfold itself. Or
is
the Machine blindfold? How do you think of it?"
"Gosh, I don't know. Say, Doc, is it really true that Master Jandorf
has played 50 games at once blindfolded? I can't believe that."
"Of course not!" Doc assured her. "It was only 49 and he lost two of
those and drew five. Jandorf always exaggerates. It's in his blood."
"He's one of the Russians, isn't he?" Sandra asked. "Igor?"
Doc chuckled. "Not exactly," he said gently. "He is originally a Pole
and now he has Argentinian citizenship. You have a program, don't you?"
Sandra started to hunt through her pocketbook, but just then two lists
of names lit up on the big electric scoreboard.
THE PLAYERS
William Angler, USA
Bela Grabo, Hungary
Ivan Jal, USSR
Igor Jandorf, Argentina
Dr. S. Krakatower, France
Vassily Lysmov, USSR
The Machine, USA (programmed by Simon Great)
Maxim Serek, USSR
Moses Sherevsky, USA
Mikhail Votbinnik, USSR
Tournament Director
: Dr. Jan Vanderhoef
FIRST ROUND PAIRINGS
Sherevsky vs. Serek
Jal vs. Angler
Jandorf vs. Votbinnik
Lysmov vs. Krakatower
Grabo vs. Machine
"Cripes, Doc, they all sound like they were Russians," Sandra said
after a bit. "Except this Willie Angler. Oh, he's the boy wonder,
isn't he?"
Doc nodded. "Not such a boy any longer, though. He's.... Well, speak of
the Devil's children.... Miss Grayling, I have the honor of presenting
to you the only grandmaster ever to have been ex-chess-champion of the
United States while still technically a minor—Master William Augustus
Angler."
A tall, sharply-dressed young man with a hatchet face pressed the old
man back into his chair.
"How are you, Savvy, old boy old boy?" he demanded. "Still chasing the
girls, I see."
"Please, Willie, get off me."
"Can't take it, huh?" Angler straightened up somewhat. "Hey waiter!
Where's that chocolate malt? I don't want it
next
year. About that
ex-
, though. I was swindled, Savvy. I was robbed."
"Willie!" Doc said with some asperity. "Miss Grayling is a journalist.
She would like to have a statement from you as to how you will play
against the Machine."
Angler grinned and shook his head sadly. "Poor old Machine," he said.
"I don't know why they take so much trouble polishing up that pile of
tin just so that I can give it a hit in the head. I got a hatful of
moves it'll burn out all its tubes trying to answer. And if it gets too
fresh, how about you and me giving its low-temperature section the
hotfoot, Savvy? The money WBM's putting up is okay, though. That first
prize will just fit the big hole in my bank account."
"I know you haven't the time now, Master Angler," Sandra said rapidly,
"but if after the playing session you could grant me—"
"Sorry, babe," Angler broke in with a wave of dismissal. "I'm dated up
for two months in advance. Waiter! I'm here, not there!" And he went
charging off.
Doc and Sandra looked at each other and smiled.
"Chess masters aren't exactly humble people, are they?" she said.
Doc's smile became tinged with sad understanding. "You must excuse
them, though," he said. "They really get so little recognition or
recompense. This tournament is an exception. And it takes a great deal
of ego to play greatly."
"I suppose so. So World Business Machines is responsible for this
tournament?"
"Correct. Their advertising department is interested in the prestige.
They want to score a point over their great rival."
"But if the Machine plays badly it will be a black eye for them,"
Sandra pointed out.
"True," Doc agreed thoughtfully. "WBM must feel very sure.... It's
the prize money they've put up, of course, that's brought the world's
greatest players here. Otherwise half of them would be holding off
in the best temperamental-artist style. For chess players the prize
money is fabulous—$35,000, with $15,000 for first place, and all
expenses paid for all players. There's never been anything like it.
Soviet Russia is the only country that has ever supported and rewarded
her best chess players at all adequately. I think the Russian players
are here because UNESCO and FIDE (that's
Federation Internationale
des Echecs
—the international chess organization) are also backing
the tournament. And perhaps because the Kremlin is hungry for a little
prestige now that its space program is sagging."
"But if a Russian doesn't take first place it will be a black eye for
them."
Doc frowned. "True, in a sense.
They
must feel very sure.... Here
they are now."
Four men were crossing the center of the hall, which was clearing,
toward the tables at the other end. Doubtless they just happened to be
going two by two in close formation, but it gave Sandra the feeling of
a phalanx.
"The first two are Lysmov and Votbinnik," Doc told her. "It isn't often
that you see the current champion of the world—Votbinnik—and an
ex-champion arm in arm. There are two other persons in the tournament
who have held that honor—Jal and Vanderhoef the director, way back."
"Will whoever wins this tournament become champion?"
"Oh no. That's decided by two-player matches—a very long
business—after elimination tournaments between leading contenders.
This tournament is a round robin: each player plays one game with every
other player. That means nine rounds."
"Anyway there
are
an awful lot of Russians in the tournament,"
Sandra said, consulting her program. "Four out of ten have USSR after
them. And Bela Grabo, Hungary—that's a satellite. And Sherevsky and
Krakatower are Russian-sounding names."
"The proportion of Soviet to American entries in the tournament
represents pretty fairly the general difference in playing strength
between the two countries," Doc said judiciously. "Chess mastery
moves from land to land with the years. Way back it was the Moslems
and the Hindus and Persians. Then Italy and Spain. A little over a
hundred years ago it was France and England. Then Germany, Austria
and the New World. Now it's Russia—including of course the Russians
who have run away from Russia. But don't think there aren't a lot of
good Anglo-Saxon types who are masters of the first water. In fact,
there are a lot of them here around us, though perhaps you don't
think so. It's just that if you play a lot of chess you get to looking
Russian. Once it probably made you look Italian. Do you see that short
bald-headed man?"
"You mean the one facing the Machine and talking to Jandorf?"
"Yes. Now that's one with a lot of human interest. Moses Sherevsky.
Been champion of the United States many times. A very strict Orthodox
Jew. Can't play chess on Fridays or on Saturdays before sundown." He
chuckled. "Why, there's even a story going around that one rabbi told
Sherevsky it would be unlawful for him to play against the Machine
because it is technically a
golem
—the clay Frankenstein's monster of
Hebrew legend."
Sandra asked, "What about Grabo and Krakatower?"
Doc gave a short scornful laugh. "Krakatower! Don't pay any attention
to
him
. A senile has-been, it's a scandal he's been allowed to play
in this tournament! He must have pulled all sorts of strings. Told them
that his lifelong services to chess had won him the honor and that they
had to have a member of the so-called Old Guard. Maybe he even got down
on his knees and cried—and all the time his eyes on that expense money
and the last-place consolation prize! Yet dreaming schizophrenically
of beating them all! Please, don't get me started on Dirty Old
Krakatower."
"Take it easy, Doc. He sounds like he would make an interesting
article? Can you point him out to me?"
"You can tell him by his long white beard with coffee stains. I don't
see it anywhere, though. Perhaps he's shaved it off for the occasion.
It would be like that antique womanizer to develop senile delusions of
youthfulness."
"And Grabo?" Sandra pressed, suppressing a smile at the intensity of
Doc's animosity.
Doc's eyes grew thoughtful. "About Bela Grabo (why are three out of
four Hungarians named Bela?) I will tell you only this: That he is a
very brilliant player and that the Machine is very lucky to have drawn
him as its first opponent."
He would not amplify his statement. Sandra studied the Scoreboard again.
"This Simon Great who's down as programming the Machine. He's a famous
physicist, I suppose?"
"By no means. That was the trouble with some of the early chess-playing
machines—they were programmed by scientists. No, Simon Great is a
psychologist who at one time was a leading contender for the world's
chess championship. I think WBM was surprisingly shrewd to pick him
for the programming job. Let me tell you—No, better yet—"
Doc shot to his feet, stretched an arm on high and called out sharply,
"Simon!"
A man some four tables away waved back and a moment later came over.
"What is it, Savilly?" he asked. "There's hardly any time, you know."
The newcomer was of middle height, compact of figure and feature, with
graying hair cut short and combed sharply back.
Doc spoke his piece for Sandra.
Simon Great smiled thinly. "Sorry," he said, "But I am making no
predictions and we are giving out no advance information on the
programming of the Machine. As you know, I have had to fight the
Players' Committee tooth and nail on all sorts of points about that
and they have won most of them. I am not permitted to re-program the
Machine at adjournments—only between games (I did insist on that and
get it!) And if the Machine breaks down during a game, its clock keeps
running on it. My men are permitted to make repairs—if they can work
fast enough."
"That makes it very tough on you," Sandra put in. "The Machine isn't
allowed any weaknesses."
Great nodded soberly. "And now I must go. They've almost finished the
count-down, as one of my technicians keeps on calling it. Very pleased
to have met you, Miss Grayling—I'll check with our PR man on that
interview. Be seeing you, Savvy."
The tiers of seats were filled now and the central space almost clear.
Officials were shooing off a few knots of lingerers. Several of the
grandmasters, including all four Russians, were seated at their tables.
Press and company cameras were flashing. The four smaller wallboards
lit up with the pieces in the opening position—white for White and red
for Black. Simon Great stepped over the red velvet cord and more flash
bulbs went off.
"You know, Doc," Sandra said, "I'm a dog to suggest this, but what
if this whole thing were a big fake? What if Simon Great were really
playing the Machine's moves? There would surely be some way for his
electricians to rig—"
Doc laughed happily—and so loudly that some people at the adjoining
tables frowned.
"Miss Grayling, that is a wonderful idea! I will probably steal it for
a short story. I still manage to write and place a few in England.
No, I do not think that is at all likely. WBM would never risk such
a fraud. Great is completely out of practice for actual tournament
play, though not for chess-thinking. The difference in style between
a computer and a man would be evident to any expert. Great's own style
is remembered and would be recognized—though, come to think of it, his
style was often described as being machinelike...." For a moment Doc's
eyes became thoughtful. Then he smiled again. "But no, the idea is
impossible. Vanderhoef as Tournament Director has played two or three
games with the Machine to assure himself that it operates legitimately
and has grandmaster skill."
"Did the Machine beat him?" Sandra asked.
Doc shrugged. "The scores weren't released. It was very hush-hush.
But about your idea, Miss Grayling—did you ever read about Maelzel's
famous chess-playing automaton of the 19th Century? That one too was
supposed to work by machinery (cogs and gears, not electricity) but
actually it had a man hidden inside it—your Edgar Poe exposed the
fraud in a famous article. In
my
story I think the chess robot will
break down while it is being demonstrated to a millionaire purchaser
and the young inventor will have to win its game for it to cover up
and swing the deal. Only the millionaire's daughter, who is really a
better player than either of them ... yes, yes! Your Ambrose Bierce
too wrote a story about a chess-playing robot of the clickety-clank-grr
kind who murdered his creator, crushing him like an iron grizzly bear
when the man won a game from him. Tell me, Miss Grayling, do you find
yourself imagining this Machine putting out angry tendrils to strangle
its opponents, or beaming rays of death and hypnotism at them? I can
imagine...."
While Doc chattered happily on about chess-playing robots and chess
stories, Sandra found herself thinking about him. A writer of some sort
evidently and a terrific chess buff. Perhaps he was an actual medical
doctor. She'd read something about two or three coming over with the
Russian squad. But Doc certainly didn't sound like a Soviet citizen.
He was older than she'd first assumed. She could see that now that
she was listening to him less and looking at him more. Tired, too.
Only his dark-circled eyes shone with unquenchable youth. A useful old
guy, whoever he was. An hour ago she'd been sure she was going to muff
this assignment completely and now she had it laid out cold. For the
umpteenth time in her career Sandra shied away from the guilty thought
that she wasn't a writer at all or even a reporter, she just used
dime-a-dozen female attractiveness to rope a susceptible man (young,
old, American, Russian) and pick his brain....
She realized suddenly that the whole hall had become very quiet.
Doc was the only person still talking and people were again looking at
them disapprovingly. All five wallboards were lit up and the changed
position of a few pieces showed that opening moves had been made on
four of them, including the Machine's. The central space between
the tiers of seats was completely clear now, except for one man
hurrying across it in their direction with the rapid yet quiet, almost
tip-toe walk that seemed to mark all the officials.
Like morticians'
assistants
, she thought. He rapidly mounted the stairs and halted at
the top to look around searchingly. His gaze lighted on their table,
his eyebrows went up, and he made a beeline for Doc. Sandra wondered if
she should warn him that he was about to be shushed.
The official laid a hand on Doc's shoulder. "Sir!" he said agitatedly.
"Do you realize that they've started your clock, Dr. Krakatower?"
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/1/2/1/61213//61213-h//61213-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | Which mode of exposition affects the story’s plot?
| 61213_UY49ALLO_7 | [
"The story uses the Doc character to help paint a portrait of what Sandra cannot understand. Namely, the world of chess. \n",
"The story uses the chess player characters to help paint a portrait of what Sandra cannot understand. Namely, chess. \n",
"The story uses Doc to hide the presence of Dr. Krakatower, the Frenchman responsible for defeating the WBM machines. \n",
"The story uses the machine’s astonishing capabilities to distract from the true interest of the story: the human intellect’s ability to conquer computers. \n"
] | 1 | 1 | [
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61,213 | 61213_UY49ALLO | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | The 64-Square Madhouse | 1951.0 | Leiber, Fritz | PS; Science fiction; Computers -- Fiction; Journalists -- Fiction; Chess -- Tournaments -- Fiction | THE 64-SQUARE MADHOUSE
by FRITZ LEIBER
The machine was not perfect. It
could be tricked. It could make
mistakes. And—it could learn!
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of If Science Fiction, May 1962.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
Silently, so as not to shock anyone with illusions about well dressed
young women, Sandra Lea Grayling cursed the day she had persuaded the
Chicago Space Mirror
that there would be all sorts of human interest
stories to be picked up at the first international grandmaster chess
tournament in which an electronic computing machine was entered.
Not that there weren't enough humans around, it was the interest that
was in doubt. The large hall was crammed with energetic dark-suited
men of whom a disproportionately large number were bald, wore glasses,
were faintly untidy and indefinably shabby, had Slavic or Scandinavian
features, and talked foreign languages.
They yakked interminably. The only ones who didn't were scurrying
individuals with the eager-zombie look of officials.
Chess sets were everywhere—big ones on tables, still bigger
diagram-type electric ones on walls, small peg-in sets dragged from
side pockets and manipulated rapidly as part of the conversational
ritual and still smaller folding sets in which the pieces were the tiny
magnetized disks used for playing in free-fall.
There were signs featuring largely mysterious combinations of letters:
FIDE, WBM, USCF, USSF, USSR and UNESCO. Sandra felt fairly sure about
the last three.
The many clocks, bedside table size, would have struck a familiar
note except that they had little red flags and wheels sprinkled over
their faces and they were all in pairs, two clocks to a case. That
Siamese-twin clocks should be essential to a chess tournament struck
Sandra as a particularly maddening circumstance.
Her last assignment had been to interview the pilot pair riding the
first American manned circum-lunar satellite—and the five alternate
pairs who hadn't made the flight. This tournament hall seemed to Sandra
much further out of the world.
Overheard scraps of conversation in reasonably intelligible English
were not particularly helpful. Samples:
"They say the Machine has been programmed to play nothing but pure
Barcza System and Indian Defenses—and the Dragon Formation if anyone
pushes the King Pawn."
"Hah! In that case...."
"The Russians have come with ten trunkfuls of prepared variations and
they'll gang up on the Machine at adjournments. What can one New Jersey
computer do against four Russian grandmasters?"
"I heard the Russians have been programmed—with hypnotic cramming and
somno-briefing. Votbinnik had a nervous breakdown."
"Why, the Machine hasn't even a
Haupturnier
or an intercollegiate
won. It'll over its head be playing."
"Yes, but maybe like Capa at San Sebastian or Morphy or Willie Angler
at New York. The Russians will look like potzers."
"Have you studied the scores of the match between Moon Base and
Circum-Terra?"
"Not worth the trouble. The play was feeble. Barely Expert Rating."
Sandra's chief difficulty was that she knew absolutely nothing about
the game of chess—a point that she had slid over in conferring with
the powers at the
Space Mirror
, but that now had begun to weigh on
her. How wonderful it would be, she dreamed, to walk out this minute,
find a quiet bar and get pie-eyed in an evil, ladylike way.
"Perhaps mademoiselle would welcome a drink?"
"You're durn tootin' she would!" Sandra replied in a rush, and then
looked down apprehensively at the person who had read her thoughts.
It was a small sprightly elderly man who looked like a somewhat
thinned down Peter Lorre—there was that same impression of the happy
Slavic elf. What was left of his white hair was cut very short,
making a silvery nap. His pince-nez had quite thick lenses. But in
sharp contrast to the somberly clad men around them, he was wearing
a pearl-gray suit of almost exactly the same shade as Sandra's—a
circumstance that created for her the illusion that they were fellow
conspirators.
"Hey, wait a minute," she protested just the same. He had already taken
her arm and was piloting her toward the nearest flight of low wide
stairs. "How did you know I wanted a drink?"
"I could see that mademoiselle was having difficulty swallowing," he
replied, keeping them moving. "Pardon me for feasting my eyes on your
lovely throat."
"I didn't suppose they'd serve drinks here."
"But of course." They were already mounting the stairs. "What would
chess be without coffee or schnapps?"
"Okay, lead on," Sandra said. "You're the doctor."
"Doctor?" He smiled widely. "You know, I like being called that."
"Then the name is yours as long as you want it—Doc."
Meanwhile the happy little man had edged them into the first of a small
cluster of tables, where a dark-suited jabbering trio was just rising.
He snapped his fingers and hissed through his teeth. A white-aproned
waiter materialized.
"For myself black coffee," he said. "For mademoiselle rhine wine and
seltzer?"
"That'd go fine." Sandra leaned back. "Confidentially, Doc, I was
having trouble swallowing ... well, just about everything here."
He nodded. "You are not the first to be shocked and horrified by
chess," he assured her. "It is a curse of the intellect. It is a game
for lunatics—or else it creates them. But what brings a sane and
beautiful young lady to this 64-square madhouse?"
Sandra briefly told him her story and her predicament. By the time they
were served, Doc had absorbed the one and assessed the other.
"You have one great advantage," he told her. "You know nothing
whatsoever of chess—so you will be able to write about it
understandably for your readers." He swallowed half his demitasse and
smacked his lips. "As for the Machine—you
do
know, I suppose, that
it is not a humanoid metal robot, walking about clanking and squeaking
like a late medieval knight in armor?"
"Yes, Doc, but...." Sandra found difficulty in phrasing the question.
"Wait." He lifted a finger. "I think I know what you're going to ask.
You want to know why, if the Machine works at all, it doesn't work
perfectly, so that it always wins and there is no contest. Right?"
Sandra grinned and nodded. Doc's ability to interpret her mind was as
comforting as the bubbly, mildly astringent mixture she was sipping.
He removed his pince-nez, massaged the bridge of his nose and replaced
them.
"If you had," he said, "a billion computers all as fast as the Machine,
it would take them all the time there ever will be in the universe just
to play through all the possible games of chess, not to mention the
time needed to classify those games into branching families of wins for
White, wins for Black and draws, and the additional time required to
trace out chains of key-moves leading always to wins. So the Machine
can't play chess like God. What the Machine can do is examine all the
likely lines of play for about eight moves ahead—that is, four moves
each for White and Black—and then decide which is the best move on the
basis of capturing enemy pieces, working toward checkmate, establishing
a powerful central position and so on."
"That sounds like the way a man would play a game," Sandra observed.
"Look ahead a little way and try to make a plan. You know, like getting
out trumps in bridge or setting up a finesse."
"Exactly!" Doc beamed at her approvingly. "The Machine
is
like a
man. A rather peculiar and not exactly pleasant man. A man who always
abides by sound principles, who is utterly incapable of flights of
genius, but who never makes a mistake. You see, you are finding human
interest already, even in the Machine."
Sandra nodded. "Does a human chess player—a grandmaster, I mean—ever
look eight moves ahead in a game?"
"Most assuredly he does! In crucial situations, say where there's a
chance of winning at once by trapping the enemy king, he examines
many more moves ahead than that—thirty or forty even. The Machine
is probably programmed to recognize such situations and do something
of the same sort, though we can't be sure from the information World
Business Machines has released. But in most chess positions the
possibilities are so very nearly unlimited that even a grandmaster can
only look a very few moves ahead and must rely on his judgment and
experience and artistry. The equivalent of those in the Machine is the
directions fed into it before it plays a game."
"You mean the programming?"
"Indeed yes! The programming is the crux of the problem of the
chess-playing computer. The first practical model, reported by
Bernstein and Roberts of IBM in 1958 and which looked four moves
ahead, was programmed so that it had a greedy worried tendency to grab
at enemy pieces and to retreat its own whenever they were attacked. It
had a personality like that of a certain kind of chess-playing dub—a
dull-brained woodpusher afraid to take the slightest risk of losing
material—but a dub who could almost always beat an utter novice.
The WBM machine here in the hall operates about a million times as
fast. Don't ask me how, I'm no physicist, but it depends on the new
transistors and something they call hypervelocity, which in turn
depends on keeping parts of the Machine at a temperature near absolute
zero. However, the result is that the Machine can see eight moves ahead
and is capable of being programmed much more craftily."
"A million times as fast as the first machine, you say, Doc? And yet it
only sees twice as many moves ahead?" Sandra objected.
"There is a geometrical progression involved there," he told her
with a smile. "Believe me, eight moves ahead is a lot of moves when
you remember that the Machine is errorlessly examining every one of
thousands of variations. Flesh-and-blood chess masters have lost games
by blunders they could have avoided by looking only one or two moves
ahead. The Machine will make no such oversights. Once again, you see,
you have the human factor, in this case working for the Machine."
"Savilly, I have been looking allplace for you!"
A stocky, bull-faced man with a great bristling shock of black,
gray-flecked hair had halted abruptly by their table. He bent over Doc
and began to whisper explosively in a guttural foreign tongue.
Sandra's gaze traveled beyond the balustrade. Now that she could look
down at it, the central hall seemed less confusedly crowded. In the
middle, toward the far end, were five small tables spaced rather widely
apart and with a chessboard and men and one of the Siamese clocks set
out on each. To either side of the hall were tiers of temporary seats,
about half of them occupied. There were at least as many more people
still wandering about.
On the far wall was a big electric scoreboard and also, above the
corresponding tables, five large dully glassy chessboards, the White
squares in light gray, the Black squares in dark.
One of the five wall chessboards was considerably larger than the other
four—the one above the Machine.
Sandra looked with quickening interest at the console of the Machine—a
bank of keys and some half-dozen panels of rows and rows of tiny
telltale lights, all dark at the moment. A thick red velvet cord on
little brass standards ran around the Machine at a distance of about
ten feet. Inside the cord were only a few gray-smocked men. Two of
them had just laid a black cable to the nearest chess table and were
attaching it to the Siamese clock.
Sandra tried to think of a being who always checked everything, but
only within limits beyond which his thoughts never ventured, and who
never made a mistake....
"Miss Grayling! May I present to you Igor Jandorf."
She turned back quickly with a smile and a nod.
"I should tell you, Igor," Doc continued, "that Miss Grayling
represents a large and influential Midwestern newspaper. Perhaps you
have a message for her readers."
The shock-headed man's eyes flashed. "I most certainly do!" At that
moment the waiter arrived with a second coffee and wine-and-seltzer.
Jandorf seized Doc's new demitasse, drained it, set it back on the tray
with a flourish and drew himself up.
"Tell your readers, Miss Grayling," he proclaimed, fiercely arching his
eyebrows at her and actually slapping his chest, "that I, Igor Jandorf,
will defeat the Machine by the living force of my human personality!
Already I have offered to play it an informal game blindfold—I, who
have played 50 blindfold games simultaneously! Its owners refuse me. I
have challenged it also to a few games of rapid-transit—an offer no
true grandmaster would dare ignore. Again they refuse me. I predict
that the Machine will play like a great oaf—at least against
me
.
Repeat: I, Igor Jandorf, by the living force of my human personality,
will defeat the Machine. Do you have that? You can remember it?"
"Oh yes," Sandra assured him, "but there are some other questions I
very much want to ask you, Mr. Jandorf."
"I am sorry, Miss Grayling, but I must clear my mind now. In ten
minutes they start the clocks."
While Sandra arranged for an interview with Jandorf after the day's
playing session, Doc reordered his coffee.
"One expects it of Jandorf," he explained to Sandra with a philosophic
shrug when the shock-headed man was gone. "At least he didn't take your
wine-and-seltzer. Or did he? One tip I have for you: don't call a chess
master Mister, call him Master. They all eat it up."
"Gee, Doc, I don't know how to thank you for everything. I hope I
haven't offended Mis—Master Jandorf so that he doesn't—"
"Don't worry about that. Wild horses couldn't keep Jandorf away from a
press interview. You know, his rapid-transit challenge was cunning.
That's a minor variety of chess where each player gets only ten seconds
to make a move. Which I don't suppose would give the Machine time to
look three moves ahead. Chess players would say that the Machine has a
very slow sight of the board. This tournament is being played at the
usual international rate of 15 moves an hour, and—"
"Is that why they've got all those crazy clocks?" Sandra interrupted.
"Oh, yes. Chess clocks measure the time each player takes in making his
moves. When a player makes a move he presses a button that shuts his
clock off and turns his opponent's on. If a player uses too much time,
he loses as surely as if he were checkmated. Now since the Machine
will almost certainly be programmed to take an equal amount of time
on successive moves, a rate of 15 moves an hour means it will have 4
minutes a move—and it will need every second of them! Incidentally
it was typical Jandorf bravado to make a point of a blindfold
challenge—just as if the Machine weren't playing blindfold itself. Or
is
the Machine blindfold? How do you think of it?"
"Gosh, I don't know. Say, Doc, is it really true that Master Jandorf
has played 50 games at once blindfolded? I can't believe that."
"Of course not!" Doc assured her. "It was only 49 and he lost two of
those and drew five. Jandorf always exaggerates. It's in his blood."
"He's one of the Russians, isn't he?" Sandra asked. "Igor?"
Doc chuckled. "Not exactly," he said gently. "He is originally a Pole
and now he has Argentinian citizenship. You have a program, don't you?"
Sandra started to hunt through her pocketbook, but just then two lists
of names lit up on the big electric scoreboard.
THE PLAYERS
William Angler, USA
Bela Grabo, Hungary
Ivan Jal, USSR
Igor Jandorf, Argentina
Dr. S. Krakatower, France
Vassily Lysmov, USSR
The Machine, USA (programmed by Simon Great)
Maxim Serek, USSR
Moses Sherevsky, USA
Mikhail Votbinnik, USSR
Tournament Director
: Dr. Jan Vanderhoef
FIRST ROUND PAIRINGS
Sherevsky vs. Serek
Jal vs. Angler
Jandorf vs. Votbinnik
Lysmov vs. Krakatower
Grabo vs. Machine
"Cripes, Doc, they all sound like they were Russians," Sandra said
after a bit. "Except this Willie Angler. Oh, he's the boy wonder,
isn't he?"
Doc nodded. "Not such a boy any longer, though. He's.... Well, speak of
the Devil's children.... Miss Grayling, I have the honor of presenting
to you the only grandmaster ever to have been ex-chess-champion of the
United States while still technically a minor—Master William Augustus
Angler."
A tall, sharply-dressed young man with a hatchet face pressed the old
man back into his chair.
"How are you, Savvy, old boy old boy?" he demanded. "Still chasing the
girls, I see."
"Please, Willie, get off me."
"Can't take it, huh?" Angler straightened up somewhat. "Hey waiter!
Where's that chocolate malt? I don't want it
next
year. About that
ex-
, though. I was swindled, Savvy. I was robbed."
"Willie!" Doc said with some asperity. "Miss Grayling is a journalist.
She would like to have a statement from you as to how you will play
against the Machine."
Angler grinned and shook his head sadly. "Poor old Machine," he said.
"I don't know why they take so much trouble polishing up that pile of
tin just so that I can give it a hit in the head. I got a hatful of
moves it'll burn out all its tubes trying to answer. And if it gets too
fresh, how about you and me giving its low-temperature section the
hotfoot, Savvy? The money WBM's putting up is okay, though. That first
prize will just fit the big hole in my bank account."
"I know you haven't the time now, Master Angler," Sandra said rapidly,
"but if after the playing session you could grant me—"
"Sorry, babe," Angler broke in with a wave of dismissal. "I'm dated up
for two months in advance. Waiter! I'm here, not there!" And he went
charging off.
Doc and Sandra looked at each other and smiled.
"Chess masters aren't exactly humble people, are they?" she said.
Doc's smile became tinged with sad understanding. "You must excuse
them, though," he said. "They really get so little recognition or
recompense. This tournament is an exception. And it takes a great deal
of ego to play greatly."
"I suppose so. So World Business Machines is responsible for this
tournament?"
"Correct. Their advertising department is interested in the prestige.
They want to score a point over their great rival."
"But if the Machine plays badly it will be a black eye for them,"
Sandra pointed out.
"True," Doc agreed thoughtfully. "WBM must feel very sure.... It's
the prize money they've put up, of course, that's brought the world's
greatest players here. Otherwise half of them would be holding off
in the best temperamental-artist style. For chess players the prize
money is fabulous—$35,000, with $15,000 for first place, and all
expenses paid for all players. There's never been anything like it.
Soviet Russia is the only country that has ever supported and rewarded
her best chess players at all adequately. I think the Russian players
are here because UNESCO and FIDE (that's
Federation Internationale
des Echecs
—the international chess organization) are also backing
the tournament. And perhaps because the Kremlin is hungry for a little
prestige now that its space program is sagging."
"But if a Russian doesn't take first place it will be a black eye for
them."
Doc frowned. "True, in a sense.
They
must feel very sure.... Here
they are now."
Four men were crossing the center of the hall, which was clearing,
toward the tables at the other end. Doubtless they just happened to be
going two by two in close formation, but it gave Sandra the feeling of
a phalanx.
"The first two are Lysmov and Votbinnik," Doc told her. "It isn't often
that you see the current champion of the world—Votbinnik—and an
ex-champion arm in arm. There are two other persons in the tournament
who have held that honor—Jal and Vanderhoef the director, way back."
"Will whoever wins this tournament become champion?"
"Oh no. That's decided by two-player matches—a very long
business—after elimination tournaments between leading contenders.
This tournament is a round robin: each player plays one game with every
other player. That means nine rounds."
"Anyway there
are
an awful lot of Russians in the tournament,"
Sandra said, consulting her program. "Four out of ten have USSR after
them. And Bela Grabo, Hungary—that's a satellite. And Sherevsky and
Krakatower are Russian-sounding names."
