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31355_7INGZJ49_4 | What does Dunbar mean in calling the other stars 'Jezebels' of stars? | Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from Space Science Fiction May 1952. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.
TO EACH HIS STAR
by
BRYCE WALTON
"Nothing around those other suns but ashes and dried
blood," old Dunbar told the space-wrecked, desperate men.
"Only one way to go, where we can float down through the
clouds to Paradise. That's straight ahead to the sun with
the red rim around it."
But Dunbar's eyes were old and uncertain. How could they
believe in his choice when every star in this forsaken
section of space was surrounded by a beckoning red rim?
There was just blackness, frosty glimmering terrible blackness, going
out and out forever in all directions. Russell didn't think they could
remain sane in all this blackness much longer. Bitterly he thought of
how they would die—not knowing within maybe thousands of light years
where they were, or where they were going.
After the wreck, the four of them had floated a while, floated and
drifted together, four men in bulbous pressure suits like small
individual rockets, held together by an awful pressing need for each
other and by the "gravity-rope" beam.
Dunbar, the oldest of the four, an old space-buster with a face
wrinkled like a dried prune, burned by cosmic rays and the suns of
worlds so far away they were scarcely credible, had taken command.
Suddenly, Old Dunbar had known where they were. Suddenly, Dunbar knew
where they were going.
They could talk to one another through the etheric transmitters inside
their helmets. They could live ... if this was living ... a long time,
if only a man's brain would hold up, Russell thought. The suits were
complete units. 700 pounds each, all enclosing shelters, with
atmosphere pressure, temperature control, mobility in space, and
electric power. Each suit had its own power-plant, reprocessing
continuously the precious air breathed by the occupants, putting it
back into circulation again after enriching it. Packed with food
concentrates. Each suit a rocket, each human being part of a rocket,
and the special "life-gun" that went with each suit each blast of
which sent a man a few hundred thousand miles further on toward
wherever he was going.
Four men, thought Russell, held together by an invisible string of
gravity, plunging through a lost pocket of hell's dark where there had
never been any sound or life, with old Dunbar the first in line,
taking the lead because he was older and knew where he was and where
he was going. Maybe Johnson, second in line, and Alvar who was third,
knew too, but were afraid to admit it.
But Russell knew it and he'd admitted it from the first—that old
Dunbar was as crazy as a Jovian juke-bird.
A lot of time had rushed past into darkness. Russell had no idea now
how long the four of them had been plunging toward the red-rimmed sun
that never seemed to get any nearer. When the ultra-drive had gone
crazy the four of them had blanked out and nobody could say now how
long an interim that had been. Nobody knew what happened to a man who
suffered a space-time warping like that. When they had regained
consciousness, the ship was pretty banged up, and the meteor-repeller
shields cracked. A meteor ripped the ship down the center like an old
breakfast cannister.
How long ago that had been, Russell didn't know. All Russell knew was
that they were millions of light years from any place he had ever
heard about, where the galactic space lanterns had absolutely no
recognizable pattern. But Dunbar knew. And Russell was looking at
Dunbar's suit up ahead, watching it more and more intently, thinking
about how Dunbar looked inside that suit—and hating Dunbar more and
more for claiming he knew when he didn't, for his drooling
optimism—because he was taking them on into deeper darkness and
calling their destination Paradise.
Russell wanted to laugh, but the last time he'd given way to this
impulse, the results inside his helmet had been too unpleasant to
repeat.
Sometimes Russell thought of other things besides his growing hatred
of the old man. Sometimes he thought about the ship, lost back there
in the void, and he wondered if wrecked space ships were ever found.
Compared with the universe in which one of them drifted, a wrecked
ship was a lot smaller than a grain of sand on a nice warm beach back
on Earth, or one of those specks of silver dust that floated like
strange seeds down the night winds of Venus.
And a human was smaller still, thought Russell when he was not hating
Dunbar. Out here, a human being is the smallest thing of all. He
thought then of what Dunbar would say to such a thought, how Dunbar
would laugh that high piping squawking laugh of his and say that the
human being was bigger than the Universe itself.
Dunbar had a big answer for every little thing.
When the four of them had escaped from that prison colony on a
sizzling hot asteroid rock in the Ronlwhyn system, that wasn't enough
for Dunbar. Hell no—Dunbar had to start talking about a place they
could go where they'd never be apprehended, in a system no one else
had ever heard of, where they could live like gods on a green soft
world like the Earth had been a long time back.
And Dunbar had spouted endlessly about a world of treasure they would
find, if they would just follow old Dunbar. That's what all four of
them had been trying to find all their lives in the big cold grabbag
of eternity—a rich star, a rich far fertile star where no one else
had ever been, loaded with treasure that had no name, that no one had
ever heard of before. And was, because of that, the richest treasure
of all.
We all look alike out here in these big rocket pressure suits, Russell
thought. No one for God only knew how many of millions of light years
away could see or care. Still—we might have a chance to live, even
now, Russell thought—if it weren't for old crazy Dunbar.
They might have a chance if Alvar and Johnson weren't so damn lacking
in self-confidence as to put all their trust in that crazed old
rum-dum. Russell had known now for some time that they were going in
the wrong direction. No reason for knowing. Just a hunch. And Russell
was sure his hunch was right.
Russell said. "Look—look to your left and to your right and behind
us. Four suns. You guys see those other three suns all around you,
don't you?"
"Sure," someone said.
"Well, if you'll notice," Russell said, "the one on the left also now
has a red rim around it. Can't you guys see that?"
"Yeah, I see it," Alvar said.
"So now," Johnson said, "there's two suns with red rims around them."
"We're about in the middle of those four suns aren't we, Dunbar?"
Russell said.
"That's right, boys!" yelled old Dunbar in that sickeningly optimistic
voice. Like a hysterical old woman's. "Just about in the sweet dark
old middle."
"You're still sure it's the sun up ahead ... that's the only one with
life on it, Dunbar ... the only one we can live on?" Russell asked.
"That's right! That's right," Dunbar yelled. "That's the only one—and
it's a paradise. Not just a place to live, boys—but a place you'll
have trouble believing in because it's like a dream!"
"And none of these other three suns have worlds we could live on,
Dunbar?" Russell asked. Keep the old duck talking like this and maybe
Alvar and Johnson would see that he was cracked.
"Yeah," said Alvar. "You still say that, Dunbar?"
"No life, boys, nothing," Dunbar laughed. "Nothing on these other
worlds but ashes ... just ashes and iron and dried blood, dried a
million years or more."
"When in hell were you ever here?" Johnson said. "You say you were
here before. You never said when, or why or anything!"
"It was a long time back boys. Don't remember too well, but it was
when we had an old ship called the DOG STAR that I was here. A pirate
ship and I was second in command, and we came through this sector.
That was—hell, it musta' been fifty years ago. I been too many places
nobody's ever bothered to name or chart, to remember where it is, but
I been here. I remember those four suns all spotted to form a perfect
circle from this point, with us squarely in the middle. We explored
all these suns and the worlds that go round 'em. Trust me, boys, and
we'll reach the right one. And that one's just like Paradise."
"Paradise is it," Russell whispered hoarsely.
"Paradise and there we'll be like gods, like Mercuries with wings
flying on nights of sweet song. These other suns, don't let them
bother you. They're Jezebels of stars. All painted up in the darkness
and pretty and waiting and calling and lying! They make you think of
nice green worlds all running waters and dews and forests thick as
fleas on a wet dog. But it ain't there, boys. I know this place. I
been here, long time back."
Russell said tightly. "It'll take us a long time won't it? If it's got
air we can breath, and water we can drink and shade we can rest
in—that'll be paradise enough for us. But it'll take a long time
won't it? And what if it isn't there—what if after all the time we
spend hoping and getting there—there won't be nothing but ashes and
cracked clay?"
"I know we're going right," Dunbar said cheerfully. "I can tell. Like
I said—you can tell it because of the red rim around it."
"But the sun on our left, you can see—it's got a red rim too now,"
Russell said.
"Yeah, that's right," said Alvar. "Sometimes I see a red rim around
the one we're going for, sometimes a red rim around that one on the
left. Now, sometimes I'm not sure either of them's got a red rim. You
said that one had a red rim, Dunbar, and I wanted to believe it. So
now maybe we're all seeing a red rim that was never there."
Old Dunbar laughed. The sound brought blood hotly to Russell's face.
"We're heading to the right one, boys. Don't doubt me ... I been here.
We explored all these sun systems. And I remember it all. The second
planet from that red-rimmed sun. You come down through a soft
atmosphere, floating like in a dream. You see the green lakes coming
up through the clouds and the women dancing and the music playing. I
remember seeing a ship there that brought those women there, a long
long time before ever I got there. A land like heaven and women like
angels singing and dancing and laughing with red lips and arms white
as milk, and soft silky hair floating in the winds."
Russell was very sick of the old man's voice. He was at least glad he
didn't have to look at the old man now. His bald head, his skinny
bobbing neck, his simpering watery blue eyes. But he still had to
suffer that immutable babbling, that idiotic cheerfulness ... and
knowing all the time the old man was crazy, that he was leading them
wrong.
I'd break away, go it alone to the right sun, Russell thought—but I'd
never make it alone. A little while out here alone and I'd be nuttier
than old Dunbar will ever be, even if he keeps on getting nuttier all
the time.
Somewhere, sometime then ... Russell got the idea that the only way
was to get rid of Dunbar.
You mean to tell us there are people living by that red-rimmed sun,"
Russell said.
"Lost people ... lost ... who knows how long," Dunbar said, as the
four of them hurtled along. "You never know where you'll find people
on a world somewhere nobody's ever named or knows about. Places where
a lost ship's landed and never got up again, or wrecked itself so far
off the lanes they'll never be found except by accident for millions
of years. That's what this world is, boys. Must have been a ship load
of beautiful people, maybe actresses and people like that being hauled
to some outpost to entertain. They're like angels now, living in a
land all free from care. Every place you see green forests and fields
and blue lakes, and at nights there's three moons that come around the
sky in a thousand different colors. And it never gets cold ... it's
always spring, always spring, boys, and the music plays all night,
every night of a long long year...."
Russell suddenly shouted. "Keep quiet, Dunbar. Shut up will you?"
Johnson said. "Dunbar—how long'll it take us?"
"Six months to a year, I'd say," Dunbar yelled happily. "That is—of
our hereditary time."
"What?" croaked Alvar.
Johnson didn't say anything at all.
Russell screamed at Dunbar, then quieted down. He whispered. "Six
months to a year—out here—cooped up in these damn suits. You're
crazy as hell, Dunbar. Crazy ... crazy! Nobody could stand it. We'll
all be crazier than you are—"
"We'll make it, boys. Trust ole' Dunbar. What's a year when we know
we're getting to Paradise at the end of it? What's a year out here ...
it's paradise ain't it, compared with that prison hole we were rotting
in? We can make it. We have the food concentrates, and all the rest.
All we need's the will, boys, and we got that. The whole damn Universe
isn't big enough to kill the will of a human being, boys. I been over
a whole lot of it, and I know. In the old days—"
"The hell with the old days," screamed Russell.
"Now quiet down, Russ," Dunbar said in a kind of dreadful crooning
whisper. "You calm down now. You younger fellows—you don't look at
things the way we used to. Thing is, we got to go straight. People
trapped like this liable to start meandering. Liable to start losing
the old will-power."
He chuckled.
"Yeah," said Alvar. "Someone says maybe we ought to go left, and
someone says to go right, and someone else says to go in another
direction. And then someone says maybe they'd better go back the old
way. An' pretty soon something breaks, or the food runs out, and
you're a million million miles from someplace you don't care about any
more because you're dead. All frozen up in space ... preserved like a
piece of meat in a cold storage locker. And then maybe in a million
years or so some lousy insect man from Jupiter comes along and finds
you and takes you away to a museum...."
"Shut up!" Johnson yelled.
Dunbar laughed. "Boys, boys, don't get panicky. Keep your heads. Just
stick to old Dunbar and he'll see you through. I'm always lucky. Only
one way to go ... an' that's straight ahead to the sun with the
red-rim around it ... and then we tune in the gravity repellers, and
coast down, floating and singing down through the clouds to
paradise."
After that they traveled on for what seemed months to Russell, but it
couldn't have been over a day or two of the kind of time-sense he had
inherited from Earth.
Then he saw how the other two stars also were beginning to develop red
rims. He yelled this fact out to the others. And Alvar said. "Russ's
right. That sun to the right, and the one behind us ... now they ALL
have red rims around them. Dunbar—" A pause and no awareness of
motion.
Dunbar laughed. "Sure, they all maybe have a touch of red, but it
isn't the same, boys. I can tell the difference. Trust me—"
Russell half choked on his words. "You old goat! With those old eyes
of yours, you couldn't see your way into a fire!"
"Don't get panicky now. Keep your heads. In another year, we'll be
there—"
"God, you gotta' be sure," Alvar said. "I don't mind dyin' out here.
But after a year of this, and then to get to a world that was only
ashes, and not able to go any further—"
"I always come through, boys. I'm lucky. Angel women will take us to
their houses on the edges of cool lakes, little houses that sit there
in the sun like fancy jewels. And we'll walk under colored fountains,
pretty colored fountains just splashing and splashing like pretty rain
on our hungry hides. That's worth waiting for."
Russell did it before he hardly realized he was killing the old man.
It was something he had had to do for a long time and that made it
easy. There was a flash of burning oxygen from inside the suit of
Dunbar. If he'd aimed right, Russell knew the fire-bullet should have
pierced Dunbar's back. Now the fire was gone, extinguished
automatically by units inside the suit. The suit was still inflated,
self-sealing. Nothing appeared to have changed. The four of them
hurtling on together, but inside that first suit up there on the front
of the gravity rope, Dunbar was dead.
He was dead and his mouth was shut for good.
Dunbar's last faint cry from inside his suit still rang in Russell's
ears, and he knew Alvar and Johnson had heard it too. Alvar and
Johnson both called Dunbar's name a few times. There was no answer.
"Russ—you shouldn't have done that," Johnson whispered. "You
shouldn't have done that to the old man!"
"No," Alvar said, so low he could barely be heard. "You shouldn't have
done it."
"I did it for the three of us," Russell said. "It was either him or us.
Lies ... lies that was all he had left in his crazy head. Paradise ...
don't tell me you guys don't see the red rims around all four suns, all
four suns all around us. Don't tell me you guys didn't know he was batty,
that you really believed all that stuff he was spouting all the time!"
"Maybe he was lying, maybe not," Johnson said. "Now he's dead anyway."
"Maybe he was wrong, crazy, full of lies," Alvar said. "But now he's
dead."
"How could he see any difference in those four stars?" Russell said,
louder.
"He thought he was right," Alvar said. "He wanted to take us to
paradise. He was happy, nothing could stop the old man—but he's dead
now."
He sighed.
"He was taking us wrong ... wrong!" Russell screamed. "Angels—music
all night—houses like jewels—and women like angels—"
"
Shhhh
," said Alvar. It was quiet. How could it be so quiet, Russell
thought? And up ahead the old man's pressure suit with a corpse inside
went on ahead, leading the other three at the front of the
gravity-rope.
"Maybe he was wrong," Alvar said. "But now do we know which way is
right?"
Sometime later, Johnson said, "We got to decide now. Let's forget the
old man. Let's forget him and all that's gone and let's start now and
decide what to do."
And Alvar said, "Guess he was crazy all right, and I guess we trusted
him because we didn't have the strength to make up our own minds. Why
does a crazy man's laugh sound so good when you're desperate and don't
know what to do?"
"I always had a feeling we were going wrong," Johnson said. "Anyway,
it's forgotten, Russ. It's swallowed up in the darkness all around.
It's never been."
Russell said, "I've had a hunch all along that maybe the old man was
here before, and that he was right about there being a star here with
a world we can live on. But I've known we was heading wrong. I've had
a hunch all along that the right star was the one to the left."
"I don't know," Johnson sighed. "I been feeling partial toward that
one on the right. What about you, Alvar?"
"I always thought we were going straight in the opposite direction
from what we should, I guess. I always wanted to turn around and go
back. It won't make over maybe a month's difference. And what does a
month matter anyway out here—hell there never was any time out here
until we came along. We make our own time here, and a month don't
matter to me."
Sweat ran down Russell's face. His voice trembled. "No—that's wrong.
You're both wrong." He could see himself going it alone. Going crazy
because he was alone. He'd have broken away, gone his own direction,
long ago but for that fear.
"How can we tell which of us is right?" Alvar said. "It's like
everything was changing all the time out here. Sometimes I'd swear
none of those suns had red rims, and at other times—like the old man
said, they're all pretty and lying and saying nothing, just changing
all the time. Jezebel stars, the old man said."
"I know I'm right," Russell pleaded. "My hunches always been right.
My hunch got us out of that prison didn't it? Listen—I tell you it's
that star to the left—"
"The one to the right," said Johnson.
"We been going away from the right one all the time," said Alvar.
"We got to stay together," said Russell. "Nobody could spend a year
out here ... alone...."
"Ah ... in another month or so we'd be lousy company anyway," Alvar
said. "Maybe a guy could get to the point where he'd sleep most of the
time ... just wake up enough times to give himself another boost with
the old life-gun."
"We got to face it," Johnson said finally. "We three don't go on
together any more."
"That's it," said Alvar. "There's three suns that look like they might
be right seeing as how we all agree the old man was wrong. But we
believe there is one we can live by, because we all seem to agree that
the old man might have been right about that. If we stick together,
the chance is three to one against us. But if each of us makes for one
star, one of us has a chance to live. Maybe not in paradise like the
old man said, but a place where we can live. And maybe there'll be
intelligent life, maybe even a ship, and whoever gets the right star
can come and help the other two...."
"No ... God no...." Russell whispered over and over. "None of us can
ever make it alone...."
Alvar said, "We each take the star he likes best. I'll go back the
other way. Russ, you take the left. And you, Johnson, go to the
right."
Johnson started to laugh. Russell was yelling wildly at them, and
above his own yelling he could hear Johnson's rising laughter. "Every
guy's got a star of his own," Johnson said when he stopped laughing.
"And we got ours. A nice red-rimmed sun for each of us to call his
very own."
"Okay," Alvar said. "We cut off the gravity rope, and each to his own
sun."
Now Russell wasn't saying anything.
"And the old man," Alvar said, "can keep right on going toward what he
thought was right. And he'll keep on going. Course he won't be able to
give himself another boost with the life-gun, but he'll keep going.