"The proportion of Soviet to American entries in the tournament
represents pretty fairly the general difference in playing strength
between the two countries," Doc said judiciously. "Chess mastery
moves from land to land with the years. Way back it was the Moslems
and the Hindus and Persians. Then Italy and Spain. A little over a
hundred years ago it was France and England. Then Germany, Austria
and the New World. Now it's Russia—including of course the Russians
who have run away from Russia. But don't think there aren't a lot of
good Anglo-Saxon types who are masters of the first water. In fact,
there are a lot of them here around us, though perhaps you don't
think so. It's just that if you play a lot of chess you get to looking
Russian. Once it probably made you look Italian. Do you see that short
bald-headed man?"
"You mean the one facing the Machine and talking to Jandorf?"
"Yes. Now that's one with a lot of human interest. Moses Sherevsky.
Been champion of the United States many times. A very strict Orthodox
Jew. Can't play chess on Fridays or on Saturdays before sundown." He
chuckled. "Why, there's even a story going around that one rabbi told
Sherevsky it would be unlawful for him to play against the Machine
because it is technically a
golem
—the clay Frankenstein's monster of
Hebrew legend."
Sandra asked, "What about Grabo and Krakatower?"
Doc gave a short scornful laugh. "Krakatower! Don't pay any attention
to
him
. A senile has-been, it's a scandal he's been allowed to play
in this tournament! He must have pulled all sorts of strings. Told them
that his lifelong services to chess had won him the honor and that they
had to have a member of the so-called Old Guard. Maybe he even got down
on his knees and cried—and all the time his eyes on that expense money
and the last-place consolation prize! Yet dreaming schizophrenically
of beating them all! Please, don't get me started on Dirty Old
Krakatower."
"Take it easy, Doc. He sounds like he would make an interesting
article? Can you point him out to me?"
"You can tell him by his long white beard with coffee stains. I don't
see it anywhere, though. Perhaps he's shaved it off for the occasion.
It would be like that antique womanizer to develop senile delusions of
youthfulness."
"And Grabo?" Sandra pressed, suppressing a smile at the intensity of
Doc's animosity.
Doc's eyes grew thoughtful. "About Bela Grabo (why are three out of
four Hungarians named Bela?) I will tell you only this: That he is a
very brilliant player and that the Machine is very lucky to have drawn
him as its first opponent."
He would not amplify his statement. Sandra studied the Scoreboard again.
"This Simon Great who's down as programming the Machine. He's a famous
physicist, I suppose?"
"By no means. That was the trouble with some of the early chess-playing
machines—they were programmed by scientists. No, Simon Great is a
psychologist who at one time was a leading contender for the world's
chess championship. I think WBM was surprisingly shrewd to pick him
for the programming job. Let me tell you—No, better yet—"
Doc shot to his feet, stretched an arm on high and called out sharply,
"Simon!"
A man some four tables away waved back and a moment later came over.
"What is it, Savilly?" he asked. "There's hardly any time, you know."
The newcomer was of middle height, compact of figure and feature, with
graying hair cut short and combed sharply back.
Doc spoke his piece for Sandra.
Simon Great smiled thinly. "Sorry," he said, "But I am making no
predictions and we are giving out no advance information on the
programming of the Machine. As you know, I have had to fight the
Players' Committee tooth and nail on all sorts of points about that
and they have won most of them. I am not permitted to re-program the
Machine at adjournments—only between games (I did insist on that and
get it!) And if the Machine breaks down during a game, its clock keeps
running on it. My men are permitted to make repairs—if they can work
fast enough."
"That makes it very tough on you," Sandra put in. "The Machine isn't
allowed any weaknesses."
Great nodded soberly. "And now I must go. They've almost finished the
count-down, as one of my technicians keeps on calling it. Very pleased
to have met you, Miss Grayling—I'll check with our PR man on that
interview. Be seeing you, Savvy."
The tiers of seats were filled now and the central space almost clear.
Officials were shooing off a few knots of lingerers. Several of the
grandmasters, including all four Russians, were seated at their tables.
Press and company cameras were flashing. The four smaller wallboards
lit up with the pieces in the opening position—white for White and red
for Black. Simon Great stepped over the red velvet cord and more flash
bulbs went off.
"You know, Doc," Sandra said, "I'm a dog to suggest this, but what
if this whole thing were a big fake? What if Simon Great were really
playing the Machine's moves? There would surely be some way for his
electricians to rig—"
Doc laughed happily—and so loudly that some people at the adjoining
tables frowned.
"Miss Grayling, that is a wonderful idea! I will probably steal it for
a short story. I still manage to write and place a few in England.
No, I do not think that is at all likely. WBM would never risk such
a fraud. Great is completely out of practice for actual tournament
play, though not for chess-thinking. The difference in style between
a computer and a man would be evident to any expert. Great's own style
is remembered and would be recognized—though, come to think of it, his
style was often described as being machinelike...." For a moment Doc's
eyes became thoughtful. Then he smiled again. "But no, the idea is
impossible. Vanderhoef as Tournament Director has played two or three
games with the Machine to assure himself that it operates legitimately
and has grandmaster skill."
"Did the Machine beat him?" Sandra asked.
Doc shrugged. "The scores weren't released. It was very hush-hush.
But about your idea, Miss Grayling—did you ever read about Maelzel's
famous chess-playing automaton of the 19th Century? That one too was
supposed to work by machinery (cogs and gears, not electricity) but
actually it had a man hidden inside it—your Edgar Poe exposed the
fraud in a famous article. In
my
story I think the chess robot will
break down while it is being demonstrated to a millionaire purchaser
and the young inventor will have to win its game for it to cover up
and swing the deal. Only the millionaire's daughter, who is really a
better player than either of them ... yes, yes! Your Ambrose Bierce
too wrote a story about a chess-playing robot of the clickety-clank-grr
kind who murdered his creator, crushing him like an iron grizzly bear
when the man won a game from him. Tell me, Miss Grayling, do you find
yourself imagining this Machine putting out angry tendrils to strangle
its opponents, or beaming rays of death and hypnotism at them? I can
imagine...."
While Doc chattered happily on about chess-playing robots and chess
stories, Sandra found herself thinking about him. A writer of some sort
evidently and a terrific chess buff. Perhaps he was an actual medical
doctor. She'd read something about two or three coming over with the
Russian squad. But Doc certainly didn't sound like a Soviet citizen.
He was older than she'd first assumed. She could see that now that
she was listening to him less and looking at him more. Tired, too.
Only his dark-circled eyes shone with unquenchable youth. A useful old
guy, whoever he was. An hour ago she'd been sure she was going to muff
this assignment completely and now she had it laid out cold. For the
umpteenth time in her career Sandra shied away from the guilty thought
that she wasn't a writer at all or even a reporter, she just used
dime-a-dozen female attractiveness to rope a susceptible man (young,
old, American, Russian) and pick his brain....
She realized suddenly that the whole hall had become very quiet.
Doc was the only person still talking and people were again looking at
them disapprovingly. All five wallboards were lit up and the changed
position of a few pieces showed that opening moves had been made on
four of them, including the Machine's. The central space between
the tiers of seats was completely clear now, except for one man
hurrying across it in their direction with the rapid yet quiet, almost
tip-toe walk that seemed to mark all the officials.
Like morticians'
assistants
, she thought. He rapidly mounted the stairs and halted at
the top to look around searchingly. His gaze lighted on their table,
his eyebrows went up, and he made a beeline for Doc. Sandra wondered if
she should warn him that he was about to be shushed.
The official laid a hand on Doc's shoulder. "Sir!" he said agitatedly.
"Do you realize that they've started your clock, Dr. Krakatower?"
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/1/2/1/61213//61213-h//61213-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | According to the story, which famous writers have written about chess in the past?
| 61213_UY49ALLO_8 | [
"Doc and Sandra. \n",
"Ambrose Bierce and Edgar Allen Poe. \n",
"Sandra and Dr. Krakatower. \n",
"Edgar Allen Poe and Sandra. \n"
] | 2 | 2 | [
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61,380 | 61380_KG4GXTUS | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | The Five Hells of Orion | 1976.0 | Pohl, Frederik | Abduction -- Fiction; Astral projection -- Fiction; Science fiction; PS; Human-alien encounters -- Fiction; Space ships -- Fiction; Interstellar travel -- Fiction | THE FIVE HELLS OF ORION
BY FREDERICK POHL
Out in the great gas cloud of the Orion
Nebula McCray found an ally—and a foe!
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of If Science Fiction, January 1963.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
His name was Herrell McCray and he was scared.
As best he could tell, he was in a sort of room no bigger than a prison
cell. Perhaps it was a prison cell. Whatever it was, he had no business
in it; for five minutes before he had been spaceborne, on the Long Jump
from Earth to the thriving colonies circling Betelgeuse Nine. McCray
was ship's navigator, plotting course corrections—not that there were
any, ever; but the reason there were none was that the check-sightings
were made every hour of the long flight. He had read off the azimuth
angles from the computer sights, automatically locked on their beacon
stars, and found them correct; then out of long habit confirmed the
locking mechanism visually. It was only a personal quaintness; he had
done it a thousand times. And while he was looking at Betelgeuse, Rigel
and Saiph ... it happened.
The room was totally dark, and it seemed to be furnished with a
collection of hard, sharp, sticky and knobby objects of various shapes
and a number of inconvenient sizes. McCray tripped over something
that rocked under his feet and fell against something that clattered
hollowly. He picked himself up, braced against something that smelled
dangerously of halogen compounds, and scratched his shoulder, right
through his space-tunic, against something that vibrated as he touched
it.
McCray had no idea where he was, and no way to find out.
Not only was he in darkness, but in utter silence as well. No. Not
quite utter silence.
Somewhere, just at the threshold of his senses, there was something
like a voice. He could not quite hear it, but it was there. He sat as
still as he could, listening; it remained elusive.
Probably it was only an illusion.
But the room itself was hard fact. McCray swore violently and out loud.
It was crazy and impossible. There simply was no way for him to get
from a warm, bright navigator's cubicle on
Starship Jodrell Bank
to
this damned, dark, dismal hole of a place where everything was out to
hurt him and nothing explained what was going on. He cried aloud in
exasperation: "If I could only
see
!"
He tripped and fell against something that was soft, slimy and, like
baker's dough, not at all resilient.
A flickering halo of pinkish light appeared. He sat up, startled. He
was looking at something that resembled a suit of medieval armor.
It was, he saw in a moment, not armor but a spacesuit. But what was the
light? And what were these other things in the room?
Wherever he looked, the light danced along with his eyes. It was like
having tunnel vision or wearing blinders. He could see what he was
looking at, but he could see nothing else. And the things he could
see made no sense. A spacesuit, yes; he knew that he could construct
a logical explanation for that with no trouble—maybe a subspace
meteorite striking the
Jodrell Bank
, an explosion, himself knocked
out, brought here in a suit ... well, it was an explanation with more
holes than fabric, like a fisherman's net, but at least it was rational.
How to explain a set of Gibbon's
Decline and Fall of the Roman
Empire?
A space-ax? Or the old-fashioned child's rocking-chair, the
chemistry set—or, most of all, the scrap of gaily printed fabric
that, when he picked it up, turned out to be a girl's scanty bathing
suit? It was slightly reassuring, McCray thought, to find that most of
the objects were more or less familiar. Even the child's chair—why,
he'd had one more or less like that himself, long before he was old
enough to go to school. But what were they doing here?
Not everything he saw was familiar. The walls of the room itself were
strange. They were not metal or plaster or knotty pine; they were
not papered, painted or overlaid with stucco. They seemed to be made
of some sort of hard organic compound, perhaps a sort of plastic or
processed cellulose. It was hard to tell colors in the pinkish light.
But they seemed to have none. They were "neutral"—the color of aged
driftwood or unbleached cloth.
Three of the walls were that way, and the floor and ceiling. The fourth
wall was something else. Areas in it had the appearance of gratings;
from them issued the pungent, distasteful halogen odor. They might be
ventilators, he thought; but if so the air they brought in was worse
than what he already had.
McCray was beginning to feel more confident. It was astonishing how a
little light made an impossible situation bearable, how quickly his
courage flowed back when he could see again.
He stood still, thinking. Item, a short time ago—subjectively it
seemed to be minutes—he had been aboard the
Jodrell Bank
with
nothing more on his mind than completing his check-sighting and meeting
one of the female passengers for coffee. Item, apart from being
shaken up and—he admitted it—scared damn near witless, he did not
seem to be hurt. Item, wherever he was now, it became, not so much what
had happened to him, but what had happened to the ship?
He allowed that thought to seep into his mind. Suppose there had been
an accident to the
Jodrell Bank
.
He could, of course, be dead. All this could be the fantasies of a
cooling brain.
McCray grinned into the pink-lit darkness. The thought had somehow
refreshed him, like icewater between rounds, and with a clearing head
he remembered what a spacesuit was good for.
It held a radio.
He pressed the unsealing tabs, slipped his hand into the vacant chest
of the suit and pulled out the hand mike. "This is Herrell McCray," he
said, "calling the
Jodrell Bank
."
No response. He frowned. "This is Herrell McCray, calling
Jodrell
Bank
.
"Herrell McCray, calling anybody, come in, please."
But there was no answer.
Thoughtfully he replaced the microphone. This was ultrawave radio,
something more than a million times faster than light, with a range
measured, at least, in hundreds of light-years. If there was no answer,
he was a good long way from anywhere.
Of course, the thing might not be operating.
He reached for the microphone again—
He cried aloud.
The pinkish lights went out. He was in the dark again, worse dark than
before.
For before the light had gone, McCray had seen what had escaped
his eyes before. The suit and the microphone were clear enough in
the pinkish glimmer; but the hand—his own hand, cupped to hold the
microphone—he had not seen at all. Nor his arm. Nor, in one fleeting
moment of study, his chest.
McCray could not see any part of his own body at all.
II
Someone else could.
Someone was watching Herrell McCray, with the clinical fascination
of a biochemist observing the wigglings of paramecia in a new
antibiotic—and with the prayerful emotions of a starving, shipwrecked,
sailor, watching the inward bobbing drift of a wave-born cask that
may
contain food.
Suppose you call him "Hatcher" (and suppose you call it a "him.")
Hatcher was not exactly male, because his race had no true males; but
it did have females and he was certainly not that. Hatcher did not in
any way look like a human being, but they had features in common.
If Hatcher and McCray had somehow managed to strike up an acquaintance,
they might have got along very well. Hatcher, like McCray, was an
adventurous soul, young, able, well-learned in the technical sciences
of his culture. Both enjoyed games—McCray baseball, poker and
three-dimensional chess; Hatcher a number of sports which defy human
description. Both held positions of some importance—considering their
ages—in the affairs of their respective worlds.
Physically they were nothing alike. Hatcher was a three-foot,
hard-shelled sphere of jelly. He had "arms" and "legs," but they were
not organically attached to "himself." They were snakelike things which
obeyed the orders of his brain as well as your mind can make your toes
curl; but they did not touch him directly. Indeed, they worked as well
a yard or a quarter-mile away as they did when, rarely, they rested
in the crevices they had been formed from in his "skin." At greater
distances they worked less well, for reasons irrelevant to the Law of
Inverse Squares.
Hatcher's principal task at this moment was to run the "probe team"
which had McCray under observation, and he was more than a little
excited. His members, disposed about the room where he had sent them on
various errands, quivered and shook a little; yet they were the calmest
limbs in the room; the members of the other team workers were in a
state of violent commotion.
The probe team had had a shock.
"Paranormal powers," muttered Hatcher's second in command, and the
others mumbled agreement. Hatcher ordered silence, studying the
specimen from Earth.
After a long moment he turned his senses from the Earthman.
"Incredible—but it's true enough," he said. "I'd better report. Watch
him," he added, but that was surely unnecessary. Their job was to
watch McCray, and they would do their job; and even more, not one of
them could have looked away to save his life from the spectacle of
a creature as odd and, from their point of view, hideously alien as
Herrell McCray.
Hatcher hurried through the halls of the great buried structure in
which he worked, toward the place where the supervising council of all
probes would be in permanent session. They admitted him at once.
Hatcher identified himself and gave a quick, concise report:
"The subject recovered consciousness a short time ago and began to
inspect his enclosure. His method of doing so was to put his own
members in physical contact with the various objects in the enclosure.
After observing him do this for a time we concluded he might be unable
to see and so we illuminated his field of vision for him.
"This appeared to work well for a time. He seemed relatively
undisturbed. However, he then reverted to physical-contact,
manipulating certain appurtenances of an artificial skin we had
provided for him.
"He then began to vibrate the atmosphere by means of resonating organs
in his breathing passage.
"Simultaneously, the object he was holding, attached to the artificial
skin, was discovered to be generating paranormal forces."
The supervising council rocked with excitement. "You're sure?" demanded
one of the councilmen.
"Yes, sir. The staff is preparing a technical description of the forces
now, but I can say that they are electromagnetic vibrations modulating
a carrier wave of very high speed, and in turn modulated by the
vibrations of the atmosphere caused by the subject's own breathing."
"Fantastic," breathed the councillor, in a tone of dawning hope. "How
about communicating with him, Hatcher? Any progress?"
"Well ... not much, sir. He suddenly panicked. We don't know why; but
we thought we'd better pull back and let him recover for a while."
The council conferred among itself for a moment, Hatcher waiting. It
was not really a waste of time for him; with the organs he had left in
the probe-team room, he was in fairly close touch with what was going
on—knew that McCray was once again fumbling among the objects in the
dark, knew that the team-members had tried illuminating the room for
him briefly and again produced the rising panic.
Still, Hatcher fretted. He wanted to get back.
"Stop fidgeting," commanded the council leader abruptly. "Hatcher, you
are to establish communication at once."
"But, sir...." Hatcher swung closer, his thick skin quivering slightly;
he would have gestured if he had brought members with him to gesture
with. "We've done everything we dare. We've made the place homey
for him—" actually, what he said was more like,
we've warmed the
biophysical nuances of his enclosure
—"and tried to guess his needs;
and we're frightening him half to death. We
can't
go faster. This
creature is in no way similar to us, you know. He relies on paranormal
forces—heat, light, kinetic energy—for his life. His chemistry is not
ours, his processes of thought are not ours, his entire organism is
closer to the inanimate rocks of a sea-bottom than to ourselves."
"Understood, Hatcher. In your first report you stated these creatures
were intelligent."
"Yes, sir. But not in our way."
"But in
a
way, and you must learn that way. I know." One lobster-claw
shaped member drifted close to the councillor's body and raised itself
in an admonitory gesture. "You want time. But we don't have time,
Hatcher. Yours is not the only probe team working. The Central Masses
team has just turned in a most alarming report."
"Have they secured a subject?" Hatcher demanded jealously.
The councillor paused. "Worse than that, Hatcher. I am afraid their
subjects have secured one of them. One of them is missing."
There was a moment's silence. Frozen, Hatcher could only wait. The
council room was like a tableau in a museum until the councillor spoke
again, each council member poised over his locus-point, his members
drifting about him.
Finally the councillor said, "I speak for all of us, I think. If the
Old Ones have seized one of our probers our time margin is considerably
narrowed. Indeed, we may not have any time at all. You must do
everything you can to establish communication with your subject."
"But the danger to the specimen—" Hatcher protested automatically.
"—is no greater," said the councillor, "than the danger to every one
of us if we do not find allies
now
."
Hatcher returned to his laboratory gloomily.
It was just like the council to put the screws on; they had a
reputation for demanding results at any cost—even at the cost of
destroying the only thing you had that would make results possible.
Hatcher did not like the idea of endangering the Earthman. It cannot
be said that he was emotionally involved; it was not pity or sympathy
that caused him to regret the dangers in moving too fast toward
communication. Not even Hatcher had quite got over the revolting
physical differences between the Earthman and his own people. But
Hatcher did not want him destroyed. It had been difficult enough
getting him here.
Hatcher checked through the members that he had left with the rest of
his team and discovered that there were no immediate emergencies, so he
took time to eat. In Hatcher's race this was accomplished in ways not
entirely pleasant to Earthmen. A slit in the lower hemisphere of his
body opened, like a purse, emitting a thin, pussy, fetid fluid which
Hatcher caught and poured into a disposal trough at the side of the
eating room. He then stuffed the slit with pulpy vegetation the texture
of kelp; it closed, and his body was supplied with nourishment for
another day.
He returned quickly to the room.
His second in command was busy, but one of the other team workers
reported—nothing new—and asked about Hatcher's appearance before the
council. Hatcher passed the question off. He considered telling his
staff about the disappearance of the Central Masses team member, but
decided against it. He had not been told it was secret. On the other
hand, he had not been told it was not. Something of this importance was
not lightly to be gossiped about. For endless generations the threat
of the Old Ones had hung over his race, those queer, almost mythical
beings from the Central Masses of the galaxy. One brush with them, in
ages past, had almost destroyed Hatcher's people. Only by running and
hiding, bearing one of their planets with them and abandoning it—with
its population—as a decoy, had they arrived at all.
Now they had detected mapping parties of the Old Ones dangerously near
the spiral arm of the galaxy in which their planet was located, they
had begun the Probe Teams to find some way of combating them, or of
fleeing again.
But it seemed that the Probe Teams themselves might be betraying their
existence to their enemies—
"Hatcher!"
The call was urgent; he hurried to see what it was about. It was his
second in command, very excited. "What is it?" Hatcher demanded.
"Wait...."
Hatcher was patient; he knew his assistant well. Obviously something
was about to happen. He took the moment to call his members back to
him for feeding; they dodged back to their niches on his skin, fitted
themselves into their vestigial slots, poured back their wastes into
his own circulation and ingested what they needed from the meal he had
just taken.... "Now!" cried the assistant. "Look!"
At what passed among Hatcher's people for a viewing console an image
was forming. Actually it was the assistant himself who formed it, not a
cathode trace or projected shadow; but it showed what it was meant to
show.
Hatcher was startled. "Another one! And—is it a different species? Or
merely a different sex?"
"Study the probe for yourself," the assistant invited.
Hatcher studied him frostily; his patience was not, after all, endless.
"No matter," he said at last. "Bring the other one in."
And then, in a completely different mood, "We may need him badly. We
may be in the process of killing our first one now."
"Killing him, Hatcher?"
Hatcher rose and shook himself, his mindless members floating away like
puppies dislodged from suck. "Council's orders," he said. "We've got to
go into Stage Two of the project at once."
III
Before Stage Two began, or before Herrell McCray realized it had begun,
he had an inspiration.
The dark was absolute, but he remembered where the spacesuit had been
and groped his way to it and, yes, it had what all spacesuits had to
have. It had a light. He found the toggle that turned it on and pressed
it.
Light. White, flaring, Earthly light, that showed everything—even
himself.
"God bless," he said, almost beside himself with joy. Whatever that
pinkish, dancing halo had been, it had thrown him into a panic; now
that he could see his own hand again, he could blame the weird effects
on some strange property of the light.
At the moment he heard the click that was the beginning of Stage Two.
He switched off the light and stood for a moment, listening.
For a second he thought he heard the far-off voice, quiet, calm and
almost hopeless, that he had sensed hours before; but then that was
gone. Something else was gone. Some faint mechanical sound that had
hardly registered at the time, but was not missing. And there was,
perhaps, a nice new sound that had not been there before; a very
faint, an almost inaudible elfin hiss.
McCray switched the light on and looked around. There seemed to be no
change.
And yet, surely, it was warmer in here.
He could see no difference; but perhaps, he thought, he could smell
one. The unpleasant halogen odor from the grating was surely stronger
now. He stood there, perplexed.
A tinny little voice from the helmet of the space suit said sharply,
amazement in its tone, "McCray, is that you? Where the devil are you
calling from?"
He forgot smell, sound and temperature and leaped for the suit. "This
is Herrell McCray," he cried. "I'm in a room of some sort, apparently
on a planet of approximate Earth mass. I don't know—"
"McCray!" cried the tiny voice in his ear. "Where are you? This is
Jodrell Bank
calling. Answer, please!"
"I
am
answering, damn it," he roared. "What took you so long?"
"Herrell McCray," droned the tiny voice in his ear, "Herrell McCray,
Herrell McCray, this is
Jodrell Bank
responding to your message,
acknowledge please. Herrell McCray, Herrell McCray...."
It kept on, and on.
McCray took a deep breath and thought. Something was wrong. Either they
didn't hear him, which meant the radio wasn't transmitting, or—no.
That was not it; they
had
heard him, because they were responding.
But it seemed to take them so long....
Abruptly his face went white. Took them so long! He cast back in his
mind, questing for a fact, unable to face its implications. When was
it he called them? Two hours ago? Three?
Did that mean—did it
possibly
mean—that there was a lag of an hour
or two each way? Did it, for example, mean that at the speed of his
suit's pararadio, millions of times faster than light, it took
hours
to get a message to the ship and back?
And if so ... where in the name of heaven was he?
Herrell McCray was a navigator, which is to say, a man who has learned
to trust the evidence of mathematics and instrument readings beyond the
guesses of his "common sense." When
Jodrell Bank
, hurtling faster
than light in its voyage between stars, made its regular position
check, common sense was a liar. Light bore false witness. The line of
sight was trustworthy directly forward and directly after—sometimes
not even then—and it took computers, sensing their data through
instruments, to comprehend a star bearing and convert three fixes into
a position.
If the evidence of his radio contradicted common sense, common sense
was wrong. Perhaps it was impossible to believe what the radio's
message implied; but it was not necessary to "believe," only to act.
McCray thumbed down the transmitter button and gave a concise report
of his situation and his guesses. "I don't know how I got here. I
don't know how long I've been gone, since I was unconscious for a
time. However, if the transmission lag is a reliable indication—" he
swallowed and went on—"I'd estimate I am something more than five
hundred light-years away from you at this moment. That's all I have to
say, except for one more word: Help."
He grinned sourly and released the button. The message was on its way,
and it would be hours before he could have a reply. Therefore he had to
consider what to do next.
He mopped his brow. With the droning, repetitious call from the ship
finally quiet, the room was quiet again. And warm.
Very warm, he thought tardily; and more than that. The halogen stench
was strong in his nostrils again.
Hurriedly McCray scrambled into the suit. By the time he was sealed
down he was coughing from the bottom of his lungs, deep, tearing rasps
that pained him, uncontrollable. Chlorine or fluorine, one of them was
in the air he had been breathing. He could not guess where it had come
from; but it was ripping his lungs out.
He flushed the interior of the suit out with a reckless disregard for
the wastage of his air reserve, holding his breath as much as he could,
daring only shallow gasps that made him retch and gag. After a long
time he could breathe, though his eyes were spilling tears.
He could see the fumes in the room now. The heat was building up.
Automatically—now that he had put it on and so started its
servo-circuits operating—the suit was cooling him. This was a
deep-space suit, regulation garb when going outside the pressure hull
of an FTL ship. It was good up to at least five hundred degrees in thin
air, perhaps three or four hundred in dense. In thin air or in space it
was the elastic joints and couplings that depolymerized when the heat
grew too great; in dense air, with conduction pouring energy in faster
than the cooling coils could suck it out and hurl it away, it was the
refrigerating equipment that broke down.
McCray had no way of knowing just how hot it was going to get. Nor,
for that matter, had the suit been designed to operate in a corrosive
medium.
All in all it was time for him to do something.
Among the debris on the floor, he remembered, was a five-foot space-ax,
tungsten-steel blade and springy aluminum shaft.
McCray caught it up and headed for the door. It felt good in his
gauntlets, a rewarding weight; any weapon straightens the back of the
man who holds it, and McCray was grateful for this one. With something
concrete to do he could postpone questioning. Never mind why he had
been brought here; never mind how. Never mind what he would, or could,
do next; all those questions could recede into the background of his
mind while he swung the ax and battered his way out of this poisoned
oven.
Crash-clang!
The double jolt ran up the shaft of the ax, through his
gauntlets and into his arm; but he was making progress, he could see
the plastic—or whatever it was—of the door. It was chipping out. Not
easily, very reluctantly; but flaking out in chips that left a white
powdery residue.
At this rate, he thought grimly, he would be an hour getting through
it. Did he have an hour?
But it did not take an hour. One blow was luckier than the rest; it
must have snapped the lock mechanism. The door shook and slid ajar.
McCray got the thin of the blade into the crack and pried it wide.
He was in another room, maybe a hall, large and bare.
McCray put the broad of his back against the broken door and pressed it
as nearly closed as he could; it might not keep the gas and heat out,
but it would retard them.
The room was again unlighted—at least to McCray's eyes. There was not
even that pink pseudo-light that had baffled him; here was nothing
but the beam of his suit lamp. What it showed was cryptic. There were
evidences of use: shelves, boxy contraptions that might have been
cupboards, crude level surfaces attached to the walls that might have
been workbenches. Yet they were queerly contrived, for it was not
possible to guess from them much about the creatures who used them.
Some were near the floor, some at waist height, some even suspended
from the ceiling itself. A man would need a ladder to work at these
benches and McCray, staring, thought briefly of many-armed blind giants
or shapeless huge intelligent amoebae, and felt the skin prickle at the
back of his neck.
He tapped half-heartedly at one of the closed cupboards, and was not
surprised when it proved as refractory as the door. Undoubtedly he
could batter it open, but it was not likely that much would be left of
its contents when he was through; and there was the question of time.
But his attention was diverted by a gleam from one of the benches.
Metallic parts lay heaped in a pile. He poked at them with a
stiff-fingered gauntlet; they were oddly familiar. They were, he
thought, very much like the parts of a bullet-gun.
In fact, they were. He could recognize barrel, chamber, trigger, even
a couple of cartridges, neatly opened and the grains of powder stacked
beside them. It was an older, clumsier model than the kind he had seen
in survival locker, on the
Jodrell Bank
—and abruptly wished he were
carrying now—but it was a pistol. Another trophy, like the strange
assortment in the other room? He could not guess. But the others had
been more familiar; they all have come from his own ship. He was
prepared to swear that nothing like this antique had been aboard.
The drone began again in his ear, as it had at five-minute intervals
all along:
"Herrell McCray, Herrell McCray, Herrell McCray, this is
Jodrell Bank
calling Herrell McCray...."
And louder, blaring, then fading to normal volume as the AVC circuits
toned the signal down, another voice. A woman's voice, crying out in
panic and fear: "
Jodrell Bank!
Where are you? Help!"
IV
Hatcher's second in command said: "He has got through the first
survival test. In fact, he broke his way out! What next?"
"Wait!" Hatcher ordered sharply. He was watching the new specimen and
a troublesome thought had occurred to him. The new one was female and
seemed to be in pain; but it was not the pain that disturbed Hatcher,
it was something far more immediate to his interests.
"I think," he said slowly, "that they are in contact."
His assistant vibrated startlement.
"I know," Hatcher said, "but watch. Do you see? He is going straight
toward her."
Hatcher, who was not human, did not possess truly human emotions; but
he did feel amazement when he was amazed, and fear when there was
cause to be afraid. These specimens, obtained with so much difficulty,
needed so badly, were his responsibility. He knew the issues involved
much better than any of his helpers. They could only be surprised at
the queer antics of the aliens with attached limbs and strange powers.