Someday he'll get to that red-rimmed star of his. Out here in space,
once you're going, you never stop ... and I guess there isn't any
other body to pull him off his course. And what will time matter to
old Dunbar? Even less than to us, I guess. He's dead and he won't
care."
"Ready," Johnson said. "I'll cut off the gravity rope."
"I'm ready," Alvar said. "To go back toward whatever it was I started
from."
"Ready, Russ?"
Russell couldn't say anything. He stared at the endless void which now
he would share with no one. Not even crazy old Dunbar.
"All right," Johnson said. "Good-bye."
Russell felt the release, felt the sudden inexplicable isolation and
aloneness even before Alvar and Johnson used their life-guns and shot
out of sight, Johnson toward the left and Alvar back toward that other
red-rimmed sun behind them.
And old Dunbar shooting right on ahead. And all three of them
dwindling and dwindling and blinking out like little lights.
Fading, he could hear their voices. "Each to his own star," Johnson
said. "On a bee line."
"On a bee line," Alvar said.
Russell used his own life-gun and in a little while he didn't hear
Alvar or Johnson's voices, nor could he see them. They were thousands
of miles away, and going further all the time.
Russell's head fell forward against the front of his helmet, and he
closed his eyes. "Maybe," he thought, "I shouldn't have killed the old
man. Maybe one sun's as good as another...."
Then he raised his body and looked out into the year of blackness that
waited for him, stretching away to the red-rimmed sun. Even if he were
right—he was sure now he'd never make it alone.
The body inside the pressure suit drifted into a low-level orbit
around the second planet from the sun of its choice, and drifted there
a long time. A strato-cruiser detected it by chance because of the
strong concentration of radio-activity that came from it.
They took the body down to one of the small, quiet towns on the edge
of one of the many blue lakes where the domed houses were like bright
joyful jewels. They got the leathery, well-preserved body from the
pressure suit.
"An old man," one of them mused. "A very old man. From one of the lost
sectors. I wonder how and why he came so very far from his home?"
"Wrecked a ship out there, probably," one of the others said. "But he
managed to get this far. It looks as though a small meteor fragment
pierced his body. Here. You see?"
"Yes," another of them said. "But what amazes me is that this old man
picked this planet out of all the others. The only one in this entire
sector that would sustain life."
"Maybe he was just a very lucky old man. Yes ... a man who attains
such an age was usually lucky. Or at least that is what they say about
the lost sectors."
"Maybe he knew the way here. Maybe he was here before—sometime."
The other shook his head. "I don't think so. They say some humans from
that far sector did land here—but that's probably only a myth. And if
they did, it was well over a thousand years ago."
Another said. "He has a fine face, this old man. A noble face. Whoever
he is ... wherever he came from, he died bravely and he knew the way,
though he never reached this haven of the lost alive."
"Nor is it irony that he reached here dead," said the Lake Chieftain.
He had been listening and he stepped forward and raised his arm. "He
was old. It is obvious that he fought bravely, that he had great
courage, and that he knew the way. He will be given a burial suitable
to his stature, and he will rest here among the brave.
"Let the women dance and the music play for this old man. Let the
trumpets speak, and the rockets fly up. And let flowers be strewn over
the path above which the women will carry him to rest." | They are uncomely on the exterior, but thriving within | They are designed to lure men to their deaths | They are meant to distract travelers from their main focus | They are seductive, but ultimately, unworthy of pursuit | 3 |
31355_7INGZJ49_5 | What is ironic about Russell's decision to kill Dunbar? | Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from Space Science Fiction May 1952. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.
TO EACH HIS STAR
by
BRYCE WALTON
"Nothing around those other suns but ashes and dried
blood," old Dunbar told the space-wrecked, desperate men.
"Only one way to go, where we can float down through the
clouds to Paradise. That's straight ahead to the sun with
the red rim around it."
But Dunbar's eyes were old and uncertain. How could they
believe in his choice when every star in this forsaken
section of space was surrounded by a beckoning red rim?
There was just blackness, frosty glimmering terrible blackness, going
out and out forever in all directions. Russell didn't think they could
remain sane in all this blackness much longer. Bitterly he thought of
how they would die—not knowing within maybe thousands of light years
where they were, or where they were going.
After the wreck, the four of them had floated a while, floated and
drifted together, four men in bulbous pressure suits like small
individual rockets, held together by an awful pressing need for each
other and by the "gravity-rope" beam.
Dunbar, the oldest of the four, an old space-buster with a face
wrinkled like a dried prune, burned by cosmic rays and the suns of
worlds so far away they were scarcely credible, had taken command.
Suddenly, Old Dunbar had known where they were. Suddenly, Dunbar knew
where they were going.
They could talk to one another through the etheric transmitters inside
their helmets. They could live ... if this was living ... a long time,
if only a man's brain would hold up, Russell thought. The suits were
complete units. 700 pounds each, all enclosing shelters, with
atmosphere pressure, temperature control, mobility in space, and
electric power. Each suit had its own power-plant, reprocessing
continuously the precious air breathed by the occupants, putting it
back into circulation again after enriching it. Packed with food
concentrates. Each suit a rocket, each human being part of a rocket,
and the special "life-gun" that went with each suit each blast of
which sent a man a few hundred thousand miles further on toward
wherever he was going.
Four men, thought Russell, held together by an invisible string of
gravity, plunging through a lost pocket of hell's dark where there had
never been any sound or life, with old Dunbar the first in line,
taking the lead because he was older and knew where he was and where
he was going. Maybe Johnson, second in line, and Alvar who was third,
knew too, but were afraid to admit it.
But Russell knew it and he'd admitted it from the first—that old
Dunbar was as crazy as a Jovian juke-bird.
A lot of time had rushed past into darkness. Russell had no idea now
how long the four of them had been plunging toward the red-rimmed sun
that never seemed to get any nearer. When the ultra-drive had gone
crazy the four of them had blanked out and nobody could say now how
long an interim that had been. Nobody knew what happened to a man who
suffered a space-time warping like that. When they had regained
consciousness, the ship was pretty banged up, and the meteor-repeller
shields cracked. A meteor ripped the ship down the center like an old
breakfast cannister.
How long ago that had been, Russell didn't know. All Russell knew was
that they were millions of light years from any place he had ever
heard about, where the galactic space lanterns had absolutely no
recognizable pattern. But Dunbar knew. And Russell was looking at
Dunbar's suit up ahead, watching it more and more intently, thinking
about how Dunbar looked inside that suit—and hating Dunbar more and
more for claiming he knew when he didn't, for his drooling
optimism—because he was taking them on into deeper darkness and
calling their destination Paradise.
Russell wanted to laugh, but the last time he'd given way to this
impulse, the results inside his helmet had been too unpleasant to
repeat.
Sometimes Russell thought of other things besides his growing hatred
of the old man. Sometimes he thought about the ship, lost back there
in the void, and he wondered if wrecked space ships were ever found.
Compared with the universe in which one of them drifted, a wrecked
ship was a lot smaller than a grain of sand on a nice warm beach back
on Earth, or one of those specks of silver dust that floated like
strange seeds down the night winds of Venus.
And a human was smaller still, thought Russell when he was not hating
Dunbar. Out here, a human being is the smallest thing of all. He
thought then of what Dunbar would say to such a thought, how Dunbar
would laugh that high piping squawking laugh of his and say that the
human being was bigger than the Universe itself.
Dunbar had a big answer for every little thing.
When the four of them had escaped from that prison colony on a
sizzling hot asteroid rock in the Ronlwhyn system, that wasn't enough
for Dunbar. Hell no—Dunbar had to start talking about a place they
could go where they'd never be apprehended, in a system no one else
had ever heard of, where they could live like gods on a green soft
world like the Earth had been a long time back.
And Dunbar had spouted endlessly about a world of treasure they would
find, if they would just follow old Dunbar. That's what all four of
them had been trying to find all their lives in the big cold grabbag
of eternity—a rich star, a rich far fertile star where no one else
had ever been, loaded with treasure that had no name, that no one had
ever heard of before. And was, because of that, the richest treasure
of all.
We all look alike out here in these big rocket pressure suits, Russell
thought. No one for God only knew how many of millions of light years
away could see or care. Still—we might have a chance to live, even
now, Russell thought—if it weren't for old crazy Dunbar.
They might have a chance if Alvar and Johnson weren't so damn lacking
in self-confidence as to put all their trust in that crazed old
rum-dum. Russell had known now for some time that they were going in
the wrong direction. No reason for knowing. Just a hunch. And Russell
was sure his hunch was right.
Russell said. "Look—look to your left and to your right and behind
us. Four suns. You guys see those other three suns all around you,
don't you?"
"Sure," someone said.
"Well, if you'll notice," Russell said, "the one on the left also now
has a red rim around it. Can't you guys see that?"
"Yeah, I see it," Alvar said.
"So now," Johnson said, "there's two suns with red rims around them."
"We're about in the middle of those four suns aren't we, Dunbar?"
Russell said.
"That's right, boys!" yelled old Dunbar in that sickeningly optimistic
voice. Like a hysterical old woman's. "Just about in the sweet dark
old middle."
"You're still sure it's the sun up ahead ... that's the only one with
life on it, Dunbar ... the only one we can live on?" Russell asked.
"That's right! That's right," Dunbar yelled. "That's the only one—and
it's a paradise. Not just a place to live, boys—but a place you'll
have trouble believing in because it's like a dream!"
"And none of these other three suns have worlds we could live on,
Dunbar?" Russell asked. Keep the old duck talking like this and maybe
Alvar and Johnson would see that he was cracked.
"Yeah," said Alvar. "You still say that, Dunbar?"
"No life, boys, nothing," Dunbar laughed. "Nothing on these other
worlds but ashes ... just ashes and iron and dried blood, dried a
million years or more."
"When in hell were you ever here?" Johnson said. "You say you were
here before. You never said when, or why or anything!"
"It was a long time back boys. Don't remember too well, but it was
when we had an old ship called the DOG STAR that I was here. A pirate
ship and I was second in command, and we came through this sector.
That was—hell, it musta' been fifty years ago. I been too many places
nobody's ever bothered to name or chart, to remember where it is, but
I been here. I remember those four suns all spotted to form a perfect
circle from this point, with us squarely in the middle. We explored
all these suns and the worlds that go round 'em. Trust me, boys, and
we'll reach the right one. And that one's just like Paradise."
"Paradise is it," Russell whispered hoarsely.
"Paradise and there we'll be like gods, like Mercuries with wings
flying on nights of sweet song. These other suns, don't let them
bother you. They're Jezebels of stars. All painted up in the darkness
and pretty and waiting and calling and lying! They make you think of
nice green worlds all running waters and dews and forests thick as
fleas on a wet dog. But it ain't there, boys. I know this place. I
been here, long time back."
Russell said tightly. "It'll take us a long time won't it? If it's got
air we can breath, and water we can drink and shade we can rest
in—that'll be paradise enough for us. But it'll take a long time
won't it? And what if it isn't there—what if after all the time we
spend hoping and getting there—there won't be nothing but ashes and
cracked clay?"
"I know we're going right," Dunbar said cheerfully. "I can tell. Like
I said—you can tell it because of the red rim around it."
"But the sun on our left, you can see—it's got a red rim too now,"
Russell said.
"Yeah, that's right," said Alvar. "Sometimes I see a red rim around
the one we're going for, sometimes a red rim around that one on the
left. Now, sometimes I'm not sure either of them's got a red rim. You
said that one had a red rim, Dunbar, and I wanted to believe it. So
now maybe we're all seeing a red rim that was never there."
Old Dunbar laughed. The sound brought blood hotly to Russell's face.
"We're heading to the right one, boys. Don't doubt me ... I been here.
We explored all these sun systems. And I remember it all. The second
planet from that red-rimmed sun. You come down through a soft
atmosphere, floating like in a dream. You see the green lakes coming
up through the clouds and the women dancing and the music playing. I
remember seeing a ship there that brought those women there, a long
long time before ever I got there. A land like heaven and women like
angels singing and dancing and laughing with red lips and arms white
as milk, and soft silky hair floating in the winds."
Russell was very sick of the old man's voice. He was at least glad he
didn't have to look at the old man now. His bald head, his skinny
bobbing neck, his simpering watery blue eyes. But he still had to
suffer that immutable babbling, that idiotic cheerfulness ... and
knowing all the time the old man was crazy, that he was leading them
wrong.
I'd break away, go it alone to the right sun, Russell thought—but I'd
never make it alone. A little while out here alone and I'd be nuttier
than old Dunbar will ever be, even if he keeps on getting nuttier all
the time.
Somewhere, sometime then ... Russell got the idea that the only way
was to get rid of Dunbar.
You mean to tell us there are people living by that red-rimmed sun,"
Russell said.
"Lost people ... lost ... who knows how long," Dunbar said, as the
four of them hurtled along. "You never know where you'll find people
on a world somewhere nobody's ever named or knows about. Places where
a lost ship's landed and never got up again, or wrecked itself so far
off the lanes they'll never be found except by accident for millions
of years. That's what this world is, boys. Must have been a ship load
of beautiful people, maybe actresses and people like that being hauled
to some outpost to entertain. They're like angels now, living in a
land all free from care. Every place you see green forests and fields
and blue lakes, and at nights there's three moons that come around the
sky in a thousand different colors. And it never gets cold ... it's
always spring, always spring, boys, and the music plays all night,
every night of a long long year...."
Russell suddenly shouted. "Keep quiet, Dunbar. Shut up will you?"
Johnson said. "Dunbar—how long'll it take us?"
"Six months to a year, I'd say," Dunbar yelled happily. "That is—of
our hereditary time."
"What?" croaked Alvar.
Johnson didn't say anything at all.
Russell screamed at Dunbar, then quieted down. He whispered. "Six
months to a year—out here—cooped up in these damn suits. You're
crazy as hell, Dunbar. Crazy ... crazy! Nobody could stand it. We'll
all be crazier than you are—"
"We'll make it, boys. Trust ole' Dunbar. What's a year when we know
we're getting to Paradise at the end of it? What's a year out here ...
it's paradise ain't it, compared with that prison hole we were rotting
in? We can make it. We have the food concentrates, and all the rest.
All we need's the will, boys, and we got that. The whole damn Universe
isn't big enough to kill the will of a human being, boys. I been over
a whole lot of it, and I know. In the old days—"
"The hell with the old days," screamed Russell.
"Now quiet down, Russ," Dunbar said in a kind of dreadful crooning
whisper. "You calm down now. You younger fellows—you don't look at
things the way we used to. Thing is, we got to go straight. People
trapped like this liable to start meandering. Liable to start losing
the old will-power."
He chuckled.
"Yeah," said Alvar. "Someone says maybe we ought to go left, and
someone says to go right, and someone else says to go in another
direction. And then someone says maybe they'd better go back the old
way. An' pretty soon something breaks, or the food runs out, and
you're a million million miles from someplace you don't care about any
more because you're dead. All frozen up in space ... preserved like a
piece of meat in a cold storage locker. And then maybe in a million
years or so some lousy insect man from Jupiter comes along and finds
you and takes you away to a museum...."
"Shut up!" Johnson yelled.
Dunbar laughed. "Boys, boys, don't get panicky. Keep your heads. Just
stick to old Dunbar and he'll see you through. I'm always lucky. Only
one way to go ... an' that's straight ahead to the sun with the
red-rim around it ... and then we tune in the gravity repellers, and
coast down, floating and singing down through the clouds to
paradise."
After that they traveled on for what seemed months to Russell, but it
couldn't have been over a day or two of the kind of time-sense he had
inherited from Earth.
Then he saw how the other two stars also were beginning to develop red
rims. He yelled this fact out to the others. And Alvar said. "Russ's
right. That sun to the right, and the one behind us ... now they ALL
have red rims around them. Dunbar—" A pause and no awareness of
motion.
Dunbar laughed. "Sure, they all maybe have a touch of red, but it
isn't the same, boys. I can tell the difference. Trust me—"
Russell half choked on his words. "You old goat! With those old eyes
of yours, you couldn't see your way into a fire!"
"Don't get panicky now. Keep your heads. In another year, we'll be
there—"
"God, you gotta' be sure," Alvar said. "I don't mind dyin' out here.
But after a year of this, and then to get to a world that was only
ashes, and not able to go any further—"
"I always come through, boys. I'm lucky. Angel women will take us to
their houses on the edges of cool lakes, little houses that sit there
in the sun like fancy jewels. And we'll walk under colored fountains,
pretty colored fountains just splashing and splashing like pretty rain
on our hungry hides. That's worth waiting for."
Russell did it before he hardly realized he was killing the old man.
It was something he had had to do for a long time and that made it
easy. There was a flash of burning oxygen from inside the suit of
Dunbar. If he'd aimed right, Russell knew the fire-bullet should have
pierced Dunbar's back. Now the fire was gone, extinguished
automatically by units inside the suit. The suit was still inflated,
self-sealing. Nothing appeared to have changed. The four of them
hurtling on together, but inside that first suit up there on the front
of the gravity rope, Dunbar was dead.
He was dead and his mouth was shut for good.
Dunbar's last faint cry from inside his suit still rang in Russell's
ears, and he knew Alvar and Johnson had heard it too. Alvar and
Johnson both called Dunbar's name a few times. There was no answer.
"Russ—you shouldn't have done that," Johnson whispered. "You
shouldn't have done that to the old man!"
"No," Alvar said, so low he could barely be heard. "You shouldn't have
done it."
"I did it for the three of us," Russell said. "It was either him or us.
Lies ... lies that was all he had left in his crazy head. Paradise ...
don't tell me you guys don't see the red rims around all four suns, all
four suns all around us. Don't tell me you guys didn't know he was batty,
that you really believed all that stuff he was spouting all the time!"
"Maybe he was lying, maybe not," Johnson said. "Now he's dead anyway."
"Maybe he was wrong, crazy, full of lies," Alvar said. "But now he's
dead."
"How could he see any difference in those four stars?" Russell said,
louder.
"He thought he was right," Alvar said. "He wanted to take us to
paradise. He was happy, nothing could stop the old man—but he's dead
now."
He sighed.
"He was taking us wrong ... wrong!" Russell screamed. "Angels—music
all night—houses like jewels—and women like angels—"
"
Shhhh
," said Alvar. It was quiet. How could it be so quiet, Russell
thought? And up ahead the old man's pressure suit with a corpse inside
went on ahead, leading the other three at the front of the
gravity-rope.
"Maybe he was wrong," Alvar said. "But now do we know which way is
right?"
Sometime later, Johnson said, "We got to decide now. Let's forget the
old man. Let's forget him and all that's gone and let's start now and
decide what to do."
And Alvar said, "Guess he was crazy all right, and I guess we trusted
him because we didn't have the strength to make up our own minds. Why
does a crazy man's laugh sound so good when you're desperate and don't
know what to do?"
"I always had a feeling we were going wrong," Johnson said. "Anyway,
it's forgotten, Russ. It's swallowed up in the darkness all around.
It's never been."
Russell said, "I've had a hunch all along that maybe the old man was
here before, and that he was right about there being a star here with
a world we can live on. But I've known we was heading wrong. I've had
a hunch all along that the right star was the one to the left."
"I don't know," Johnson sighed. "I been feeling partial toward that
one on the right. What about you, Alvar?"
"I always thought we were going straight in the opposite direction
from what we should, I guess. I always wanted to turn around and go
back. It won't make over maybe a month's difference. And what does a
month matter anyway out here—hell there never was any time out here
until we came along. We make our own time here, and a month don't
matter to me."
Sweat ran down Russell's face. His voice trembled. "No—that's wrong.
You're both wrong." He could see himself going it alone. Going crazy
because he was alone. He'd have broken away, gone his own direction,
long ago but for that fear.
"How can we tell which of us is right?" Alvar said. "It's like
everything was changing all the time out here. Sometimes I'd swear
none of those suns had red rims, and at other times—like the old man
said, they're all pretty and lying and saying nothing, just changing
all the time. Jezebel stars, the old man said."
"I know I'm right," Russell pleaded. "My hunches always been right.
My hunch got us out of that prison didn't it? Listen—I tell you it's
that star to the left—"
"The one to the right," said Johnson.
"We been going away from the right one all the time," said Alvar.
"We got to stay together," said Russell. "Nobody could spend a year
out here ... alone...."
"Ah ... in another month or so we'd be lousy company anyway," Alvar
said. "Maybe a guy could get to the point where he'd sleep most of the
time ... just wake up enough times to give himself another boost with
the old life-gun."
"We got to face it," Johnson said finally. "We three don't go on
together any more."
"That's it," said Alvar. "There's three suns that look like they might
be right seeing as how we all agree the old man was wrong. But we
believe there is one we can live by, because we all seem to agree that
the old man might have been right about that. If we stick together,
the chance is three to one against us. But if each of us makes for one
star, one of us has a chance to live. Maybe not in paradise like the
old man said, but a place where we can live. And maybe there'll be
intelligent life, maybe even a ship, and whoever gets the right star
can come and help the other two...."
"No ... God no...." Russell whispered over and over. "None of us can
ever make it alone...."
Alvar said, "We each take the star he likes best. I'll go back the
other way. Russ, you take the left. And you, Johnson, go to the
right."
Johnson started to laugh. Russell was yelling wildly at them, and
above his own yelling he could hear Johnson's rising laughter. "Every
guy's got a star of his own," Johnson said when he stopped laughing.
"And we got ours. A nice red-rimmed sun for each of us to call his
very own."
"Okay," Alvar said. "We cut off the gravity rope, and each to his own
sun."
Now Russell wasn't saying anything.
"And the old man," Alvar said, "can keep right on going toward what he
thought was right. And he'll keep on going. Course he won't be able to
give himself another boost with the life-gun, but he'll keep going.
Someday he'll get to that red-rimmed star of his. Out here in space,
once you're going, you never stop ... and I guess there isn't any
other body to pull him off his course. And what will time matter to
old Dunbar? Even less than to us, I guess. He's dead and he won't
care."
"Ready," Johnson said. "I'll cut off the gravity rope."
"I'm ready," Alvar said. "To go back toward whatever it was I started
from."
"Ready, Russ?"
Russell couldn't say anything. He stared at the endless void which now
he would share with no one. Not even crazy old Dunbar.
"All right," Johnson said. "Good-bye."
Russell felt the release, felt the sudden inexplicable isolation and
aloneness even before Alvar and Johnson used their life-guns and shot
out of sight, Johnson toward the left and Alvar back toward that other
red-rimmed sun behind them.
And old Dunbar shooting right on ahead. And all three of them
dwindling and dwindling and blinking out like little lights.
Fading, he could hear their voices. "Each to his own star," Johnson
said. "On a bee line."
"On a bee line," Alvar said.
Russell used his own life-gun and in a little while he didn't hear
Alvar or Johnson's voices, nor could he see them. They were thousands
of miles away, and going further all the time.
Russell's head fell forward against the front of his helmet, and he
closed his eyes. "Maybe," he thought, "I shouldn't have killed the old
man. Maybe one sun's as good as another...."
Then he raised his body and looked out into the year of blackness that
waited for him, stretching away to the red-rimmed sun. Even if he were
right—he was sure now he'd never make it alone.
The body inside the pressure suit drifted into a low-level orbit
around the second planet from the sun of its choice, and drifted there
a long time. A strato-cruiser detected it by chance because of the
strong concentration of radio-activity that came from it.
They took the body down to one of the small, quiet towns on the edge
of one of the many blue lakes where the domed houses were like bright
joyful jewels. They got the leathery, well-preserved body from the
pressure suit.
"An old man," one of them mused. "A very old man. From one of the lost
sectors. I wonder how and why he came so very far from his home?"
"Wrecked a ship out there, probably," one of the others said. "But he
managed to get this far. It looks as though a small meteor fragment
pierced his body. Here. You see?"
"Yes," another of them said. "But what amazes me is that this old man
picked this planet out of all the others. The only one in this entire
sector that would sustain life."
"Maybe he was just a very lucky old man. Yes ... a man who attains
such an age was usually lucky. Or at least that is what they say about
the lost sectors."
"Maybe he knew the way here. Maybe he was here before—sometime."
The other shook his head. "I don't think so. They say some humans from
that far sector did land here—but that's probably only a myth. And if
they did, it was well over a thousand years ago."
Another said. "He has a fine face, this old man. A noble face. Whoever
he is ... wherever he came from, he died bravely and he knew the way,
though he never reached this haven of the lost alive."
"Nor is it irony that he reached here dead," said the Lake Chieftain.
He had been listening and he stepped forward and raised his arm. "He
was old. It is obvious that he fought bravely, that he had great
courage, and that he knew the way. He will be given a burial suitable
to his stature, and he will rest here among the brave.
"Let the women dance and the music play for this old man. Let the
trumpets speak, and the rockets fly up. And let flowers be strewn over
the path above which the women will carry him to rest." | After killing Dunbar, Russell became just as delusional as Dunbar | If Russell had not killed Dunbar, the three men would have never reached their ultimate paradise | The four men were all going to die anyway, but they could have died together. | If the four men had followed Dunbar, they all would have survived. | 3 |
31355_7INGZJ49_6 | Why does Dunbar continue to tell stories of an enchanting paradise? | Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from Space Science Fiction May 1952. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.
TO EACH HIS STAR
by
BRYCE WALTON
"Nothing around those other suns but ashes and dried
blood," old Dunbar told the space-wrecked, desperate men.
"Only one way to go, where we can float down through the
clouds to Paradise. That's straight ahead to the sun with
the red rim around it."
But Dunbar's eyes were old and uncertain. How could they
believe in his choice when every star in this forsaken
section of space was surrounded by a beckoning red rim?
There was just blackness, frosty glimmering terrible blackness, going
out and out forever in all directions. Russell didn't think they could
remain sane in all this blackness much longer. Bitterly he thought of
how they would die—not knowing within maybe thousands of light years
where they were, or where they were going.
After the wreck, the four of them had floated a while, floated and
drifted together, four men in bulbous pressure suits like small
individual rockets, held together by an awful pressing need for each
other and by the "gravity-rope" beam.
Dunbar, the oldest of the four, an old space-buster with a face
wrinkled like a dried prune, burned by cosmic rays and the suns of
worlds so far away they were scarcely credible, had taken command.
Suddenly, Old Dunbar had known where they were. Suddenly, Dunbar knew
where they were going.
They could talk to one another through the etheric transmitters inside
their helmets. They could live ... if this was living ... a long time,
if only a man's brain would hold up, Russell thought. The suits were
complete units. 700 pounds each, all enclosing shelters, with
atmosphere pressure, temperature control, mobility in space, and
electric power. Each suit had its own power-plant, reprocessing
continuously the precious air breathed by the occupants, putting it
back into circulation again after enriching it. Packed with food
concentrates. Each suit a rocket, each human being part of a rocket,
and the special "life-gun" that went with each suit each blast of
which sent a man a few hundred thousand miles further on toward
wherever he was going.
Four men, thought Russell, held together by an invisible string of
gravity, plunging through a lost pocket of hell's dark where there had
never been any sound or life, with old Dunbar the first in line,
taking the lead because he was older and knew where he was and where
he was going. Maybe Johnson, second in line, and Alvar who was third,
knew too, but were afraid to admit it.
But Russell knew it and he'd admitted it from the first—that old
Dunbar was as crazy as a Jovian juke-bird.
A lot of time had rushed past into darkness. Russell had no idea now
how long the four of them had been plunging toward the red-rimmed sun
that never seemed to get any nearer. When the ultra-drive had gone
crazy the four of them had blanked out and nobody could say now how
long an interim that had been. Nobody knew what happened to a man who
suffered a space-time warping like that. When they had regained
consciousness, the ship was pretty banged up, and the meteor-repeller
shields cracked. A meteor ripped the ship down the center like an old
breakfast cannister.
How long ago that had been, Russell didn't know. All Russell knew was
that they were millions of light years from any place he had ever
heard about, where the galactic space lanterns had absolutely no
recognizable pattern. But Dunbar knew. And Russell was looking at
Dunbar's suit up ahead, watching it more and more intently, thinking
about how Dunbar looked inside that suit—and hating Dunbar more and
more for claiming he knew when he didn't, for his drooling
optimism—because he was taking them on into deeper darkness and
calling their destination Paradise.
Russell wanted to laugh, but the last time he'd given way to this
impulse, the results inside his helmet had been too unpleasant to
repeat.
Sometimes Russell thought of other things besides his growing hatred
of the old man. Sometimes he thought about the ship, lost back there
in the void, and he wondered if wrecked space ships were ever found.
Compared with the universe in which one of them drifted, a wrecked
ship was a lot smaller than a grain of sand on a nice warm beach back
on Earth, or one of those specks of silver dust that floated like
strange seeds down the night winds of Venus.
And a human was smaller still, thought Russell when he was not hating
Dunbar. Out here, a human being is the smallest thing of all. He
thought then of what Dunbar would say to such a thought, how Dunbar
would laugh that high piping squawking laugh of his and say that the
human being was bigger than the Universe itself.
Dunbar had a big answer for every little thing.
When the four of them had escaped from that prison colony on a
sizzling hot asteroid rock in the Ronlwhyn system, that wasn't enough
for Dunbar. Hell no—Dunbar had to start talking about a place they
could go where they'd never be apprehended, in a system no one else
had ever heard of, where they could live like gods on a green soft
world like the Earth had been a long time back.
And Dunbar had spouted endlessly about a world of treasure they would
find, if they would just follow old Dunbar. That's what all four of
them had been trying to find all their lives in the big cold grabbag
of eternity—a rich star, a rich far fertile star where no one else
had ever been, loaded with treasure that had no name, that no one had
ever heard of before. And was, because of that, the richest treasure
of all.
We all look alike out here in these big rocket pressure suits, Russell
thought. No one for God only knew how many of millions of light years
away could see or care. Still—we might have a chance to live, even
now, Russell thought—if it weren't for old crazy Dunbar.
They might have a chance if Alvar and Johnson weren't so damn lacking
in self-confidence as to put all their trust in that crazed old
rum-dum. Russell had known now for some time that they were going in
the wrong direction. No reason for knowing. Just a hunch. And Russell
was sure his hunch was right.
Russell said. "Look—look to your left and to your right and behind
us. Four suns. You guys see those other three suns all around you,
don't you?"
"Sure," someone said.
"Well, if you'll notice," Russell said, "the one on the left also now
has a red rim around it. Can't you guys see that?"
"Yeah, I see it," Alvar said.
"So now," Johnson said, "there's two suns with red rims around them."
"We're about in the middle of those four suns aren't we, Dunbar?"
Russell said.
"That's right, boys!" yelled old Dunbar in that sickeningly optimistic
voice. Like a hysterical old woman's. "Just about in the sweet dark
old middle."
"You're still sure it's the sun up ahead ... that's the only one with
life on it, Dunbar ... the only one we can live on?" Russell asked.
"That's right! That's right," Dunbar yelled. "That's the only one—and
it's a paradise. Not just a place to live, boys—but a place you'll
have trouble believing in because it's like a dream!"
"And none of these other three suns have worlds we could live on,
Dunbar?" Russell asked. Keep the old duck talking like this and maybe
Alvar and Johnson would see that he was cracked.
"Yeah," said Alvar. "You still say that, Dunbar?"
"No life, boys, nothing," Dunbar laughed. "Nothing on these other
worlds but ashes ... just ashes and iron and dried blood, dried a
million years or more."
"When in hell were you ever here?" Johnson said. "You say you were
here before. You never said when, or why or anything!"
"It was a long time back boys. Don't remember too well, but it was
when we had an old ship called the DOG STAR that I was here. A pirate
ship and I was second in command, and we came through this sector.
That was—hell, it musta' been fifty years ago. I been too many places
nobody's ever bothered to name or chart, to remember where it is, but
I been here. I remember those four suns all spotted to form a perfect
circle from this point, with us squarely in the middle. We explored
all these suns and the worlds that go round 'em. Trust me, boys, and
we'll reach the right one. And that one's just like Paradise."
"Paradise is it," Russell whispered hoarsely.
"Paradise and there we'll be like gods, like Mercuries with wings
flying on nights of sweet song. These other suns, don't let them
bother you. They're Jezebels of stars. All painted up in the darkness
and pretty and waiting and calling and lying! They make you think of
nice green worlds all running waters and dews and forests thick as
fleas on a wet dog. But it ain't there, boys. I know this place. I
been here, long time back."
Russell said tightly. "It'll take us a long time won't it? If it's got
air we can breath, and water we can drink and shade we can rest
in—that'll be paradise enough for us. But it'll take a long time
won't it? And what if it isn't there—what if after all the time we
spend hoping and getting there—there won't be nothing but ashes and
cracked clay?"
"I know we're going right," Dunbar said cheerfully. "I can tell. Like
I said—you can tell it because of the red rim around it."
"But the sun on our left, you can see—it's got a red rim too now,"
Russell said.
"Yeah, that's right," said Alvar. "Sometimes I see a red rim around
the one we're going for, sometimes a red rim around that one on the
left. Now, sometimes I'm not sure either of them's got a red rim. You
said that one had a red rim, Dunbar, and I wanted to believe it. So
now maybe we're all seeing a red rim that was never there."
Old Dunbar laughed. The sound brought blood hotly to Russell's face.
"We're heading to the right one, boys. Don't doubt me ... I been here.
We explored all these sun systems. And I remember it all. The second
planet from that red-rimmed sun. You come down through a soft
atmosphere, floating like in a dream. You see the green lakes coming
up through the clouds and the women dancing and the music playing. I
remember seeing a ship there that brought those women there, a long
long time before ever I got there. A land like heaven and women like
angels singing and dancing and laughing with red lips and arms white
as milk, and soft silky hair floating in the winds."
Russell was very sick of the old man's voice. He was at least glad he
didn't have to look at the old man now. His bald head, his skinny
bobbing neck, his simpering watery blue eyes. But he still had to
suffer that immutable babbling, that idiotic cheerfulness ... and
knowing all the time the old man was crazy, that he was leading them
wrong.
I'd break away, go it alone to the right sun, Russell thought—but I'd
never make it alone. A little while out here alone and I'd be nuttier
than old Dunbar will ever be, even if he keeps on getting nuttier all
the time.
Somewhere, sometime then ... Russell got the idea that the only way
was to get rid of Dunbar.
You mean to tell us there are people living by that red-rimmed sun,"
Russell said.
"Lost people ... lost ... who knows how long," Dunbar said, as the
four of them hurtled along. "You never know where you'll find people
on a world somewhere nobody's ever named or knows about. Places where
a lost ship's landed and never got up again, or wrecked itself so far
off the lanes they'll never be found except by accident for millions
of years. That's what this world is, boys. Must have been a ship load
of beautiful people, maybe actresses and people like that being hauled
to some outpost to entertain. They're like angels now, living in a
land all free from care. Every place you see green forests and fields
and blue lakes, and at nights there's three moons that come around the
sky in a thousand different colors. And it never gets cold ... it's
always spring, always spring, boys, and the music plays all night,
every night of a long long year...."
Russell suddenly shouted. "Keep quiet, Dunbar. Shut up will you?"
Johnson said. "Dunbar—how long'll it take us?"
"Six months to a year, I'd say," Dunbar yelled happily. "That is—of
our hereditary time."
"What?" croaked Alvar.
Johnson didn't say anything at all.
Russell screamed at Dunbar, then quieted down. He whispered. "Six
months to a year—out here—cooped up in these damn suits. You're
crazy as hell, Dunbar. Crazy ... crazy! Nobody could stand it. We'll
all be crazier than you are—"
"We'll make it, boys. Trust ole' Dunbar. What's a year when we know
we're getting to Paradise at the end of it? What's a year out here ...
it's paradise ain't it, compared with that prison hole we were rotting
in? We can make it. We have the food concentrates, and all the rest.
All we need's the will, boys, and we got that. The whole damn Universe
isn't big enough to kill the will of a human being, boys. I been over
a whole lot of it, and I know. In the old days—"
"The hell with the old days," screamed Russell.
"Now quiet down, Russ," Dunbar said in a kind of dreadful crooning
whisper. "You calm down now. You younger fellows—you don't look at
things the way we used to. Thing is, we got to go straight. People
trapped like this liable to start meandering. Liable to start losing
the old will-power."
He chuckled.
"Yeah," said Alvar. "Someone says maybe we ought to go left, and
someone says to go right, and someone else says to go in another
direction. And then someone says maybe they'd better go back the old
way. An' pretty soon something breaks, or the food runs out, and
you're a million million miles from someplace you don't care about any
more because you're dead. All frozen up in space ... preserved like a
piece of meat in a cold storage locker. And then maybe in a million
years or so some lousy insect man from Jupiter comes along and finds
you and takes you away to a museum...."