Hatcher knew that this was not a freak show, but a matter of life and
death. He said, musing:
"This new one, I cannot communicate with her, but I get—almost—a
whisper, now and then. The first one, the male, nothing. But this
female is perhaps not quite mute."
"Then shall we abandon him and work with her, forgetting the first one?"
Hatcher hesitated. "No," he said at last. "The male is responding well.
Remember that when last this experiment was done every subject died; he
is alive at least. But I am wondering. We can't quite communicate with
the female—"
"But?"
"But I'm not sure that others can't."
The woman's voice was at such close range that McCray's suit radio made
a useful RDF set. He located her direction easily enough, shielding the
tiny built-in antenna with the tungsten-steel blade of the ax, while
she begged him to hurry. Her voice was heavily accented, with some
words in a language he did not recognize. She seemed to be in shock.
McCray was hardly surprised at that; he had been close enough to shock
himself. He tried to reassure her as he searched for a way out of the
hall, but in the middle of a word her voice stopped.
He hesitated, hefting the ax, glancing back at the way he had come.
There had to be a way out, even if it meant chopping through a wall.
When he turned around again there was a door. It was oddly shaped and
unlike the door he had hewn through, but clearly a door all the same,
and it was open.
McCray regarded it grimly. He went back in his memory with meticulous
care. Had he not looked at, this very spot a matter of moments before?
He had. And had there been an open door then? There had not. There
hadn't been even a shadowy outline of the three-sided, uneven opening
that stood there now.
Still, it led in the proper direction. McCray added one more
inexplicable fact to his file and walked through. He was in another
hall—or tunnel—rising quite steeply to the right. By his reckoning it
was the proper direction. He labored up it, sweating under the weight
of the suit, and found another open door, this one round, and behind
it—
Yes, there was the woman whose voice he had heard.
It was a woman, all right. The voice had been so strained that he
hadn't been positive. Even now, short black hair might not have proved
it, and she was lying face down but the waist and hips were a woman's,
even though she wore a bulky, quilted suit of coveralls.
He knelt beside her and gently turned her face.
She was unconscious. Broad, dark face, with no make-up; she was
apparently in her late thirties. She appeared to be Chinese.
She breathed, a little raggedly but without visible discomfort; her
face was relaxed as though she were sleeping. She did not rouse as he
moved her.
He realized she was breathing the air of the room they were in.
His instant first thought was that she was in danger of asphyxiation;
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/1/3/8/61380//61380-h//61380-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | What is the purpose of the strange objects in Herrell’s cell?
| 61380_KG4GXTUS_1 | [
"To make him use his senses. \n",
"To make him feel at home. \n",
"To make him use his space suit.\n",
"To make him feel confused. \n"
] | 2 | 2 | [
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61,380 | 61380_KG4GXTUS | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | The Five Hells of Orion | 1976.0 | Pohl, Frederik | Abduction -- Fiction; Astral projection -- Fiction; Science fiction; PS; Human-alien encounters -- Fiction; Space ships -- Fiction; Interstellar travel -- Fiction | THE FIVE HELLS OF ORION
BY FREDERICK POHL
Out in the great gas cloud of the Orion
Nebula McCray found an ally—and a foe!
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of If Science Fiction, January 1963.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
His name was Herrell McCray and he was scared.
As best he could tell, he was in a sort of room no bigger than a prison
cell. Perhaps it was a prison cell. Whatever it was, he had no business
in it; for five minutes before he had been spaceborne, on the Long Jump
from Earth to the thriving colonies circling Betelgeuse Nine. McCray
was ship's navigator, plotting course corrections—not that there were
any, ever; but the reason there were none was that the check-sightings
were made every hour of the long flight. He had read off the azimuth
angles from the computer sights, automatically locked on their beacon
stars, and found them correct; then out of long habit confirmed the
locking mechanism visually. It was only a personal quaintness; he had
done it a thousand times. And while he was looking at Betelgeuse, Rigel
and Saiph ... it happened.
The room was totally dark, and it seemed to be furnished with a
collection of hard, sharp, sticky and knobby objects of various shapes
and a number of inconvenient sizes. McCray tripped over something
that rocked under his feet and fell against something that clattered
hollowly. He picked himself up, braced against something that smelled
dangerously of halogen compounds, and scratched his shoulder, right
through his space-tunic, against something that vibrated as he touched
it.
McCray had no idea where he was, and no way to find out.
Not only was he in darkness, but in utter silence as well. No. Not
quite utter silence.
Somewhere, just at the threshold of his senses, there was something
like a voice. He could not quite hear it, but it was there. He sat as
still as he could, listening; it remained elusive.
Probably it was only an illusion.
But the room itself was hard fact. McCray swore violently and out loud.
It was crazy and impossible. There simply was no way for him to get
from a warm, bright navigator's cubicle on
Starship Jodrell Bank
to
this damned, dark, dismal hole of a place where everything was out to
hurt him and nothing explained what was going on. He cried aloud in
exasperation: "If I could only
see
!"
He tripped and fell against something that was soft, slimy and, like
baker's dough, not at all resilient.
A flickering halo of pinkish light appeared. He sat up, startled. He
was looking at something that resembled a suit of medieval armor.
It was, he saw in a moment, not armor but a spacesuit. But what was the
light? And what were these other things in the room?
Wherever he looked, the light danced along with his eyes. It was like
having tunnel vision or wearing blinders. He could see what he was
looking at, but he could see nothing else. And the things he could
see made no sense. A spacesuit, yes; he knew that he could construct
a logical explanation for that with no trouble—maybe a subspace
meteorite striking the
Jodrell Bank
, an explosion, himself knocked
out, brought here in a suit ... well, it was an explanation with more
holes than fabric, like a fisherman's net, but at least it was rational.
How to explain a set of Gibbon's
Decline and Fall of the Roman
Empire?
A space-ax? Or the old-fashioned child's rocking-chair, the
chemistry set—or, most of all, the scrap of gaily printed fabric
that, when he picked it up, turned out to be a girl's scanty bathing
suit? It was slightly reassuring, McCray thought, to find that most of
the objects were more or less familiar. Even the child's chair—why,
he'd had one more or less like that himself, long before he was old
enough to go to school. But what were they doing here?
Not everything he saw was familiar. The walls of the room itself were
strange. They were not metal or plaster or knotty pine; they were
not papered, painted or overlaid with stucco. They seemed to be made
of some sort of hard organic compound, perhaps a sort of plastic or
processed cellulose. It was hard to tell colors in the pinkish light.
But they seemed to have none. They were "neutral"—the color of aged
driftwood or unbleached cloth.
Three of the walls were that way, and the floor and ceiling. The fourth
wall was something else. Areas in it had the appearance of gratings;
from them issued the pungent, distasteful halogen odor. They might be
ventilators, he thought; but if so the air they brought in was worse
than what he already had.
McCray was beginning to feel more confident. It was astonishing how a
little light made an impossible situation bearable, how quickly his
courage flowed back when he could see again.
He stood still, thinking. Item, a short time ago—subjectively it
seemed to be minutes—he had been aboard the
Jodrell Bank
with
nothing more on his mind than completing his check-sighting and meeting
one of the female passengers for coffee. Item, apart from being
shaken up and—he admitted it—scared damn near witless, he did not
seem to be hurt. Item, wherever he was now, it became, not so much what
had happened to him, but what had happened to the ship?
He allowed that thought to seep into his mind. Suppose there had been
an accident to the
Jodrell Bank
.
He could, of course, be dead. All this could be the fantasies of a
cooling brain.
McCray grinned into the pink-lit darkness. The thought had somehow
refreshed him, like icewater between rounds, and with a clearing head
he remembered what a spacesuit was good for.
It held a radio.
He pressed the unsealing tabs, slipped his hand into the vacant chest
of the suit and pulled out the hand mike. "This is Herrell McCray," he
said, "calling the
Jodrell Bank
."
No response. He frowned. "This is Herrell McCray, calling
Jodrell
Bank
.
"Herrell McCray, calling anybody, come in, please."
But there was no answer.
Thoughtfully he replaced the microphone. This was ultrawave radio,
something more than a million times faster than light, with a range
measured, at least, in hundreds of light-years. If there was no answer,
he was a good long way from anywhere.
Of course, the thing might not be operating.
He reached for the microphone again—
He cried aloud.
The pinkish lights went out. He was in the dark again, worse dark than
before.
For before the light had gone, McCray had seen what had escaped
his eyes before. The suit and the microphone were clear enough in
the pinkish glimmer; but the hand—his own hand, cupped to hold the
microphone—he had not seen at all. Nor his arm. Nor, in one fleeting
moment of study, his chest.
McCray could not see any part of his own body at all.
II
Someone else could.
Someone was watching Herrell McCray, with the clinical fascination
of a biochemist observing the wigglings of paramecia in a new
antibiotic—and with the prayerful emotions of a starving, shipwrecked,
sailor, watching the inward bobbing drift of a wave-born cask that
may
contain food.
Suppose you call him "Hatcher" (and suppose you call it a "him.")
Hatcher was not exactly male, because his race had no true males; but
it did have females and he was certainly not that. Hatcher did not in
any way look like a human being, but they had features in common.
If Hatcher and McCray had somehow managed to strike up an acquaintance,
they might have got along very well. Hatcher, like McCray, was an
adventurous soul, young, able, well-learned in the technical sciences
of his culture. Both enjoyed games—McCray baseball, poker and
three-dimensional chess; Hatcher a number of sports which defy human
description. Both held positions of some importance—considering their
ages—in the affairs of their respective worlds.
Physically they were nothing alike. Hatcher was a three-foot,
hard-shelled sphere of jelly. He had "arms" and "legs," but they were
not organically attached to "himself." They were snakelike things which
obeyed the orders of his brain as well as your mind can make your toes
curl; but they did not touch him directly. Indeed, they worked as well
a yard or a quarter-mile away as they did when, rarely, they rested
in the crevices they had been formed from in his "skin." At greater
distances they worked less well, for reasons irrelevant to the Law of
Inverse Squares.
Hatcher's principal task at this moment was to run the "probe team"
which had McCray under observation, and he was more than a little
excited. His members, disposed about the room where he had sent them on
various errands, quivered and shook a little; yet they were the calmest
limbs in the room; the members of the other team workers were in a
state of violent commotion.
The probe team had had a shock.
"Paranormal powers," muttered Hatcher's second in command, and the
others mumbled agreement. Hatcher ordered silence, studying the
specimen from Earth.
After a long moment he turned his senses from the Earthman.
"Incredible—but it's true enough," he said. "I'd better report. Watch
him," he added, but that was surely unnecessary. Their job was to
watch McCray, and they would do their job; and even more, not one of
them could have looked away to save his life from the spectacle of
a creature as odd and, from their point of view, hideously alien as
Herrell McCray.
Hatcher hurried through the halls of the great buried structure in
which he worked, toward the place where the supervising council of all
probes would be in permanent session. They admitted him at once.
Hatcher identified himself and gave a quick, concise report:
"The subject recovered consciousness a short time ago and began to
inspect his enclosure. His method of doing so was to put his own
members in physical contact with the various objects in the enclosure.
After observing him do this for a time we concluded he might be unable
to see and so we illuminated his field of vision for him.
"This appeared to work well for a time. He seemed relatively
undisturbed. However, he then reverted to physical-contact,
manipulating certain appurtenances of an artificial skin we had
provided for him.
"He then began to vibrate the atmosphere by means of resonating organs
in his breathing passage.
"Simultaneously, the object he was holding, attached to the artificial
skin, was discovered to be generating paranormal forces."
The supervising council rocked with excitement. "You're sure?" demanded
one of the councilmen.
"Yes, sir. The staff is preparing a technical description of the forces
now, but I can say that they are electromagnetic vibrations modulating
a carrier wave of very high speed, and in turn modulated by the
vibrations of the atmosphere caused by the subject's own breathing."
"Fantastic," breathed the councillor, in a tone of dawning hope. "How
about communicating with him, Hatcher? Any progress?"
"Well ... not much, sir. He suddenly panicked. We don't know why; but
we thought we'd better pull back and let him recover for a while."
The council conferred among itself for a moment, Hatcher waiting. It
was not really a waste of time for him; with the organs he had left in
the probe-team room, he was in fairly close touch with what was going
on—knew that McCray was once again fumbling among the objects in the
dark, knew that the team-members had tried illuminating the room for
him briefly and again produced the rising panic.
Still, Hatcher fretted. He wanted to get back.
"Stop fidgeting," commanded the council leader abruptly. "Hatcher, you
are to establish communication at once."
"But, sir...." Hatcher swung closer, his thick skin quivering slightly;
he would have gestured if he had brought members with him to gesture
with. "We've done everything we dare. We've made the place homey
for him—" actually, what he said was more like,
we've warmed the
biophysical nuances of his enclosure
—"and tried to guess his needs;
and we're frightening him half to death. We
can't
go faster. This
creature is in no way similar to us, you know. He relies on paranormal
forces—heat, light, kinetic energy—for his life. His chemistry is not
ours, his processes of thought are not ours, his entire organism is
closer to the inanimate rocks of a sea-bottom than to ourselves."
"Understood, Hatcher. In your first report you stated these creatures
were intelligent."
"Yes, sir. But not in our way."
"But in
a
way, and you must learn that way. I know." One lobster-claw
shaped member drifted close to the councillor's body and raised itself
in an admonitory gesture. "You want time. But we don't have time,
Hatcher. Yours is not the only probe team working. The Central Masses
team has just turned in a most alarming report."
"Have they secured a subject?" Hatcher demanded jealously.
The councillor paused. "Worse than that, Hatcher. I am afraid their
subjects have secured one of them. One of them is missing."
There was a moment's silence. Frozen, Hatcher could only wait. The
council room was like a tableau in a museum until the councillor spoke
again, each council member poised over his locus-point, his members
drifting about him.
Finally the councillor said, "I speak for all of us, I think. If the
Old Ones have seized one of our probers our time margin is considerably
narrowed. Indeed, we may not have any time at all. You must do
everything you can to establish communication with your subject."
"But the danger to the specimen—" Hatcher protested automatically.
"—is no greater," said the councillor, "than the danger to every one
of us if we do not find allies
now
."
Hatcher returned to his laboratory gloomily.
It was just like the council to put the screws on; they had a
reputation for demanding results at any cost—even at the cost of
destroying the only thing you had that would make results possible.
Hatcher did not like the idea of endangering the Earthman. It cannot
be said that he was emotionally involved; it was not pity or sympathy
that caused him to regret the dangers in moving too fast toward
communication. Not even Hatcher had quite got over the revolting
physical differences between the Earthman and his own people. But
Hatcher did not want him destroyed. It had been difficult enough
getting him here.
Hatcher checked through the members that he had left with the rest of
his team and discovered that there were no immediate emergencies, so he
took time to eat. In Hatcher's race this was accomplished in ways not
entirely pleasant to Earthmen. A slit in the lower hemisphere of his
body opened, like a purse, emitting a thin, pussy, fetid fluid which
Hatcher caught and poured into a disposal trough at the side of the
eating room. He then stuffed the slit with pulpy vegetation the texture
of kelp; it closed, and his body was supplied with nourishment for
another day.
He returned quickly to the room.
His second in command was busy, but one of the other team workers
reported—nothing new—and asked about Hatcher's appearance before the
council. Hatcher passed the question off. He considered telling his
staff about the disappearance of the Central Masses team member, but
decided against it. He had not been told it was secret. On the other
hand, he had not been told it was not. Something of this importance was
not lightly to be gossiped about. For endless generations the threat
of the Old Ones had hung over his race, those queer, almost mythical
beings from the Central Masses of the galaxy. One brush with them, in
ages past, had almost destroyed Hatcher's people. Only by running and
hiding, bearing one of their planets with them and abandoning it—with
its population—as a decoy, had they arrived at all.
Now they had detected mapping parties of the Old Ones dangerously near
the spiral arm of the galaxy in which their planet was located, they
had begun the Probe Teams to find some way of combating them, or of
fleeing again.
But it seemed that the Probe Teams themselves might be betraying their
existence to their enemies—
"Hatcher!"
The call was urgent; he hurried to see what it was about. It was his
second in command, very excited. "What is it?" Hatcher demanded.
"Wait...."
Hatcher was patient; he knew his assistant well. Obviously something
was about to happen. He took the moment to call his members back to
him for feeding; they dodged back to their niches on his skin, fitted
themselves into their vestigial slots, poured back their wastes into
his own circulation and ingested what they needed from the meal he had
just taken.... "Now!" cried the assistant. "Look!"
At what passed among Hatcher's people for a viewing console an image
was forming. Actually it was the assistant himself who formed it, not a
cathode trace or projected shadow; but it showed what it was meant to
show.
Hatcher was startled. "Another one! And—is it a different species? Or
merely a different sex?"
"Study the probe for yourself," the assistant invited.
Hatcher studied him frostily; his patience was not, after all, endless.
"No matter," he said at last. "Bring the other one in."
And then, in a completely different mood, "We may need him badly. We
may be in the process of killing our first one now."
"Killing him, Hatcher?"
Hatcher rose and shook himself, his mindless members floating away like
puppies dislodged from suck. "Council's orders," he said. "We've got to
go into Stage Two of the project at once."
III
Before Stage Two began, or before Herrell McCray realized it had begun,
he had an inspiration.
The dark was absolute, but he remembered where the spacesuit had been
and groped his way to it and, yes, it had what all spacesuits had to
have. It had a light. He found the toggle that turned it on and pressed
it.
Light. White, flaring, Earthly light, that showed everything—even
himself.
"God bless," he said, almost beside himself with joy. Whatever that
pinkish, dancing halo had been, it had thrown him into a panic; now
that he could see his own hand again, he could blame the weird effects
on some strange property of the light.
At the moment he heard the click that was the beginning of Stage Two.
He switched off the light and stood for a moment, listening.
For a second he thought he heard the far-off voice, quiet, calm and
almost hopeless, that he had sensed hours before; but then that was
gone. Something else was gone. Some faint mechanical sound that had
hardly registered at the time, but was not missing. And there was,
perhaps, a nice new sound that had not been there before; a very
faint, an almost inaudible elfin hiss.
McCray switched the light on and looked around. There seemed to be no
change.
And yet, surely, it was warmer in here.
He could see no difference; but perhaps, he thought, he could smell
one. The unpleasant halogen odor from the grating was surely stronger
now. He stood there, perplexed.
A tinny little voice from the helmet of the space suit said sharply,
amazement in its tone, "McCray, is that you? Where the devil are you
calling from?"
He forgot smell, sound and temperature and leaped for the suit. "This
is Herrell McCray," he cried. "I'm in a room of some sort, apparently
on a planet of approximate Earth mass. I don't know—"
"McCray!" cried the tiny voice in his ear. "Where are you? This is
Jodrell Bank
calling. Answer, please!"
"I
am
answering, damn it," he roared. "What took you so long?"
"Herrell McCray," droned the tiny voice in his ear, "Herrell McCray,
Herrell McCray, this is
Jodrell Bank
responding to your message,
acknowledge please. Herrell McCray, Herrell McCray...."
It kept on, and on.
McCray took a deep breath and thought. Something was wrong. Either they
didn't hear him, which meant the radio wasn't transmitting, or—no.
That was not it; they
had
heard him, because they were responding.
But it seemed to take them so long....
Abruptly his face went white. Took them so long! He cast back in his
mind, questing for a fact, unable to face its implications. When was
it he called them? Two hours ago? Three?
Did that mean—did it
possibly
mean—that there was a lag of an hour
or two each way? Did it, for example, mean that at the speed of his
suit's pararadio, millions of times faster than light, it took
hours
to get a message to the ship and back?
And if so ... where in the name of heaven was he?
Herrell McCray was a navigator, which is to say, a man who has learned
to trust the evidence of mathematics and instrument readings beyond the
guesses of his "common sense." When
Jodrell Bank
, hurtling faster
than light in its voyage between stars, made its regular position
check, common sense was a liar. Light bore false witness. The line of
sight was trustworthy directly forward and directly after—sometimes
not even then—and it took computers, sensing their data through
instruments, to comprehend a star bearing and convert three fixes into
a position.
If the evidence of his radio contradicted common sense, common sense
was wrong. Perhaps it was impossible to believe what the radio's
message implied; but it was not necessary to "believe," only to act.
McCray thumbed down the transmitter button and gave a concise report
of his situation and his guesses. "I don't know how I got here. I
don't know how long I've been gone, since I was unconscious for a
time. However, if the transmission lag is a reliable indication—" he
swallowed and went on—"I'd estimate I am something more than five
hundred light-years away from you at this moment. That's all I have to
say, except for one more word: Help."
He grinned sourly and released the button. The message was on its way,
and it would be hours before he could have a reply. Therefore he had to
consider what to do next.
He mopped his brow. With the droning, repetitious call from the ship
finally quiet, the room was quiet again. And warm.
Very warm, he thought tardily; and more than that. The halogen stench
was strong in his nostrils again.
Hurriedly McCray scrambled into the suit. By the time he was sealed
down he was coughing from the bottom of his lungs, deep, tearing rasps
that pained him, uncontrollable. Chlorine or fluorine, one of them was
in the air he had been breathing. He could not guess where it had come
from; but it was ripping his lungs out.
He flushed the interior of the suit out with a reckless disregard for
the wastage of his air reserve, holding his breath as much as he could,
daring only shallow gasps that made him retch and gag. After a long
time he could breathe, though his eyes were spilling tears.
He could see the fumes in the room now. The heat was building up.
Automatically—now that he had put it on and so started its
servo-circuits operating—the suit was cooling him. This was a
deep-space suit, regulation garb when going outside the pressure hull
of an FTL ship. It was good up to at least five hundred degrees in thin
air, perhaps three or four hundred in dense. In thin air or in space it
was the elastic joints and couplings that depolymerized when the heat
grew too great; in dense air, with conduction pouring energy in faster
than the cooling coils could suck it out and hurl it away, it was the
refrigerating equipment that broke down.
McCray had no way of knowing just how hot it was going to get. Nor,
for that matter, had the suit been designed to operate in a corrosive
medium.
All in all it was time for him to do something.
Among the debris on the floor, he remembered, was a five-foot space-ax,
tungsten-steel blade and springy aluminum shaft.
McCray caught it up and headed for the door. It felt good in his
gauntlets, a rewarding weight; any weapon straightens the back of the
man who holds it, and McCray was grateful for this one. With something
concrete to do he could postpone questioning. Never mind why he had
been brought here; never mind how. Never mind what he would, or could,
do next; all those questions could recede into the background of his
mind while he swung the ax and battered his way out of this poisoned
oven.
Crash-clang!
The double jolt ran up the shaft of the ax, through his
gauntlets and into his arm; but he was making progress, he could see
the plastic—or whatever it was—of the door. It was chipping out. Not
easily, very reluctantly; but flaking out in chips that left a white
powdery residue.
At this rate, he thought grimly, he would be an hour getting through
it. Did he have an hour?
But it did not take an hour. One blow was luckier than the rest; it
must have snapped the lock mechanism. The door shook and slid ajar.
McCray got the thin of the blade into the crack and pried it wide.
He was in another room, maybe a hall, large and bare.
McCray put the broad of his back against the broken door and pressed it
as nearly closed as he could; it might not keep the gas and heat out,
but it would retard them.
The room was again unlighted—at least to McCray's eyes. There was not
even that pink pseudo-light that had baffled him; here was nothing
but the beam of his suit lamp. What it showed was cryptic. There were
evidences of use: shelves, boxy contraptions that might have been
cupboards, crude level surfaces attached to the walls that might have
been workbenches. Yet they were queerly contrived, for it was not
possible to guess from them much about the creatures who used them.
Some were near the floor, some at waist height, some even suspended
from the ceiling itself. A man would need a ladder to work at these
benches and McCray, staring, thought briefly of many-armed blind giants
or shapeless huge intelligent amoebae, and felt the skin prickle at the
back of his neck.
He tapped half-heartedly at one of the closed cupboards, and was not
surprised when it proved as refractory as the door. Undoubtedly he
could batter it open, but it was not likely that much would be left of
its contents when he was through; and there was the question of time.
But his attention was diverted by a gleam from one of the benches.
Metallic parts lay heaped in a pile. He poked at them with a
stiff-fingered gauntlet; they were oddly familiar. They were, he
thought, very much like the parts of a bullet-gun.
In fact, they were. He could recognize barrel, chamber, trigger, even
a couple of cartridges, neatly opened and the grains of powder stacked
beside them. It was an older, clumsier model than the kind he had seen
in survival locker, on the
Jodrell Bank
—and abruptly wished he were
carrying now—but it was a pistol. Another trophy, like the strange
assortment in the other room? He could not guess. But the others had
been more familiar; they all have come from his own ship. He was
prepared to swear that nothing like this antique had been aboard.
The drone began again in his ear, as it had at five-minute intervals
all along:
"Herrell McCray, Herrell McCray, Herrell McCray, this is
Jodrell Bank
calling Herrell McCray...."
And louder, blaring, then fading to normal volume as the AVC circuits
toned the signal down, another voice. A woman's voice, crying out in
panic and fear: "
Jodrell Bank!
Where are you? Help!"
IV
Hatcher's second in command said: "He has got through the first
survival test. In fact, he broke his way out! What next?"
"Wait!" Hatcher ordered sharply. He was watching the new specimen and
a troublesome thought had occurred to him. The new one was female and
seemed to be in pain; but it was not the pain that disturbed Hatcher,
it was something far more immediate to his interests.
"I think," he said slowly, "that they are in contact."
His assistant vibrated startlement.
"I know," Hatcher said, "but watch. Do you see? He is going straight
toward her."
Hatcher, who was not human, did not possess truly human emotions; but
he did feel amazement when he was amazed, and fear when there was
cause to be afraid. These specimens, obtained with so much difficulty,
needed so badly, were his responsibility. He knew the issues involved
much better than any of his helpers. They could only be surprised at
the queer antics of the aliens with attached limbs and strange powers.
Hatcher knew that this was not a freak show, but a matter of life and
death. He said, musing:
"This new one, I cannot communicate with her, but I get—almost—a
whisper, now and then. The first one, the male, nothing. But this
female is perhaps not quite mute."
"Then shall we abandon him and work with her, forgetting the first one?"
Hatcher hesitated. "No," he said at last. "The male is responding well.
Remember that when last this experiment was done every subject died; he
is alive at least. But I am wondering. We can't quite communicate with
the female—"
"But?"
"But I'm not sure that others can't."
The woman's voice was at such close range that McCray's suit radio made
a useful RDF set. He located her direction easily enough, shielding the
tiny built-in antenna with the tungsten-steel blade of the ax, while
she begged him to hurry. Her voice was heavily accented, with some
words in a language he did not recognize. She seemed to be in shock.
McCray was hardly surprised at that; he had been close enough to shock
himself. He tried to reassure her as he searched for a way out of the
hall, but in the middle of a word her voice stopped.
He hesitated, hefting the ax, glancing back at the way he had come.
There had to be a way out, even if it meant chopping through a wall.
When he turned around again there was a door. It was oddly shaped and
unlike the door he had hewn through, but clearly a door all the same,
and it was open.
McCray regarded it grimly. He went back in his memory with meticulous
care. Had he not looked at, this very spot a matter of moments before?
He had. And had there been an open door then? There had not. There
hadn't been even a shadowy outline of the three-sided, uneven opening
that stood there now.
Still, it led in the proper direction. McCray added one more
inexplicable fact to his file and walked through. He was in another
hall—or tunnel—rising quite steeply to the right. By his reckoning it
was the proper direction. He labored up it, sweating under the weight
of the suit, and found another open door, this one round, and behind
it—
Yes, there was the woman whose voice he had heard.
It was a woman, all right. The voice had been so strained that he
hadn't been positive. Even now, short black hair might not have proved
it, and she was lying face down but the waist and hips were a woman's,
even though she wore a bulky, quilted suit of coveralls.
He knelt beside her and gently turned her face.
She was unconscious. Broad, dark face, with no make-up; she was
apparently in her late thirties. She appeared to be Chinese.
She breathed, a little raggedly but without visible discomfort; her
face was relaxed as though she were sleeping. She did not rouse as he
moved her.
He realized she was breathing the air of the room they were in.
His instant first thought was that she was in danger of asphyxiation;
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/1/3/8/61380//61380-h//61380-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | Why is the supervising council worried about the Old Ones?
| 61380_KG4GXTUS_2 | [
"The Old Ones have captured one of their probers.\n",
"The Old Ones are not happy with the kind of science Hatcher is conducting.\n",
"The Old Ones need Hatcher’s data on the human specimen. \n",
"The Old Ones must be given a human tribute soon. \n"
] | 1 | 1 | [
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61,380 | 61380_KG4GXTUS | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | The Five Hells of Orion | 1976.0 | Pohl, Frederik | Abduction -- Fiction; Astral projection -- Fiction; Science fiction; PS; Human-alien encounters -- Fiction; Space ships -- Fiction; Interstellar travel -- Fiction | THE FIVE HELLS OF ORION
BY FREDERICK POHL
Out in the great gas cloud of the Orion
Nebula McCray found an ally—and a foe!
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of If Science Fiction, January 1963.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
His name was Herrell McCray and he was scared.
As best he could tell, he was in a sort of room no bigger than a prison
cell. Perhaps it was a prison cell. Whatever it was, he had no business
in it; for five minutes before he had been spaceborne, on the Long Jump
from Earth to the thriving colonies circling Betelgeuse Nine. McCray
was ship's navigator, plotting course corrections—not that there were
any, ever; but the reason there were none was that the check-sightings
were made every hour of the long flight. He had read off the azimuth
angles from the computer sights, automatically locked on their beacon
stars, and found them correct; then out of long habit confirmed the
locking mechanism visually. It was only a personal quaintness; he had
done it a thousand times. And while he was looking at Betelgeuse, Rigel
and Saiph ... it happened.
The room was totally dark, and it seemed to be furnished with a
collection of hard, sharp, sticky and knobby objects of various shapes
and a number of inconvenient sizes. McCray tripped over something
that rocked under his feet and fell against something that clattered
hollowly. He picked himself up, braced against something that smelled
dangerously of halogen compounds, and scratched his shoulder, right
through his space-tunic, against something that vibrated as he touched
it.
McCray had no idea where he was, and no way to find out.
Not only was he in darkness, but in utter silence as well. No. Not
quite utter silence.
Somewhere, just at the threshold of his senses, there was something
like a voice. He could not quite hear it, but it was there. He sat as
still as he could, listening; it remained elusive.
Probably it was only an illusion.
But the room itself was hard fact. McCray swore violently and out loud.
It was crazy and impossible. There simply was no way for him to get
from a warm, bright navigator's cubicle on
Starship Jodrell Bank
to
this damned, dark, dismal hole of a place where everything was out to
hurt him and nothing explained what was going on. He cried aloud in
exasperation: "If I could only
see
!"