"Shut up!" Johnson yelled.
Dunbar laughed. "Boys, boys, don't get panicky. Keep your heads. Just
stick to old Dunbar and he'll see you through. I'm always lucky. Only
one way to go ... an' that's straight ahead to the sun with the
red-rim around it ... and then we tune in the gravity repellers, and
coast down, floating and singing down through the clouds to
paradise."
After that they traveled on for what seemed months to Russell, but it
couldn't have been over a day or two of the kind of time-sense he had
inherited from Earth.
Then he saw how the other two stars also were beginning to develop red
rims. He yelled this fact out to the others. And Alvar said. "Russ's
right. That sun to the right, and the one behind us ... now they ALL
have red rims around them. Dunbar—" A pause and no awareness of
motion.
Dunbar laughed. "Sure, they all maybe have a touch of red, but it
isn't the same, boys. I can tell the difference. Trust me—"
Russell half choked on his words. "You old goat! With those old eyes
of yours, you couldn't see your way into a fire!"
"Don't get panicky now. Keep your heads. In another year, we'll be
there—"
"God, you gotta' be sure," Alvar said. "I don't mind dyin' out here.
But after a year of this, and then to get to a world that was only
ashes, and not able to go any further—"
"I always come through, boys. I'm lucky. Angel women will take us to
their houses on the edges of cool lakes, little houses that sit there
in the sun like fancy jewels. And we'll walk under colored fountains,
pretty colored fountains just splashing and splashing like pretty rain
on our hungry hides. That's worth waiting for."
Russell did it before he hardly realized he was killing the old man.
It was something he had had to do for a long time and that made it
easy. There was a flash of burning oxygen from inside the suit of
Dunbar. If he'd aimed right, Russell knew the fire-bullet should have
pierced Dunbar's back. Now the fire was gone, extinguished
automatically by units inside the suit. The suit was still inflated,
self-sealing. Nothing appeared to have changed. The four of them
hurtling on together, but inside that first suit up there on the front
of the gravity rope, Dunbar was dead.
He was dead and his mouth was shut for good.
Dunbar's last faint cry from inside his suit still rang in Russell's
ears, and he knew Alvar and Johnson had heard it too. Alvar and
Johnson both called Dunbar's name a few times. There was no answer.
"Russ—you shouldn't have done that," Johnson whispered. "You
shouldn't have done that to the old man!"
"No," Alvar said, so low he could barely be heard. "You shouldn't have
done it."
"I did it for the three of us," Russell said. "It was either him or us.
Lies ... lies that was all he had left in his crazy head. Paradise ...
don't tell me you guys don't see the red rims around all four suns, all
four suns all around us. Don't tell me you guys didn't know he was batty,
that you really believed all that stuff he was spouting all the time!"
"Maybe he was lying, maybe not," Johnson said. "Now he's dead anyway."
"Maybe he was wrong, crazy, full of lies," Alvar said. "But now he's
dead."
"How could he see any difference in those four stars?" Russell said,
louder.
"He thought he was right," Alvar said. "He wanted to take us to
paradise. He was happy, nothing could stop the old man—but he's dead
now."
He sighed.
"He was taking us wrong ... wrong!" Russell screamed. "Angels—music
all night—houses like jewels—and women like angels—"
"
Shhhh
," said Alvar. It was quiet. How could it be so quiet, Russell
thought? And up ahead the old man's pressure suit with a corpse inside
went on ahead, leading the other three at the front of the
gravity-rope.
"Maybe he was wrong," Alvar said. "But now do we know which way is
right?"
Sometime later, Johnson said, "We got to decide now. Let's forget the
old man. Let's forget him and all that's gone and let's start now and
decide what to do."
And Alvar said, "Guess he was crazy all right, and I guess we trusted
him because we didn't have the strength to make up our own minds. Why
does a crazy man's laugh sound so good when you're desperate and don't
know what to do?"
"I always had a feeling we were going wrong," Johnson said. "Anyway,
it's forgotten, Russ. It's swallowed up in the darkness all around.
It's never been."
Russell said, "I've had a hunch all along that maybe the old man was
here before, and that he was right about there being a star here with
a world we can live on. But I've known we was heading wrong. I've had
a hunch all along that the right star was the one to the left."
"I don't know," Johnson sighed. "I been feeling partial toward that
one on the right. What about you, Alvar?"
"I always thought we were going straight in the opposite direction
from what we should, I guess. I always wanted to turn around and go
back. It won't make over maybe a month's difference. And what does a
month matter anyway out here—hell there never was any time out here
until we came along. We make our own time here, and a month don't
matter to me."
Sweat ran down Russell's face. His voice trembled. "No—that's wrong.
You're both wrong." He could see himself going it alone. Going crazy
because he was alone. He'd have broken away, gone his own direction,
long ago but for that fear.
"How can we tell which of us is right?" Alvar said. "It's like
everything was changing all the time out here. Sometimes I'd swear
none of those suns had red rims, and at other times—like the old man
said, they're all pretty and lying and saying nothing, just changing
all the time. Jezebel stars, the old man said."
"I know I'm right," Russell pleaded. "My hunches always been right.
My hunch got us out of that prison didn't it? Listen—I tell you it's
that star to the left—"
"The one to the right," said Johnson.
"We been going away from the right one all the time," said Alvar.
"We got to stay together," said Russell. "Nobody could spend a year
out here ... alone...."
"Ah ... in another month or so we'd be lousy company anyway," Alvar
said. "Maybe a guy could get to the point where he'd sleep most of the
time ... just wake up enough times to give himself another boost with
the old life-gun."
"We got to face it," Johnson said finally. "We three don't go on
together any more."
"That's it," said Alvar. "There's three suns that look like they might
be right seeing as how we all agree the old man was wrong. But we
believe there is one we can live by, because we all seem to agree that
the old man might have been right about that. If we stick together,
the chance is three to one against us. But if each of us makes for one
star, one of us has a chance to live. Maybe not in paradise like the
old man said, but a place where we can live. And maybe there'll be
intelligent life, maybe even a ship, and whoever gets the right star
can come and help the other two...."
"No ... God no...." Russell whispered over and over. "None of us can
ever make it alone...."
Alvar said, "We each take the star he likes best. I'll go back the
other way. Russ, you take the left. And you, Johnson, go to the
right."
Johnson started to laugh. Russell was yelling wildly at them, and
above his own yelling he could hear Johnson's rising laughter. "Every
guy's got a star of his own," Johnson said when he stopped laughing.
"And we got ours. A nice red-rimmed sun for each of us to call his
very own."
"Okay," Alvar said. "We cut off the gravity rope, and each to his own
sun."
Now Russell wasn't saying anything.
"And the old man," Alvar said, "can keep right on going toward what he
thought was right. And he'll keep on going. Course he won't be able to
give himself another boost with the life-gun, but he'll keep going.
Someday he'll get to that red-rimmed star of his. Out here in space,
once you're going, you never stop ... and I guess there isn't any
other body to pull him off his course. And what will time matter to
old Dunbar? Even less than to us, I guess. He's dead and he won't
care."
"Ready," Johnson said. "I'll cut off the gravity rope."
"I'm ready," Alvar said. "To go back toward whatever it was I started
from."
"Ready, Russ?"
Russell couldn't say anything. He stared at the endless void which now
he would share with no one. Not even crazy old Dunbar.
"All right," Johnson said. "Good-bye."
Russell felt the release, felt the sudden inexplicable isolation and
aloneness even before Alvar and Johnson used their life-guns and shot
out of sight, Johnson toward the left and Alvar back toward that other
red-rimmed sun behind them.
And old Dunbar shooting right on ahead. And all three of them
dwindling and dwindling and blinking out like little lights.
Fading, he could hear their voices. "Each to his own star," Johnson
said. "On a bee line."
"On a bee line," Alvar said.
Russell used his own life-gun and in a little while he didn't hear
Alvar or Johnson's voices, nor could he see them. They were thousands
of miles away, and going further all the time.
Russell's head fell forward against the front of his helmet, and he
closed his eyes. "Maybe," he thought, "I shouldn't have killed the old
man. Maybe one sun's as good as another...."
Then he raised his body and looked out into the year of blackness that
waited for him, stretching away to the red-rimmed sun. Even if he were
right—he was sure now he'd never make it alone.
The body inside the pressure suit drifted into a low-level orbit
around the second planet from the sun of its choice, and drifted there
a long time. A strato-cruiser detected it by chance because of the
strong concentration of radio-activity that came from it.
They took the body down to one of the small, quiet towns on the edge
of one of the many blue lakes where the domed houses were like bright
joyful jewels. They got the leathery, well-preserved body from the
pressure suit.
"An old man," one of them mused. "A very old man. From one of the lost
sectors. I wonder how and why he came so very far from his home?"
"Wrecked a ship out there, probably," one of the others said. "But he
managed to get this far. It looks as though a small meteor fragment
pierced his body. Here. You see?"
"Yes," another of them said. "But what amazes me is that this old man
picked this planet out of all the others. The only one in this entire
sector that would sustain life."
"Maybe he was just a very lucky old man. Yes ... a man who attains
such an age was usually lucky. Or at least that is what they say about
the lost sectors."
"Maybe he knew the way here. Maybe he was here before—sometime."
The other shook his head. "I don't think so. They say some humans from
that far sector did land here—but that's probably only a myth. And if
they did, it was well over a thousand years ago."
Another said. "He has a fine face, this old man. A noble face. Whoever
he is ... wherever he came from, he died bravely and he knew the way,
though he never reached this haven of the lost alive."
"Nor is it irony that he reached here dead," said the Lake Chieftain.
He had been listening and he stepped forward and raised his arm. "He
was old. It is obvious that he fought bravely, that he had great
courage, and that he knew the way. He will be given a burial suitable
to his stature, and he will rest here among the brave.
"Let the women dance and the music play for this old man. Let the
trumpets speak, and the rockets fly up. And let flowers be strewn over
the path above which the women will carry him to rest." | To motivate them to keep persisting until they arrive | To convince himself that he is choosing the correct star | To assuage his crewmen's minds before they inevitably die | To lure the Johnson, Alvar, and Russell into a trap | 0 |
31355_7INGZJ49_7 | What is Russell's greatest fear? | Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from Space Science Fiction May 1952. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.
TO EACH HIS STAR
by
BRYCE WALTON
"Nothing around those other suns but ashes and dried
blood," old Dunbar told the space-wrecked, desperate men.
"Only one way to go, where we can float down through the
clouds to Paradise. That's straight ahead to the sun with
the red rim around it."
But Dunbar's eyes were old and uncertain. How could they
believe in his choice when every star in this forsaken
section of space was surrounded by a beckoning red rim?
There was just blackness, frosty glimmering terrible blackness, going
out and out forever in all directions. Russell didn't think they could
remain sane in all this blackness much longer. Bitterly he thought of
how they would die—not knowing within maybe thousands of light years
where they were, or where they were going.
After the wreck, the four of them had floated a while, floated and
drifted together, four men in bulbous pressure suits like small
individual rockets, held together by an awful pressing need for each
other and by the "gravity-rope" beam.
Dunbar, the oldest of the four, an old space-buster with a face
wrinkled like a dried prune, burned by cosmic rays and the suns of
worlds so far away they were scarcely credible, had taken command.
Suddenly, Old Dunbar had known where they were. Suddenly, Dunbar knew
where they were going.
They could talk to one another through the etheric transmitters inside
their helmets. They could live ... if this was living ... a long time,
if only a man's brain would hold up, Russell thought. The suits were
complete units. 700 pounds each, all enclosing shelters, with
atmosphere pressure, temperature control, mobility in space, and
electric power. Each suit had its own power-plant, reprocessing
continuously the precious air breathed by the occupants, putting it
back into circulation again after enriching it. Packed with food
concentrates. Each suit a rocket, each human being part of a rocket,
and the special "life-gun" that went with each suit each blast of
which sent a man a few hundred thousand miles further on toward
wherever he was going.
Four men, thought Russell, held together by an invisible string of
gravity, plunging through a lost pocket of hell's dark where there had
never been any sound or life, with old Dunbar the first in line,
taking the lead because he was older and knew where he was and where
he was going. Maybe Johnson, second in line, and Alvar who was third,
knew too, but were afraid to admit it.
But Russell knew it and he'd admitted it from the first—that old
Dunbar was as crazy as a Jovian juke-bird.
A lot of time had rushed past into darkness. Russell had no idea now
how long the four of them had been plunging toward the red-rimmed sun
that never seemed to get any nearer. When the ultra-drive had gone
crazy the four of them had blanked out and nobody could say now how
long an interim that had been. Nobody knew what happened to a man who
suffered a space-time warping like that. When they had regained
consciousness, the ship was pretty banged up, and the meteor-repeller
shields cracked. A meteor ripped the ship down the center like an old
breakfast cannister.
How long ago that had been, Russell didn't know. All Russell knew was
that they were millions of light years from any place he had ever
heard about, where the galactic space lanterns had absolutely no
recognizable pattern. But Dunbar knew. And Russell was looking at
Dunbar's suit up ahead, watching it more and more intently, thinking
about how Dunbar looked inside that suit—and hating Dunbar more and
more for claiming he knew when he didn't, for his drooling
optimism—because he was taking them on into deeper darkness and
calling their destination Paradise.
Russell wanted to laugh, but the last time he'd given way to this
impulse, the results inside his helmet had been too unpleasant to
repeat.
Sometimes Russell thought of other things besides his growing hatred
of the old man. Sometimes he thought about the ship, lost back there
in the void, and he wondered if wrecked space ships were ever found.
Compared with the universe in which one of them drifted, a wrecked
ship was a lot smaller than a grain of sand on a nice warm beach back
on Earth, or one of those specks of silver dust that floated like
strange seeds down the night winds of Venus.
And a human was smaller still, thought Russell when he was not hating
Dunbar. Out here, a human being is the smallest thing of all. He
thought then of what Dunbar would say to such a thought, how Dunbar
would laugh that high piping squawking laugh of his and say that the
human being was bigger than the Universe itself.
Dunbar had a big answer for every little thing.
When the four of them had escaped from that prison colony on a
sizzling hot asteroid rock in the Ronlwhyn system, that wasn't enough
for Dunbar. Hell no—Dunbar had to start talking about a place they
could go where they'd never be apprehended, in a system no one else
had ever heard of, where they could live like gods on a green soft
world like the Earth had been a long time back.
And Dunbar had spouted endlessly about a world of treasure they would
find, if they would just follow old Dunbar. That's what all four of
them had been trying to find all their lives in the big cold grabbag
of eternity—a rich star, a rich far fertile star where no one else
had ever been, loaded with treasure that had no name, that no one had
ever heard of before. And was, because of that, the richest treasure
of all.
We all look alike out here in these big rocket pressure suits, Russell
thought. No one for God only knew how many of millions of light years
away could see or care. Still—we might have a chance to live, even
now, Russell thought—if it weren't for old crazy Dunbar.
They might have a chance if Alvar and Johnson weren't so damn lacking
in self-confidence as to put all their trust in that crazed old
rum-dum. Russell had known now for some time that they were going in
the wrong direction. No reason for knowing. Just a hunch. And Russell
was sure his hunch was right.
Russell said. "Look—look to your left and to your right and behind
us. Four suns. You guys see those other three suns all around you,
don't you?"
"Sure," someone said.
"Well, if you'll notice," Russell said, "the one on the left also now
has a red rim around it. Can't you guys see that?"
"Yeah, I see it," Alvar said.
"So now," Johnson said, "there's two suns with red rims around them."
"We're about in the middle of those four suns aren't we, Dunbar?"
Russell said.
"That's right, boys!" yelled old Dunbar in that sickeningly optimistic
voice. Like a hysterical old woman's. "Just about in the sweet dark
old middle."
"You're still sure it's the sun up ahead ... that's the only one with
life on it, Dunbar ... the only one we can live on?" Russell asked.
"That's right! That's right," Dunbar yelled. "That's the only one—and
it's a paradise. Not just a place to live, boys—but a place you'll
have trouble believing in because it's like a dream!"
"And none of these other three suns have worlds we could live on,
Dunbar?" Russell asked. Keep the old duck talking like this and maybe
Alvar and Johnson would see that he was cracked.
"Yeah," said Alvar. "You still say that, Dunbar?"
"No life, boys, nothing," Dunbar laughed. "Nothing on these other
worlds but ashes ... just ashes and iron and dried blood, dried a
million years or more."
"When in hell were you ever here?" Johnson said. "You say you were
here before. You never said when, or why or anything!"
"It was a long time back boys. Don't remember too well, but it was
when we had an old ship called the DOG STAR that I was here. A pirate
ship and I was second in command, and we came through this sector.
That was—hell, it musta' been fifty years ago. I been too many places
nobody's ever bothered to name or chart, to remember where it is, but
I been here. I remember those four suns all spotted to form a perfect
circle from this point, with us squarely in the middle. We explored
all these suns and the worlds that go round 'em. Trust me, boys, and
we'll reach the right one. And that one's just like Paradise."
"Paradise is it," Russell whispered hoarsely.
"Paradise and there we'll be like gods, like Mercuries with wings
flying on nights of sweet song. These other suns, don't let them
bother you. They're Jezebels of stars. All painted up in the darkness
and pretty and waiting and calling and lying! They make you think of
nice green worlds all running waters and dews and forests thick as
fleas on a wet dog. But it ain't there, boys. I know this place. I
been here, long time back."
Russell said tightly. "It'll take us a long time won't it? If it's got
air we can breath, and water we can drink and shade we can rest
in—that'll be paradise enough for us. But it'll take a long time
won't it? And what if it isn't there—what if after all the time we
spend hoping and getting there—there won't be nothing but ashes and
cracked clay?"
"I know we're going right," Dunbar said cheerfully. "I can tell. Like
I said—you can tell it because of the red rim around it."
"But the sun on our left, you can see—it's got a red rim too now,"
Russell said.
"Yeah, that's right," said Alvar. "Sometimes I see a red rim around
the one we're going for, sometimes a red rim around that one on the
left. Now, sometimes I'm not sure either of them's got a red rim. You
said that one had a red rim, Dunbar, and I wanted to believe it. So
now maybe we're all seeing a red rim that was never there."
Old Dunbar laughed. The sound brought blood hotly to Russell's face.
"We're heading to the right one, boys. Don't doubt me ... I been here.
We explored all these sun systems. And I remember it all. The second
planet from that red-rimmed sun. You come down through a soft
atmosphere, floating like in a dream. You see the green lakes coming
up through the clouds and the women dancing and the music playing. I
remember seeing a ship there that brought those women there, a long
long time before ever I got there. A land like heaven and women like
angels singing and dancing and laughing with red lips and arms white
as milk, and soft silky hair floating in the winds."
Russell was very sick of the old man's voice. He was at least glad he
didn't have to look at the old man now. His bald head, his skinny
bobbing neck, his simpering watery blue eyes. But he still had to
suffer that immutable babbling, that idiotic cheerfulness ... and
knowing all the time the old man was crazy, that he was leading them
wrong.
I'd break away, go it alone to the right sun, Russell thought—but I'd
never make it alone. A little while out here alone and I'd be nuttier
than old Dunbar will ever be, even if he keeps on getting nuttier all
the time.
Somewhere, sometime then ... Russell got the idea that the only way
was to get rid of Dunbar.
You mean to tell us there are people living by that red-rimmed sun,"
Russell said.
"Lost people ... lost ... who knows how long," Dunbar said, as the
four of them hurtled along. "You never know where you'll find people
on a world somewhere nobody's ever named or knows about. Places where
a lost ship's landed and never got up again, or wrecked itself so far
off the lanes they'll never be found except by accident for millions
of years. That's what this world is, boys. Must have been a ship load
of beautiful people, maybe actresses and people like that being hauled
to some outpost to entertain. They're like angels now, living in a
land all free from care. Every place you see green forests and fields
and blue lakes, and at nights there's three moons that come around the
sky in a thousand different colors. And it never gets cold ... it's
always spring, always spring, boys, and the music plays all night,
every night of a long long year...."
Russell suddenly shouted. "Keep quiet, Dunbar. Shut up will you?"
Johnson said. "Dunbar—how long'll it take us?"
"Six months to a year, I'd say," Dunbar yelled happily. "That is—of
our hereditary time."
"What?" croaked Alvar.
Johnson didn't say anything at all.
Russell screamed at Dunbar, then quieted down. He whispered. "Six
months to a year—out here—cooped up in these damn suits. You're
crazy as hell, Dunbar. Crazy ... crazy! Nobody could stand it. We'll
all be crazier than you are—"
"We'll make it, boys. Trust ole' Dunbar. What's a year when we know
we're getting to Paradise at the end of it? What's a year out here ...
it's paradise ain't it, compared with that prison hole we were rotting
in? We can make it. We have the food concentrates, and all the rest.
All we need's the will, boys, and we got that. The whole damn Universe
isn't big enough to kill the will of a human being, boys. I been over
a whole lot of it, and I know. In the old days—"
"The hell with the old days," screamed Russell.
"Now quiet down, Russ," Dunbar said in a kind of dreadful crooning
whisper. "You calm down now. You younger fellows—you don't look at
things the way we used to. Thing is, we got to go straight. People
trapped like this liable to start meandering. Liable to start losing
the old will-power."
He chuckled.
"Yeah," said Alvar. "Someone says maybe we ought to go left, and
someone says to go right, and someone else says to go in another
direction. And then someone says maybe they'd better go back the old
way. An' pretty soon something breaks, or the food runs out, and
you're a million million miles from someplace you don't care about any
more because you're dead. All frozen up in space ... preserved like a
piece of meat in a cold storage locker. And then maybe in a million
years or so some lousy insect man from Jupiter comes along and finds
you and takes you away to a museum...."
"Shut up!" Johnson yelled.
Dunbar laughed. "Boys, boys, don't get panicky. Keep your heads. Just
stick to old Dunbar and he'll see you through. I'm always lucky. Only
one way to go ... an' that's straight ahead to the sun with the
red-rim around it ... and then we tune in the gravity repellers, and
coast down, floating and singing down through the clouds to
paradise."
After that they traveled on for what seemed months to Russell, but it
couldn't have been over a day or two of the kind of time-sense he had
inherited from Earth.
Then he saw how the other two stars also were beginning to develop red
rims. He yelled this fact out to the others. And Alvar said. "Russ's
right. That sun to the right, and the one behind us ... now they ALL
have red rims around them. Dunbar—" A pause and no awareness of
motion.
Dunbar laughed. "Sure, they all maybe have a touch of red, but it
isn't the same, boys. I can tell the difference. Trust me—"
Russell half choked on his words. "You old goat! With those old eyes
of yours, you couldn't see your way into a fire!"
"Don't get panicky now. Keep your heads. In another year, we'll be
there—"
"God, you gotta' be sure," Alvar said. "I don't mind dyin' out here.
But after a year of this, and then to get to a world that was only
ashes, and not able to go any further—"
"I always come through, boys. I'm lucky. Angel women will take us to
their houses on the edges of cool lakes, little houses that sit there
in the sun like fancy jewels. And we'll walk under colored fountains,
pretty colored fountains just splashing and splashing like pretty rain
on our hungry hides. That's worth waiting for."
Russell did it before he hardly realized he was killing the old man.
It was something he had had to do for a long time and that made it
easy. There was a flash of burning oxygen from inside the suit of
Dunbar. If he'd aimed right, Russell knew the fire-bullet should have
pierced Dunbar's back. Now the fire was gone, extinguished
automatically by units inside the suit. The suit was still inflated,
self-sealing. Nothing appeared to have changed. The four of them
hurtling on together, but inside that first suit up there on the front
of the gravity rope, Dunbar was dead.
He was dead and his mouth was shut for good.
Dunbar's last faint cry from inside his suit still rang in Russell's
ears, and he knew Alvar and Johnson had heard it too. Alvar and
Johnson both called Dunbar's name a few times. There was no answer.
"Russ—you shouldn't have done that," Johnson whispered. "You
shouldn't have done that to the old man!"
"No," Alvar said, so low he could barely be heard. "You shouldn't have
done it."
"I did it for the three of us," Russell said. "It was either him or us.
Lies ... lies that was all he had left in his crazy head. Paradise ...
don't tell me you guys don't see the red rims around all four suns, all
four suns all around us. Don't tell me you guys didn't know he was batty,
that you really believed all that stuff he was spouting all the time!"
"Maybe he was lying, maybe not," Johnson said. "Now he's dead anyway."
"Maybe he was wrong, crazy, full of lies," Alvar said. "But now he's
dead."
"How could he see any difference in those four stars?" Russell said,
louder.
"He thought he was right," Alvar said. "He wanted to take us to
paradise. He was happy, nothing could stop the old man—but he's dead
now."
He sighed.
"He was taking us wrong ... wrong!" Russell screamed. "Angels—music
all night—houses like jewels—and women like angels—"
"
Shhhh
," said Alvar. It was quiet. How could it be so quiet, Russell
thought? And up ahead the old man's pressure suit with a corpse inside
went on ahead, leading the other three at the front of the
gravity-rope.
"Maybe he was wrong," Alvar said. "But now do we know which way is
right?"
Sometime later, Johnson said, "We got to decide now. Let's forget the
old man. Let's forget him and all that's gone and let's start now and
decide what to do."
And Alvar said, "Guess he was crazy all right, and I guess we trusted
him because we didn't have the strength to make up our own minds. Why
does a crazy man's laugh sound so good when you're desperate and don't
know what to do?"
"I always had a feeling we were going wrong," Johnson said. "Anyway,
it's forgotten, Russ. It's swallowed up in the darkness all around.
It's never been."
Russell said, "I've had a hunch all along that maybe the old man was
here before, and that he was right about there being a star here with
a world we can live on. But I've known we was heading wrong. I've had
a hunch all along that the right star was the one to the left."
"I don't know," Johnson sighed. "I been feeling partial toward that
one on the right. What about you, Alvar?"
"I always thought we were going straight in the opposite direction
from what we should, I guess. I always wanted to turn around and go
back. It won't make over maybe a month's difference. And what does a
month matter anyway out here—hell there never was any time out here
until we came along. We make our own time here, and a month don't
matter to me."
Sweat ran down Russell's face. His voice trembled. "No—that's wrong.
You're both wrong." He could see himself going it alone. Going crazy
because he was alone. He'd have broken away, gone his own direction,
long ago but for that fear.
"How can we tell which of us is right?" Alvar said. "It's like
everything was changing all the time out here. Sometimes I'd swear
none of those suns had red rims, and at other times—like the old man
said, they're all pretty and lying and saying nothing, just changing
all the time. Jezebel stars, the old man said."
"I know I'm right," Russell pleaded. "My hunches always been right.
My hunch got us out of that prison didn't it? Listen—I tell you it's
that star to the left—"
"The one to the right," said Johnson.
"We been going away from the right one all the time," said Alvar.
"We got to stay together," said Russell. "Nobody could spend a year
out here ... alone...."
"Ah ... in another month or so we'd be lousy company anyway," Alvar
said. "Maybe a guy could get to the point where he'd sleep most of the
time ... just wake up enough times to give himself another boost with
the old life-gun."
"We got to face it," Johnson said finally. "We three don't go on
together any more."
"That's it," said Alvar. "There's three suns that look like they might
be right seeing as how we all agree the old man was wrong. But we
believe there is one we can live by, because we all seem to agree that
the old man might have been right about that. If we stick together,
the chance is three to one against us. But if each of us makes for one
star, one of us has a chance to live. Maybe not in paradise like the
old man said, but a place where we can live. And maybe there'll be
intelligent life, maybe even a ship, and whoever gets the right star
can come and help the other two...."
"No ... God no...." Russell whispered over and over. "None of us can
ever make it alone...."
Alvar said, "We each take the star he likes best. I'll go back the
other way. Russ, you take the left. And you, Johnson, go to the
right."
Johnson started to laugh. Russell was yelling wildly at them, and
above his own yelling he could hear Johnson's rising laughter. "Every
guy's got a star of his own," Johnson said when he stopped laughing.
"And we got ours. A nice red-rimmed sun for each of us to call his
very own."
"Okay," Alvar said. "We cut off the gravity rope, and each to his own
sun."
Now Russell wasn't saying anything.
"And the old man," Alvar said, "can keep right on going toward what he
thought was right. And he'll keep on going. Course he won't be able to
give himself another boost with the life-gun, but he'll keep going.
Someday he'll get to that red-rimmed star of his. Out here in space,
once you're going, you never stop ... and I guess there isn't any
other body to pull him off his course. And what will time matter to
old Dunbar? Even less than to us, I guess. He's dead and he won't
care."
"Ready," Johnson said. "I'll cut off the gravity rope."
"I'm ready," Alvar said. "To go back toward whatever it was I started
from."
"Ready, Russ?"
Russell couldn't say anything. He stared at the endless void which now
he would share with no one. Not even crazy old Dunbar.
"All right," Johnson said. "Good-bye."
Russell felt the release, felt the sudden inexplicable isolation and
aloneness even before Alvar and Johnson used their life-guns and shot
out of sight, Johnson toward the left and Alvar back toward that other
red-rimmed sun behind them.
And old Dunbar shooting right on ahead. And all three of them
dwindling and dwindling and blinking out like little lights.
Fading, he could hear their voices. "Each to his own star," Johnson
said. "On a bee line."
"On a bee line," Alvar said.
Russell used his own life-gun and in a little while he didn't hear
Alvar or Johnson's voices, nor could he see them. They were thousands
of miles away, and going further all the time.
Russell's head fell forward against the front of his helmet, and he
closed his eyes. "Maybe," he thought, "I shouldn't have killed the old
man. Maybe one sun's as good as another...."
Then he raised his body and looked out into the year of blackness that
waited for him, stretching away to the red-rimmed sun. Even if he were
right—he was sure now he'd never make it alone.
The body inside the pressure suit drifted into a low-level orbit
around the second planet from the sun of its choice, and drifted there
a long time. A strato-cruiser detected it by chance because of the
strong concentration of radio-activity that came from it.
They took the body down to one of the small, quiet towns on the edge
of one of the many blue lakes where the domed houses were like bright
joyful jewels. They got the leathery, well-preserved body from the
pressure suit.
"An old man," one of them mused. "A very old man. From one of the lost
sectors. I wonder how and why he came so very far from his home?"
"Wrecked a ship out there, probably," one of the others said. "But he
managed to get this far. It looks as though a small meteor fragment
pierced his body. Here. You see?"
"Yes," another of them said. "But what amazes me is that this old man
picked this planet out of all the others. The only one in this entire
sector that would sustain life."
"Maybe he was just a very lucky old man. Yes ... a man who attains
such an age was usually lucky. Or at least that is what they say about
the lost sectors."
"Maybe he knew the way here. Maybe he was here before—sometime."
The other shook his head. "I don't think so. They say some humans from
that far sector did land here—but that's probably only a myth. And if
they did, it was well over a thousand years ago."
Another said. "He has a fine face, this old man. A noble face. Whoever
he is ... wherever he came from, he died bravely and he knew the way,
though he never reached this haven of the lost alive."
"Nor is it irony that he reached here dead," said the Lake Chieftain.
He had been listening and he stepped forward and raised his arm. "He
was old. It is obvious that he fought bravely, that he had great
courage, and that he knew the way. He will be given a burial suitable
to his stature, and he will rest here among the brave.
"Let the women dance and the music play for this old man. Let the
trumpets speak, and the rockets fly up. And let flowers be strewn over
the path above which the women will carry him to rest." | Being disappointed | Losing his mind | Being lost and alone | Living forever | 2 |
29168_4D0KU2UQ_1 | Which terms best describe the narrator's tone? | Every writer must seek his own Flowery Kingdom in imagination's wide
demesne, and if that search can begin and end on Earth his problem has
been greatly simplified. In post-war Japan Walt Sheldon has found not only
serenity, but complete freedom to write undisturbed about the things he
treasures most. A one-time Air Force officer, he has turned to fantasy in
his lighter moments, to bring us such brightly sparkling little gems as this.
houlihan's
equation
by ... Walt Sheldon
The tiny spaceship had been built for a journey to a star. But its
small, mischievous pilots had a rendezvous with destiny—on Earth.
I must
admit that at first I
wasn't sure I was hearing those
noises. It was in a park near the
nuclear propulsion center—a cool,
green spot, with the leaves all telling
each other to hush, be quiet,
and the soft breeze stirring them up
again. I had known precisely such
a secluded little green sanctuary just
over the hill from Mr. Riordan's
farm when I was a boy.
Now it was a place I came to
when I had a problem to thrash out.
That morning I had been trying to
work out an equation to give the
coefficient of discharge for the matter
in combustion. You may call it
gas, if you wish, for we treated it
like gas at the center for convenience—as
it came from the rocket
tubes in our engine.
Without this coefficient to give
us control, we would have lacked a
workable equation when we set
about putting the first moon rocket
around those extraordinary engines
of ours, which were still in the undeveloped
blueprint stage.
I see I shall have to explain this,
although I had hoped to get right
along with my story. When you
start from scratch, matter discharged
from any orifice has a velocity directly
proportional to the square
root of the pressure-head driving it.
But when you actually put things
together, contractions or expansions
in the gas, surface roughness
and other factors make the velocity
a bit smaller.
At the terrible discharge speed
of nuclear explosion—which is
what the drive amounts to despite
the fact that it is simply water in
which nuclear salts have been previously
dissolved—this small factor
makes quite a difference. I had
to figure everything into it—diameter
of the nozzle, sharpness of the
edge, the velocity of approach to the
point of discharge, atomic weight
and structure— Oh, there is so
much of this that if you're not a
nuclear engineer yourself it's certain
to weary you.
Perhaps you had better take my
word for it that without this equation—correctly
stated, mind you—mankind
would be well advised not
to make a first trip to the moon.
And all this talk of coefficients and
equations sits strangely, you might
say, upon the tongue of a man
named Kevin Francis Houlihan.
But I am, after all, a scientist. If I
had not been a specialist in my field
I would hardly have found myself
engaged in vital research at the
center.
Anyway, I heard these little
noises in the park. They sounded
like small working sounds, blending
in eerily mysterious fashion with a
chorus of small voices. I thought at
first it might be children at play,
but then at the time I was a bit
absent-minded. I tiptoed to the edge
of the trees, not wanting to deprive
any small scalawags of their pleasure,
and peered out between the
branches. And what do you suppose
I saw? Not children, but a
group of little people, hard at work.
There was a leader, an older one
with a crank face. He was beating
the air with his arms and piping:
"Over here, now! All right, bring
those electrical connections over
here—and see you're not slow as
treacle about it!"
There were perhaps fifty of the
little people. I was more than startled
by it, too. I had not seen little
people in—oh, close to thirty years.
I had seen them first as a boy of
eight, and then, very briefly again,
on my tenth birthday. And I had
become convinced they could
never
be seen here in America. I had
never seen them so busy, either.
They were building something in
the middle of the glade. It was long
and shiny and upright and a little
over five feet in height.
"Come along now, people!" said
this crotchety one, looking straight
at me. "Stop starin' and get to
work! You'll not be needin' to
mind that man standin' there! You
know he can't see nor hear us!"
Oh, it was good to hear the rich
old tongue again. I smiled, and the
foreman of the leprechauns—if
that's what he was—saw me smile
and became stiff and alert for a moment,
as though suspecting that perhaps
I actually could see him. Then
he shrugged and turned away, clearly
deeming such a thing impossible.
I said, "Just a minute, friend,
and I'll beg your pardon. It so happens
I
can
see you."
He whirled to face me again,
staring open-mouthed. Then he
said, "What? What's that, now?"
"I can see you," I said.
"Ohhh!" he said and put his
palms to his cheekbones. "Saints be
with us! He's a believer! Run everybody—run
for your lives!"
And they all began running, in
as many directions as there were
little souls. They began to scurry
behind the trees and bushes, and a
sloping embankment nearby.
"No, wait!" I said. "Don't go
away! I'll not be hurting you!"
They continued to scurry.
I knew what it was they feared.
"I don't intend catching one of
you!" I said. "Come back, you daft
little creatures!"
But the glade was silent, and they
had all disappeared. They thought I
wanted their crock of gold, of
course. I'd be entitled to it if I could
catch one and keep him. Or so the
legends affirmed, though I've wondered
often about the truth of them.
But I was after no gold. I only wanted
to hear the music of an Irish
tongue. I was lonely here in America,
even if I had latched on to a fine
job of work for almost shamefully
generous pay. You see, in a place as
full of science as the nuclear propulsion
center there is not much
time for the old things. I very much
wanted to talk to the little people.