He tripped and fell against something that was soft, slimy and, like
baker's dough, not at all resilient.
A flickering halo of pinkish light appeared. He sat up, startled. He
was looking at something that resembled a suit of medieval armor.
It was, he saw in a moment, not armor but a spacesuit. But what was the
light? And what were these other things in the room?
Wherever he looked, the light danced along with his eyes. It was like
having tunnel vision or wearing blinders. He could see what he was
looking at, but he could see nothing else. And the things he could
see made no sense. A spacesuit, yes; he knew that he could construct
a logical explanation for that with no trouble—maybe a subspace
meteorite striking the
Jodrell Bank
, an explosion, himself knocked
out, brought here in a suit ... well, it was an explanation with more
holes than fabric, like a fisherman's net, but at least it was rational.
How to explain a set of Gibbon's
Decline and Fall of the Roman
Empire?
A space-ax? Or the old-fashioned child's rocking-chair, the
chemistry set—or, most of all, the scrap of gaily printed fabric
that, when he picked it up, turned out to be a girl's scanty bathing
suit? It was slightly reassuring, McCray thought, to find that most of
the objects were more or less familiar. Even the child's chair—why,
he'd had one more or less like that himself, long before he was old
enough to go to school. But what were they doing here?
Not everything he saw was familiar. The walls of the room itself were
strange. They were not metal or plaster or knotty pine; they were
not papered, painted or overlaid with stucco. They seemed to be made
of some sort of hard organic compound, perhaps a sort of plastic or
processed cellulose. It was hard to tell colors in the pinkish light.
But they seemed to have none. They were "neutral"—the color of aged
driftwood or unbleached cloth.
Three of the walls were that way, and the floor and ceiling. The fourth
wall was something else. Areas in it had the appearance of gratings;
from them issued the pungent, distasteful halogen odor. They might be
ventilators, he thought; but if so the air they brought in was worse
than what he already had.
McCray was beginning to feel more confident. It was astonishing how a
little light made an impossible situation bearable, how quickly his
courage flowed back when he could see again.
He stood still, thinking. Item, a short time ago—subjectively it
seemed to be minutes—he had been aboard the
Jodrell Bank
with
nothing more on his mind than completing his check-sighting and meeting
one of the female passengers for coffee. Item, apart from being
shaken up and—he admitted it—scared damn near witless, he did not
seem to be hurt. Item, wherever he was now, it became, not so much what
had happened to him, but what had happened to the ship?
He allowed that thought to seep into his mind. Suppose there had been
an accident to the
Jodrell Bank
.
He could, of course, be dead. All this could be the fantasies of a
cooling brain.
McCray grinned into the pink-lit darkness. The thought had somehow
refreshed him, like icewater between rounds, and with a clearing head
he remembered what a spacesuit was good for.
It held a radio.
He pressed the unsealing tabs, slipped his hand into the vacant chest
of the suit and pulled out the hand mike. "This is Herrell McCray," he
said, "calling the
Jodrell Bank
."
No response. He frowned. "This is Herrell McCray, calling
Jodrell
Bank
.
"Herrell McCray, calling anybody, come in, please."
But there was no answer.
Thoughtfully he replaced the microphone. This was ultrawave radio,
something more than a million times faster than light, with a range
measured, at least, in hundreds of light-years. If there was no answer,
he was a good long way from anywhere.
Of course, the thing might not be operating.
He reached for the microphone again—
He cried aloud.
The pinkish lights went out. He was in the dark again, worse dark than
before.
For before the light had gone, McCray had seen what had escaped
his eyes before. The suit and the microphone were clear enough in
the pinkish glimmer; but the hand—his own hand, cupped to hold the
microphone—he had not seen at all. Nor his arm. Nor, in one fleeting
moment of study, his chest.
McCray could not see any part of his own body at all.
II
Someone else could.
Someone was watching Herrell McCray, with the clinical fascination
of a biochemist observing the wigglings of paramecia in a new
antibiotic—and with the prayerful emotions of a starving, shipwrecked,
sailor, watching the inward bobbing drift of a wave-born cask that
may
contain food.
Suppose you call him "Hatcher" (and suppose you call it a "him.")
Hatcher was not exactly male, because his race had no true males; but
it did have females and he was certainly not that. Hatcher did not in
any way look like a human being, but they had features in common.
If Hatcher and McCray had somehow managed to strike up an acquaintance,
they might have got along very well. Hatcher, like McCray, was an
adventurous soul, young, able, well-learned in the technical sciences
of his culture. Both enjoyed games—McCray baseball, poker and
three-dimensional chess; Hatcher a number of sports which defy human
description. Both held positions of some importance—considering their
ages—in the affairs of their respective worlds.
Physically they were nothing alike. Hatcher was a three-foot,
hard-shelled sphere of jelly. He had "arms" and "legs," but they were
not organically attached to "himself." They were snakelike things which
obeyed the orders of his brain as well as your mind can make your toes
curl; but they did not touch him directly. Indeed, they worked as well
a yard or a quarter-mile away as they did when, rarely, they rested
in the crevices they had been formed from in his "skin." At greater
distances they worked less well, for reasons irrelevant to the Law of
Inverse Squares.
Hatcher's principal task at this moment was to run the "probe team"
which had McCray under observation, and he was more than a little
excited. His members, disposed about the room where he had sent them on
various errands, quivered and shook a little; yet they were the calmest
limbs in the room; the members of the other team workers were in a
state of violent commotion.
The probe team had had a shock.
"Paranormal powers," muttered Hatcher's second in command, and the
others mumbled agreement. Hatcher ordered silence, studying the
specimen from Earth.
After a long moment he turned his senses from the Earthman.
"Incredible—but it's true enough," he said. "I'd better report. Watch
him," he added, but that was surely unnecessary. Their job was to
watch McCray, and they would do their job; and even more, not one of
them could have looked away to save his life from the spectacle of
a creature as odd and, from their point of view, hideously alien as
Herrell McCray.
Hatcher hurried through the halls of the great buried structure in
which he worked, toward the place where the supervising council of all
probes would be in permanent session. They admitted him at once.
Hatcher identified himself and gave a quick, concise report:
"The subject recovered consciousness a short time ago and began to
inspect his enclosure. His method of doing so was to put his own
members in physical contact with the various objects in the enclosure.
After observing him do this for a time we concluded he might be unable
to see and so we illuminated his field of vision for him.
"This appeared to work well for a time. He seemed relatively
undisturbed. However, he then reverted to physical-contact,
manipulating certain appurtenances of an artificial skin we had
provided for him.
"He then began to vibrate the atmosphere by means of resonating organs
in his breathing passage.
"Simultaneously, the object he was holding, attached to the artificial
skin, was discovered to be generating paranormal forces."
The supervising council rocked with excitement. "You're sure?" demanded
one of the councilmen.
"Yes, sir. The staff is preparing a technical description of the forces
now, but I can say that they are electromagnetic vibrations modulating
a carrier wave of very high speed, and in turn modulated by the
vibrations of the atmosphere caused by the subject's own breathing."
"Fantastic," breathed the councillor, in a tone of dawning hope. "How
about communicating with him, Hatcher? Any progress?"
"Well ... not much, sir. He suddenly panicked. We don't know why; but
we thought we'd better pull back and let him recover for a while."
The council conferred among itself for a moment, Hatcher waiting. It
was not really a waste of time for him; with the organs he had left in
the probe-team room, he was in fairly close touch with what was going
on—knew that McCray was once again fumbling among the objects in the
dark, knew that the team-members had tried illuminating the room for
him briefly and again produced the rising panic.
Still, Hatcher fretted. He wanted to get back.
"Stop fidgeting," commanded the council leader abruptly. "Hatcher, you
are to establish communication at once."
"But, sir...." Hatcher swung closer, his thick skin quivering slightly;
he would have gestured if he had brought members with him to gesture
with. "We've done everything we dare. We've made the place homey
for him—" actually, what he said was more like,
we've warmed the
biophysical nuances of his enclosure
—"and tried to guess his needs;
and we're frightening him half to death. We
can't
go faster. This
creature is in no way similar to us, you know. He relies on paranormal
forces—heat, light, kinetic energy—for his life. His chemistry is not
ours, his processes of thought are not ours, his entire organism is
closer to the inanimate rocks of a sea-bottom than to ourselves."
"Understood, Hatcher. In your first report you stated these creatures
were intelligent."
"Yes, sir. But not in our way."
"But in
a
way, and you must learn that way. I know." One lobster-claw
shaped member drifted close to the councillor's body and raised itself
in an admonitory gesture. "You want time. But we don't have time,
Hatcher. Yours is not the only probe team working. The Central Masses
team has just turned in a most alarming report."
"Have they secured a subject?" Hatcher demanded jealously.
The councillor paused. "Worse than that, Hatcher. I am afraid their
subjects have secured one of them. One of them is missing."
There was a moment's silence. Frozen, Hatcher could only wait. The
council room was like a tableau in a museum until the councillor spoke
again, each council member poised over his locus-point, his members
drifting about him.
Finally the councillor said, "I speak for all of us, I think. If the
Old Ones have seized one of our probers our time margin is considerably
narrowed. Indeed, we may not have any time at all. You must do
everything you can to establish communication with your subject."
"But the danger to the specimen—" Hatcher protested automatically.
"—is no greater," said the councillor, "than the danger to every one
of us if we do not find allies
now
."
Hatcher returned to his laboratory gloomily.
It was just like the council to put the screws on; they had a
reputation for demanding results at any cost—even at the cost of
destroying the only thing you had that would make results possible.
Hatcher did not like the idea of endangering the Earthman. It cannot
be said that he was emotionally involved; it was not pity or sympathy
that caused him to regret the dangers in moving too fast toward
communication. Not even Hatcher had quite got over the revolting
physical differences between the Earthman and his own people. But
Hatcher did not want him destroyed. It had been difficult enough
getting him here.
Hatcher checked through the members that he had left with the rest of
his team and discovered that there were no immediate emergencies, so he
took time to eat. In Hatcher's race this was accomplished in ways not
entirely pleasant to Earthmen. A slit in the lower hemisphere of his
body opened, like a purse, emitting a thin, pussy, fetid fluid which
Hatcher caught and poured into a disposal trough at the side of the
eating room. He then stuffed the slit with pulpy vegetation the texture
of kelp; it closed, and his body was supplied with nourishment for
another day.
He returned quickly to the room.
His second in command was busy, but one of the other team workers
reported—nothing new—and asked about Hatcher's appearance before the
council. Hatcher passed the question off. He considered telling his
staff about the disappearance of the Central Masses team member, but
decided against it. He had not been told it was secret. On the other
hand, he had not been told it was not. Something of this importance was
not lightly to be gossiped about. For endless generations the threat
of the Old Ones had hung over his race, those queer, almost mythical
beings from the Central Masses of the galaxy. One brush with them, in
ages past, had almost destroyed Hatcher's people. Only by running and
hiding, bearing one of their planets with them and abandoning it—with
its population—as a decoy, had they arrived at all.
Now they had detected mapping parties of the Old Ones dangerously near
the spiral arm of the galaxy in which their planet was located, they
had begun the Probe Teams to find some way of combating them, or of
fleeing again.
But it seemed that the Probe Teams themselves might be betraying their
existence to their enemies—
"Hatcher!"
The call was urgent; he hurried to see what it was about. It was his
second in command, very excited. "What is it?" Hatcher demanded.
"Wait...."
Hatcher was patient; he knew his assistant well. Obviously something
was about to happen. He took the moment to call his members back to
him for feeding; they dodged back to their niches on his skin, fitted
themselves into their vestigial slots, poured back their wastes into
his own circulation and ingested what they needed from the meal he had
just taken.... "Now!" cried the assistant. "Look!"
At what passed among Hatcher's people for a viewing console an image
was forming. Actually it was the assistant himself who formed it, not a
cathode trace or projected shadow; but it showed what it was meant to
show.
Hatcher was startled. "Another one! And—is it a different species? Or
merely a different sex?"
"Study the probe for yourself," the assistant invited.
Hatcher studied him frostily; his patience was not, after all, endless.
"No matter," he said at last. "Bring the other one in."
And then, in a completely different mood, "We may need him badly. We
may be in the process of killing our first one now."
"Killing him, Hatcher?"
Hatcher rose and shook himself, his mindless members floating away like
puppies dislodged from suck. "Council's orders," he said. "We've got to
go into Stage Two of the project at once."
III
Before Stage Two began, or before Herrell McCray realized it had begun,
he had an inspiration.
The dark was absolute, but he remembered where the spacesuit had been
and groped his way to it and, yes, it had what all spacesuits had to
have. It had a light. He found the toggle that turned it on and pressed
it.
Light. White, flaring, Earthly light, that showed everything—even
himself.
"God bless," he said, almost beside himself with joy. Whatever that
pinkish, dancing halo had been, it had thrown him into a panic; now
that he could see his own hand again, he could blame the weird effects
on some strange property of the light.
At the moment he heard the click that was the beginning of Stage Two.
He switched off the light and stood for a moment, listening.
For a second he thought he heard the far-off voice, quiet, calm and
almost hopeless, that he had sensed hours before; but then that was
gone. Something else was gone. Some faint mechanical sound that had
hardly registered at the time, but was not missing. And there was,
perhaps, a nice new sound that had not been there before; a very
faint, an almost inaudible elfin hiss.
McCray switched the light on and looked around. There seemed to be no
change.
And yet, surely, it was warmer in here.
He could see no difference; but perhaps, he thought, he could smell
one. The unpleasant halogen odor from the grating was surely stronger
now. He stood there, perplexed.
A tinny little voice from the helmet of the space suit said sharply,
amazement in its tone, "McCray, is that you? Where the devil are you
calling from?"
He forgot smell, sound and temperature and leaped for the suit. "This
is Herrell McCray," he cried. "I'm in a room of some sort, apparently
on a planet of approximate Earth mass. I don't know—"
"McCray!" cried the tiny voice in his ear. "Where are you? This is
Jodrell Bank
calling. Answer, please!"
"I
am
answering, damn it," he roared. "What took you so long?"
"Herrell McCray," droned the tiny voice in his ear, "Herrell McCray,
Herrell McCray, this is
Jodrell Bank
responding to your message,
acknowledge please. Herrell McCray, Herrell McCray...."
It kept on, and on.
McCray took a deep breath and thought. Something was wrong. Either they
didn't hear him, which meant the radio wasn't transmitting, or—no.
That was not it; they
had
heard him, because they were responding.
But it seemed to take them so long....
Abruptly his face went white. Took them so long! He cast back in his
mind, questing for a fact, unable to face its implications. When was
it he called them? Two hours ago? Three?
Did that mean—did it
possibly
mean—that there was a lag of an hour
or two each way? Did it, for example, mean that at the speed of his
suit's pararadio, millions of times faster than light, it took
hours
to get a message to the ship and back?
And if so ... where in the name of heaven was he?
Herrell McCray was a navigator, which is to say, a man who has learned
to trust the evidence of mathematics and instrument readings beyond the
guesses of his "common sense." When
Jodrell Bank
, hurtling faster
than light in its voyage between stars, made its regular position
check, common sense was a liar. Light bore false witness. The line of
sight was trustworthy directly forward and directly after—sometimes
not even then—and it took computers, sensing their data through
instruments, to comprehend a star bearing and convert three fixes into
a position.
If the evidence of his radio contradicted common sense, common sense
was wrong. Perhaps it was impossible to believe what the radio's
message implied; but it was not necessary to "believe," only to act.
McCray thumbed down the transmitter button and gave a concise report
of his situation and his guesses. "I don't know how I got here. I
don't know how long I've been gone, since I was unconscious for a
time. However, if the transmission lag is a reliable indication—" he
swallowed and went on—"I'd estimate I am something more than five
hundred light-years away from you at this moment. That's all I have to
say, except for one more word: Help."
He grinned sourly and released the button. The message was on its way,
and it would be hours before he could have a reply. Therefore he had to
consider what to do next.
He mopped his brow. With the droning, repetitious call from the ship
finally quiet, the room was quiet again. And warm.
Very warm, he thought tardily; and more than that. The halogen stench
was strong in his nostrils again.
Hurriedly McCray scrambled into the suit. By the time he was sealed
down he was coughing from the bottom of his lungs, deep, tearing rasps
that pained him, uncontrollable. Chlorine or fluorine, one of them was
in the air he had been breathing. He could not guess where it had come
from; but it was ripping his lungs out.
He flushed the interior of the suit out with a reckless disregard for
the wastage of his air reserve, holding his breath as much as he could,
daring only shallow gasps that made him retch and gag. After a long
time he could breathe, though his eyes were spilling tears.
He could see the fumes in the room now. The heat was building up.
Automatically—now that he had put it on and so started its
servo-circuits operating—the suit was cooling him. This was a
deep-space suit, regulation garb when going outside the pressure hull
of an FTL ship. It was good up to at least five hundred degrees in thin
air, perhaps three or four hundred in dense. In thin air or in space it
was the elastic joints and couplings that depolymerized when the heat
grew too great; in dense air, with conduction pouring energy in faster
than the cooling coils could suck it out and hurl it away, it was the
refrigerating equipment that broke down.
McCray had no way of knowing just how hot it was going to get. Nor,
for that matter, had the suit been designed to operate in a corrosive
medium.
All in all it was time for him to do something.
Among the debris on the floor, he remembered, was a five-foot space-ax,
tungsten-steel blade and springy aluminum shaft.
McCray caught it up and headed for the door. It felt good in his
gauntlets, a rewarding weight; any weapon straightens the back of the
man who holds it, and McCray was grateful for this one. With something
concrete to do he could postpone questioning. Never mind why he had
been brought here; never mind how. Never mind what he would, or could,
do next; all those questions could recede into the background of his
mind while he swung the ax and battered his way out of this poisoned
oven.
Crash-clang!
The double jolt ran up the shaft of the ax, through his
gauntlets and into his arm; but he was making progress, he could see
the plastic—or whatever it was—of the door. It was chipping out. Not
easily, very reluctantly; but flaking out in chips that left a white
powdery residue.
At this rate, he thought grimly, he would be an hour getting through
it. Did he have an hour?
But it did not take an hour. One blow was luckier than the rest; it
must have snapped the lock mechanism. The door shook and slid ajar.
McCray got the thin of the blade into the crack and pried it wide.
He was in another room, maybe a hall, large and bare.
McCray put the broad of his back against the broken door and pressed it
as nearly closed as he could; it might not keep the gas and heat out,
but it would retard them.
The room was again unlighted—at least to McCray's eyes. There was not
even that pink pseudo-light that had baffled him; here was nothing
but the beam of his suit lamp. What it showed was cryptic. There were
evidences of use: shelves, boxy contraptions that might have been
cupboards, crude level surfaces attached to the walls that might have
been workbenches. Yet they were queerly contrived, for it was not
possible to guess from them much about the creatures who used them.
Some were near the floor, some at waist height, some even suspended
from the ceiling itself. A man would need a ladder to work at these
benches and McCray, staring, thought briefly of many-armed blind giants
or shapeless huge intelligent amoebae, and felt the skin prickle at the
back of his neck.
He tapped half-heartedly at one of the closed cupboards, and was not
surprised when it proved as refractory as the door. Undoubtedly he
could batter it open, but it was not likely that much would be left of
its contents when he was through; and there was the question of time.
But his attention was diverted by a gleam from one of the benches.
Metallic parts lay heaped in a pile. He poked at them with a
stiff-fingered gauntlet; they were oddly familiar. They were, he
thought, very much like the parts of a bullet-gun.
In fact, they were. He could recognize barrel, chamber, trigger, even
a couple of cartridges, neatly opened and the grains of powder stacked
beside them. It was an older, clumsier model than the kind he had seen
in survival locker, on the
Jodrell Bank
—and abruptly wished he were
carrying now—but it was a pistol. Another trophy, like the strange
assortment in the other room? He could not guess. But the others had
been more familiar; they all have come from his own ship. He was
prepared to swear that nothing like this antique had been aboard.
The drone began again in his ear, as it had at five-minute intervals
all along:
"Herrell McCray, Herrell McCray, Herrell McCray, this is
Jodrell Bank
calling Herrell McCray...."
And louder, blaring, then fading to normal volume as the AVC circuits
toned the signal down, another voice. A woman's voice, crying out in
panic and fear: "
Jodrell Bank!
Where are you? Help!"
IV
Hatcher's second in command said: "He has got through the first
survival test. In fact, he broke his way out! What next?"
"Wait!" Hatcher ordered sharply. He was watching the new specimen and
a troublesome thought had occurred to him. The new one was female and
seemed to be in pain; but it was not the pain that disturbed Hatcher,
it was something far more immediate to his interests.
"I think," he said slowly, "that they are in contact."
His assistant vibrated startlement.
"I know," Hatcher said, "but watch. Do you see? He is going straight
toward her."
Hatcher, who was not human, did not possess truly human emotions; but
he did feel amazement when he was amazed, and fear when there was
cause to be afraid. These specimens, obtained with so much difficulty,
needed so badly, were his responsibility. He knew the issues involved
much better than any of his helpers. They could only be surprised at
the queer antics of the aliens with attached limbs and strange powers.
Hatcher knew that this was not a freak show, but a matter of life and
death. He said, musing:
"This new one, I cannot communicate with her, but I get—almost—a
whisper, now and then. The first one, the male, nothing. But this
female is perhaps not quite mute."
"Then shall we abandon him and work with her, forgetting the first one?"
Hatcher hesitated. "No," he said at last. "The male is responding well.
Remember that when last this experiment was done every subject died; he
is alive at least. But I am wondering. We can't quite communicate with
the female—"
"But?"
"But I'm not sure that others can't."
The woman's voice was at such close range that McCray's suit radio made
a useful RDF set. He located her direction easily enough, shielding the
tiny built-in antenna with the tungsten-steel blade of the ax, while
she begged him to hurry. Her voice was heavily accented, with some
words in a language he did not recognize. She seemed to be in shock.
McCray was hardly surprised at that; he had been close enough to shock
himself. He tried to reassure her as he searched for a way out of the
hall, but in the middle of a word her voice stopped.
He hesitated, hefting the ax, glancing back at the way he had come.
There had to be a way out, even if it meant chopping through a wall.
When he turned around again there was a door. It was oddly shaped and
unlike the door he had hewn through, but clearly a door all the same,
and it was open.
McCray regarded it grimly. He went back in his memory with meticulous
care. Had he not looked at, this very spot a matter of moments before?
He had. And had there been an open door then? There had not. There
hadn't been even a shadowy outline of the three-sided, uneven opening
that stood there now.
Still, it led in the proper direction. McCray added one more
inexplicable fact to his file and walked through. He was in another
hall—or tunnel—rising quite steeply to the right. By his reckoning it
was the proper direction. He labored up it, sweating under the weight
of the suit, and found another open door, this one round, and behind
it—
Yes, there was the woman whose voice he had heard.
It was a woman, all right. The voice had been so strained that he
hadn't been positive. Even now, short black hair might not have proved
it, and she was lying face down but the waist and hips were a woman's,
even though she wore a bulky, quilted suit of coveralls.
He knelt beside her and gently turned her face.
She was unconscious. Broad, dark face, with no make-up; she was
apparently in her late thirties. She appeared to be Chinese.
She breathed, a little raggedly but without visible discomfort; her
face was relaxed as though she were sleeping. She did not rouse as he
moved her.
He realized she was breathing the air of the room they were in.
His instant first thought was that she was in danger of asphyxiation;
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/1/3/8/61380//61380-h//61380-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | Is Herrell as intelligent as Hatcher? Why or why not?
| 61380_KG4GXTUS_3 | [
"No, Humans lack the organs that make Hatcher’s race smarter.\n",
"No, Hatcher’s race is far more intelligent. \n",
"Yes, but their intelligences operate differently. \n",
"Yes, but humans absorb intelligence through concepts while Hatcher’s race absorbs intelligence through light. \n"
] | 3 | 3 | [
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61,380 | 61380_KG4GXTUS | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | The Five Hells of Orion | 1976.0 | Pohl, Frederik | Abduction -- Fiction; Astral projection -- Fiction; Science fiction; PS; Human-alien encounters -- Fiction; Space ships -- Fiction; Interstellar travel -- Fiction | THE FIVE HELLS OF ORION
BY FREDERICK POHL
Out in the great gas cloud of the Orion
Nebula McCray found an ally—and a foe!
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of If Science Fiction, January 1963.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
His name was Herrell McCray and he was scared.
As best he could tell, he was in a sort of room no bigger than a prison
cell. Perhaps it was a prison cell. Whatever it was, he had no business
in it; for five minutes before he had been spaceborne, on the Long Jump
from Earth to the thriving colonies circling Betelgeuse Nine. McCray
was ship's navigator, plotting course corrections—not that there were
any, ever; but the reason there were none was that the check-sightings
were made every hour of the long flight. He had read off the azimuth
angles from the computer sights, automatically locked on their beacon
stars, and found them correct; then out of long habit confirmed the
locking mechanism visually. It was only a personal quaintness; he had
done it a thousand times. And while he was looking at Betelgeuse, Rigel
and Saiph ... it happened.
The room was totally dark, and it seemed to be furnished with a
collection of hard, sharp, sticky and knobby objects of various shapes
and a number of inconvenient sizes. McCray tripped over something
that rocked under his feet and fell against something that clattered
hollowly. He picked himself up, braced against something that smelled
dangerously of halogen compounds, and scratched his shoulder, right
through his space-tunic, against something that vibrated as he touched
it.
McCray had no idea where he was, and no way to find out.
Not only was he in darkness, but in utter silence as well. No. Not
quite utter silence.
Somewhere, just at the threshold of his senses, there was something
like a voice. He could not quite hear it, but it was there. He sat as
still as he could, listening; it remained elusive.
Probably it was only an illusion.
But the room itself was hard fact. McCray swore violently and out loud.
It was crazy and impossible. There simply was no way for him to get
from a warm, bright navigator's cubicle on
Starship Jodrell Bank
to
this damned, dark, dismal hole of a place where everything was out to
hurt him and nothing explained what was going on. He cried aloud in
exasperation: "If I could only
see
!"
He tripped and fell against something that was soft, slimy and, like
baker's dough, not at all resilient.
A flickering halo of pinkish light appeared. He sat up, startled. He
was looking at something that resembled a suit of medieval armor.
It was, he saw in a moment, not armor but a spacesuit. But what was the
light? And what were these other things in the room?
Wherever he looked, the light danced along with his eyes. It was like
having tunnel vision or wearing blinders. He could see what he was
looking at, but he could see nothing else. And the things he could
see made no sense. A spacesuit, yes; he knew that he could construct
a logical explanation for that with no trouble—maybe a subspace
meteorite striking the
Jodrell Bank
, an explosion, himself knocked
out, brought here in a suit ... well, it was an explanation with more
holes than fabric, like a fisherman's net, but at least it was rational.
How to explain a set of Gibbon's
Decline and Fall of the Roman
Empire?
A space-ax? Or the old-fashioned child's rocking-chair, the
chemistry set—or, most of all, the scrap of gaily printed fabric
that, when he picked it up, turned out to be a girl's scanty bathing
suit? It was slightly reassuring, McCray thought, to find that most of
the objects were more or less familiar. Even the child's chair—why,
he'd had one more or less like that himself, long before he was old
enough to go to school. But what were they doing here?
Not everything he saw was familiar. The walls of the room itself were
strange. They were not metal or plaster or knotty pine; they were
not papered, painted or overlaid with stucco. They seemed to be made
of some sort of hard organic compound, perhaps a sort of plastic or
processed cellulose. It was hard to tell colors in the pinkish light.
But they seemed to have none. They were "neutral"—the color of aged
driftwood or unbleached cloth.
Three of the walls were that way, and the floor and ceiling. The fourth
wall was something else. Areas in it had the appearance of gratings;
from them issued the pungent, distasteful halogen odor. They might be
ventilators, he thought; but if so the air they brought in was worse
than what he already had.
McCray was beginning to feel more confident. It was astonishing how a
little light made an impossible situation bearable, how quickly his
courage flowed back when he could see again.
He stood still, thinking. Item, a short time ago—subjectively it
seemed to be minutes—he had been aboard the
Jodrell Bank
with
nothing more on his mind than completing his check-sighting and meeting
one of the female passengers for coffee. Item, apart from being
shaken up and—he admitted it—scared damn near witless, he did not
seem to be hurt. Item, wherever he was now, it became, not so much what
had happened to him, but what had happened to the ship?
He allowed that thought to seep into his mind. Suppose there had been
an accident to the
Jodrell Bank
.
He could, of course, be dead. All this could be the fantasies of a
cooling brain.
McCray grinned into the pink-lit darkness. The thought had somehow
refreshed him, like icewater between rounds, and with a clearing head
he remembered what a spacesuit was good for.
It held a radio.
He pressed the unsealing tabs, slipped his hand into the vacant chest
of the suit and pulled out the hand mike. "This is Herrell McCray," he
said, "calling the
Jodrell Bank
."
No response. He frowned. "This is Herrell McCray, calling
Jodrell
Bank
.
"Herrell McCray, calling anybody, come in, please."
But there was no answer.
Thoughtfully he replaced the microphone. This was ultrawave radio,
something more than a million times faster than light, with a range
measured, at least, in hundreds of light-years. If there was no answer,
he was a good long way from anywhere.
Of course, the thing might not be operating.
He reached for the microphone again—
He cried aloud.
The pinkish lights went out. He was in the dark again, worse dark than
before.
For before the light had gone, McCray had seen what had escaped
his eyes before. The suit and the microphone were clear enough in
the pinkish glimmer; but the hand—his own hand, cupped to hold the
microphone—he had not seen at all. Nor his arm. Nor, in one fleeting
moment of study, his chest.
McCray could not see any part of his own body at all.
II
Someone else could.
Someone was watching Herrell McCray, with the clinical fascination
of a biochemist observing the wigglings of paramecia in a new
antibiotic—and with the prayerful emotions of a starving, shipwrecked,
sailor, watching the inward bobbing drift of a wave-born cask that
may
contain food.
Suppose you call him "Hatcher" (and suppose you call it a "him.")
Hatcher was not exactly male, because his race had no true males; but
it did have females and he was certainly not that. Hatcher did not in
any way look like a human being, but they had features in common.
If Hatcher and McCray had somehow managed to strike up an acquaintance,
they might have got along very well. Hatcher, like McCray, was an
adventurous soul, young, able, well-learned in the technical sciences
of his culture. Both enjoyed games—McCray baseball, poker and
three-dimensional chess; Hatcher a number of sports which defy human
description. Both held positions of some importance—considering their
ages—in the affairs of their respective worlds.
Physically they were nothing alike. Hatcher was a three-foot,
hard-shelled sphere of jelly. He had "arms" and "legs," but they were
not organically attached to "himself." They were snakelike things which
obeyed the orders of his brain as well as your mind can make your toes
curl; but they did not touch him directly. Indeed, they worked as well
a yard or a quarter-mile away as they did when, rarely, they rested
in the crevices they had been formed from in his "skin." At greater
distances they worked less well, for reasons irrelevant to the Law of
Inverse Squares.