I walked over to the center of
the glade where the curious shiny
object was standing. It was as
smooth as glass and shaped like a
huge cigar. There were a pair of
triangular fins down at the bottom,
and stubby wings amidships. Of
course it was a spaceship, or a
miniature replica of one. I looked
at it more closely. Everything seemed
almost miraculously complete
and workable.
I shook my head in wonder, then
stepped back from the spaceship
and looked about the glade. I knew
they were all hiding nearby, watching
me apprehensively. I lifted my
head to them.
"Listen to me now, little people!"
I called out. "My name's
Houlihan of the Roscommon Houlihans.
I am descended from King
Niall himself—or so at least my
father used to say! Come on out
now, and pass the time o' day!"
Then I waited, but they didn't
answer. The little people always
had been shy. Yet without reaching
a decision in so many words I knew
suddenly that I
had
to talk to them.
I'd come to the glen to work out a
knotty problem, and I was up
against a blank wall. Simply because
I was so lonely that my mind had
become clogged.
I knew that if I could just once
hear the old tongue again, and talk
about the old things, I might be able
to think the problem through to a
satisfactory conclusion.
So I stepped back to the tiny
spaceship, and this time I struck it
a resounding blow with my fist.
"Hear me now, little people! If you
don't show yourselves and come out
and talk to me, I'll wreck this spaceship
from stem to stern!"
I heard only the leaves rustling
softly.
"Do you understand? I'll give
you until I count three to make an
appearance! One!"
The glade remained deathly silent.
"Two!"
I thought I heard a stirring somewhere,
as if a small, brittle twig had
snapped in the underbrush.
"
Three!
"
And with that the little people
suddenly appeared.
The leader—he seemed more
wizened and bent than before—approached
me slowly and warily as I
stood there. The others all followed
at a safe distance. I smiled to reassure
them and then waved my arm
in a friendly gesture of greeting.
"Good morning," I said.
"Good morning," the foreman
said with some caution. "My name
is Keech."
"And mine's Houlihan, as I've
told you. Are you convinced now
that I have no intention of doing
you any injury?"
"Mr. Houlihan," said Keech,
drawing a kind of peppered dignity
up about himself, "in such matters
I am never fully convinced. After
living for many centuries I am all
too acutely aware of the perversity
of human nature."
"Yes," I said. "Well, as you will
quickly see, all I want to do is
talk." I nodded as I spoke, and sat
down cross-legged upon the grass.
"Any Irishman wants to talk, Mr.
Houlihan."
"And often that's
all
he wants,"
I said. "Sit down with me now, and
stop staring as if I were a snake
returned to the Island."
He shook his head and remained
standing. "Have your say, Mr.
Houlihan. And afterward we'll appreciate
it if you'll go away and
leave us to our work."
"Well, now, your work," I said,
and glanced at the spaceship.
"That's exactly what's got me curious."
The others had edged in a bit
now and were standing in a circle,
intently staring at me. I took out my
pipe. "Why," I asked, "would a
group of little people be building a
spaceship here in America—out in
this lonely place?"
Keech stared back without much
expression, and said, "I've been
wondering how you guessed it was
a spaceship. I was surprised enough
when you told me you could see us
but not overwhelmingly so. I've run
into believers before who could see
the little people. It happens every
so often, though not as frequently
as it did a century ago. But knowing
a spaceship at first glance! Well, I
must confess that
does
astonish
me."
"And why wouldn't I know a
spaceship when I see one?" I said.
"It just so happens I'm a doctor of
science."
"A doctor of science, now," said
Keech.
"Invited by the American government
to work on the first moon
rocket here at the nuclear propulsion
center. Since it's no secret I
can advise you of it."
"A scientist, is it," said Keech.
"Well, now, that's very interesting."
"I'll make no apologies for it," I
said.
"Oh, there's no need for apology,"
said Keech. "Though in truth
we prefer poets to scientists. But it
has just now crossed my mind, Mr.
Houlihan that you, being a scientist,
might be of help to us."
"How?" I asked.
"Well, I might try starting at the
beginning," he replied.
"You might," I said. "A man
usually does."
Keech took out his own pipe—a
clay dudeen—and looked hopeful.
I gave him a pinch of tobacco from
my pouch. "Well, now," he said,
"first of all you're no doubt surprised
to find us here in America."
"I am surprised from time to
time to find myself here," I said.
"But continue."
"We had to come here," said
Keech, "to learn how to make a
spaceship."
"A spaceship, now," I said, unconsciously
adopting some of the
old manner.
"Leprechauns are not really mechanically
inclined," said Keech.
"Their major passions are music
and laughter and mischief, as anyone
knows."
"Myself included," I agreed.
"Then why do you need a spaceship?"
"Well, if I may use an old expression,
we've had a feelin' lately
that we're not long for this world.
Or let me put it this way. We feel
the world isn't long for itself."
I scratched my cheek. "How
would a man unravel a statement
such as that?"
"It's very simple. With all the
super weapons you mortals have
developed, there's the distinct possibility
you might be blowin' us all
up in the process of destroying
yourselves."
"There
is
that possibility," I said.
"Well, then, as I say," said
Keech, "the little people have decided
to leave the planet in a spaceship.
Which we're buildin' here and
now. We've spied upon you and
learned how to do it. Well—almost
how to do it. We haven't learned
yet how to control the power—"
"Hold on, now," I said. "Leaving
the planet, you say. And where
would you be going?"
"There's another committee
working on that. 'Tis not our concern.
I was inclined to suggest the
constellation Orion, which sounds
as though it has a good Irish name,
but I was hooted down. Be that as it
may, my own job was to go into
your nuclear center, learn how to
make the ship, and proceed with its
construction. Naturally, we didn't
understand all of your high-flyin'
science, but some of our people are
pretty clever at gettin' up replicas
of things."
"You mean you've been spying
on us at the center all this time? Do
you know, we often had the feeling
we were being watched, but we
thought it was by the Russians.
There's one thing which puzzles
me, though. If you've been constantly
around us—and I'm still
able to see the little people—why
did I never see you before?"
"It may be we never crossed your
path. It may be you can only see us
when you're thinkin' of us, and of
course truly believin' in us. I don't
know—'tis a thing of the mind, and
not important at the moment.
What's important is for us to get
our first ship to workin' properly
and then we'll be on our way."
"You're determined to go."
"Truly we are, Mr. Houlihan.
Now—to business. Just during
these last few minutes a certain matter
has crossed my mind. That's
why I'm wastin' all this time with
you, sir. You say you are a scientist."
"A nuclear engineer."
"Well, then, it may be that you
can help us—now that you know
we're here."
"Help you?"
"The power control, Mr. Houlihan.
As I understand it, 'tis necessary
to know at any instant exactly
how much thrust is bein' delivered
through the little holes in back.
And on paper it looks simple
enough—the square of somethin' or
other. I've got the figures jotted in
a book when I need 'em. But when
you get to doin' it it doesn't come
out exactly as it does on paper."
"You're referring to the necessity
for a coefficient of discharge."
"Whatever it might be named,"
said Keech, shrugging. "'Tis the
one thing we lack. I suppose eventually
you people will be gettin'
around to it. But meanwhile we
need it right now, if we're to make
our ship move."
"And you want me to help you
with this?"
"That is exactly what crossed my
mind."
I nodded and looked grave and
kneaded my chin for a moment softly.
"Well, now, Keech," I said
finally, "why should I help you?"
"Ha!" said Keech, grinning, but
not with humor, "the avarice of
humans! I knew it! Well, Mr. Houlihan,
I'll give you reason enough.
The pot o' gold, Mr. Houlihan!"
"The one at the end of the rainbow?"
"It's not at the end of the rainbow.
That's a grandmother's tale.
Nor is it actually in an earthen
crock. But there's gold, all right,
enough to make you rich for the
rest of your life. And I'll make you
a proposition."
"Go ahead."
"We'll not be needin' gold where
we're goin'. It's yours if you show
us how to make our ship work."
"Well, now, that's quite an
offer," I said. Keech had the goodness
to be quiet while I sat and
thought for a while. My pipe had
gone out and I lit it again. I finally
said, "Let's have a look at your
ship's drive and see what we can
see."
"You accept the proposition
then?"
"Let's have a look," I said, and
that was all.
Well, we had a look, and then
several looks, and before the morning
was out we had half the spaceship
apart, and were deep in argument
about the whole project.
It was a most fascinating session.
I had often wished for a true working
model at the center, but no allowance
had been inserted in the
budget for it. Keech brought me
paper and pencil and I talked with
the aid of diagrams, as engineers
are wont to do. Although the pencils
were small and I had to hold
them between thumb and forefinger,
as you would a needle, I was
able to make many sensible observations
and even a few innovations.
I came back again the next day—and
every day for the following
two weeks. It rained several times,
but Keech and his people made a
canopy of boughs and leaves and I
was comfortable enough. Every once
in a while someone from the town
or the center itself would pass by,
and stop to watch me. But of course
they wouldn't see the leprechauns
or anything the leprechauns had
made, not being believers.
I would halt work, pass the time
of day, and then, in subtle fashion,
send the intruder on his way. Keech
and the little people just stood by
and grinned all the while.
At the end of sixteen days I had
the entire problem all but whipped.
It is not difficult to understand why.
The working model and the fact
that the small people with their
quick eyes and clever fingers could
spot all sorts of minute shortcomings
was a great help. And I was
hearing the old tongue and talking
of the old things every day, and
truly that went far to take the clutter
out of my mind. I was no longer
so lonely that I couldn't think properly.
On the sixteenth day I covered a
piece of paper with tiny mathematical
symbols and handed it to Keech.
"Here is your equation," I said. "It
will enable you to know your thrust
at any given moment, under any
circumstances, in or out of gravity,
and under all conditions of friction
and combustion."
"Thank you, Mr. Houlihan," said
Keech. All his people had gathered
in a loose circle, as though attending
a rite. They were all looking at
me quietly.
"Mr. Houlihan," said Keech,
"you will not be forgotten by the
leprechauns. If we ever meet again,
upon another world perchance,
you'll find our friendship always
eager and ready."
"Thank you," I said.
"And now, Mr. Houlihan," said
Keech, "I'll see that a quantity of
gold is delivered to your rooms tonight,
and so keep my part of the
bargain."
"I'll not be needing the gold," I
said.
Keech's eyebrows popped upward.
"What's this now?"
"I'll not be needing it," I repeated.
"I don't feel it would be
right to take it for a service of this
sort."
"Well," said Keech in surprise,
and in some awe, too, "well, now,
musha Lord help us! 'Tis the first
time I ever heard such a speech
from a mortal." He turned to his
people. "We'll have three cheers
now, do you hear, for Mr. Houlihan—friend
of the little people as
long as he shall live!"
And they cheered. And little tears
crept into the corners of some of
their turned-up eyes.
We shook hands, all of us, and I
left.
I walked through the park, and
back to the nuclear propulsion center.
It was another cool, green morning
with the leaves making only
soft noises as the breezes came
along. It smelled exactly like a
wood I had known in Roscommon.
And I lit my pipe and smoked it
slowly and chuckled to myself at
how I had gotten the best of the
little people. Surely it was not every
mortal who could accomplish that. I
had given them the wrong equation,
of course. They would never get
their spaceship to work now, and
later, if they tried to spy out the
right information I would take special
measures to prevent it, for I had
the advantage of being able to see
them.
As for our own rocket ship, it
should be well on its way by next
St. Patrick's Day. For I had indeed
determined the true coefficient of
discharge, which I never could have
done so quickly without those sessions
in the glade with Keech and
his working model.
It would go down in scientific
literature now, I suppose, as Houlihan's
Equation, and that was honor
and glory enough for me. I could
do without Keech's pot of gold,
though it would have been pleasant
to be truly rich for a change.
There was no sense in cheating
him out of the gold to boot, for
leprechauns are most clever in matters
of this sort and he would have
had it back soon enough—or else
made it a burden in some way.
Indeed, I had done a piece of
work greatly to my advantage, and
also to the advantage of humankind,
and when a man can do the first and
include the second as a fortunate byproduct
it is a most happy accident.
For if I had shown the little people
how to make a spaceship they
would have left our world. And
this world, as long as it lasts—what
would it be in that event? I ask you
now, wouldn't we be even
more
likely to blow ourselves to Kingdom
Come without the little people here
for us to believe in every now and
then?
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Fantastic Universe
September 1955.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | authoritative and oblivious | manipulative and meticulous | congenial and self-aware | hostile and condescending | 2 |
29168_4D0KU2UQ_2 | Why didn't the narrator provide the leprechauns with the correct equation? | Every writer must seek his own Flowery Kingdom in imagination's wide
demesne, and if that search can begin and end on Earth his problem has
been greatly simplified. In post-war Japan Walt Sheldon has found not only
serenity, but complete freedom to write undisturbed about the things he
treasures most. A one-time Air Force officer, he has turned to fantasy in
his lighter moments, to bring us such brightly sparkling little gems as this.
houlihan's
equation
by ... Walt Sheldon
The tiny spaceship had been built for a journey to a star. But its
small, mischievous pilots had a rendezvous with destiny—on Earth.
I must
admit that at first I
wasn't sure I was hearing those
noises. It was in a park near the
nuclear propulsion center—a cool,
green spot, with the leaves all telling
each other to hush, be quiet,
and the soft breeze stirring them up
again. I had known precisely such
a secluded little green sanctuary just
over the hill from Mr. Riordan's
farm when I was a boy.
Now it was a place I came to
when I had a problem to thrash out.
That morning I had been trying to
work out an equation to give the
coefficient of discharge for the matter
in combustion. You may call it
gas, if you wish, for we treated it
like gas at the center for convenience—as
it came from the rocket
tubes in our engine.
Without this coefficient to give
us control, we would have lacked a
workable equation when we set
about putting the first moon rocket
around those extraordinary engines
of ours, which were still in the undeveloped
blueprint stage.
I see I shall have to explain this,
although I had hoped to get right
along with my story. When you
start from scratch, matter discharged
from any orifice has a velocity directly
proportional to the square
root of the pressure-head driving it.
But when you actually put things
together, contractions or expansions
in the gas, surface roughness
and other factors make the velocity
a bit smaller.
At the terrible discharge speed
of nuclear explosion—which is
what the drive amounts to despite
the fact that it is simply water in
which nuclear salts have been previously
dissolved—this small factor
makes quite a difference. I had
to figure everything into it—diameter
of the nozzle, sharpness of the
edge, the velocity of approach to the
point of discharge, atomic weight
and structure— Oh, there is so
much of this that if you're not a
nuclear engineer yourself it's certain
to weary you.
Perhaps you had better take my
word for it that without this equation—correctly
stated, mind you—mankind
would be well advised not
to make a first trip to the moon.
And all this talk of coefficients and
equations sits strangely, you might
say, upon the tongue of a man
named Kevin Francis Houlihan.
But I am, after all, a scientist. If I
had not been a specialist in my field
I would hardly have found myself
engaged in vital research at the
center.
Anyway, I heard these little
noises in the park. They sounded
like small working sounds, blending
in eerily mysterious fashion with a
chorus of small voices. I thought at
first it might be children at play,
but then at the time I was a bit
absent-minded. I tiptoed to the edge
of the trees, not wanting to deprive
any small scalawags of their pleasure,
and peered out between the
branches. And what do you suppose
I saw? Not children, but a
group of little people, hard at work.
There was a leader, an older one
with a crank face. He was beating
the air with his arms and piping:
"Over here, now! All right, bring
those electrical connections over
here—and see you're not slow as
treacle about it!"
There were perhaps fifty of the
little people. I was more than startled
by it, too. I had not seen little
people in—oh, close to thirty years.
I had seen them first as a boy of
eight, and then, very briefly again,
on my tenth birthday. And I had
become convinced they could
never
be seen here in America. I had
never seen them so busy, either.
They were building something in
the middle of the glade. It was long
and shiny and upright and a little
over five feet in height.
"Come along now, people!" said
this crotchety one, looking straight
at me. "Stop starin' and get to
work! You'll not be needin' to
mind that man standin' there! You
know he can't see nor hear us!"
Oh, it was good to hear the rich
old tongue again. I smiled, and the
foreman of the leprechauns—if
that's what he was—saw me smile
and became stiff and alert for a moment,
as though suspecting that perhaps
I actually could see him. Then
he shrugged and turned away, clearly
deeming such a thing impossible.
I said, "Just a minute, friend,
and I'll beg your pardon. It so happens
I
can
see you."
He whirled to face me again,
staring open-mouthed. Then he
said, "What? What's that, now?"
"I can see you," I said.
"Ohhh!" he said and put his
palms to his cheekbones. "Saints be
with us! He's a believer! Run everybody—run
for your lives!"
And they all began running, in
as many directions as there were
little souls. They began to scurry
behind the trees and bushes, and a
sloping embankment nearby.
"No, wait!" I said. "Don't go
away! I'll not be hurting you!"
They continued to scurry.
I knew what it was they feared.
"I don't intend catching one of
you!" I said. "Come back, you daft
little creatures!"
But the glade was silent, and they
had all disappeared. They thought I
wanted their crock of gold, of
course. I'd be entitled to it if I could
catch one and keep him. Or so the
legends affirmed, though I've wondered
often about the truth of them.
But I was after no gold. I only wanted
to hear the music of an Irish
tongue. I was lonely here in America,
even if I had latched on to a fine
job of work for almost shamefully
generous pay. You see, in a place as
full of science as the nuclear propulsion
center there is not much
time for the old things. I very much
wanted to talk to the little people.
I walked over to the center of
the glade where the curious shiny
object was standing. It was as
smooth as glass and shaped like a
huge cigar. There were a pair of
triangular fins down at the bottom,
and stubby wings amidships. Of
course it was a spaceship, or a
miniature replica of one. I looked
at it more closely. Everything seemed
almost miraculously complete
and workable.
I shook my head in wonder, then
stepped back from the spaceship
and looked about the glade. I knew
they were all hiding nearby, watching
me apprehensively. I lifted my
head to them.
"Listen to me now, little people!"
I called out. "My name's
Houlihan of the Roscommon Houlihans.
I am descended from King
Niall himself—or so at least my
father used to say! Come on out
now, and pass the time o' day!"
Then I waited, but they didn't
answer. The little people always
had been shy. Yet without reaching
a decision in so many words I knew
suddenly that I
had
to talk to them.
I'd come to the glen to work out a
knotty problem, and I was up
against a blank wall. Simply because
I was so lonely that my mind had
become clogged.
I knew that if I could just once
hear the old tongue again, and talk
about the old things, I might be able
to think the problem through to a
satisfactory conclusion.
So I stepped back to the tiny
spaceship, and this time I struck it
a resounding blow with my fist.
"Hear me now, little people! If you
don't show yourselves and come out
and talk to me, I'll wreck this spaceship
from stem to stern!"
I heard only the leaves rustling
softly.
"Do you understand? I'll give
you until I count three to make an
appearance! One!"
The glade remained deathly silent.
"Two!"
I thought I heard a stirring somewhere,
as if a small, brittle twig had
snapped in the underbrush.
"
Three!
"
And with that the little people
suddenly appeared.
The leader—he seemed more
wizened and bent than before—approached
me slowly and warily as I
stood there. The others all followed
at a safe distance. I smiled to reassure
them and then waved my arm
in a friendly gesture of greeting.
"Good morning," I said.
"Good morning," the foreman
said with some caution. "My name
is Keech."
"And mine's Houlihan, as I've
told you. Are you convinced now
that I have no intention of doing
you any injury?"
"Mr. Houlihan," said Keech,
drawing a kind of peppered dignity
up about himself, "in such matters
I am never fully convinced. After
living for many centuries I am all
too acutely aware of the perversity
of human nature."
"Yes," I said. "Well, as you will
quickly see, all I want to do is
talk." I nodded as I spoke, and sat
down cross-legged upon the grass.
"Any Irishman wants to talk, Mr.
Houlihan."
"And often that's
all
he wants,"
I said. "Sit down with me now, and
stop staring as if I were a snake
returned to the Island."
He shook his head and remained
standing. "Have your say, Mr.
Houlihan. And afterward we'll appreciate
it if you'll go away and
leave us to our work."
"Well, now, your work," I said,
and glanced at the spaceship.
"That's exactly what's got me curious."
The others had edged in a bit
now and were standing in a circle,
intently staring at me. I took out my
pipe. "Why," I asked, "would a
group of little people be building a
spaceship here in America—out in
this lonely place?"
Keech stared back without much
expression, and said, "I've been
wondering how you guessed it was
a spaceship. I was surprised enough
when you told me you could see us
but not overwhelmingly so. I've run
into believers before who could see
the little people. It happens every
so often, though not as frequently
as it did a century ago. But knowing
a spaceship at first glance! Well, I
must confess that
does
astonish
me."
"And why wouldn't I know a
spaceship when I see one?" I said.
"It just so happens I'm a doctor of
science."
"A doctor of science, now," said
Keech.
"Invited by the American government
to work on the first moon
rocket here at the nuclear propulsion
center. Since it's no secret I
can advise you of it."
"A scientist, is it," said Keech.
"Well, now, that's very interesting."
"I'll make no apologies for it," I
said.
"Oh, there's no need for apology,"
said Keech. "Though in truth
we prefer poets to scientists. But it
has just now crossed my mind, Mr.
Houlihan that you, being a scientist,
might be of help to us."
"How?" I asked.
"Well, I might try starting at the
beginning," he replied.
"You might," I said. "A man
usually does."
Keech took out his own pipe—a
clay dudeen—and looked hopeful.
I gave him a pinch of tobacco from
my pouch. "Well, now," he said,
"first of all you're no doubt surprised
to find us here in America."
"I am surprised from time to
time to find myself here," I said.
"But continue."
"We had to come here," said
Keech, "to learn how to make a
spaceship."
"A spaceship, now," I said, unconsciously
adopting some of the
old manner.
"Leprechauns are not really mechanically
inclined," said Keech.
"Their major passions are music
and laughter and mischief, as anyone
knows."
"Myself included," I agreed.
"Then why do you need a spaceship?"
"Well, if I may use an old expression,
we've had a feelin' lately
that we're not long for this world.
Or let me put it this way. We feel
the world isn't long for itself."
I scratched my cheek. "How
would a man unravel a statement
such as that?"
"It's very simple. With all the
super weapons you mortals have
developed, there's the distinct possibility
you might be blowin' us all
up in the process of destroying
yourselves."
"There
is
that possibility," I said.
"Well, then, as I say," said
Keech, "the little people have decided
to leave the planet in a spaceship.
Which we're buildin' here and
now. We've spied upon you and
learned how to do it. Well—almost
how to do it. We haven't learned
yet how to control the power—"
"Hold on, now," I said. "Leaving
the planet, you say. And where
would you be going?"
"There's another committee
working on that. 'Tis not our concern.
I was inclined to suggest the
constellation Orion, which sounds
as though it has a good Irish name,
but I was hooted down. Be that as it
may, my own job was to go into
your nuclear center, learn how to
make the ship, and proceed with its
construction. Naturally, we didn't
understand all of your high-flyin'
science, but some of our people are
pretty clever at gettin' up replicas
of things."
"You mean you've been spying
on us at the center all this time? Do
you know, we often had the feeling
we were being watched, but we
thought it was by the Russians.
There's one thing which puzzles
me, though. If you've been constantly
around us—and I'm still
able to see the little people—why
did I never see you before?"
"It may be we never crossed your
path. It may be you can only see us
when you're thinkin' of us, and of
course truly believin' in us. I don't
know—'tis a thing of the mind, and
not important at the moment.
What's important is for us to get
our first ship to workin' properly
and then we'll be on our way."
"You're determined to go."
"Truly we are, Mr. Houlihan.
Now—to business. Just during
these last few minutes a certain matter
has crossed my mind. That's
why I'm wastin' all this time with
you, sir. You say you are a scientist."
"A nuclear engineer."
"Well, then, it may be that you
can help us—now that you know
we're here."
"Help you?"
"The power control, Mr. Houlihan.
As I understand it, 'tis necessary
to know at any instant exactly
how much thrust is bein' delivered
through the little holes in back.
And on paper it looks simple
enough—the square of somethin' or
other. I've got the figures jotted in
a book when I need 'em. But when
you get to doin' it it doesn't come
out exactly as it does on paper."
"You're referring to the necessity
for a coefficient of discharge."
"Whatever it might be named,"
said Keech, shrugging. "'Tis the
one thing we lack. I suppose eventually
you people will be gettin'
around to it. But meanwhile we
need it right now, if we're to make
our ship move."
"And you want me to help you
with this?"
"That is exactly what crossed my
mind."
I nodded and looked grave and
kneaded my chin for a moment softly.
"Well, now, Keech," I said
finally, "why should I help you?"
"Ha!" said Keech, grinning, but
not with humor, "the avarice of
humans! I knew it! Well, Mr. Houlihan,
I'll give you reason enough.
The pot o' gold, Mr. Houlihan!"
"The one at the end of the rainbow?"
"It's not at the end of the rainbow.
That's a grandmother's tale.
Nor is it actually in an earthen
crock. But there's gold, all right,
enough to make you rich for the
rest of your life. And I'll make you
a proposition."
"Go ahead."
"We'll not be needin' gold where
we're goin'. It's yours if you show
us how to make our ship work."
"Well, now, that's quite an
offer," I said. Keech had the goodness
to be quiet while I sat and
thought for a while. My pipe had
gone out and I lit it again. I finally
said, "Let's have a look at your
ship's drive and see what we can
see."
"You accept the proposition
then?"
"Let's have a look," I said, and
that was all.
Well, we had a look, and then
several looks, and before the morning
was out we had half the spaceship
apart, and were deep in argument
about the whole project.
It was a most fascinating session.
I had often wished for a true working
model at the center, but no allowance
had been inserted in the
budget for it. Keech brought me
paper and pencil and I talked with
the aid of diagrams, as engineers
are wont to do. Although the pencils
were small and I had to hold
them between thumb and forefinger,
as you would a needle, I was
able to make many sensible observations
and even a few innovations.
I came back again the next day—and
every day for the following
two weeks. It rained several times,
but Keech and his people made a
canopy of boughs and leaves and I
was comfortable enough. Every once
in a while someone from the town
or the center itself would pass by,
and stop to watch me. But of course
they wouldn't see the leprechauns
or anything the leprechauns had
made, not being believers.
I would halt work, pass the time
of day, and then, in subtle fashion,
send the intruder on his way. Keech
and the little people just stood by
and grinned all the while.
At the end of sixteen days I had
the entire problem all but whipped.
It is not difficult to understand why.
The working model and the fact
that the small people with their
quick eyes and clever fingers could
spot all sorts of minute shortcomings
was a great help. And I was
hearing the old tongue and talking
of the old things every day, and
truly that went far to take the clutter
out of my mind. I was no longer
so lonely that I couldn't think properly.
On the sixteenth day I covered a
piece of paper with tiny mathematical
symbols and handed it to Keech.
"Here is your equation," I said. "It
will enable you to know your thrust
at any given moment, under any
circumstances, in or out of gravity,
and under all conditions of friction
and combustion."
"Thank you, Mr. Houlihan," said
Keech. All his people had gathered
in a loose circle, as though attending
a rite. They were all looking at
me quietly.
"Mr. Houlihan," said Keech,
"you will not be forgotten by the
leprechauns. If we ever meet again,
upon another world perchance,
you'll find our friendship always
eager and ready."
"Thank you," I said.
"And now, Mr. Houlihan," said
Keech, "I'll see that a quantity of
gold is delivered to your rooms tonight,
and so keep my part of the
bargain."
"I'll not be needing the gold," I
said.
Keech's eyebrows popped upward.
"What's this now?"
"I'll not be needing it," I repeated.
"I don't feel it would be
right to take it for a service of this
sort."
"Well," said Keech in surprise,
and in some awe, too, "well, now,
musha Lord help us! 'Tis the first
time I ever heard such a speech
from a mortal." He turned to his
people. "We'll have three cheers
now, do you hear, for Mr. Houlihan—friend
of the little people as
long as he shall live!"
And they cheered. And little tears
crept into the corners of some of
their turned-up eyes.
We shook hands, all of us, and I
left.
I walked through the park, and
back to the nuclear propulsion center.
It was another cool, green morning
with the leaves making only
soft noises as the breezes came
along. It smelled exactly like a
wood I had known in Roscommon.
And I lit my pipe and smoked it
slowly and chuckled to myself at
how I had gotten the best of the
little people. Surely it was not every
mortal who could accomplish that. I
had given them the wrong equation,
of course. They would never get
their spaceship to work now, and
later, if they tried to spy out the
right information I would take special
measures to prevent it, for I had
the advantage of being able to see
them.
As for our own rocket ship, it
should be well on its way by next
St. Patrick's Day. For I had indeed
determined the true coefficient of
discharge, which I never could have
done so quickly without those sessions
in the glade with Keech and
his working model.
It would go down in scientific
literature now, I suppose, as Houlihan's
Equation, and that was honor
and glory enough for me. I could
do without Keech's pot of gold,
though it would have been pleasant
to be truly rich for a change.
There was no sense in cheating
him out of the gold to boot, for
leprechauns are most clever in matters
of this sort and he would have
had it back soon enough—or else
made it a burden in some way.
Indeed, I had done a piece of
work greatly to my advantage, and
also to the advantage of humankind,
and when a man can do the first and
include the second as a fortunate byproduct
it is a most happy accident.
For if I had shown the little people
how to make a spaceship they
would have left our world. And
this world, as long as it lasts—what
would it be in that event? I ask you
now, wouldn't we be even
more
likely to blow ourselves to Kingdom
Come without the little people here
for us to believe in every now and
then?
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Fantastic Universe
September 1955.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | He knows that the leprechauns are preventing humans from destroying the Earth | He wants to take credit for the equation and is concerned they will try to get credit first | In swearing their allegiance to him, they are bound to him for eternity | He believes humans need to believe in things like leprechauns in order to sustain their own race | 3 |
29168_4D0KU2UQ_3 | What is the narrator's ethnicity? | Every writer must seek his own Flowery Kingdom in imagination's wide
demesne, and if that search can begin and end on Earth his problem has
been greatly simplified. In post-war Japan Walt Sheldon has found not only
serenity, but complete freedom to write undisturbed about the things he
treasures most. A one-time Air Force officer, he has turned to fantasy in
his lighter moments, to bring us such brightly sparkling little gems as this.
houlihan's
equation
by ... Walt Sheldon
The tiny spaceship had been built for a journey to a star. But its
small, mischievous pilots had a rendezvous with destiny—on Earth.
I must
admit that at first I
wasn't sure I was hearing those
noises. It was in a park near the
nuclear propulsion center—a cool,
green spot, with the leaves all telling
each other to hush, be quiet,
and the soft breeze stirring them up
again. I had known precisely such
a secluded little green sanctuary just
over the hill from Mr. Riordan's
farm when I was a boy.
Now it was a place I came to
when I had a problem to thrash out.
That morning I had been trying to
work out an equation to give the
coefficient of discharge for the matter
in combustion. You may call it
gas, if you wish, for we treated it
like gas at the center for convenience—as
it came from the rocket
tubes in our engine.
Without this coefficient to give
us control, we would have lacked a
workable equation when we set
about putting the first moon rocket
around those extraordinary engines
of ours, which were still in the undeveloped
blueprint stage.
I see I shall have to explain this,
although I had hoped to get right
along with my story. When you
start from scratch, matter discharged
from any orifice has a velocity directly
proportional to the square
root of the pressure-head driving it.
But when you actually put things
together, contractions or expansions
in the gas, surface roughness
and other factors make the velocity
a bit smaller.
At the terrible discharge speed
of nuclear explosion—which is
what the drive amounts to despite
the fact that it is simply water in
which nuclear salts have been previously
dissolved—this small factor
makes quite a difference. I had
to figure everything into it—diameter
of the nozzle, sharpness of the
edge, the velocity of approach to the
point of discharge, atomic weight
and structure— Oh, there is so
much of this that if you're not a
nuclear engineer yourself it's certain
to weary you.
Perhaps you had better take my
word for it that without this equation—correctly
stated, mind you—mankind
would be well advised not
to make a first trip to the moon.
And all this talk of coefficients and
equations sits strangely, you might
say, upon the tongue of a man
named Kevin Francis Houlihan.
But I am, after all, a scientist. If I
had not been a specialist in my field
I would hardly have found myself
engaged in vital research at the
center.
Anyway, I heard these little
noises in the park. They sounded
like small working sounds, blending
in eerily mysterious fashion with a
chorus of small voices. I thought at
first it might be children at play,
but then at the time I was a bit
absent-minded. I tiptoed to the edge
of the trees, not wanting to deprive
any small scalawags of their pleasure,
and peered out between the
branches. And what do you suppose
I saw? Not children, but a
group of little people, hard at work.
There was a leader, an older one
with a crank face. He was beating
the air with his arms and piping:
"Over here, now! All right, bring
those electrical connections over
here—and see you're not slow as
treacle about it!"
There were perhaps fifty of the
little people. I was more than startled
by it, too. I had not seen little
people in—oh, close to thirty years.
I had seen them first as a boy of
eight, and then, very briefly again,
on my tenth birthday. And I had
become convinced they could
never
be seen here in America. I had
never seen them so busy, either.
They were building something in
the middle of the glade. It was long
and shiny and upright and a little
over five feet in height.
"Come along now, people!" said
this crotchety one, looking straight
at me. "Stop starin' and get to
work! You'll not be needin' to
mind that man standin' there! You
know he can't see nor hear us!"
Oh, it was good to hear the rich
old tongue again. I smiled, and the
foreman of the leprechauns—if
that's what he was—saw me smile
and became stiff and alert for a moment,
as though suspecting that perhaps
I actually could see him. Then
he shrugged and turned away, clearly
deeming such a thing impossible.
I said, "Just a minute, friend,
and I'll beg your pardon. It so happens
I
can
see you."
He whirled to face me again,
staring open-mouthed. Then he
said, "What? What's that, now?"
"I can see you," I said.
"Ohhh!" he said and put his
palms to his cheekbones. "Saints be
with us! He's a believer! Run everybody—run
for your lives!"
And they all began running, in
as many directions as there were
little souls. They began to scurry
behind the trees and bushes, and a
sloping embankment nearby.
"No, wait!" I said. "Don't go
away! I'll not be hurting you!"
They continued to scurry.
I knew what it was they feared.
"I don't intend catching one of
you!" I said. "Come back, you daft
little creatures!"
But the glade was silent, and they
had all disappeared. They thought I
wanted their crock of gold, of
course. I'd be entitled to it if I could
catch one and keep him. Or so the
legends affirmed, though I've wondered
often about the truth of them.
But I was after no gold. I only wanted
to hear the music of an Irish
tongue. I was lonely here in America,
even if I had latched on to a fine
job of work for almost shamefully
generous pay. You see, in a place as
full of science as the nuclear propulsion
center there is not much
time for the old things. I very much
wanted to talk to the little people.
I walked over to the center of
the glade where the curious shiny
object was standing. It was as
smooth as glass and shaped like a
huge cigar. There were a pair of
triangular fins down at the bottom,
and stubby wings amidships. Of
course it was a spaceship, or a
miniature replica of one. I looked
at it more closely. Everything seemed
almost miraculously complete
and workable.
I shook my head in wonder, then
stepped back from the spaceship
and looked about the glade. I knew
they were all hiding nearby, watching
me apprehensively. I lifted my
head to them.
"Listen to me now, little people!"
I called out. "My name's
Houlihan of the Roscommon Houlihans.
I am descended from King
Niall himself—or so at least my
father used to say! Come on out
now, and pass the time o' day!"
Then I waited, but they didn't
answer. The little people always
had been shy. Yet without reaching
a decision in so many words I knew
suddenly that I
had
to talk to them.
I'd come to the glen to work out a
knotty problem, and I was up
against a blank wall. Simply because
I was so lonely that my mind had
become clogged.
I knew that if I could just once
hear the old tongue again, and talk
about the old things, I might be able
to think the problem through to a
satisfactory conclusion.
So I stepped back to the tiny
spaceship, and this time I struck it
a resounding blow with my fist.
"Hear me now, little people! If you
don't show yourselves and come out
and talk to me, I'll wreck this spaceship
from stem to stern!"
I heard only the leaves rustling
softly.
"Do you understand? I'll give
you until I count three to make an
appearance! One!"
The glade remained deathly silent.
"Two!"