Hatcher's principal task at this moment was to run the "probe team"
which had McCray under observation, and he was more than a little
excited. His members, disposed about the room where he had sent them on
various errands, quivered and shook a little; yet they were the calmest
limbs in the room; the members of the other team workers were in a
state of violent commotion.
The probe team had had a shock.
"Paranormal powers," muttered Hatcher's second in command, and the
others mumbled agreement. Hatcher ordered silence, studying the
specimen from Earth.
After a long moment he turned his senses from the Earthman.
"Incredible—but it's true enough," he said. "I'd better report. Watch
him," he added, but that was surely unnecessary. Their job was to
watch McCray, and they would do their job; and even more, not one of
them could have looked away to save his life from the spectacle of
a creature as odd and, from their point of view, hideously alien as
Herrell McCray.
Hatcher hurried through the halls of the great buried structure in
which he worked, toward the place where the supervising council of all
probes would be in permanent session. They admitted him at once.
Hatcher identified himself and gave a quick, concise report:
"The subject recovered consciousness a short time ago and began to
inspect his enclosure. His method of doing so was to put his own
members in physical contact with the various objects in the enclosure.
After observing him do this for a time we concluded he might be unable
to see and so we illuminated his field of vision for him.
"This appeared to work well for a time. He seemed relatively
undisturbed. However, he then reverted to physical-contact,
manipulating certain appurtenances of an artificial skin we had
provided for him.
"He then began to vibrate the atmosphere by means of resonating organs
in his breathing passage.
"Simultaneously, the object he was holding, attached to the artificial
skin, was discovered to be generating paranormal forces."
The supervising council rocked with excitement. "You're sure?" demanded
one of the councilmen.
"Yes, sir. The staff is preparing a technical description of the forces
now, but I can say that they are electromagnetic vibrations modulating
a carrier wave of very high speed, and in turn modulated by the
vibrations of the atmosphere caused by the subject's own breathing."
"Fantastic," breathed the councillor, in a tone of dawning hope. "How
about communicating with him, Hatcher? Any progress?"
"Well ... not much, sir. He suddenly panicked. We don't know why; but
we thought we'd better pull back and let him recover for a while."
The council conferred among itself for a moment, Hatcher waiting. It
was not really a waste of time for him; with the organs he had left in
the probe-team room, he was in fairly close touch with what was going
on—knew that McCray was once again fumbling among the objects in the
dark, knew that the team-members had tried illuminating the room for
him briefly and again produced the rising panic.
Still, Hatcher fretted. He wanted to get back.
"Stop fidgeting," commanded the council leader abruptly. "Hatcher, you
are to establish communication at once."
"But, sir...." Hatcher swung closer, his thick skin quivering slightly;
he would have gestured if he had brought members with him to gesture
with. "We've done everything we dare. We've made the place homey
for him—" actually, what he said was more like,
we've warmed the
biophysical nuances of his enclosure
—"and tried to guess his needs;
and we're frightening him half to death. We
can't
go faster. This
creature is in no way similar to us, you know. He relies on paranormal
forces—heat, light, kinetic energy—for his life. His chemistry is not
ours, his processes of thought are not ours, his entire organism is
closer to the inanimate rocks of a sea-bottom than to ourselves."
"Understood, Hatcher. In your first report you stated these creatures
were intelligent."
"Yes, sir. But not in our way."
"But in
a
way, and you must learn that way. I know." One lobster-claw
shaped member drifted close to the councillor's body and raised itself
in an admonitory gesture. "You want time. But we don't have time,
Hatcher. Yours is not the only probe team working. The Central Masses
team has just turned in a most alarming report."
"Have they secured a subject?" Hatcher demanded jealously.
The councillor paused. "Worse than that, Hatcher. I am afraid their
subjects have secured one of them. One of them is missing."
There was a moment's silence. Frozen, Hatcher could only wait. The
council room was like a tableau in a museum until the councillor spoke
again, each council member poised over his locus-point, his members
drifting about him.
Finally the councillor said, "I speak for all of us, I think. If the
Old Ones have seized one of our probers our time margin is considerably
narrowed. Indeed, we may not have any time at all. You must do
everything you can to establish communication with your subject."
"But the danger to the specimen—" Hatcher protested automatically.
"—is no greater," said the councillor, "than the danger to every one
of us if we do not find allies
now
."
Hatcher returned to his laboratory gloomily.
It was just like the council to put the screws on; they had a
reputation for demanding results at any cost—even at the cost of
destroying the only thing you had that would make results possible.
Hatcher did not like the idea of endangering the Earthman. It cannot
be said that he was emotionally involved; it was not pity or sympathy
that caused him to regret the dangers in moving too fast toward
communication. Not even Hatcher had quite got over the revolting
physical differences between the Earthman and his own people. But
Hatcher did not want him destroyed. It had been difficult enough
getting him here.
Hatcher checked through the members that he had left with the rest of
his team and discovered that there were no immediate emergencies, so he
took time to eat. In Hatcher's race this was accomplished in ways not
entirely pleasant to Earthmen. A slit in the lower hemisphere of his
body opened, like a purse, emitting a thin, pussy, fetid fluid which
Hatcher caught and poured into a disposal trough at the side of the
eating room. He then stuffed the slit with pulpy vegetation the texture
of kelp; it closed, and his body was supplied with nourishment for
another day.
He returned quickly to the room.
His second in command was busy, but one of the other team workers
reported—nothing new—and asked about Hatcher's appearance before the
council. Hatcher passed the question off. He considered telling his
staff about the disappearance of the Central Masses team member, but
decided against it. He had not been told it was secret. On the other
hand, he had not been told it was not. Something of this importance was
not lightly to be gossiped about. For endless generations the threat
of the Old Ones had hung over his race, those queer, almost mythical
beings from the Central Masses of the galaxy. One brush with them, in
ages past, had almost destroyed Hatcher's people. Only by running and
hiding, bearing one of their planets with them and abandoning it—with
its population—as a decoy, had they arrived at all.
Now they had detected mapping parties of the Old Ones dangerously near
the spiral arm of the galaxy in which their planet was located, they
had begun the Probe Teams to find some way of combating them, or of
fleeing again.
But it seemed that the Probe Teams themselves might be betraying their
existence to their enemies—
"Hatcher!"
The call was urgent; he hurried to see what it was about. It was his
second in command, very excited. "What is it?" Hatcher demanded.
"Wait...."
Hatcher was patient; he knew his assistant well. Obviously something
was about to happen. He took the moment to call his members back to
him for feeding; they dodged back to their niches on his skin, fitted
themselves into their vestigial slots, poured back their wastes into
his own circulation and ingested what they needed from the meal he had
just taken.... "Now!" cried the assistant. "Look!"
At what passed among Hatcher's people for a viewing console an image
was forming. Actually it was the assistant himself who formed it, not a
cathode trace or projected shadow; but it showed what it was meant to
show.
Hatcher was startled. "Another one! And—is it a different species? Or
merely a different sex?"
"Study the probe for yourself," the assistant invited.
Hatcher studied him frostily; his patience was not, after all, endless.
"No matter," he said at last. "Bring the other one in."
And then, in a completely different mood, "We may need him badly. We
may be in the process of killing our first one now."
"Killing him, Hatcher?"
Hatcher rose and shook himself, his mindless members floating away like
puppies dislodged from suck. "Council's orders," he said. "We've got to
go into Stage Two of the project at once."
III
Before Stage Two began, or before Herrell McCray realized it had begun,
he had an inspiration.
The dark was absolute, but he remembered where the spacesuit had been
and groped his way to it and, yes, it had what all spacesuits had to
have. It had a light. He found the toggle that turned it on and pressed
it.
Light. White, flaring, Earthly light, that showed everything—even
himself.
"God bless," he said, almost beside himself with joy. Whatever that
pinkish, dancing halo had been, it had thrown him into a panic; now
that he could see his own hand again, he could blame the weird effects
on some strange property of the light.
At the moment he heard the click that was the beginning of Stage Two.
He switched off the light and stood for a moment, listening.
For a second he thought he heard the far-off voice, quiet, calm and
almost hopeless, that he had sensed hours before; but then that was
gone. Something else was gone. Some faint mechanical sound that had
hardly registered at the time, but was not missing. And there was,
perhaps, a nice new sound that had not been there before; a very
faint, an almost inaudible elfin hiss.
McCray switched the light on and looked around. There seemed to be no
change.
And yet, surely, it was warmer in here.
He could see no difference; but perhaps, he thought, he could smell
one. The unpleasant halogen odor from the grating was surely stronger
now. He stood there, perplexed.
A tinny little voice from the helmet of the space suit said sharply,
amazement in its tone, "McCray, is that you? Where the devil are you
calling from?"
He forgot smell, sound and temperature and leaped for the suit. "This
is Herrell McCray," he cried. "I'm in a room of some sort, apparently
on a planet of approximate Earth mass. I don't know—"
"McCray!" cried the tiny voice in his ear. "Where are you? This is
Jodrell Bank
calling. Answer, please!"
"I
am
answering, damn it," he roared. "What took you so long?"
"Herrell McCray," droned the tiny voice in his ear, "Herrell McCray,
Herrell McCray, this is
Jodrell Bank
responding to your message,
acknowledge please. Herrell McCray, Herrell McCray...."
It kept on, and on.
McCray took a deep breath and thought. Something was wrong. Either they
didn't hear him, which meant the radio wasn't transmitting, or—no.
That was not it; they
had
heard him, because they were responding.
But it seemed to take them so long....
Abruptly his face went white. Took them so long! He cast back in his
mind, questing for a fact, unable to face its implications. When was
it he called them? Two hours ago? Three?
Did that mean—did it
possibly
mean—that there was a lag of an hour
or two each way? Did it, for example, mean that at the speed of his
suit's pararadio, millions of times faster than light, it took
hours
to get a message to the ship and back?
And if so ... where in the name of heaven was he?
Herrell McCray was a navigator, which is to say, a man who has learned
to trust the evidence of mathematics and instrument readings beyond the
guesses of his "common sense." When
Jodrell Bank
, hurtling faster
than light in its voyage between stars, made its regular position
check, common sense was a liar. Light bore false witness. The line of
sight was trustworthy directly forward and directly after—sometimes
not even then—and it took computers, sensing their data through
instruments, to comprehend a star bearing and convert three fixes into
a position.
If the evidence of his radio contradicted common sense, common sense
was wrong. Perhaps it was impossible to believe what the radio's
message implied; but it was not necessary to "believe," only to act.
McCray thumbed down the transmitter button and gave a concise report
of his situation and his guesses. "I don't know how I got here. I
don't know how long I've been gone, since I was unconscious for a
time. However, if the transmission lag is a reliable indication—" he
swallowed and went on—"I'd estimate I am something more than five
hundred light-years away from you at this moment. That's all I have to
say, except for one more word: Help."
He grinned sourly and released the button. The message was on its way,
and it would be hours before he could have a reply. Therefore he had to
consider what to do next.
He mopped his brow. With the droning, repetitious call from the ship
finally quiet, the room was quiet again. And warm.
Very warm, he thought tardily; and more than that. The halogen stench
was strong in his nostrils again.
Hurriedly McCray scrambled into the suit. By the time he was sealed
down he was coughing from the bottom of his lungs, deep, tearing rasps
that pained him, uncontrollable. Chlorine or fluorine, one of them was
in the air he had been breathing. He could not guess where it had come
from; but it was ripping his lungs out.
He flushed the interior of the suit out with a reckless disregard for
the wastage of his air reserve, holding his breath as much as he could,
daring only shallow gasps that made him retch and gag. After a long
time he could breathe, though his eyes were spilling tears.
He could see the fumes in the room now. The heat was building up.
Automatically—now that he had put it on and so started its
servo-circuits operating—the suit was cooling him. This was a
deep-space suit, regulation garb when going outside the pressure hull
of an FTL ship. It was good up to at least five hundred degrees in thin
air, perhaps three or four hundred in dense. In thin air or in space it
was the elastic joints and couplings that depolymerized when the heat
grew too great; in dense air, with conduction pouring energy in faster
than the cooling coils could suck it out and hurl it away, it was the
refrigerating equipment that broke down.
McCray had no way of knowing just how hot it was going to get. Nor,
for that matter, had the suit been designed to operate in a corrosive
medium.
All in all it was time for him to do something.
Among the debris on the floor, he remembered, was a five-foot space-ax,
tungsten-steel blade and springy aluminum shaft.
McCray caught it up and headed for the door. It felt good in his
gauntlets, a rewarding weight; any weapon straightens the back of the
man who holds it, and McCray was grateful for this one. With something
concrete to do he could postpone questioning. Never mind why he had
been brought here; never mind how. Never mind what he would, or could,
do next; all those questions could recede into the background of his
mind while he swung the ax and battered his way out of this poisoned
oven.
Crash-clang!
The double jolt ran up the shaft of the ax, through his
gauntlets and into his arm; but he was making progress, he could see
the plastic—or whatever it was—of the door. It was chipping out. Not
easily, very reluctantly; but flaking out in chips that left a white
powdery residue.
At this rate, he thought grimly, he would be an hour getting through
it. Did he have an hour?
But it did not take an hour. One blow was luckier than the rest; it
must have snapped the lock mechanism. The door shook and slid ajar.
McCray got the thin of the blade into the crack and pried it wide.
He was in another room, maybe a hall, large and bare.
McCray put the broad of his back against the broken door and pressed it
as nearly closed as he could; it might not keep the gas and heat out,
but it would retard them.
The room was again unlighted—at least to McCray's eyes. There was not
even that pink pseudo-light that had baffled him; here was nothing
but the beam of his suit lamp. What it showed was cryptic. There were
evidences of use: shelves, boxy contraptions that might have been
cupboards, crude level surfaces attached to the walls that might have
been workbenches. Yet they were queerly contrived, for it was not
possible to guess from them much about the creatures who used them.
Some were near the floor, some at waist height, some even suspended
from the ceiling itself. A man would need a ladder to work at these
benches and McCray, staring, thought briefly of many-armed blind giants
or shapeless huge intelligent amoebae, and felt the skin prickle at the
back of his neck.
He tapped half-heartedly at one of the closed cupboards, and was not
surprised when it proved as refractory as the door. Undoubtedly he
could batter it open, but it was not likely that much would be left of
its contents when he was through; and there was the question of time.
But his attention was diverted by a gleam from one of the benches.
Metallic parts lay heaped in a pile. He poked at them with a
stiff-fingered gauntlet; they were oddly familiar. They were, he
thought, very much like the parts of a bullet-gun.
In fact, they were. He could recognize barrel, chamber, trigger, even
a couple of cartridges, neatly opened and the grains of powder stacked
beside them. It was an older, clumsier model than the kind he had seen
in survival locker, on the
Jodrell Bank
—and abruptly wished he were
carrying now—but it was a pistol. Another trophy, like the strange
assortment in the other room? He could not guess. But the others had
been more familiar; they all have come from his own ship. He was
prepared to swear that nothing like this antique had been aboard.
The drone began again in his ear, as it had at five-minute intervals
all along:
"Herrell McCray, Herrell McCray, Herrell McCray, this is
Jodrell Bank
calling Herrell McCray...."
And louder, blaring, then fading to normal volume as the AVC circuits
toned the signal down, another voice. A woman's voice, crying out in
panic and fear: "
Jodrell Bank!
Where are you? Help!"
IV
Hatcher's second in command said: "He has got through the first
survival test. In fact, he broke his way out! What next?"
"Wait!" Hatcher ordered sharply. He was watching the new specimen and
a troublesome thought had occurred to him. The new one was female and
seemed to be in pain; but it was not the pain that disturbed Hatcher,
it was something far more immediate to his interests.
"I think," he said slowly, "that they are in contact."
His assistant vibrated startlement.
"I know," Hatcher said, "but watch. Do you see? He is going straight
toward her."
Hatcher, who was not human, did not possess truly human emotions; but
he did feel amazement when he was amazed, and fear when there was
cause to be afraid. These specimens, obtained with so much difficulty,
needed so badly, were his responsibility. He knew the issues involved
much better than any of his helpers. They could only be surprised at
the queer antics of the aliens with attached limbs and strange powers.
Hatcher knew that this was not a freak show, but a matter of life and
death. He said, musing:
"This new one, I cannot communicate with her, but I get—almost—a
whisper, now and then. The first one, the male, nothing. But this
female is perhaps not quite mute."
"Then shall we abandon him and work with her, forgetting the first one?"
Hatcher hesitated. "No," he said at last. "The male is responding well.
Remember that when last this experiment was done every subject died; he
is alive at least. But I am wondering. We can't quite communicate with
the female—"
"But?"
"But I'm not sure that others can't."
The woman's voice was at such close range that McCray's suit radio made
a useful RDF set. He located her direction easily enough, shielding the
tiny built-in antenna with the tungsten-steel blade of the ax, while
she begged him to hurry. Her voice was heavily accented, with some
words in a language he did not recognize. She seemed to be in shock.
McCray was hardly surprised at that; he had been close enough to shock
himself. He tried to reassure her as he searched for a way out of the
hall, but in the middle of a word her voice stopped.
He hesitated, hefting the ax, glancing back at the way he had come.
There had to be a way out, even if it meant chopping through a wall.
When he turned around again there was a door. It was oddly shaped and
unlike the door he had hewn through, but clearly a door all the same,
and it was open.
McCray regarded it grimly. He went back in his memory with meticulous
care. Had he not looked at, this very spot a matter of moments before?
He had. And had there been an open door then? There had not. There
hadn't been even a shadowy outline of the three-sided, uneven opening
that stood there now.
Still, it led in the proper direction. McCray added one more
inexplicable fact to his file and walked through. He was in another
hall—or tunnel—rising quite steeply to the right. By his reckoning it
was the proper direction. He labored up it, sweating under the weight
of the suit, and found another open door, this one round, and behind
it—
Yes, there was the woman whose voice he had heard.
It was a woman, all right. The voice had been so strained that he
hadn't been positive. Even now, short black hair might not have proved
it, and she was lying face down but the waist and hips were a woman's,
even though she wore a bulky, quilted suit of coveralls.
He knelt beside her and gently turned her face.
She was unconscious. Broad, dark face, with no make-up; she was
apparently in her late thirties. She appeared to be Chinese.
She breathed, a little raggedly but without visible discomfort; her
face was relaxed as though she were sleeping. She did not rouse as he
moved her.
He realized she was breathing the air of the room they were in.
His instant first thought was that she was in danger of asphyxiation;
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/1/3/8/61380//61380-h//61380-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | What effect does Stage Two have on Herrell?
| 61380_KG4GXTUS_4 | [
"It distresses him to the point of leaving the cell in order to find the woman.\n",
"It distresses him to the point of risking what wearing the space suit will do to him. \n",
"It distresses him to the point of breaking out of the cell. \n",
"The woman’s distress inspires him to break out of the cell. \n"
] | 3 | 3 | [
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61,380 | 61380_KG4GXTUS | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | The Five Hells of Orion | 1976.0 | Pohl, Frederik | Abduction -- Fiction; Astral projection -- Fiction; Science fiction; PS; Human-alien encounters -- Fiction; Space ships -- Fiction; Interstellar travel -- Fiction | THE FIVE HELLS OF ORION
BY FREDERICK POHL
Out in the great gas cloud of the Orion
Nebula McCray found an ally—and a foe!
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of If Science Fiction, January 1963.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
His name was Herrell McCray and he was scared.
As best he could tell, he was in a sort of room no bigger than a prison
cell. Perhaps it was a prison cell. Whatever it was, he had no business
in it; for five minutes before he had been spaceborne, on the Long Jump
from Earth to the thriving colonies circling Betelgeuse Nine. McCray
was ship's navigator, plotting course corrections—not that there were
any, ever; but the reason there were none was that the check-sightings
were made every hour of the long flight. He had read off the azimuth
angles from the computer sights, automatically locked on their beacon
stars, and found them correct; then out of long habit confirmed the
locking mechanism visually. It was only a personal quaintness; he had
done it a thousand times. And while he was looking at Betelgeuse, Rigel
and Saiph ... it happened.
The room was totally dark, and it seemed to be furnished with a
collection of hard, sharp, sticky and knobby objects of various shapes
and a number of inconvenient sizes. McCray tripped over something
that rocked under his feet and fell against something that clattered
hollowly. He picked himself up, braced against something that smelled
dangerously of halogen compounds, and scratched his shoulder, right
through his space-tunic, against something that vibrated as he touched
it.
McCray had no idea where he was, and no way to find out.
Not only was he in darkness, but in utter silence as well. No. Not
quite utter silence.
Somewhere, just at the threshold of his senses, there was something
like a voice. He could not quite hear it, but it was there. He sat as
still as he could, listening; it remained elusive.
Probably it was only an illusion.
But the room itself was hard fact. McCray swore violently and out loud.
It was crazy and impossible. There simply was no way for him to get
from a warm, bright navigator's cubicle on
Starship Jodrell Bank
to
this damned, dark, dismal hole of a place where everything was out to
hurt him and nothing explained what was going on. He cried aloud in
exasperation: "If I could only
see
!"
He tripped and fell against something that was soft, slimy and, like
baker's dough, not at all resilient.
A flickering halo of pinkish light appeared. He sat up, startled. He
was looking at something that resembled a suit of medieval armor.
It was, he saw in a moment, not armor but a spacesuit. But what was the
light? And what were these other things in the room?
Wherever he looked, the light danced along with his eyes. It was like
having tunnel vision or wearing blinders. He could see what he was
looking at, but he could see nothing else. And the things he could
see made no sense. A spacesuit, yes; he knew that he could construct
a logical explanation for that with no trouble—maybe a subspace
meteorite striking the
Jodrell Bank
, an explosion, himself knocked
out, brought here in a suit ... well, it was an explanation with more
holes than fabric, like a fisherman's net, but at least it was rational.
How to explain a set of Gibbon's
Decline and Fall of the Roman
Empire?
A space-ax? Or the old-fashioned child's rocking-chair, the
chemistry set—or, most of all, the scrap of gaily printed fabric
that, when he picked it up, turned out to be a girl's scanty bathing
suit? It was slightly reassuring, McCray thought, to find that most of
the objects were more or less familiar. Even the child's chair—why,
he'd had one more or less like that himself, long before he was old
enough to go to school. But what were they doing here?
Not everything he saw was familiar. The walls of the room itself were
strange. They were not metal or plaster or knotty pine; they were
not papered, painted or overlaid with stucco. They seemed to be made
of some sort of hard organic compound, perhaps a sort of plastic or
processed cellulose. It was hard to tell colors in the pinkish light.
But they seemed to have none. They were "neutral"—the color of aged
driftwood or unbleached cloth.
Three of the walls were that way, and the floor and ceiling. The fourth
wall was something else. Areas in it had the appearance of gratings;
from them issued the pungent, distasteful halogen odor. They might be
ventilators, he thought; but if so the air they brought in was worse
than what he already had.
McCray was beginning to feel more confident. It was astonishing how a
little light made an impossible situation bearable, how quickly his
courage flowed back when he could see again.
He stood still, thinking. Item, a short time ago—subjectively it
seemed to be minutes—he had been aboard the
Jodrell Bank
with
nothing more on his mind than completing his check-sighting and meeting
one of the female passengers for coffee. Item, apart from being
shaken up and—he admitted it—scared damn near witless, he did not
seem to be hurt. Item, wherever he was now, it became, not so much what
had happened to him, but what had happened to the ship?
He allowed that thought to seep into his mind. Suppose there had been
an accident to the
Jodrell Bank
.
He could, of course, be dead. All this could be the fantasies of a
cooling brain.
McCray grinned into the pink-lit darkness. The thought had somehow
refreshed him, like icewater between rounds, and with a clearing head
he remembered what a spacesuit was good for.
It held a radio.
He pressed the unsealing tabs, slipped his hand into the vacant chest
of the suit and pulled out the hand mike. "This is Herrell McCray," he
said, "calling the
Jodrell Bank
."
No response. He frowned. "This is Herrell McCray, calling
Jodrell
Bank
.
"Herrell McCray, calling anybody, come in, please."
But there was no answer.
Thoughtfully he replaced the microphone. This was ultrawave radio,
something more than a million times faster than light, with a range
measured, at least, in hundreds of light-years. If there was no answer,
he was a good long way from anywhere.
Of course, the thing might not be operating.
He reached for the microphone again—
He cried aloud.
The pinkish lights went out. He was in the dark again, worse dark than
before.
For before the light had gone, McCray had seen what had escaped
his eyes before. The suit and the microphone were clear enough in
the pinkish glimmer; but the hand—his own hand, cupped to hold the
microphone—he had not seen at all. Nor his arm. Nor, in one fleeting
moment of study, his chest.
McCray could not see any part of his own body at all.
II
Someone else could.
Someone was watching Herrell McCray, with the clinical fascination
of a biochemist observing the wigglings of paramecia in a new
antibiotic—and with the prayerful emotions of a starving, shipwrecked,
sailor, watching the inward bobbing drift of a wave-born cask that
may
contain food.
Suppose you call him "Hatcher" (and suppose you call it a "him.")
Hatcher was not exactly male, because his race had no true males; but
it did have females and he was certainly not that. Hatcher did not in
any way look like a human being, but they had features in common.
If Hatcher and McCray had somehow managed to strike up an acquaintance,
they might have got along very well. Hatcher, like McCray, was an
adventurous soul, young, able, well-learned in the technical sciences
of his culture. Both enjoyed games—McCray baseball, poker and
three-dimensional chess; Hatcher a number of sports which defy human
description. Both held positions of some importance—considering their
ages—in the affairs of their respective worlds.
Physically they were nothing alike. Hatcher was a three-foot,
hard-shelled sphere of jelly. He had "arms" and "legs," but they were
not organically attached to "himself." They were snakelike things which
obeyed the orders of his brain as well as your mind can make your toes
curl; but they did not touch him directly. Indeed, they worked as well
a yard or a quarter-mile away as they did when, rarely, they rested
in the crevices they had been formed from in his "skin." At greater
distances they worked less well, for reasons irrelevant to the Law of
Inverse Squares.
Hatcher's principal task at this moment was to run the "probe team"
which had McCray under observation, and he was more than a little
excited. His members, disposed about the room where he had sent them on
various errands, quivered and shook a little; yet they were the calmest
limbs in the room; the members of the other team workers were in a
state of violent commotion.
The probe team had had a shock.
"Paranormal powers," muttered Hatcher's second in command, and the
others mumbled agreement. Hatcher ordered silence, studying the
specimen from Earth.
After a long moment he turned his senses from the Earthman.
"Incredible—but it's true enough," he said. "I'd better report. Watch
him," he added, but that was surely unnecessary. Their job was to
watch McCray, and they would do their job; and even more, not one of
them could have looked away to save his life from the spectacle of
a creature as odd and, from their point of view, hideously alien as
Herrell McCray.
Hatcher hurried through the halls of the great buried structure in
which he worked, toward the place where the supervising council of all
probes would be in permanent session. They admitted him at once.
Hatcher identified himself and gave a quick, concise report:
"The subject recovered consciousness a short time ago and began to
inspect his enclosure. His method of doing so was to put his own
members in physical contact with the various objects in the enclosure.
After observing him do this for a time we concluded he might be unable
to see and so we illuminated his field of vision for him.
"This appeared to work well for a time. He seemed relatively
undisturbed. However, he then reverted to physical-contact,
manipulating certain appurtenances of an artificial skin we had
provided for him.
"He then began to vibrate the atmosphere by means of resonating organs
in his breathing passage.
"Simultaneously, the object he was holding, attached to the artificial
skin, was discovered to be generating paranormal forces."
The supervising council rocked with excitement. "You're sure?" demanded
one of the councilmen.
"Yes, sir. The staff is preparing a technical description of the forces
now, but I can say that they are electromagnetic vibrations modulating
a carrier wave of very high speed, and in turn modulated by the
vibrations of the atmosphere caused by the subject's own breathing."
"Fantastic," breathed the councillor, in a tone of dawning hope. "How
about communicating with him, Hatcher? Any progress?"
"Well ... not much, sir. He suddenly panicked. We don't know why; but
we thought we'd better pull back and let him recover for a while."
The council conferred among itself for a moment, Hatcher waiting. It
was not really a waste of time for him; with the organs he had left in
the probe-team room, he was in fairly close touch with what was going
on—knew that McCray was once again fumbling among the objects in the
dark, knew that the team-members had tried illuminating the room for
him briefly and again produced the rising panic.
Still, Hatcher fretted. He wanted to get back.
"Stop fidgeting," commanded the council leader abruptly. "Hatcher, you
are to establish communication at once."
"But, sir...." Hatcher swung closer, his thick skin quivering slightly;
he would have gestured if he had brought members with him to gesture
with. "We've done everything we dare. We've made the place homey
for him—" actually, what he said was more like,
we've warmed the
biophysical nuances of his enclosure
—"and tried to guess his needs;
and we're frightening him half to death. We
can't
go faster. This
creature is in no way similar to us, you know. He relies on paranormal
forces—heat, light, kinetic energy—for his life. His chemistry is not
ours, his processes of thought are not ours, his entire organism is
closer to the inanimate rocks of a sea-bottom than to ourselves."
"Understood, Hatcher. In your first report you stated these creatures
were intelligent."
"Yes, sir. But not in our way."
"But in
a
way, and you must learn that way. I know." One lobster-claw
shaped member drifted close to the councillor's body and raised itself
in an admonitory gesture. "You want time. But we don't have time,
Hatcher. Yours is not the only probe team working. The Central Masses
team has just turned in a most alarming report."
"Have they secured a subject?" Hatcher demanded jealously.
The councillor paused. "Worse than that, Hatcher. I am afraid their
subjects have secured one of them. One of them is missing."
There was a moment's silence. Frozen, Hatcher could only wait. The
council room was like a tableau in a museum until the councillor spoke
again, each council member poised over his locus-point, his members
drifting about him.
Finally the councillor said, "I speak for all of us, I think. If the
Old Ones have seized one of our probers our time margin is considerably
narrowed. Indeed, we may not have any time at all. You must do
everything you can to establish communication with your subject."
"But the danger to the specimen—" Hatcher protested automatically.
"—is no greater," said the councillor, "than the danger to every one
of us if we do not find allies
now
."
Hatcher returned to his laboratory gloomily.
It was just like the council to put the screws on; they had a
reputation for demanding results at any cost—even at the cost of
destroying the only thing you had that would make results possible.
Hatcher did not like the idea of endangering the Earthman. It cannot
be said that he was emotionally involved; it was not pity or sympathy
that caused him to regret the dangers in moving too fast toward
communication. Not even Hatcher had quite got over the revolting
physical differences between the Earthman and his own people. But
Hatcher did not want him destroyed. It had been difficult enough
getting him here.
Hatcher checked through the members that he had left with the rest of
his team and discovered that there were no immediate emergencies, so he
took time to eat. In Hatcher's race this was accomplished in ways not
entirely pleasant to Earthmen. A slit in the lower hemisphere of his
body opened, like a purse, emitting a thin, pussy, fetid fluid which
Hatcher caught and poured into a disposal trough at the side of the
eating room. He then stuffed the slit with pulpy vegetation the texture
of kelp; it closed, and his body was supplied with nourishment for
another day.
He returned quickly to the room.
His second in command was busy, but one of the other team workers
reported—nothing new—and asked about Hatcher's appearance before the
council. Hatcher passed the question off. He considered telling his
staff about the disappearance of the Central Masses team member, but
decided against it. He had not been told it was secret. On the other
hand, he had not been told it was not. Something of this importance was
not lightly to be gossiped about. For endless generations the threat
of the Old Ones had hung over his race, those queer, almost mythical
beings from the Central Masses of the galaxy. One brush with them, in
ages past, had almost destroyed Hatcher's people. Only by running and
hiding, bearing one of their planets with them and abandoning it—with
its population—as a decoy, had they arrived at all.
Now they had detected mapping parties of the Old Ones dangerously near
the spiral arm of the galaxy in which their planet was located, they
had begun the Probe Teams to find some way of combating them, or of
fleeing again.
But it seemed that the Probe Teams themselves might be betraying their
existence to their enemies—
"Hatcher!"
The call was urgent; he hurried to see what it was about. It was his
second in command, very excited. "What is it?" Hatcher demanded.
"Wait...."
Hatcher was patient; he knew his assistant well. Obviously something
was about to happen. He took the moment to call his members back to
him for feeding; they dodged back to their niches on his skin, fitted
themselves into their vestigial slots, poured back their wastes into
his own circulation and ingested what they needed from the meal he had
just taken.... "Now!" cried the assistant. "Look!"
At what passed among Hatcher's people for a viewing console an image
was forming. Actually it was the assistant himself who formed it, not a
cathode trace or projected shadow; but it showed what it was meant to
show.
Hatcher was startled. "Another one! And—is it a different species? Or
merely a different sex?"
"Study the probe for yourself," the assistant invited.
Hatcher studied him frostily; his patience was not, after all, endless.
"No matter," he said at last. "Bring the other one in."
And then, in a completely different mood, "We may need him badly. We
may be in the process of killing our first one now."
"Killing him, Hatcher?"
Hatcher rose and shook himself, his mindless members floating away like
puppies dislodged from suck. "Council's orders," he said. "We've got to
go into Stage Two of the project at once."
III
Before Stage Two began, or before Herrell McCray realized it had begun,
he had an inspiration.
The dark was absolute, but he remembered where the spacesuit had been
and groped his way to it and, yes, it had what all spacesuits had to
have. It had a light. He found the toggle that turned it on and pressed
it.
Light. White, flaring, Earthly light, that showed everything—even
himself.
"God bless," he said, almost beside himself with joy. Whatever that
pinkish, dancing halo had been, it had thrown him into a panic; now
that he could see his own hand again, he could blame the weird effects
on some strange property of the light.
At the moment he heard the click that was the beginning of Stage Two.
He switched off the light and stood for a moment, listening.
For a second he thought he heard the far-off voice, quiet, calm and
almost hopeless, that he had sensed hours before; but then that was
gone. Something else was gone. Some faint mechanical sound that had
hardly registered at the time, but was not missing. And there was,
perhaps, a nice new sound that had not been there before; a very
faint, an almost inaudible elfin hiss.
McCray switched the light on and looked around. There seemed to be no
change.
And yet, surely, it was warmer in here.
He could see no difference; but perhaps, he thought, he could smell
one. The unpleasant halogen odor from the grating was surely stronger
now. He stood there, perplexed.
A tinny little voice from the helmet of the space suit said sharply,
amazement in its tone, "McCray, is that you? Where the devil are you
calling from?"
He forgot smell, sound and temperature and leaped for the suit. "This
is Herrell McCray," he cried. "I'm in a room of some sort, apparently
on a planet of approximate Earth mass. I don't know—"
"McCray!" cried the tiny voice in his ear. "Where are you? This is
Jodrell Bank
calling. Answer, please!"
"I
am
answering, damn it," he roared. "What took you so long?"
"Herrell McCray," droned the tiny voice in his ear, "Herrell McCray,
Herrell McCray, this is
Jodrell Bank
responding to your message,
acknowledge please. Herrell McCray, Herrell McCray...."
It kept on, and on.
McCray took a deep breath and thought. Something was wrong. Either they
didn't hear him, which meant the radio wasn't transmitting, or—no.
That was not it; they
had
heard him, because they were responding.
But it seemed to take them so long....
Abruptly his face went white. Took them so long! He cast back in his
mind, questing for a fact, unable to face its implications. When was
it he called them? Two hours ago? Three?
Did that mean—did it
possibly
mean—that there was a lag of an hour
or two each way? Did it, for example, mean that at the speed of his
suit's pararadio, millions of times faster than light, it took
hours
to get a message to the ship and back?
And if so ... where in the name of heaven was he?
Herrell McCray was a navigator, which is to say, a man who has learned
to trust the evidence of mathematics and instrument readings beyond the
guesses of his "common sense." When
Jodrell Bank
, hurtling faster
than light in its voyage between stars, made its regular position
check, common sense was a liar. Light bore false witness. The line of
sight was trustworthy directly forward and directly after—sometimes
not even then—and it took computers, sensing their data through
instruments, to comprehend a star bearing and convert three fixes into
a position.
If the evidence of his radio contradicted common sense, common sense
was wrong. Perhaps it was impossible to believe what the radio's
message implied; but it was not necessary to "believe," only to act.
McCray thumbed down the transmitter button and gave a concise report
of his situation and his guesses. "I don't know how I got here. I
don't know how long I've been gone, since I was unconscious for a
time. However, if the transmission lag is a reliable indication—" he
swallowed and went on—"I'd estimate I am something more than five
hundred light-years away from you at this moment. That's all I have to
say, except for one more word: Help."
He grinned sourly and released the button. The message was on its way,
and it would be hours before he could have a reply. Therefore he had to
consider what to do next.
He mopped his brow. With the droning, repetitious call from the ship
finally quiet, the room was quiet again. And warm.
Very warm, he thought tardily; and more than that. The halogen stench
was strong in his nostrils again.
Hurriedly McCray scrambled into the suit. By the time he was sealed
down he was coughing from the bottom of his lungs, deep, tearing rasps
that pained him, uncontrollable. Chlorine or fluorine, one of them was
in the air he had been breathing. He could not guess where it had come
from; but it was ripping his lungs out.
He flushed the interior of the suit out with a reckless disregard for
the wastage of his air reserve, holding his breath as much as he could,
daring only shallow gasps that made him retch and gag. After a long
time he could breathe, though his eyes were spilling tears.
He could see the fumes in the room now. The heat was building up.
Automatically—now that he had put it on and so started its
servo-circuits operating—the suit was cooling him. This was a
deep-space suit, regulation garb when going outside the pressure hull
of an FTL ship. It was good up to at least five hundred degrees in thin
air, perhaps three or four hundred in dense. In thin air or in space it
was the elastic joints and couplings that depolymerized when the heat
grew too great; in dense air, with conduction pouring energy in faster
than the cooling coils could suck it out and hurl it away, it was the
refrigerating equipment that broke down.
McCray had no way of knowing just how hot it was going to get. Nor,
for that matter, had the suit been designed to operate in a corrosive
medium.
All in all it was time for him to do something.
Among the debris on the floor, he remembered, was a five-foot space-ax,
tungsten-steel blade and springy aluminum shaft.
McCray caught it up and headed for the door. It felt good in his
gauntlets, a rewarding weight; any weapon straightens the back of the
man who holds it, and McCray was grateful for this one. With something
concrete to do he could postpone questioning. Never mind why he had
been brought here; never mind how. Never mind what he would, or could,
do next; all those questions could recede into the background of his
mind while he swung the ax and battered his way out of this poisoned
oven.
Crash-clang!
The double jolt ran up the shaft of the ax, through his
gauntlets and into his arm; but he was making progress, he could see
the plastic—or whatever it was—of the door. It was chipping out. Not
easily, very reluctantly; but flaking out in chips that left a white
powdery residue.
At this rate, he thought grimly, he would be an hour getting through
it. Did he have an hour?
But it did not take an hour. One blow was luckier than the rest; it
must have snapped the lock mechanism. The door shook and slid ajar.
McCray got the thin of the blade into the crack and pried it wide.
He was in another room, maybe a hall, large and bare.
McCray put the broad of his back against the broken door and pressed it
as nearly closed as he could; it might not keep the gas and heat out,
but it would retard them.
The room was again unlighted—at least to McCray's eyes. There was not
even that pink pseudo-light that had baffled him; here was nothing
but the beam of his suit lamp. What it showed was cryptic. There were
evidences of use: shelves, boxy contraptions that might have been
cupboards, crude level surfaces attached to the walls that might have
been workbenches. Yet they were queerly contrived, for it was not
possible to guess from them much about the creatures who used them.
Some were near the floor, some at waist height, some even suspended
from the ceiling itself. A man would need a ladder to work at these
benches and McCray, staring, thought briefly of many-armed blind giants
or shapeless huge intelligent amoebae, and felt the skin prickle at the
back of his neck.
He tapped half-heartedly at one of the closed cupboards, and was not
surprised when it proved as refractory as the door. Undoubtedly he
could batter it open, but it was not likely that much would be left of
its contents when he was through; and there was the question of time.
But his attention was diverted by a gleam from one of the benches.
Metallic parts lay heaped in a pile. He poked at them with a
stiff-fingered gauntlet; they were oddly familiar. They were, he
thought, very much like the parts of a bullet-gun.
In fact, they were. He could recognize barrel, chamber, trigger, even
a couple of cartridges, neatly opened and the grains of powder stacked
beside them. It was an older, clumsier model than the kind he had seen
in survival locker, on the
Jodrell Bank
—and abruptly wished he were
carrying now—but it was a pistol. Another trophy, like the strange
assortment in the other room? He could not guess. But the others had
been more familiar; they all have come from his own ship. He was
prepared to swear that nothing like this antique had been aboard.
The drone began again in his ear, as it had at five-minute intervals
all along:
"Herrell McCray, Herrell McCray, Herrell McCray, this is
Jodrell Bank
calling Herrell McCray...."
And louder, blaring, then fading to normal volume as the AVC circuits
toned the signal down, another voice. A woman's voice, crying out in
panic and fear: "
Jodrell Bank!
Where are you? Help!"
IV
Hatcher's second in command said: "He has got through the first
survival test. In fact, he broke his way out! What next?"
"Wait!" Hatcher ordered sharply. He was watching the new specimen and
a troublesome thought had occurred to him. The new one was female and
seemed to be in pain; but it was not the pain that disturbed Hatcher,
it was something far more immediate to his interests.
"I think," he said slowly, "that they are in contact."
His assistant vibrated startlement.
"I know," Hatcher said, "but watch. Do you see? He is going straight
toward her."
Hatcher, who was not human, did not possess truly human emotions; but
he did feel amazement when he was amazed, and fear when there was
cause to be afraid. These specimens, obtained with so much difficulty,
needed so badly, were his responsibility. He knew the issues involved
much better than any of his helpers. They could only be surprised at
the queer antics of the aliens with attached limbs and strange powers.
Hatcher knew that this was not a freak show, but a matter of life and
death. He said, musing:
"This new one, I cannot communicate with her, but I get—almost—a
whisper, now and then. The first one, the male, nothing. But this
female is perhaps not quite mute."
"Then shall we abandon him and work with her, forgetting the first one?"
Hatcher hesitated. "No," he said at last. "The male is responding well.
Remember that when last this experiment was done every subject died; he
is alive at least. But I am wondering. We can't quite communicate with
the female—"
"But?"
"But I'm not sure that others can't."
The woman's voice was at such close range that McCray's suit radio made
a useful RDF set. He located her direction easily enough, shielding the
tiny built-in antenna with the tungsten-steel blade of the ax, while
she begged him to hurry. Her voice was heavily accented, with some
words in a language he did not recognize. She seemed to be in shock.
McCray was hardly surprised at that; he had been close enough to shock
himself. He tried to reassure her as he searched for a way out of the
hall, but in the middle of a word her voice stopped.
He hesitated, hefting the ax, glancing back at the way he had come.
There had to be a way out, even if it meant chopping through a wall.
When he turned around again there was a door. It was oddly shaped and
unlike the door he had hewn through, but clearly a door all the same,
and it was open.
McCray regarded it grimly. He went back in his memory with meticulous
care. Had he not looked at, this very spot a matter of moments before?
He had. And had there been an open door then? There had not. There
hadn't been even a shadowy outline of the three-sided, uneven opening
that stood there now.
Still, it led in the proper direction. McCray added one more
inexplicable fact to his file and walked through. He was in another
hall—or tunnel—rising quite steeply to the right. By his reckoning it
was the proper direction. He labored up it, sweating under the weight
of the suit, and found another open door, this one round, and behind
it—
Yes, there was the woman whose voice he had heard.
It was a woman, all right. The voice had been so strained that he
hadn't been positive. Even now, short black hair might not have proved
it, and she was lying face down but the waist and hips were a woman's,
even though she wore a bulky, quilted suit of coveralls.
He knelt beside her and gently turned her face.
She was unconscious. Broad, dark face, with no make-up; she was
apparently in her late thirties. She appeared to be Chinese.
She breathed, a little raggedly but without visible discomfort; her
face was relaxed as though she were sleeping. She did not rouse as he
moved her.
He realized she was breathing the air of the room they were in.
His instant first thought was that she was in danger of asphyxiation;
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/1/3/8/61380//61380-h//61380-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | What is the meaning of the lag between Herell’s radio and the Jodrell Bank?
| 61380_KG4GXTUS_5 | [
"Because the radio transmits faster than the speed of light, the lag indicates Herrell is nearly 400 lightyears away from his ship. \n",
"Because the radio transmits faster than the speed of light, the lag indicates Herrell is too far from his ship to ever be rescued.\n",
"Because the radio transmits faster than the speed of light, the lag indicates Herrell is nearly 500 light years away from his ship. \n",
"Because the radio transmits only a bit slower than the speed of light, the lag indicates Herrell is only 500 light years away from his ship.\n"
] | 3 | 3 | [
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61,380 | 61380_KG4GXTUS | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | The Five Hells of Orion | 1976.0 | Pohl, Frederik | Abduction -- Fiction; Astral projection -- Fiction; Science fiction; PS; Human-alien encounters -- Fiction; Space ships -- Fiction; Interstellar travel -- Fiction | THE FIVE HELLS OF ORION
BY FREDERICK POHL
Out in the great gas cloud of the Orion
Nebula McCray found an ally—and a foe!
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of If Science Fiction, January 1963.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
His name was Herrell McCray and he was scared.
As best he could tell, he was in a sort of room no bigger than a prison
cell. Perhaps it was a prison cell. Whatever it was, he had no business
in it; for five minutes before he had been spaceborne, on the Long Jump
from Earth to the thriving colonies circling Betelgeuse Nine. McCray
was ship's navigator, plotting course corrections—not that there were
any, ever; but the reason there were none was that the check-sightings
were made every hour of the long flight. He had read off the azimuth
angles from the computer sights, automatically locked on their beacon
stars, and found them correct; then out of long habit confirmed the
locking mechanism visually. It was only a personal quaintness; he had
done it a thousand times. And while he was looking at Betelgeuse, Rigel
and Saiph ... it happened.
The room was totally dark, and it seemed to be furnished with a
collection of hard, sharp, sticky and knobby objects of various shapes
and a number of inconvenient sizes. McCray tripped over something
that rocked under his feet and fell against something that clattered
hollowly. He picked himself up, braced against something that smelled
dangerously of halogen compounds, and scratched his shoulder, right
through his space-tunic, against something that vibrated as he touched
it.
McCray had no idea where he was, and no way to find out.
Not only was he in darkness, but in utter silence as well. No. Not
quite utter silence.
Somewhere, just at the threshold of his senses, there was something
like a voice. He could not quite hear it, but it was there. He sat as
still as he could, listening; it remained elusive.
Probably it was only an illusion.
But the room itself was hard fact. McCray swore violently and out loud.
It was crazy and impossible. There simply was no way for him to get
from a warm, bright navigator's cubicle on
Starship Jodrell Bank
to
this damned, dark, dismal hole of a place where everything was out to
hurt him and nothing explained what was going on. He cried aloud in
exasperation: "If I could only
see
!"
He tripped and fell against something that was soft, slimy and, like
baker's dough, not at all resilient.
A flickering halo of pinkish light appeared. He sat up, startled. He
was looking at something that resembled a suit of medieval armor.
It was, he saw in a moment, not armor but a spacesuit. But what was the
light? And what were these other things in the room?
Wherever he looked, the light danced along with his eyes. It was like
having tunnel vision or wearing blinders. He could see what he was
looking at, but he could see nothing else. And the things he could
see made no sense. A spacesuit, yes; he knew that he could construct
a logical explanation for that with no trouble—maybe a subspace
meteorite striking the
Jodrell Bank
, an explosion, himself knocked
out, brought here in a suit ... well, it was an explanation with more
holes than fabric, like a fisherman's net, but at least it was rational.
How to explain a set of Gibbon's
Decline and Fall of the Roman
Empire?
A space-ax? Or the old-fashioned child's rocking-chair, the
chemistry set—or, most of all, the scrap of gaily printed fabric
that, when he picked it up, turned out to be a girl's scanty bathing
suit? It was slightly reassuring, McCray thought, to find that most of
the objects were more or less familiar. Even the child's chair—why,
he'd had one more or less like that himself, long before he was old
enough to go to school. But what were they doing here?
Not everything he saw was familiar. The walls of the room itself were
strange. They were not metal or plaster or knotty pine; they were
not papered, painted or overlaid with stucco. They seemed to be made
of some sort of hard organic compound, perhaps a sort of plastic or
processed cellulose. It was hard to tell colors in the pinkish light.
But they seemed to have none. They were "neutral"—the color of aged
driftwood or unbleached cloth.
Three of the walls were that way, and the floor and ceiling. The fourth
wall was something else. Areas in it had the appearance of gratings;
from them issued the pungent, distasteful halogen odor. They might be
ventilators, he thought; but if so the air they brought in was worse
than what he already had.
McCray was beginning to feel more confident. It was astonishing how a
little light made an impossible situation bearable, how quickly his
courage flowed back when he could see again.
He stood still, thinking. Item, a short time ago—subjectively it
seemed to be minutes—he had been aboard the
Jodrell Bank
with
nothing more on his mind than completing his check-sighting and meeting
one of the female passengers for coffee. Item, apart from being
shaken up and—he admitted it—scared damn near witless, he did not
seem to be hurt. Item, wherever he was now, it became, not so much what
had happened to him, but what had happened to the ship?
He allowed that thought to seep into his mind. Suppose there had been
an accident to the
Jodrell Bank
.
He could, of course, be dead. All this could be the fantasies of a
cooling brain.
McCray grinned into the pink-lit darkness. The thought had somehow
refreshed him, like icewater between rounds, and with a clearing head
he remembered what a spacesuit was good for.
It held a radio.
He pressed the unsealing tabs, slipped his hand into the vacant chest
of the suit and pulled out the hand mike. "This is Herrell McCray," he
said, "calling the
Jodrell Bank
."
No response. He frowned. "This is Herrell McCray, calling
Jodrell
Bank
.
"Herrell McCray, calling anybody, come in, please."
But there was no answer.
Thoughtfully he replaced the microphone. This was ultrawave radio,
something more than a million times faster than light, with a range
measured, at least, in hundreds of light-years. If there was no answer,
he was a good long way from anywhere.
Of course, the thing might not be operating.
He reached for the microphone again—
He cried aloud.
The pinkish lights went out. He was in the dark again, worse dark than
before.
For before the light had gone, McCray had seen what had escaped
his eyes before. The suit and the microphone were clear enough in
the pinkish glimmer; but the hand—his own hand, cupped to hold the
microphone—he had not seen at all. Nor his arm. Nor, in one fleeting
moment of study, his chest.
McCray could not see any part of his own body at all.
II
Someone else could.
Someone was watching Herrell McCray, with the clinical fascination
of a biochemist observing the wigglings of paramecia in a new
antibiotic—and with the prayerful emotions of a starving, shipwrecked,
sailor, watching the inward bobbing drift of a wave-born cask that
may
contain food.
Suppose you call him "Hatcher" (and suppose you call it a "him.")
Hatcher was not exactly male, because his race had no true males; but
it did have females and he was certainly not that. Hatcher did not in
any way look like a human being, but they had features in common.
If Hatcher and McCray had somehow managed to strike up an acquaintance,
they might have got along very well. Hatcher, like McCray, was an
adventurous soul, young, able, well-learned in the technical sciences
of his culture. Both enjoyed games—McCray baseball, poker and
three-dimensional chess; Hatcher a number of sports which defy human
description. Both held positions of some importance—considering their
ages—in the affairs of their respective worlds.
Physically they were nothing alike. Hatcher was a three-foot,
hard-shelled sphere of jelly. He had "arms" and "legs," but they were
not organically attached to "himself." They were snakelike things which
obeyed the orders of his brain as well as your mind can make your toes
curl; but they did not touch him directly. Indeed, they worked as well
a yard or a quarter-mile away as they did when, rarely, they rested
in the crevices they had been formed from in his "skin." At greater
distances they worked less well, for reasons irrelevant to the Law of
Inverse Squares.
Hatcher's principal task at this moment was to run the "probe team"
which had McCray under observation, and he was more than a little
excited. His members, disposed about the room where he had sent them on
various errands, quivered and shook a little; yet they were the calmest
limbs in the room; the members of the other team workers were in a
state of violent commotion.
The probe team had had a shock.
"Paranormal powers," muttered Hatcher's second in command, and the
others mumbled agreement. Hatcher ordered silence, studying the
specimen from Earth.
After a long moment he turned his senses from the Earthman.
"Incredible—but it's true enough," he said. "I'd better report. Watch
him," he added, but that was surely unnecessary. Their job was to
watch McCray, and they would do their job; and even more, not one of
them could have looked away to save his life from the spectacle of
a creature as odd and, from their point of view, hideously alien as
Herrell McCray.
Hatcher hurried through the halls of the great buried structure in
which he worked, toward the place where the supervising council of all
probes would be in permanent session. They admitted him at once.
Hatcher identified himself and gave a quick, concise report:
"The subject recovered consciousness a short time ago and began to
inspect his enclosure. His method of doing so was to put his own
members in physical contact with the various objects in the enclosure.
After observing him do this for a time we concluded he might be unable
to see and so we illuminated his field of vision for him.
"This appeared to work well for a time. He seemed relatively
undisturbed. However, he then reverted to physical-contact,
manipulating certain appurtenances of an artificial skin we had
provided for him.
"He then began to vibrate the atmosphere by means of resonating organs
in his breathing passage.
"Simultaneously, the object he was holding, attached to the artificial
skin, was discovered to be generating paranormal forces."
The supervising council rocked with excitement. "You're sure?" demanded
one of the councilmen.
"Yes, sir. The staff is preparing a technical description of the forces
now, but I can say that they are electromagnetic vibrations modulating
a carrier wave of very high speed, and in turn modulated by the
vibrations of the atmosphere caused by the subject's own breathing."
"Fantastic," breathed the councillor, in a tone of dawning hope. "How
about communicating with him, Hatcher? Any progress?"
"Well ... not much, sir. He suddenly panicked. We don't know why; but
we thought we'd better pull back and let him recover for a while."
The council conferred among itself for a moment, Hatcher waiting. It
was not really a waste of time for him; with the organs he had left in
the probe-team room, he was in fairly close touch with what was going
on—knew that McCray was once again fumbling among the objects in the
dark, knew that the team-members had tried illuminating the room for
him briefly and again produced the rising panic.
Still, Hatcher fretted. He wanted to get back.
"Stop fidgeting," commanded the council leader abruptly. "Hatcher, you
are to establish communication at once."
"But, sir...." Hatcher swung closer, his thick skin quivering slightly;
he would have gestured if he had brought members with him to gesture
with. "We've done everything we dare. We've made the place homey
for him—" actually, what he said was more like,
we've warmed the
biophysical nuances of his enclosure
—"and tried to guess his needs;
and we're frightening him half to death. We
can't
go faster. This
creature is in no way similar to us, you know. He relies on paranormal
forces—heat, light, kinetic energy—for his life. His chemistry is not
ours, his processes of thought are not ours, his entire organism is
closer to the inanimate rocks of a sea-bottom than to ourselves."
"Understood, Hatcher. In your first report you stated these creatures
were intelligent."
"Yes, sir. But not in our way."
"But in
a
way, and you must learn that way. I know." One lobster-claw
shaped member drifted close to the councillor's body and raised itself
in an admonitory gesture. "You want time. But we don't have time,
Hatcher. Yours is not the only probe team working. The Central Masses
team has just turned in a most alarming report."
"Have they secured a subject?" Hatcher demanded jealously.
The councillor paused. "Worse than that, Hatcher. I am afraid their
subjects have secured one of them. One of them is missing."
There was a moment's silence. Frozen, Hatcher could only wait. The
council room was like a tableau in a museum until the councillor spoke
again, each council member poised over his locus-point, his members
drifting about him.
Finally the councillor said, "I speak for all of us, I think. If the
Old Ones have seized one of our probers our time margin is considerably
narrowed. Indeed, we may not have any time at all. You must do
everything you can to establish communication with your subject."
"But the danger to the specimen—" Hatcher protested automatically.
"—is no greater," said the councillor, "than the danger to every one
of us if we do not find allies
now
."
Hatcher returned to his laboratory gloomily.
It was just like the council to put the screws on; they had a
reputation for demanding results at any cost—even at the cost of
destroying the only thing you had that would make results possible.
Hatcher did not like the idea of endangering the Earthman. It cannot
be said that he was emotionally involved; it was not pity or sympathy
that caused him to regret the dangers in moving too fast toward
communication. Not even Hatcher had quite got over the revolting
physical differences between the Earthman and his own people. But
Hatcher did not want him destroyed. It had been difficult enough
getting him here.
Hatcher checked through the members that he had left with the rest of
his team and discovered that there were no immediate emergencies, so he
took time to eat. In Hatcher's race this was accomplished in ways not
entirely pleasant to Earthmen. A slit in the lower hemisphere of his
body opened, like a purse, emitting a thin, pussy, fetid fluid which
Hatcher caught and poured into a disposal trough at the side of the
eating room. He then stuffed the slit with pulpy vegetation the texture
of kelp; it closed, and his body was supplied with nourishment for
another day.
He returned quickly to the room.
His second in command was busy, but one of the other team workers
reported—nothing new—and asked about Hatcher's appearance before the
council. Hatcher passed the question off. He considered telling his
staff about the disappearance of the Central Masses team member, but
decided against it. He had not been told it was secret. On the other
hand, he had not been told it was not. Something of this importance was
not lightly to be gossiped about. For endless generations the threat
of the Old Ones had hung over his race, those queer, almost mythical
beings from the Central Masses of the galaxy. One brush with them, in
ages past, had almost destroyed Hatcher's people. Only by running and
hiding, bearing one of their planets with them and abandoning it—with
its population—as a decoy, had they arrived at all.
Now they had detected mapping parties of the Old Ones dangerously near
the spiral arm of the galaxy in which their planet was located, they
had begun the Probe Teams to find some way of combating them, or of
fleeing again.
But it seemed that the Probe Teams themselves might be betraying their
existence to their enemies—
"Hatcher!"
The call was urgent; he hurried to see what it was about. It was his
second in command, very excited. "What is it?" Hatcher demanded.
"Wait...."
Hatcher was patient; he knew his assistant well. Obviously something
was about to happen. He took the moment to call his members back to
him for feeding; they dodged back to their niches on his skin, fitted
themselves into their vestigial slots, poured back their wastes into
his own circulation and ingested what they needed from the meal he had
just taken.... "Now!" cried the assistant. "Look!"
At what passed among Hatcher's people for a viewing console an image
was forming. Actually it was the assistant himself who formed it, not a
cathode trace or projected shadow; but it showed what it was meant to
show.
Hatcher was startled. "Another one! And—is it a different species? Or
merely a different sex?"
"Study the probe for yourself," the assistant invited.
Hatcher studied him frostily; his patience was not, after all, endless.
"No matter," he said at last. "Bring the other one in."
And then, in a completely different mood, "We may need him badly. We
may be in the process of killing our first one now."
"Killing him, Hatcher?"
Hatcher rose and shook himself, his mindless members floating away like
puppies dislodged from suck. "Council's orders," he said. "We've got to
go into Stage Two of the project at once."
III
Before Stage Two began, or before Herrell McCray realized it had begun,
he had an inspiration.
The dark was absolute, but he remembered where the spacesuit had been
and groped his way to it and, yes, it had what all spacesuits had to
have. It had a light. He found the toggle that turned it on and pressed
it.
Light. White, flaring, Earthly light, that showed everything—even
himself.
"God bless," he said, almost beside himself with joy. Whatever that
pinkish, dancing halo had been, it had thrown him into a panic; now
that he could see his own hand again, he could blame the weird effects
on some strange property of the light.
At the moment he heard the click that was the beginning of Stage Two.
He switched off the light and stood for a moment, listening.
For a second he thought he heard the far-off voice, quiet, calm and
almost hopeless, that he had sensed hours before; but then that was
gone. Something else was gone. Some faint mechanical sound that had
hardly registered at the time, but was not missing. And there was,
perhaps, a nice new sound that had not been there before; a very
faint, an almost inaudible elfin hiss.
McCray switched the light on and looked around. There seemed to be no
change.
And yet, surely, it was warmer in here.
He could see no difference; but perhaps, he thought, he could smell
one. The unpleasant halogen odor from the grating was surely stronger
now. He stood there, perplexed.
A tinny little voice from the helmet of the space suit said sharply,
amazement in its tone, "McCray, is that you? Where the devil are you
calling from?"
He forgot smell, sound and temperature and leaped for the suit. "This
is Herrell McCray," he cried. "I'm in a room of some sort, apparently
on a planet of approximate Earth mass. I don't know—"
"McCray!" cried the tiny voice in his ear. "Where are you? This is
Jodrell Bank
calling. Answer, please!"
"I
am
answering, damn it," he roared. "What took you so long?"
"Herrell McCray," droned the tiny voice in his ear, "Herrell McCray,
Herrell McCray, this is
Jodrell Bank
responding to your message,
acknowledge please. Herrell McCray, Herrell McCray...."
It kept on, and on.
McCray took a deep breath and thought. Something was wrong. Either they
didn't hear him, which meant the radio wasn't transmitting, or—no.
That was not it; they
had
heard him, because they were responding.
But it seemed to take them so long....
Abruptly his face went white. Took them so long! He cast back in his
mind, questing for a fact, unable to face its implications. When was
it he called them? Two hours ago? Three?
Did that mean—did it
possibly
mean—that there was a lag of an hour
or two each way? Did it, for example, mean that at the speed of his
suit's pararadio, millions of times faster than light, it took
hours
to get a message to the ship and back?
And if so ... where in the name of heaven was he?
Herrell McCray was a navigator, which is to say, a man who has learned
to trust the evidence of mathematics and instrument readings beyond the
guesses of his "common sense." When
Jodrell Bank
, hurtling faster
than light in its voyage between stars, made its regular position
check, common sense was a liar. Light bore false witness. The line of
sight was trustworthy directly forward and directly after—sometimes
not even then—and it took computers, sensing their data through
instruments, to comprehend a star bearing and convert three fixes into
a position.
If the evidence of his radio contradicted common sense, common sense
was wrong. Perhaps it was impossible to believe what the radio's
message implied; but it was not necessary to "believe," only to act.
McCray thumbed down the transmitter button and gave a concise report
of his situation and his guesses. "I don't know how I got here. I
don't know how long I've been gone, since I was unconscious for a
time. However, if the transmission lag is a reliable indication—" he
swallowed and went on—"I'd estimate I am something more than five
hundred light-years away from you at this moment. That's all I have to
say, except for one more word: Help."
He grinned sourly and released the button. The message was on its way,
and it would be hours before he could have a reply. Therefore he had to
consider what to do next.
He mopped his brow. With the droning, repetitious call from the ship
finally quiet, the room was quiet again. And warm.
Very warm, he thought tardily; and more than that. The halogen stench
was strong in his nostrils again.
Hurriedly McCray scrambled into the suit. By the time he was sealed
down he was coughing from the bottom of his lungs, deep, tearing rasps
that pained him, uncontrollable. Chlorine or fluorine, one of them was
in the air he had been breathing. He could not guess where it had come
from; but it was ripping his lungs out.
He flushed the interior of the suit out with a reckless disregard for
the wastage of his air reserve, holding his breath as much as he could,
daring only shallow gasps that made him retch and gag. After a long
time he could breathe, though his eyes were spilling tears.
He could see the fumes in the room now. The heat was building up.
Automatically—now that he had put it on and so started its
servo-circuits operating—the suit was cooling him. This was a
deep-space suit, regulation garb when going outside the pressure hull
of an FTL ship. It was good up to at least five hundred degrees in thin
air, perhaps three or four hundred in dense. In thin air or in space it
was the elastic joints and couplings that depolymerized when the heat
grew too great; in dense air, with conduction pouring energy in faster
than the cooling coils could suck it out and hurl it away, it was the
refrigerating equipment that broke down.
McCray had no way of knowing just how hot it was going to get. Nor,
for that matter, had the suit been designed to operate in a corrosive
medium.
All in all it was time for him to do something.
Among the debris on the floor, he remembered, was a five-foot space-ax,
tungsten-steel blade and springy aluminum shaft.
McCray caught it up and headed for the door. It felt good in his
gauntlets, a rewarding weight; any weapon straightens the back of the
man who holds it, and McCray was grateful for this one. With something
concrete to do he could postpone questioning. Never mind why he had
been brought here; never mind how. Never mind what he would, or could,
do next; all those questions could recede into the background of his
mind while he swung the ax and battered his way out of this poisoned
oven.
Crash-clang!
The double jolt ran up the shaft of the ax, through his
gauntlets and into his arm; but he was making progress, he could see
the plastic—or whatever it was—of the door. It was chipping out. Not
easily, very reluctantly; but flaking out in chips that left a white
powdery residue.
At this rate, he thought grimly, he would be an hour getting through
it. Did he have an hour?
But it did not take an hour. One blow was luckier than the rest; it
must have snapped the lock mechanism. The door shook and slid ajar.
McCray got the thin of the blade into the crack and pried it wide.
He was in another room, maybe a hall, large and bare.
McCray put the broad of his back against the broken door and pressed it
as nearly closed as he could; it might not keep the gas and heat out,
but it would retard them.
The room was again unlighted—at least to McCray's eyes. There was not
even that pink pseudo-light that had baffled him; here was nothing
but the beam of his suit lamp. What it showed was cryptic. There were
evidences of use: shelves, boxy contraptions that might have been
cupboards, crude level surfaces attached to the walls that might have
been workbenches. Yet they were queerly contrived, for it was not
possible to guess from them much about the creatures who used them.
Some were near the floor, some at waist height, some even suspended
from the ceiling itself. A man would need a ladder to work at these
benches and McCray, staring, thought briefly of many-armed blind giants
or shapeless huge intelligent amoebae, and felt the skin prickle at the
back of his neck.
He tapped half-heartedly at one of the closed cupboards, and was not
surprised when it proved as refractory as the door. Undoubtedly he
could batter it open, but it was not likely that much would be left of
its contents when he was through; and there was the question of time.
But his attention was diverted by a gleam from one of the benches.
Metallic parts lay heaped in a pile. He poked at them with a
stiff-fingered gauntlet; they were oddly familiar. They were, he
thought, very much like the parts of a bullet-gun.
In fact, they were. He could recognize barrel, chamber, trigger, even
a couple of cartridges, neatly opened and the grains of powder stacked
beside them. It was an older, clumsier model than the kind he had seen
in survival locker, on the
Jodrell Bank
—and abruptly wished he were
carrying now—but it was a pistol. Another trophy, like the strange
assortment in the other room? He could not guess. But the others had
been more familiar; they all have come from his own ship. He was
prepared to swear that nothing like this antique had been aboard.
The drone began again in his ear, as it had at five-minute intervals
all along:
"Herrell McCray, Herrell McCray, Herrell McCray, this is
Jodrell Bank
calling Herrell McCray...."
And louder, blaring, then fading to normal volume as the AVC circuits
toned the signal down, another voice. A woman's voice, crying out in
panic and fear: "
Jodrell Bank!
Where are you? Help!"
IV
Hatcher's second in command said: "He has got through the first
survival test. In fact, he broke his way out! What next?"
"Wait!" Hatcher ordered sharply. He was watching the new specimen and
a troublesome thought had occurred to him. The new one was female and
seemed to be in pain; but it was not the pain that disturbed Hatcher,
it was something far more immediate to his interests.
"I think," he said slowly, "that they are in contact."
His assistant vibrated startlement.
"I know," Hatcher said, "but watch. Do you see? He is going straight
toward her."
Hatcher, who was not human, did not possess truly human emotions; but
he did feel amazement when he was amazed, and fear when there was
cause to be afraid. These specimens, obtained with so much difficulty,
needed so badly, were his responsibility. He knew the issues involved
much better than any of his helpers. They could only be surprised at
the queer antics of the aliens with attached limbs and strange powers.
Hatcher knew that this was not a freak show, but a matter of life and
death. He said, musing:
"This new one, I cannot communicate with her, but I get—almost—a
whisper, now and then. The first one, the male, nothing. But this
female is perhaps not quite mute."
"Then shall we abandon him and work with her, forgetting the first one?"
Hatcher hesitated. "No," he said at last. "The male is responding well.
Remember that when last this experiment was done every subject died; he
is alive at least. But I am wondering. We can't quite communicate with
the female—"
"But?"
"But I'm not sure that others can't."
The woman's voice was at such close range that McCray's suit radio made
a useful RDF set. He located her direction easily enough, shielding the
tiny built-in antenna with the tungsten-steel blade of the ax, while
she begged him to hurry. Her voice was heavily accented, with some
words in a language he did not recognize. She seemed to be in shock.
McCray was hardly surprised at that; he had been close enough to shock
himself. He tried to reassure her as he searched for a way out of the
hall, but in the middle of a word her voice stopped.
He hesitated, hefting the ax, glancing back at the way he had come.
There had to be a way out, even if it meant chopping through a wall.
When he turned around again there was a door. It was oddly shaped and
unlike the door he had hewn through, but clearly a door all the same,
and it was open.
McCray regarded it grimly. He went back in his memory with meticulous
care. Had he not looked at, this very spot a matter of moments before?
He had. And had there been an open door then? There had not. There
hadn't been even a shadowy outline of the three-sided, uneven opening
that stood there now.
Still, it led in the proper direction. McCray added one more
inexplicable fact to his file and walked through. He was in another
hall—or tunnel—rising quite steeply to the right. By his reckoning it
was the proper direction. He labored up it, sweating under the weight
of the suit, and found another open door, this one round, and behind
it—
Yes, there was the woman whose voice he had heard.
It was a woman, all right. The voice had been so strained that he
hadn't been positive. Even now, short black hair might not have proved
it, and she was lying face down but the waist and hips were a woman's,
even though she wore a bulky, quilted suit of coveralls.
He knelt beside her and gently turned her face.
She was unconscious. Broad, dark face, with no make-up; she was
apparently in her late thirties. She appeared to be Chinese.
She breathed, a little raggedly but without visible discomfort; her
face was relaxed as though she were sleeping. She did not rouse as he
moved her.
He realized she was breathing the air of the room they were in.
His instant first thought was that she was in danger of asphyxiation;
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/1/3/8/61380//61380-h//61380-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | What does hatcher mean when he says, “to vibrate the atmosphere by means of resonating organs in his breathing passage.”
| 61380_KG4GXTUS_6 | [
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"To panic \n",
"To breathe \n"
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61,380 | 61380_KG4GXTUS | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | The Five Hells of Orion | 1976.0 | Pohl, Frederik | Abduction -- Fiction; Astral projection -- Fiction; Science fiction; PS; Human-alien encounters -- Fiction; Space ships -- Fiction; Interstellar travel -- Fiction | THE FIVE HELLS OF ORION
BY FREDERICK POHL
Out in the great gas cloud of the Orion
Nebula McCray found an ally—and a foe!
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of If Science Fiction, January 1963.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
His name was Herrell McCray and he was scared.
As best he could tell, he was in a sort of room no bigger than a prison
cell. Perhaps it was a prison cell. Whatever it was, he had no business
in it; for five minutes before he had been spaceborne, on the Long Jump
from Earth to the thriving colonies circling Betelgeuse Nine. McCray
was ship's navigator, plotting course corrections—not that there were
any, ever; but the reason there were none was that the check-sightings
were made every hour of the long flight. He had read off the azimuth
angles from the computer sights, automatically locked on their beacon
stars, and found them correct; then out of long habit confirmed the
locking mechanism visually. It was only a personal quaintness; he had
done it a thousand times. And while he was looking at Betelgeuse, Rigel
and Saiph ... it happened.
The room was totally dark, and it seemed to be furnished with a
collection of hard, sharp, sticky and knobby objects of various shapes
and a number of inconvenient sizes. McCray tripped over something
that rocked under his feet and fell against something that clattered
hollowly. He picked himself up, braced against something that smelled
dangerously of halogen compounds, and scratched his shoulder, right
through his space-tunic, against something that vibrated as he touched
it.
McCray had no idea where he was, and no way to find out.
Not only was he in darkness, but in utter silence as well. No. Not
quite utter silence.
Somewhere, just at the threshold of his senses, there was something
like a voice. He could not quite hear it, but it was there. He sat as
still as he could, listening; it remained elusive.
Probably it was only an illusion.
But the room itself was hard fact. McCray swore violently and out loud.
It was crazy and impossible. There simply was no way for him to get
from a warm, bright navigator's cubicle on
Starship Jodrell Bank
to
this damned, dark, dismal hole of a place where everything was out to
hurt him and nothing explained what was going on. He cried aloud in
exasperation: "If I could only
see
!"
He tripped and fell against something that was soft, slimy and, like
baker's dough, not at all resilient.
A flickering halo of pinkish light appeared. He sat up, startled. He
was looking at something that resembled a suit of medieval armor.
It was, he saw in a moment, not armor but a spacesuit. But what was the
light? And what were these other things in the room?
Wherever he looked, the light danced along with his eyes. It was like
having tunnel vision or wearing blinders. He could see what he was
looking at, but he could see nothing else. And the things he could
see made no sense. A spacesuit, yes; he knew that he could construct
a logical explanation for that with no trouble—maybe a subspace
meteorite striking the
Jodrell Bank
, an explosion, himself knocked
out, brought here in a suit ... well, it was an explanation with more
holes than fabric, like a fisherman's net, but at least it was rational.
How to explain a set of Gibbon's
Decline and Fall of the Roman
Empire?
A space-ax? Or the old-fashioned child's rocking-chair, the
chemistry set—or, most of all, the scrap of gaily printed fabric
that, when he picked it up, turned out to be a girl's scanty bathing
suit? It was slightly reassuring, McCray thought, to find that most of
the objects were more or less familiar. Even the child's chair—why,
he'd had one more or less like that himself, long before he was old
enough to go to school. But what were they doing here?
Not everything he saw was familiar. The walls of the room itself were
strange. They were not metal or plaster or knotty pine; they were
not papered, painted or overlaid with stucco. They seemed to be made
of some sort of hard organic compound, perhaps a sort of plastic or
processed cellulose. It was hard to tell colors in the pinkish light.
But they seemed to have none. They were "neutral"—the color of aged
driftwood or unbleached cloth.
Three of the walls were that way, and the floor and ceiling. The fourth
wall was something else. Areas in it had the appearance of gratings;
from them issued the pungent, distasteful halogen odor. They might be
ventilators, he thought; but if so the air they brought in was worse
than what he already had.
McCray was beginning to feel more confident. It was astonishing how a
little light made an impossible situation bearable, how quickly his
courage flowed back when he could see again.
He stood still, thinking. Item, a short time ago—subjectively it
seemed to be minutes—he had been aboard the
Jodrell Bank
with
nothing more on his mind than completing his check-sighting and meeting
one of the female passengers for coffee. Item, apart from being
shaken up and—he admitted it—scared damn near witless, he did not
seem to be hurt. Item, wherever he was now, it became, not so much what
had happened to him, but what had happened to the ship?
He allowed that thought to seep into his mind. Suppose there had been
an accident to the
Jodrell Bank
.
He could, of course, be dead. All this could be the fantasies of a
cooling brain.
McCray grinned into the pink-lit darkness. The thought had somehow
refreshed him, like icewater between rounds, and with a clearing head
he remembered what a spacesuit was good for.
It held a radio.
He pressed the unsealing tabs, slipped his hand into the vacant chest
of the suit and pulled out the hand mike. "This is Herrell McCray," he
said, "calling the
Jodrell Bank
."
No response. He frowned. "This is Herrell McCray, calling
Jodrell
Bank
.
"Herrell McCray, calling anybody, come in, please."
But there was no answer.
Thoughtfully he replaced the microphone. This was ultrawave radio,
something more than a million times faster than light, with a range
measured, at least, in hundreds of light-years. If there was no answer,
he was a good long way from anywhere.
Of course, the thing might not be operating.
He reached for the microphone again—
He cried aloud.
The pinkish lights went out. He was in the dark again, worse dark than
before.
For before the light had gone, McCray had seen what had escaped
his eyes before. The suit and the microphone were clear enough in
the pinkish glimmer; but the hand—his own hand, cupped to hold the
microphone—he had not seen at all. Nor his arm. Nor, in one fleeting
moment of study, his chest.
McCray could not see any part of his own body at all.
II
Someone else could.
Someone was watching Herrell McCray, with the clinical fascination
of a biochemist observing the wigglings of paramecia in a new
antibiotic—and with the prayerful emotions of a starving, shipwrecked,
sailor, watching the inward bobbing drift of a wave-born cask that
may
contain food.
Suppose you call him "Hatcher" (and suppose you call it a "him.")
Hatcher was not exactly male, because his race had no true males; but
it did have females and he was certainly not that. Hatcher did not in
any way look like a human being, but they had features in common.
If Hatcher and McCray had somehow managed to strike up an acquaintance,
they might have got along very well. Hatcher, like McCray, was an
adventurous soul, young, able, well-learned in the technical sciences
of his culture. Both enjoyed games—McCray baseball, poker and
three-dimensional chess; Hatcher a number of sports which defy human
description. Both held positions of some importance—considering their
ages—in the affairs of their respective worlds.
Physically they were nothing alike. Hatcher was a three-foot,
hard-shelled sphere of jelly. He had "arms" and "legs," but they were
not organically attached to "himself." They were snakelike things which
obeyed the orders of his brain as well as your mind can make your toes
curl; but they did not touch him directly. Indeed, they worked as well
a yard or a quarter-mile away as they did when, rarely, they rested
in the crevices they had been formed from in his "skin." At greater
distances they worked less well, for reasons irrelevant to the Law of
Inverse Squares.
Hatcher's principal task at this moment was to run the "probe team"
which had McCray under observation, and he was more than a little
excited. His members, disposed about the room where he had sent them on
various errands, quivered and shook a little; yet they were the calmest
limbs in the room; the members of the other team workers were in a
state of violent commotion.
The probe team had had a shock.
"Paranormal powers," muttered Hatcher's second in command, and the
others mumbled agreement. Hatcher ordered silence, studying the
specimen from Earth.
After a long moment he turned his senses from the Earthman.
"Incredible—but it's true enough," he said. "I'd better report. Watch
him," he added, but that was surely unnecessary. Their job was to
watch McCray, and they would do their job; and even more, not one of
them could have looked away to save his life from the spectacle of
a creature as odd and, from their point of view, hideously alien as
Herrell McCray.
Hatcher hurried through the halls of the great buried structure in
which he worked, toward the place where the supervising council of all
probes would be in permanent session. They admitted him at once.
Hatcher identified himself and gave a quick, concise report:
"The subject recovered consciousness a short time ago and began to
inspect his enclosure. His method of doing so was to put his own
members in physical contact with the various objects in the enclosure.
After observing him do this for a time we concluded he might be unable
to see and so we illuminated his field of vision for him.
"This appeared to work well for a time. He seemed relatively
undisturbed. However, he then reverted to physical-contact,
manipulating certain appurtenances of an artificial skin we had
provided for him.
"He then began to vibrate the atmosphere by means of resonating organs
in his breathing passage.
"Simultaneously, the object he was holding, attached to the artificial
skin, was discovered to be generating paranormal forces."
The supervising council rocked with excitement. "You're sure?" demanded
one of the councilmen.
"Yes, sir. The staff is preparing a technical description of the forces
now, but I can say that they are electromagnetic vibrations modulating
a carrier wave of very high speed, and in turn modulated by the
vibrations of the atmosphere caused by the subject's own breathing."
"Fantastic," breathed the councillor, in a tone of dawning hope. "How
about communicating with him, Hatcher? Any progress?"
"Well ... not much, sir. He suddenly panicked. We don't know why; but
we thought we'd better pull back and let him recover for a while."
The council conferred among itself for a moment, Hatcher waiting. It
was not really a waste of time for him; with the organs he had left in
the probe-team room, he was in fairly close touch with what was going
on—knew that McCray was once again fumbling among the objects in the
dark, knew that the team-members had tried illuminating the room for
him briefly and again produced the rising panic.
Still, Hatcher fretted. He wanted to get back.
"Stop fidgeting," commanded the council leader abruptly. "Hatcher, you
are to establish communication at once."
"But, sir...." Hatcher swung closer, his thick skin quivering slightly;
he would have gestured if he had brought members with him to gesture
with. "We've done everything we dare. We've made the place homey
for him—" actually, what he said was more like,
we've warmed the
biophysical nuances of his enclosure
—"and tried to guess his needs;
and we're frightening him half to death. We
can't
go faster. This
creature is in no way similar to us, you know. He relies on paranormal
forces—heat, light, kinetic energy—for his life. His chemistry is not
ours, his processes of thought are not ours, his entire organism is
closer to the inanimate rocks of a sea-bottom than to ourselves."
"Understood, Hatcher. In your first report you stated these creatures
were intelligent."
"Yes, sir. But not in our way."
"But in
a
way, and you must learn that way. I know." One lobster-claw
shaped member drifted close to the councillor's body and raised itself
in an admonitory gesture. "You want time. But we don't have time,
Hatcher. Yours is not the only probe team working. The Central Masses
team has just turned in a most alarming report."
"Have they secured a subject?" Hatcher demanded jealously.
The councillor paused. "Worse than that, Hatcher. I am afraid their
subjects have secured one of them. One of them is missing."
There was a moment's silence. Frozen, Hatcher could only wait. The
council room was like a tableau in a museum until the councillor spoke
again, each council member poised over his locus-point, his members
drifting about him.
Finally the councillor said, "I speak for all of us, I think. If the
Old Ones have seized one of our probers our time margin is considerably
narrowed. Indeed, we may not have any time at all. You must do
everything you can to establish communication with your subject."
"But the danger to the specimen—" Hatcher protested automatically.
"—is no greater," said the councillor, "than the danger to every one
of us if we do not find allies
now
."
Hatcher returned to his laboratory gloomily.
It was just like the council to put the screws on; they had a
reputation for demanding results at any cost—even at the cost of
destroying the only thing you had that would make results possible.
Hatcher did not like the idea of endangering the Earthman. It cannot
be said that he was emotionally involved; it was not pity or sympathy
that caused him to regret the dangers in moving too fast toward
communication. Not even Hatcher had quite got over the revolting
physical differences between the Earthman and his own people. But
Hatcher did not want him destroyed. It had been difficult enough
getting him here.
Hatcher checked through the members that he had left with the rest of
his team and discovered that there were no immediate emergencies, so he
took time to eat. In Hatcher's race this was accomplished in ways not
entirely pleasant to Earthmen. A slit in the lower hemisphere of his
body opened, like a purse, emitting a thin, pussy, fetid fluid which
Hatcher caught and poured into a disposal trough at the side of the
eating room. He then stuffed the slit with pulpy vegetation the texture
of kelp; it closed, and his body was supplied with nourishment for
another day.
He returned quickly to the room.
His second in command was busy, but one of the other team workers
reported—nothing new—and asked about Hatcher's appearance before the
council. Hatcher passed the question off. He considered telling his
staff about the disappearance of the Central Masses team member, but
decided against it. He had not been told it was secret. On the other
hand, he had not been told it was not. Something of this importance was
not lightly to be gossiped about. For endless generations the threat
of the Old Ones had hung over his race, those queer, almost mythical
beings from the Central Masses of the galaxy. One brush with them, in
ages past, had almost destroyed Hatcher's people. Only by running and
hiding, bearing one of their planets with them and abandoning it—with
its population—as a decoy, had they arrived at all.
Now they had detected mapping parties of the Old Ones dangerously near
the spiral arm of the galaxy in which their planet was located, they
had begun the Probe Teams to find some way of combating them, or of
fleeing again.
But it seemed that the Probe Teams themselves might be betraying their
existence to their enemies—
"Hatcher!"
The call was urgent; he hurried to see what it was about. It was his
second in command, very excited. "What is it?" Hatcher demanded.
"Wait...."
Hatcher was patient; he knew his assistant well. Obviously something
was about to happen. He took the moment to call his members back to
him for feeding; they dodged back to their niches on his skin, fitted
themselves into their vestigial slots, poured back their wastes into
his own circulation and ingested what they needed from the meal he had
just taken.... "Now!" cried the assistant. "Look!"
At what passed among Hatcher's people for a viewing console an image
was forming. Actually it was the assistant himself who formed it, not a
cathode trace or projected shadow; but it showed what it was meant to
show.
Hatcher was startled. "Another one! And—is it a different species? Or
merely a different sex?"
"Study the probe for yourself," the assistant invited.
Hatcher studied him frostily; his patience was not, after all, endless.
"No matter," he said at last. "Bring the other one in."
And then, in a completely different mood, "We may need him badly. We
may be in the process of killing our first one now."
"Killing him, Hatcher?"
Hatcher rose and shook himself, his mindless members floating away like
puppies dislodged from suck. "Council's orders," he said. "We've got to
go into Stage Two of the project at once."
III
Before Stage Two began, or before Herrell McCray realized it had begun,
he had an inspiration.
The dark was absolute, but he remembered where the spacesuit had been
and groped his way to it and, yes, it had what all spacesuits had to
have. It had a light. He found the toggle that turned it on and pressed
it.
Light. White, flaring, Earthly light, that showed everything—even
himself.
"God bless," he said, almost beside himself with joy. Whatever that
pinkish, dancing halo had been, it had thrown him into a panic; now
that he could see his own hand again, he could blame the weird effects
on some strange property of the light.
At the moment he heard the click that was the beginning of Stage Two.
He switched off the light and stood for a moment, listening.
For a second he thought he heard the far-off voice, quiet, calm and
almost hopeless, that he had sensed hours before; but then that was
gone. Something else was gone. Some faint mechanical sound that had
hardly registered at the time, but was not missing. And there was,
perhaps, a nice new sound that had not been there before; a very
faint, an almost inaudible elfin hiss.
McCray switched the light on and looked around. There seemed to be no
change.
And yet, surely, it was warmer in here.
He could see no difference; but perhaps, he thought, he could smell
one. The unpleasant halogen odor from the grating was surely stronger
now. He stood there, perplexed.
A tinny little voice from the helmet of the space suit said sharply,
amazement in its tone, "McCray, is that you? Where the devil are you
calling from?"
He forgot smell, sound and temperature and leaped for the suit. "This
is Herrell McCray," he cried. "I'm in a room of some sort, apparently
on a planet of approximate Earth mass. I don't know—"
"McCray!" cried the tiny voice in his ear. "Where are you? This is
Jodrell Bank
calling. Answer, please!"
"I
am
answering, damn it," he roared. "What took you so long?"
"Herrell McCray," droned the tiny voice in his ear, "Herrell McCray,
Herrell McCray, this is
Jodrell Bank
responding to your message,
acknowledge please. Herrell McCray, Herrell McCray...."
It kept on, and on.
McCray took a deep breath and thought. Something was wrong. Either they
didn't hear him, which meant the radio wasn't transmitting, or—no.
That was not it; they
had
heard him, because they were responding.
But it seemed to take them so long....
Abruptly his face went white. Took them so long! He cast back in his
mind, questing for a fact, unable to face its implications. When was
it he called them? Two hours ago? Three?
Did that mean—did it
possibly
mean—that there was a lag of an hour
or two each way? Did it, for example, mean that at the speed of his
suit's pararadio, millions of times faster than light, it took
hours
to get a message to the ship and back?
And if so ... where in the name of heaven was he?
Herrell McCray was a navigator, which is to say, a man who has learned
to trust the evidence of mathematics and instrument readings beyond the
guesses of his "common sense." When
Jodrell Bank
, hurtling faster
than light in its voyage between stars, made its regular position
check, common sense was a liar. Light bore false witness. The line of
sight was trustworthy directly forward and directly after—sometimes
not even then—and it took computers, sensing their data through
instruments, to comprehend a star bearing and convert three fixes into
a position.
If the evidence of his radio contradicted common sense, common sense
was wrong. Perhaps it was impossible to believe what the radio's
message implied; but it was not necessary to "believe," only to act.
McCray thumbed down the transmitter button and gave a concise report
of his situation and his guesses. "I don't know how I got here. I
don't know how long I've been gone, since I was unconscious for a
time. However, if the transmission lag is a reliable indication—" he
swallowed and went on—"I'd estimate I am something more than five
hundred light-years away from you at this moment. That's all I have to
say, except for one more word: Help."
He grinned sourly and released the button. The message was on its way,
and it would be hours before he could have a reply. Therefore he had to
consider what to do next.
He mopped his brow. With the droning, repetitious call from the ship
finally quiet, the room was quiet again. And warm.
Very warm, he thought tardily; and more than that. The halogen stench
was strong in his nostrils again.
Hurriedly McCray scrambled into the suit. By the time he was sealed
down he was coughing from the bottom of his lungs, deep, tearing rasps
that pained him, uncontrollable. Chlorine or fluorine, one of them was
in the air he had been breathing. He could not guess where it had come
from; but it was ripping his lungs out.
He flushed the interior of the suit out with a reckless disregard for
the wastage of his air reserve, holding his breath as much as he could,
daring only shallow gasps that made him retch and gag. After a long
time he could breathe, though his eyes were spilling tears.
He could see the fumes in the room now. The heat was building up.
Automatically—now that he had put it on and so started its
servo-circuits operating—the suit was cooling him. This was a
deep-space suit, regulation garb when going outside the pressure hull
of an FTL ship. It was good up to at least five hundred degrees in thin
air, perhaps three or four hundred in dense. In thin air or in space it
was the elastic joints and couplings that depolymerized when the heat
grew too great; in dense air, with conduction pouring energy in faster
than the cooling coils could suck it out and hurl it away, it was the
refrigerating equipment that broke down.
McCray had no way of knowing just how hot it was going to get. Nor,
for that matter, had the suit been designed to operate in a corrosive
medium.
All in all it was time for him to do something.
Among the debris on the floor, he remembered, was a five-foot space-ax,
tungsten-steel blade and springy aluminum shaft.
McCray caught it up and headed for the door. It felt good in his
gauntlets, a rewarding weight; any weapon straightens the back of the
man who holds it, and McCray was grateful for this one. With something
concrete to do he could postpone questioning. Never mind why he had
been brought here; never mind how. Never mind what he would, or could,
do next; all those questions could recede into the background of his
mind while he swung the ax and battered his way out of this poisoned
oven.
Crash-clang!
The double jolt ran up the shaft of the ax, through his
gauntlets and into his arm; but he was making progress, he could see
the plastic—or whatever it was—of the door. It was chipping out. Not
easily, very reluctantly; but flaking out in chips that left a white
powdery residue.
At this rate, he thought grimly, he would be an hour getting through
it. Did he have an hour?
But it did not take an hour. One blow was luckier than the rest; it
must have snapped the lock mechanism. The door shook and slid ajar.
McCray got the thin of the blade into the crack and pried it wide.
He was in another room, maybe a hall, large and bare.
McCray put the broad of his back against the broken door and pressed it
as nearly closed as he could; it might not keep the gas and heat out,
but it would retard them.
The room was again unlighted—at least to McCray's eyes. There was not
even that pink pseudo-light that had baffled him; here was nothing
but the beam of his suit lamp. What it showed was cryptic. There were
evidences of use: shelves, boxy contraptions that might have been
cupboards, crude level surfaces attached to the walls that might have
been workbenches. Yet they were queerly contrived, for it was not
possible to guess from them much about the creatures who used them.
Some were near the floor, some at waist height, some even suspended
from the ceiling itself. A man would need a ladder to work at these
benches and McCray, staring, thought briefly of many-armed blind giants
or shapeless huge intelligent amoebae, and felt the skin prickle at the
back of his neck.
He tapped half-heartedly at one of the closed cupboards, and was not
surprised when it proved as refractory as the door. Undoubtedly he
could batter it open, but it was not likely that much would be left of
its contents when he was through; and there was the question of time.
But his attention was diverted by a gleam from one of the benches.
Metallic parts lay heaped in a pile. He poked at them with a
stiff-fingered gauntlet; they were oddly familiar. They were, he
thought, very much like the parts of a bullet-gun.
In fact, they were. He could recognize barrel, chamber, trigger, even
a couple of cartridges, neatly opened and the grains of powder stacked
beside them. It was an older, clumsier model than the kind he had seen
in survival locker, on the
Jodrell Bank
—and abruptly wished he were
carrying now—but it was a pistol. Another trophy, like the strange
assortment in the other room? He could not guess. But the others had
been more familiar; they all have come from his own ship. He was
prepared to swear that nothing like this antique had been aboard.
The drone began again in his ear, as it had at five-minute intervals
all along:
"Herrell McCray, Herrell McCray, Herrell McCray, this is
Jodrell Bank
calling Herrell McCray...."
And louder, blaring, then fading to normal volume as the AVC circuits
toned the signal down, another voice. A woman's voice, crying out in
panic and fear: "
Jodrell Bank!
Where are you? Help!"
IV
Hatcher's second in command said: "He has got through the first
survival test. In fact, he broke his way out! What next?"
"Wait!" Hatcher ordered sharply. He was watching the new specimen and
a troublesome thought had occurred to him. The new one was female and
seemed to be in pain; but it was not the pain that disturbed Hatcher,
it was something far more immediate to his interests.
"I think," he said slowly, "that they are in contact."
His assistant vibrated startlement.
"I know," Hatcher said, "but watch. Do you see? He is going straight
toward her."
Hatcher, who was not human, did not possess truly human emotions; but
he did feel amazement when he was amazed, and fear when there was
cause to be afraid. These specimens, obtained with so much difficulty,
needed so badly, were his responsibility. He knew the issues involved
much better than any of his helpers. They could only be surprised at
the queer antics of the aliens with attached limbs and strange powers.
Hatcher knew that this was not a freak show, but a matter of life and
death. He said, musing:
"This new one, I cannot communicate with her, but I get—almost—a
whisper, now and then. The first one, the male, nothing. But this
female is perhaps not quite mute."
"Then shall we abandon him and work with her, forgetting the first one?"
Hatcher hesitated. "No," he said at last. "The male is responding well.
Remember that when last this experiment was done every subject died; he
is alive at least. But I am wondering. We can't quite communicate with
the female—"
"But?"
"But I'm not sure that others can't."
The woman's voice was at such close range that McCray's suit radio made
a useful RDF set. He located her direction easily enough, shielding the
tiny built-in antenna with the tungsten-steel blade of the ax, while
she begged him to hurry. Her voice was heavily accented, with some
words in a language he did not recognize. She seemed to be in shock.
McCray was hardly surprised at that; he had been close enough to shock
himself. He tried to reassure her as he searched for a way out of the
hall, but in the middle of a word her voice stopped.
He hesitated, hefting the ax, glancing back at the way he had come.
There had to be a way out, even if it meant chopping through a wall.
When he turned around again there was a door. It was oddly shaped and
unlike the door he had hewn through, but clearly a door all the same,
and it was open.
McCray regarded it grimly. He went back in his memory with meticulous
care. Had he not looked at, this very spot a matter of moments before?
He had. And had there been an open door then? There had not. There
hadn't been even a shadowy outline of the three-sided, uneven opening
that stood there now.
Still, it led in the proper direction. McCray added one more
inexplicable fact to his file and walked through. He was in another
hall—or tunnel—rising quite steeply to the right. By his reckoning it
was the proper direction. He labored up it, sweating under the weight
of the suit, and found another open door, this one round, and behind
it—
Yes, there was the woman whose voice he had heard.
It was a woman, all right. The voice had been so strained that he
hadn't been positive. Even now, short black hair might not have proved
it, and she was lying face down but the waist and hips were a woman's,
even though she wore a bulky, quilted suit of coveralls.
He knelt beside her and gently turned her face.
She was unconscious. Broad, dark face, with no make-up; she was
apparently in her late thirties. She appeared to be Chinese.
She breathed, a little raggedly but without visible discomfort; her
face was relaxed as though she were sleeping. She did not rouse as he
moved her.
He realized she was breathing the air of the room they were in.
His instant first thought was that she was in danger of asphyxiation;
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/1/3/8/61380//61380-h//61380-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | What does it mean to be a navigator?
| 61380_KG4GXTUS_7 | [
"To trust mathematics and instrument readings for the greater good of exploring the cosmos. \n",
"To have a quick wit sharp enough to parse the problem of becoming a captive. \n",
"To trust mathematics and instrument readings more than common sense. \n",
"To have a quick wit fast enough to escape the deadly trials of Hatcher’s Stage Two. \n"
] | 3 | 3 | [
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61,380 | 61380_KG4GXTUS | 12 | 1,010 | Gutenberg | The Five Hells of Orion | 1976.0 | Pohl, Frederik | Abduction -- Fiction; Astral projection -- Fiction; Science fiction; PS; Human-alien encounters -- Fiction; Space ships -- Fiction; Interstellar travel -- Fiction | THE FIVE HELLS OF ORION
BY FREDERICK POHL
Out in the great gas cloud of the Orion
Nebula McCray found an ally—and a foe!
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
Worlds of If Science Fiction, January 1963.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
His name was Herrell McCray and he was scared.
As best he could tell, he was in a sort of room no bigger than a prison
cell. Perhaps it was a prison cell. Whatever it was, he had no business
in it; for five minutes before he had been spaceborne, on the Long Jump
from Earth to the thriving colonies circling Betelgeuse Nine. McCray
was ship's navigator, plotting course corrections—not that there were
any, ever; but the reason there were none was that the check-sightings
were made every hour of the long flight. He had read off the azimuth
angles from the computer sights, automatically locked on their beacon
stars, and found them correct; then out of long habit confirmed the
locking mechanism visually. It was only a personal quaintness; he had
done it a thousand times. And while he was looking at Betelgeuse, Rigel
and Saiph ... it happened.
The room was totally dark, and it seemed to be furnished with a
collection of hard, sharp, sticky and knobby objects of various shapes
and a number of inconvenient sizes. McCray tripped over something
that rocked under his feet and fell against something that clattered
hollowly. He picked himself up, braced against something that smelled
dangerously of halogen compounds, and scratched his shoulder, right
through his space-tunic, against something that vibrated as he touched
it.
McCray had no idea where he was, and no way to find out.
Not only was he in darkness, but in utter silence as well. No. Not
quite utter silence.
Somewhere, just at the threshold of his senses, there was something
like a voice. He could not quite hear it, but it was there. He sat as
still as he could, listening; it remained elusive.
Probably it was only an illusion.
But the room itself was hard fact. McCray swore violently and out loud.
It was crazy and impossible. There simply was no way for him to get
from a warm, bright navigator's cubicle on
Starship Jodrell Bank
to
this damned, dark, dismal hole of a place where everything was out to
hurt him and nothing explained what was going on. He cried aloud in
exasperation: "If I could only
see
!"
He tripped and fell against something that was soft, slimy and, like
baker's dough, not at all resilient.
A flickering halo of pinkish light appeared. He sat up, startled. He
was looking at something that resembled a suit of medieval armor.
It was, he saw in a moment, not armor but a spacesuit. But what was the
light? And what were these other things in the room?
Wherever he looked, the light danced along with his eyes. It was like
having tunnel vision or wearing blinders. He could see what he was
looking at, but he could see nothing else. And the things he could
see made no sense. A spacesuit, yes; he knew that he could construct
a logical explanation for that with no trouble—maybe a subspace
meteorite striking the
Jodrell Bank
, an explosion, himself knocked
out, brought here in a suit ... well, it was an explanation with more
holes than fabric, like a fisherman's net, but at least it was rational.
How to explain a set of Gibbon's
Decline and Fall of the Roman
Empire?
A space-ax? Or the old-fashioned child's rocking-chair, the
chemistry set—or, most of all, the scrap of gaily printed fabric
that, when he picked it up, turned out to be a girl's scanty bathing
suit? It was slightly reassuring, McCray thought, to find that most of
the objects were more or less familiar. Even the child's chair—why,
he'd had one more or less like that himself, long before he was old
enough to go to school. But what were they doing here?
Not everything he saw was familiar. The walls of the room itself were
strange. They were not metal or plaster or knotty pine; they were
not papered, painted or overlaid with stucco. They seemed to be made
of some sort of hard organic compound, perhaps a sort of plastic or
processed cellulose. It was hard to tell colors in the pinkish light.
But they seemed to have none. They were "neutral"—the color of aged
driftwood or unbleached cloth.
Three of the walls were that way, and the floor and ceiling. The fourth
wall was something else. Areas in it had the appearance of gratings;
from them issued the pungent, distasteful halogen odor. They might be
ventilators, he thought; but if so the air they brought in was worse
than what he already had.
McCray was beginning to feel more confident. It was astonishing how a
little light made an impossible situation bearable, how quickly his
courage flowed back when he could see again.
He stood still, thinking. Item, a short time ago—subjectively it
seemed to be minutes—he had been aboard the
Jodrell Bank
with
nothing more on his mind than completing his check-sighting and meeting
one of the female passengers for coffee. Item, apart from being
shaken up and—he admitted it—scared damn near witless, he did not
seem to be hurt. Item, wherever he was now, it became, not so much what
had happened to him, but what had happened to the ship?
He allowed that thought to seep into his mind. Suppose there had been
an accident to the
Jodrell Bank
.
He could, of course, be dead. All this could be the fantasies of a
cooling brain.
McCray grinned into the pink-lit darkness. The thought had somehow
refreshed him, like icewater between rounds, and with a clearing head
he remembered what a spacesuit was good for.
It held a radio.
He pressed the unsealing tabs, slipped his hand into the vacant chest
of the suit and pulled out the hand mike. "This is Herrell McCray," he
said, "calling the
Jodrell Bank
."
No response. He frowned. "This is Herrell McCray, calling
Jodrell
Bank
.
"Herrell McCray, calling anybody, come in, please."
But there was no answer.
Thoughtfully he replaced the microphone. This was ultrawave radio,
something more than a million times faster than light, with a range
measured, at least, in hundreds of light-years. If there was no answer,
he was a good long way from anywhere.
Of course, the thing might not be operating.
He reached for the microphone again—
He cried aloud.
The pinkish lights went out. He was in the dark again, worse dark than
before.
For before the light had gone, McCray had seen what had escaped
his eyes before. The suit and the microphone were clear enough in
the pinkish glimmer; but the hand—his own hand, cupped to hold the
microphone—he had not seen at all. Nor his arm. Nor, in one fleeting
moment of study, his chest.
McCray could not see any part of his own body at all.
II
Someone else could.
Someone was watching Herrell McCray, with the clinical fascination
of a biochemist observing the wigglings of paramecia in a new
antibiotic—and with the prayerful emotions of a starving, shipwrecked,
sailor, watching the inward bobbing drift of a wave-born cask that
may
contain food.
Suppose you call him "Hatcher" (and suppose you call it a "him.")
Hatcher was not exactly male, because his race had no true males; but
it did have females and he was certainly not that. Hatcher did not in
any way look like a human being, but they had features in common.
If Hatcher and McCray had somehow managed to strike up an acquaintance,
they might have got along very well. Hatcher, like McCray, was an
adventurous soul, young, able, well-learned in the technical sciences
of his culture. Both enjoyed games—McCray baseball, poker and
three-dimensional chess; Hatcher a number of sports which defy human
description. Both held positions of some importance—considering their
ages—in the affairs of their respective worlds.
Physically they were nothing alike. Hatcher was a three-foot,
hard-shelled sphere of jelly. He had "arms" and "legs," but they were
not organically attached to "himself." They were snakelike things which
obeyed the orders of his brain as well as your mind can make your toes
curl; but they did not touch him directly. Indeed, they worked as well
a yard or a quarter-mile away as they did when, rarely, they rested
in the crevices they had been formed from in his "skin." At greater
distances they worked less well, for reasons irrelevant to the Law of
Inverse Squares.
Hatcher's principal task at this moment was to run the "probe team"
which had McCray under observation, and he was more than a little
excited. His members, disposed about the room where he had sent them on
various errands, quivered and shook a little; yet they were the calmest
limbs in the room; the members of the other team workers were in a
state of violent commotion.
The probe team had had a shock.
"Paranormal powers," muttered Hatcher's second in command, and the
others mumbled agreement. Hatcher ordered silence, studying the
specimen from Earth.
After a long moment he turned his senses from the Earthman.
"Incredible—but it's true enough," he said. "I'd better report. Watch
him," he added, but that was surely unnecessary. Their job was to
watch McCray, and they would do their job; and even more, not one of
them could have looked away to save his life from the spectacle of
a creature as odd and, from their point of view, hideously alien as
Herrell McCray.
Hatcher hurried through the halls of the great buried structure in
which he worked, toward the place where the supervising council of all
probes would be in permanent session. They admitted him at once.
Hatcher identified himself and gave a quick, concise report:
"The subject recovered consciousness a short time ago and began to
inspect his enclosure. His method of doing so was to put his own
members in physical contact with the various objects in the enclosure.
After observing him do this for a time we concluded he might be unable
to see and so we illuminated his field of vision for him.
"This appeared to work well for a time. He seemed relatively
undisturbed. However, he then reverted to physical-contact,
manipulating certain appurtenances of an artificial skin we had
provided for him.
"He then began to vibrate the atmosphere by means of resonating organs
in his breathing passage.
"Simultaneously, the object he was holding, attached to the artificial
skin, was discovered to be generating paranormal forces."
The supervising council rocked with excitement. "You're sure?" demanded
one of the councilmen.
"Yes, sir. The staff is preparing a technical description of the forces
now, but I can say that they are electromagnetic vibrations modulating
a carrier wave of very high speed, and in turn modulated by the
vibrations of the atmosphere caused by the subject's own breathing."
"Fantastic," breathed the councillor, in a tone of dawning hope. "How
about communicating with him, Hatcher? Any progress?"
"Well ... not much, sir. He suddenly panicked. We don't know why; but
we thought we'd better pull back and let him recover for a while."
The council conferred among itself for a moment, Hatcher waiting. It
was not really a waste of time for him; with the organs he had left in
the probe-team room, he was in fairly close touch with what was going
on—knew that McCray was once again fumbling among the objects in the
dark, knew that the team-members had tried illuminating the room for
him briefly and again produced the rising panic.
Still, Hatcher fretted. He wanted to get back.
"Stop fidgeting," commanded the council leader abruptly. "Hatcher, you
are to establish communication at once."
"But, sir...." Hatcher swung closer, his thick skin quivering slightly;
he would have gestured if he had brought members with him to gesture
with. "We've done everything we dare. We've made the place homey
for him—" actually, what he said was more like,
we've warmed the
biophysical nuances of his enclosure
—"and tried to guess his needs;
and we're frightening him half to death. We
can't
go faster. This
creature is in no way similar to us, you know. He relies on paranormal
forces—heat, light, kinetic energy—for his life. His chemistry is not
ours, his processes of thought are not ours, his entire organism is
closer to the inanimate rocks of a sea-bottom than to ourselves."
"Understood, Hatcher. In your first report you stated these creatures
were intelligent."
"Yes, sir. But not in our way."
"But in
a
way, and you must learn that way. I know." One lobster-claw
shaped member drifted close to the councillor's body and raised itself
in an admonitory gesture. "You want time. But we don't have time,
Hatcher. Yours is not the only probe team working. The Central Masses
team has just turned in a most alarming report."
"Have they secured a subject?" Hatcher demanded jealously.
The councillor paused. "Worse than that, Hatcher. I am afraid their
subjects have secured one of them. One of them is missing."
There was a moment's silence. Frozen, Hatcher could only wait. The
council room was like a tableau in a museum until the councillor spoke
again, each council member poised over his locus-point, his members
drifting about him.
Finally the councillor said, "I speak for all of us, I think. If the
Old Ones have seized one of our probers our time margin is considerably
narrowed. Indeed, we may not have any time at all. You must do
everything you can to establish communication with your subject."
"But the danger to the specimen—" Hatcher protested automatically.
"—is no greater," said the councillor, "than the danger to every one
of us if we do not find allies
now
."
Hatcher returned to his laboratory gloomily.
It was just like the council to put the screws on; they had a
reputation for demanding results at any cost—even at the cost of
destroying the only thing you had that would make results possible.
Hatcher did not like the idea of endangering the Earthman. It cannot
be said that he was emotionally involved; it was not pity or sympathy
that caused him to regret the dangers in moving too fast toward
communication. Not even Hatcher had quite got over the revolting
physical differences between the Earthman and his own people. But
Hatcher did not want him destroyed. It had been difficult enough
getting him here.
Hatcher checked through the members that he had left with the rest of
his team and discovered that there were no immediate emergencies, so he
took time to eat. In Hatcher's race this was accomplished in ways not
entirely pleasant to Earthmen. A slit in the lower hemisphere of his
body opened, like a purse, emitting a thin, pussy, fetid fluid which
Hatcher caught and poured into a disposal trough at the side of the
eating room. He then stuffed the slit with pulpy vegetation the texture
of kelp; it closed, and his body was supplied with nourishment for
another day.
He returned quickly to the room.
His second in command was busy, but one of the other team workers
reported—nothing new—and asked about Hatcher's appearance before the
council. Hatcher passed the question off. He considered telling his
staff about the disappearance of the Central Masses team member, but
decided against it. He had not been told it was secret. On the other
hand, he had not been told it was not. Something of this importance was
not lightly to be gossiped about. For endless generations the threat
of the Old Ones had hung over his race, those queer, almost mythical
beings from the Central Masses of the galaxy. One brush with them, in
ages past, had almost destroyed Hatcher's people. Only by running and
hiding, bearing one of their planets with them and abandoning it—with
its population—as a decoy, had they arrived at all.
Now they had detected mapping parties of the Old Ones dangerously near
the spiral arm of the galaxy in which their planet was located, they
had begun the Probe Teams to find some way of combating them, or of
fleeing again.
But it seemed that the Probe Teams themselves might be betraying their
existence to their enemies—
"Hatcher!"
The call was urgent; he hurried to see what it was about. It was his
second in command, very excited. "What is it?" Hatcher demanded.
"Wait...."
Hatcher was patient; he knew his assistant well. Obviously something
was about to happen. He took the moment to call his members back to
him for feeding; they dodged back to their niches on his skin, fitted
themselves into their vestigial slots, poured back their wastes into
his own circulation and ingested what they needed from the meal he had
just taken.... "Now!" cried the assistant. "Look!"
At what passed among Hatcher's people for a viewing console an image
was forming. Actually it was the assistant himself who formed it, not a
cathode trace or projected shadow; but it showed what it was meant to
show.
Hatcher was startled. "Another one! And—is it a different species? Or
merely a different sex?"
"Study the probe for yourself," the assistant invited.
Hatcher studied him frostily; his patience was not, after all, endless.
"No matter," he said at last. "Bring the other one in."
And then, in a completely different mood, "We may need him badly. We
may be in the process of killing our first one now."
"Killing him, Hatcher?"
Hatcher rose and shook himself, his mindless members floating away like
puppies dislodged from suck. "Council's orders," he said. "We've got to
go into Stage Two of the project at once."
III
Before Stage Two began, or before Herrell McCray realized it had begun,
he had an inspiration.
The dark was absolute, but he remembered where the spacesuit had been
and groped his way to it and, yes, it had what all spacesuits had to
have. It had a light. He found the toggle that turned it on and pressed
it.
Light. White, flaring, Earthly light, that showed everything—even
himself.
"God bless," he said, almost beside himself with joy. Whatever that
pinkish, dancing halo had been, it had thrown him into a panic; now
that he could see his own hand again, he could blame the weird effects
on some strange property of the light.
At the moment he heard the click that was the beginning of Stage Two.
He switched off the light and stood for a moment, listening.
For a second he thought he heard the far-off voice, quiet, calm and
almost hopeless, that he had sensed hours before; but then that was
gone. Something else was gone. Some faint mechanical sound that had
hardly registered at the time, but was not missing. And there was,
perhaps, a nice new sound that had not been there before; a very
faint, an almost inaudible elfin hiss.
McCray switched the light on and looked around. There seemed to be no
change.
And yet, surely, it was warmer in here.
He could see no difference; but perhaps, he thought, he could smell
one. The unpleasant halogen odor from the grating was surely stronger
now. He stood there, perplexed.
A tinny little voice from the helmet of the space suit said sharply,
amazement in its tone, "McCray, is that you? Where the devil are you
calling from?"
He forgot smell, sound and temperature and leaped for the suit. "This
is Herrell McCray," he cried. "I'm in a room of some sort, apparently
on a planet of approximate Earth mass. I don't know—"
"McCray!" cried the tiny voice in his ear. "Where are you? This is
Jodrell Bank
calling. Answer, please!"
"I
am
answering, damn it," he roared. "What took you so long?"
"Herrell McCray," droned the tiny voice in his ear, "Herrell McCray,
Herrell McCray, this is
Jodrell Bank
responding to your message,
acknowledge please. Herrell McCray, Herrell McCray...."
It kept on, and on.
McCray took a deep breath and thought. Something was wrong. Either they
didn't hear him, which meant the radio wasn't transmitting, or—no.
That was not it; they
had
heard him, because they were responding.
But it seemed to take them so long....
Abruptly his face went white. Took them so long! He cast back in his
mind, questing for a fact, unable to face its implications. When was
it he called them? Two hours ago? Three?
Did that mean—did it
possibly
mean—that there was a lag of an hour
or two each way? Did it, for example, mean that at the speed of his
suit's pararadio, millions of times faster than light, it took
hours
to get a message to the ship and back?
And if so ... where in the name of heaven was he?
Herrell McCray was a navigator, which is to say, a man who has learned
to trust the evidence of mathematics and instrument readings beyond the
guesses of his "common sense." When
Jodrell Bank
, hurtling faster
than light in its voyage between stars, made its regular position
check, common sense was a liar. Light bore false witness. The line of
sight was trustworthy directly forward and directly after—sometimes
not even then—and it took computers, sensing their data through
instruments, to comprehend a star bearing and convert three fixes into
a position.
If the evidence of his radio contradicted common sense, common sense
was wrong. Perhaps it was impossible to believe what the radio's
message implied; but it was not necessary to "believe," only to act.
McCray thumbed down the transmitter button and gave a concise report
of his situation and his guesses. "I don't know how I got here. I
don't know how long I've been gone, since I was unconscious for a
time. However, if the transmission lag is a reliable indication—" he
swallowed and went on—"I'd estimate I am something more than five
hundred light-years away from you at this moment. That's all I have to
say, except for one more word: Help."
He grinned sourly and released the button. The message was on its way,
and it would be hours before he could have a reply. Therefore he had to
consider what to do next.
He mopped his brow. With the droning, repetitious call from the ship
finally quiet, the room was quiet again. And warm.
Very warm, he thought tardily; and more than that. The halogen stench
was strong in his nostrils again.
Hurriedly McCray scrambled into the suit. By the time he was sealed
down he was coughing from the bottom of his lungs, deep, tearing rasps
that pained him, uncontrollable. Chlorine or fluorine, one of them was
in the air he had been breathing. He could not guess where it had come
from; but it was ripping his lungs out.
He flushed the interior of the suit out with a reckless disregard for
the wastage of his air reserve, holding his breath as much as he could,
daring only shallow gasps that made him retch and gag. After a long
time he could breathe, though his eyes were spilling tears.
He could see the fumes in the room now. The heat was building up.
Automatically—now that he had put it on and so started its
servo-circuits operating—the suit was cooling him. This was a
deep-space suit, regulation garb when going outside the pressure hull
of an FTL ship. It was good up to at least five hundred degrees in thin
air, perhaps three or four hundred in dense. In thin air or in space it
was the elastic joints and couplings that depolymerized when the heat
grew too great; in dense air, with conduction pouring energy in faster
than the cooling coils could suck it out and hurl it away, it was the
refrigerating equipment that broke down.
McCray had no way of knowing just how hot it was going to get. Nor,
for that matter, had the suit been designed to operate in a corrosive
medium.
All in all it was time for him to do something.
Among the debris on the floor, he remembered, was a five-foot space-ax,
tungsten-steel blade and springy aluminum shaft.
McCray caught it up and headed for the door. It felt good in his
gauntlets, a rewarding weight; any weapon straightens the back of the
man who holds it, and McCray was grateful for this one. With something
concrete to do he could postpone questioning. Never mind why he had
been brought here; never mind how. Never mind what he would, or could,
do next; all those questions could recede into the background of his
mind while he swung the ax and battered his way out of this poisoned
oven.
Crash-clang!
The double jolt ran up the shaft of the ax, through his
gauntlets and into his arm; but he was making progress, he could see
the plastic—or whatever it was—of the door. It was chipping out. Not
easily, very reluctantly; but flaking out in chips that left a white
powdery residue.
At this rate, he thought grimly, he would be an hour getting through
it. Did he have an hour?
But it did not take an hour. One blow was luckier than the rest; it
must have snapped the lock mechanism. The door shook and slid ajar.
McCray got the thin of the blade into the crack and pried it wide.
He was in another room, maybe a hall, large and bare.
McCray put the broad of his back against the broken door and pressed it
as nearly closed as he could; it might not keep the gas and heat out,
but it would retard them.
The room was again unlighted—at least to McCray's eyes. There was not
even that pink pseudo-light that had baffled him; here was nothing
but the beam of his suit lamp. What it showed was cryptic. There were
evidences of use: shelves, boxy contraptions that might have been
cupboards, crude level surfaces attached to the walls that might have
been workbenches. Yet they were queerly contrived, for it was not
possible to guess from them much about the creatures who used them.
Some were near the floor, some at waist height, some even suspended
from the ceiling itself. A man would need a ladder to work at these
benches and McCray, staring, thought briefly of many-armed blind giants
or shapeless huge intelligent amoebae, and felt the skin prickle at the
back of his neck.
He tapped half-heartedly at one of the closed cupboards, and was not
surprised when it proved as refractory as the door. Undoubtedly he
could batter it open, but it was not likely that much would be left of
its contents when he was through; and there was the question of time.
But his attention was diverted by a gleam from one of the benches.
Metallic parts lay heaped in a pile. He poked at them with a
stiff-fingered gauntlet; they were oddly familiar. They were, he
thought, very much like the parts of a bullet-gun.
In fact, they were. He could recognize barrel, chamber, trigger, even
a couple of cartridges, neatly opened and the grains of powder stacked
beside them. It was an older, clumsier model than the kind he had seen
in survival locker, on the
Jodrell Bank
—and abruptly wished he were
carrying now—but it was a pistol. Another trophy, like the strange
assortment in the other room? He could not guess. But the others had
been more familiar; they all have come from his own ship. He was
prepared to swear that nothing like this antique had been aboard.
The drone began again in his ear, as it had at five-minute intervals
all along:
"Herrell McCray, Herrell McCray, Herrell McCray, this is
Jodrell Bank
calling Herrell McCray...."
And louder, blaring, then fading to normal volume as the AVC circuits
toned the signal down, another voice. A woman's voice, crying out in
panic and fear: "
Jodrell Bank!
Where are you? Help!"
IV
Hatcher's second in command said: "He has got through the first
survival test. In fact, he broke his way out! What next?"
"Wait!" Hatcher ordered sharply. He was watching the new specimen and
a troublesome thought had occurred to him. The new one was female and
seemed to be in pain; but it was not the pain that disturbed Hatcher,
it was something far more immediate to his interests.
"I think," he said slowly, "that they are in contact."
His assistant vibrated startlement.
"I know," Hatcher said, "but watch. Do you see? He is going straight
toward her."
Hatcher, who was not human, did not possess truly human emotions; but
he did feel amazement when he was amazed, and fear when there was
cause to be afraid. These specimens, obtained with so much difficulty,
needed so badly, were his responsibility. He knew the issues involved
much better than any of his helpers. They could only be surprised at
the queer antics of the aliens with attached limbs and strange powers.
Hatcher knew that this was not a freak show, but a matter of life and
death. He said, musing:
"This new one, I cannot communicate with her, but I get—almost—a
whisper, now and then. The first one, the male, nothing. But this
female is perhaps not quite mute."
"Then shall we abandon him and work with her, forgetting the first one?"
Hatcher hesitated. "No," he said at last. "The male is responding well.
Remember that when last this experiment was done every subject died; he
is alive at least. But I am wondering. We can't quite communicate with
the female—"
"But?"
"But I'm not sure that others can't."
The woman's voice was at such close range that McCray's suit radio made
a useful RDF set. He located her direction easily enough, shielding the
tiny built-in antenna with the tungsten-steel blade of the ax, while
she begged him to hurry. Her voice was heavily accented, with some
words in a language he did not recognize. She seemed to be in shock.
McCray was hardly surprised at that; he had been close enough to shock
himself. He tried to reassure her as he searched for a way out of the
hall, but in the middle of a word her voice stopped.
He hesitated, hefting the ax, glancing back at the way he had come.
There had to be a way out, even if it meant chopping through a wall.
When he turned around again there was a door. It was oddly shaped and
unlike the door he had hewn through, but clearly a door all the same,
and it was open.
McCray regarded it grimly. He went back in his memory with meticulous
care. Had he not looked at, this very spot a matter of moments before?
He had. And had there been an open door then? There had not. There
hadn't been even a shadowy outline of the three-sided, uneven opening
that stood there now.
Still, it led in the proper direction. McCray added one more
inexplicable fact to his file and walked through. He was in another
hall—or tunnel—rising quite steeply to the right. By his reckoning it
was the proper direction. He labored up it, sweating under the weight
of the suit, and found another open door, this one round, and behind
it—
Yes, there was the woman whose voice he had heard.
It was a woman, all right. The voice had been so strained that he
hadn't been positive. Even now, short black hair might not have proved
it, and she was lying face down but the waist and hips were a woman's,
even though she wore a bulky, quilted suit of coveralls.
He knelt beside her and gently turned her face.
She was unconscious. Broad, dark face, with no make-up; she was
apparently in her late thirties. She appeared to be Chinese.
She breathed, a little raggedly but without visible discomfort; her
face was relaxed as though she were sleeping. She did not rouse as he
moved her.
He realized she was breathing the air of the room they were in.
His instant first thought was that she was in danger of asphyxiation;
| http://aleph.gutenberg.org/6/1/3/8/61380//61380-h//61380-h.htm | This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you’ll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Please refer to https://www.gutenberg.org/policy/license.html for the detailed license. | What is the image Hatcher’s team sees on the viewing consul?
| 61380_KG4GXTUS_8 | [
"A human female \n",
"Hatcher’s specimen \n",
"The Jordell Bank\n",
"A human male\n"
] | 1 | 1 | [
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"untimed_eval1_answerability": 1,
"untimed_eval2_context": 1
}
] | [
{
"speed_annotator_id": "0001",
"speed_answer": 2
},
{
"speed_annotator_id": "0006",
"speed_answer": 3
},
{
"speed_annotator_id": "0020",
"speed_answer": 2
},
{
"speed_annotator_id": "0034",
"speed_answer": 2
},
{
"speed_annotator_id": "0004",
"speed_answer": 1
}
] | 1 |