I thought I heard a stirring somewhere,
as if a small, brittle twig had
snapped in the underbrush.
"
Three!
"
And with that the little people
suddenly appeared.
The leader—he seemed more
wizened and bent than before—approached
me slowly and warily as I
stood there. The others all followed
at a safe distance. I smiled to reassure
them and then waved my arm
in a friendly gesture of greeting.
"Good morning," I said.
"Good morning," the foreman
said with some caution. "My name
is Keech."
"And mine's Houlihan, as I've
told you. Are you convinced now
that I have no intention of doing
you any injury?"
"Mr. Houlihan," said Keech,
drawing a kind of peppered dignity
up about himself, "in such matters
I am never fully convinced. After
living for many centuries I am all
too acutely aware of the perversity
of human nature."
"Yes," I said. "Well, as you will
quickly see, all I want to do is
talk." I nodded as I spoke, and sat
down cross-legged upon the grass.
"Any Irishman wants to talk, Mr.
Houlihan."
"And often that's
all
he wants,"
I said. "Sit down with me now, and
stop staring as if I were a snake
returned to the Island."
He shook his head and remained
standing. "Have your say, Mr.
Houlihan. And afterward we'll appreciate
it if you'll go away and
leave us to our work."
"Well, now, your work," I said,
and glanced at the spaceship.
"That's exactly what's got me curious."
The others had edged in a bit
now and were standing in a circle,
intently staring at me. I took out my
pipe. "Why," I asked, "would a
group of little people be building a
spaceship here in America—out in
this lonely place?"
Keech stared back without much
expression, and said, "I've been
wondering how you guessed it was
a spaceship. I was surprised enough
when you told me you could see us
but not overwhelmingly so. I've run
into believers before who could see
the little people. It happens every
so often, though not as frequently
as it did a century ago. But knowing
a spaceship at first glance! Well, I
must confess that
does
astonish
me."
"And why wouldn't I know a
spaceship when I see one?" I said.
"It just so happens I'm a doctor of
science."
"A doctor of science, now," said
Keech.
"Invited by the American government
to work on the first moon
rocket here at the nuclear propulsion
center. Since it's no secret I
can advise you of it."
"A scientist, is it," said Keech.
"Well, now, that's very interesting."
"I'll make no apologies for it," I
said.
"Oh, there's no need for apology,"
said Keech. "Though in truth
we prefer poets to scientists. But it
has just now crossed my mind, Mr.
Houlihan that you, being a scientist,
might be of help to us."
"How?" I asked.
"Well, I might try starting at the
beginning," he replied.
"You might," I said. "A man
usually does."
Keech took out his own pipe—a
clay dudeen—and looked hopeful.
I gave him a pinch of tobacco from
my pouch. "Well, now," he said,
"first of all you're no doubt surprised
to find us here in America."
"I am surprised from time to
time to find myself here," I said.
"But continue."
"We had to come here," said
Keech, "to learn how to make a
spaceship."
"A spaceship, now," I said, unconsciously
adopting some of the
old manner.
"Leprechauns are not really mechanically
inclined," said Keech.
"Their major passions are music
and laughter and mischief, as anyone
knows."
"Myself included," I agreed.
"Then why do you need a spaceship?"
"Well, if I may use an old expression,
we've had a feelin' lately
that we're not long for this world.
Or let me put it this way. We feel
the world isn't long for itself."
I scratched my cheek. "How
would a man unravel a statement
such as that?"
"It's very simple. With all the
super weapons you mortals have
developed, there's the distinct possibility
you might be blowin' us all
up in the process of destroying
yourselves."
"There
is
that possibility," I said.
"Well, then, as I say," said
Keech, "the little people have decided
to leave the planet in a spaceship.
Which we're buildin' here and
now. We've spied upon you and
learned how to do it. Well—almost
how to do it. We haven't learned
yet how to control the power—"
"Hold on, now," I said. "Leaving
the planet, you say. And where
would you be going?"
"There's another committee
working on that. 'Tis not our concern.
I was inclined to suggest the
constellation Orion, which sounds
as though it has a good Irish name,
but I was hooted down. Be that as it
may, my own job was to go into
your nuclear center, learn how to
make the ship, and proceed with its
construction. Naturally, we didn't
understand all of your high-flyin'
science, but some of our people are
pretty clever at gettin' up replicas
of things."
"You mean you've been spying
on us at the center all this time? Do
you know, we often had the feeling
we were being watched, but we
thought it was by the Russians.
There's one thing which puzzles
me, though. If you've been constantly
around us—and I'm still
able to see the little people—why
did I never see you before?"
"It may be we never crossed your
path. It may be you can only see us
when you're thinkin' of us, and of
course truly believin' in us. I don't
know—'tis a thing of the mind, and
not important at the moment.
What's important is for us to get
our first ship to workin' properly
and then we'll be on our way."
"You're determined to go."
"Truly we are, Mr. Houlihan.
Now—to business. Just during
these last few minutes a certain matter
has crossed my mind. That's
why I'm wastin' all this time with
you, sir. You say you are a scientist."
"A nuclear engineer."
"Well, then, it may be that you
can help us—now that you know
we're here."
"Help you?"
"The power control, Mr. Houlihan.
As I understand it, 'tis necessary
to know at any instant exactly
how much thrust is bein' delivered
through the little holes in back.
And on paper it looks simple
enough—the square of somethin' or
other. I've got the figures jotted in
a book when I need 'em. But when
you get to doin' it it doesn't come
out exactly as it does on paper."
"You're referring to the necessity
for a coefficient of discharge."
"Whatever it might be named,"
said Keech, shrugging. "'Tis the
one thing we lack. I suppose eventually
you people will be gettin'
around to it. But meanwhile we
need it right now, if we're to make
our ship move."
"And you want me to help you
with this?"
"That is exactly what crossed my
mind."
I nodded and looked grave and
kneaded my chin for a moment softly.
"Well, now, Keech," I said
finally, "why should I help you?"
"Ha!" said Keech, grinning, but
not with humor, "the avarice of
humans! I knew it! Well, Mr. Houlihan,
I'll give you reason enough.
The pot o' gold, Mr. Houlihan!"
"The one at the end of the rainbow?"
"It's not at the end of the rainbow.
That's a grandmother's tale.
Nor is it actually in an earthen
crock. But there's gold, all right,
enough to make you rich for the
rest of your life. And I'll make you
a proposition."
"Go ahead."
"We'll not be needin' gold where
we're goin'. It's yours if you show
us how to make our ship work."
"Well, now, that's quite an
offer," I said. Keech had the goodness
to be quiet while I sat and
thought for a while. My pipe had
gone out and I lit it again. I finally
said, "Let's have a look at your
ship's drive and see what we can
see."
"You accept the proposition
then?"
"Let's have a look," I said, and
that was all.
Well, we had a look, and then
several looks, and before the morning
was out we had half the spaceship
apart, and were deep in argument
about the whole project.
It was a most fascinating session.
I had often wished for a true working
model at the center, but no allowance
had been inserted in the
budget for it. Keech brought me
paper and pencil and I talked with
the aid of diagrams, as engineers
are wont to do. Although the pencils
were small and I had to hold
them between thumb and forefinger,
as you would a needle, I was
able to make many sensible observations
and even a few innovations.
I came back again the next day—and
every day for the following
two weeks. It rained several times,
but Keech and his people made a
canopy of boughs and leaves and I
was comfortable enough. Every once
in a while someone from the town
or the center itself would pass by,
and stop to watch me. But of course
they wouldn't see the leprechauns
or anything the leprechauns had
made, not being believers.
I would halt work, pass the time
of day, and then, in subtle fashion,
send the intruder on his way. Keech
and the little people just stood by
and grinned all the while.
At the end of sixteen days I had
the entire problem all but whipped.
It is not difficult to understand why.
The working model and the fact
that the small people with their
quick eyes and clever fingers could
spot all sorts of minute shortcomings
was a great help. And I was
hearing the old tongue and talking
of the old things every day, and
truly that went far to take the clutter
out of my mind. I was no longer
so lonely that I couldn't think properly.
On the sixteenth day I covered a
piece of paper with tiny mathematical
symbols and handed it to Keech.
"Here is your equation," I said. "It
will enable you to know your thrust
at any given moment, under any
circumstances, in or out of gravity,
and under all conditions of friction
and combustion."
"Thank you, Mr. Houlihan," said
Keech. All his people had gathered
in a loose circle, as though attending
a rite. They were all looking at
me quietly.
"Mr. Houlihan," said Keech,
"you will not be forgotten by the
leprechauns. If we ever meet again,
upon another world perchance,
you'll find our friendship always
eager and ready."
"Thank you," I said.
"And now, Mr. Houlihan," said
Keech, "I'll see that a quantity of
gold is delivered to your rooms tonight,
and so keep my part of the
bargain."
"I'll not be needing the gold," I
said.
Keech's eyebrows popped upward.
"What's this now?"
"I'll not be needing it," I repeated.
"I don't feel it would be
right to take it for a service of this
sort."
"Well," said Keech in surprise,
and in some awe, too, "well, now,
musha Lord help us! 'Tis the first
time I ever heard such a speech
from a mortal." He turned to his
people. "We'll have three cheers
now, do you hear, for Mr. Houlihan—friend
of the little people as
long as he shall live!"
And they cheered. And little tears
crept into the corners of some of
their turned-up eyes.
We shook hands, all of us, and I
left.
I walked through the park, and
back to the nuclear propulsion center.
It was another cool, green morning
with the leaves making only
soft noises as the breezes came
along. It smelled exactly like a
wood I had known in Roscommon.
And I lit my pipe and smoked it
slowly and chuckled to myself at
how I had gotten the best of the
little people. Surely it was not every
mortal who could accomplish that. I
had given them the wrong equation,
of course. They would never get
their spaceship to work now, and
later, if they tried to spy out the
right information I would take special
measures to prevent it, for I had
the advantage of being able to see
them.
As for our own rocket ship, it
should be well on its way by next
St. Patrick's Day. For I had indeed
determined the true coefficient of
discharge, which I never could have
done so quickly without those sessions
in the glade with Keech and
his working model.
It would go down in scientific
literature now, I suppose, as Houlihan's
Equation, and that was honor
and glory enough for me. I could
do without Keech's pot of gold,
though it would have been pleasant
to be truly rich for a change.
There was no sense in cheating
him out of the gold to boot, for
leprechauns are most clever in matters
of this sort and he would have
had it back soon enough—or else
made it a burden in some way.
Indeed, I had done a piece of
work greatly to my advantage, and
also to the advantage of humankind,
and when a man can do the first and
include the second as a fortunate byproduct
it is a most happy accident.
For if I had shown the little people
how to make a spaceship they
would have left our world. And
this world, as long as it lasts—what
would it be in that event? I ask you
now, wouldn't we be even
more
likely to blow ourselves to Kingdom
Come without the little people here
for us to believe in every now and
then?
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Fantastic Universe
September 1955.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | Irish | American | Leprechaun | Japanese | 0 |
29168_4D0KU2UQ_4 | Why do the leprechauns prefer poets to scientists? | Every writer must seek his own Flowery Kingdom in imagination's wide
demesne, and if that search can begin and end on Earth his problem has
been greatly simplified. In post-war Japan Walt Sheldon has found not only
serenity, but complete freedom to write undisturbed about the things he
treasures most. A one-time Air Force officer, he has turned to fantasy in
his lighter moments, to bring us such brightly sparkling little gems as this.
houlihan's
equation
by ... Walt Sheldon
The tiny spaceship had been built for a journey to a star. But its
small, mischievous pilots had a rendezvous with destiny—on Earth.
I must
admit that at first I
wasn't sure I was hearing those
noises. It was in a park near the
nuclear propulsion center—a cool,
green spot, with the leaves all telling
each other to hush, be quiet,
and the soft breeze stirring them up
again. I had known precisely such
a secluded little green sanctuary just
over the hill from Mr. Riordan's
farm when I was a boy.
Now it was a place I came to
when I had a problem to thrash out.
That morning I had been trying to
work out an equation to give the
coefficient of discharge for the matter
in combustion. You may call it
gas, if you wish, for we treated it
like gas at the center for convenience—as
it came from the rocket
tubes in our engine.
Without this coefficient to give
us control, we would have lacked a
workable equation when we set
about putting the first moon rocket
around those extraordinary engines
of ours, which were still in the undeveloped
blueprint stage.
I see I shall have to explain this,
although I had hoped to get right
along with my story. When you
start from scratch, matter discharged
from any orifice has a velocity directly
proportional to the square
root of the pressure-head driving it.
But when you actually put things
together, contractions or expansions
in the gas, surface roughness
and other factors make the velocity
a bit smaller.
At the terrible discharge speed
of nuclear explosion—which is
what the drive amounts to despite
the fact that it is simply water in
which nuclear salts have been previously
dissolved—this small factor
makes quite a difference. I had
to figure everything into it—diameter
of the nozzle, sharpness of the
edge, the velocity of approach to the
point of discharge, atomic weight
and structure— Oh, there is so
much of this that if you're not a
nuclear engineer yourself it's certain
to weary you.
Perhaps you had better take my
word for it that without this equation—correctly
stated, mind you—mankind
would be well advised not
to make a first trip to the moon.
And all this talk of coefficients and
equations sits strangely, you might
say, upon the tongue of a man
named Kevin Francis Houlihan.
But I am, after all, a scientist. If I
had not been a specialist in my field
I would hardly have found myself
engaged in vital research at the
center.
Anyway, I heard these little
noises in the park. They sounded
like small working sounds, blending
in eerily mysterious fashion with a
chorus of small voices. I thought at
first it might be children at play,
but then at the time I was a bit
absent-minded. I tiptoed to the edge
of the trees, not wanting to deprive
any small scalawags of their pleasure,
and peered out between the
branches. And what do you suppose
I saw? Not children, but a
group of little people, hard at work.
There was a leader, an older one
with a crank face. He was beating
the air with his arms and piping:
"Over here, now! All right, bring
those electrical connections over
here—and see you're not slow as
treacle about it!"
There were perhaps fifty of the
little people. I was more than startled
by it, too. I had not seen little
people in—oh, close to thirty years.
I had seen them first as a boy of
eight, and then, very briefly again,
on my tenth birthday. And I had
become convinced they could
never
be seen here in America. I had
never seen them so busy, either.
They were building something in
the middle of the glade. It was long
and shiny and upright and a little
over five feet in height.
"Come along now, people!" said
this crotchety one, looking straight
at me. "Stop starin' and get to
work! You'll not be needin' to
mind that man standin' there! You
know he can't see nor hear us!"
Oh, it was good to hear the rich
old tongue again. I smiled, and the
foreman of the leprechauns—if
that's what he was—saw me smile
and became stiff and alert for a moment,
as though suspecting that perhaps
I actually could see him. Then
he shrugged and turned away, clearly
deeming such a thing impossible.
I said, "Just a minute, friend,
and I'll beg your pardon. It so happens
I
can
see you."
He whirled to face me again,
staring open-mouthed. Then he
said, "What? What's that, now?"
"I can see you," I said.
"Ohhh!" he said and put his
palms to his cheekbones. "Saints be
with us! He's a believer! Run everybody—run
for your lives!"
And they all began running, in
as many directions as there were
little souls. They began to scurry
behind the trees and bushes, and a
sloping embankment nearby.
"No, wait!" I said. "Don't go
away! I'll not be hurting you!"
They continued to scurry.
I knew what it was they feared.
"I don't intend catching one of
you!" I said. "Come back, you daft
little creatures!"
But the glade was silent, and they
had all disappeared. They thought I
wanted their crock of gold, of
course. I'd be entitled to it if I could
catch one and keep him. Or so the
legends affirmed, though I've wondered
often about the truth of them.
But I was after no gold. I only wanted
to hear the music of an Irish
tongue. I was lonely here in America,
even if I had latched on to a fine
job of work for almost shamefully
generous pay. You see, in a place as
full of science as the nuclear propulsion
center there is not much
time for the old things. I very much
wanted to talk to the little people.
I walked over to the center of
the glade where the curious shiny
object was standing. It was as
smooth as glass and shaped like a
huge cigar. There were a pair of
triangular fins down at the bottom,
and stubby wings amidships. Of
course it was a spaceship, or a
miniature replica of one. I looked
at it more closely. Everything seemed
almost miraculously complete
and workable.
I shook my head in wonder, then
stepped back from the spaceship
and looked about the glade. I knew
they were all hiding nearby, watching
me apprehensively. I lifted my
head to them.
"Listen to me now, little people!"
I called out. "My name's
Houlihan of the Roscommon Houlihans.
I am descended from King
Niall himself—or so at least my
father used to say! Come on out
now, and pass the time o' day!"
Then I waited, but they didn't
answer. The little people always
had been shy. Yet without reaching
a decision in so many words I knew
suddenly that I
had
to talk to them.
I'd come to the glen to work out a
knotty problem, and I was up
against a blank wall. Simply because
I was so lonely that my mind had
become clogged.
I knew that if I could just once
hear the old tongue again, and talk
about the old things, I might be able
to think the problem through to a
satisfactory conclusion.
So I stepped back to the tiny
spaceship, and this time I struck it
a resounding blow with my fist.
"Hear me now, little people! If you
don't show yourselves and come out
and talk to me, I'll wreck this spaceship
from stem to stern!"
I heard only the leaves rustling
softly.
"Do you understand? I'll give
you until I count three to make an
appearance! One!"
The glade remained deathly silent.
"Two!"
I thought I heard a stirring somewhere,
as if a small, brittle twig had
snapped in the underbrush.
"
Three!
"
And with that the little people
suddenly appeared.
The leader—he seemed more
wizened and bent than before—approached
me slowly and warily as I
stood there. The others all followed
at a safe distance. I smiled to reassure
them and then waved my arm
in a friendly gesture of greeting.
"Good morning," I said.
"Good morning," the foreman
said with some caution. "My name
is Keech."
"And mine's Houlihan, as I've
told you. Are you convinced now
that I have no intention of doing
you any injury?"
"Mr. Houlihan," said Keech,
drawing a kind of peppered dignity
up about himself, "in such matters
I am never fully convinced. After
living for many centuries I am all
too acutely aware of the perversity
of human nature."
"Yes," I said. "Well, as you will
quickly see, all I want to do is
talk." I nodded as I spoke, and sat
down cross-legged upon the grass.
"Any Irishman wants to talk, Mr.
Houlihan."
"And often that's
all
he wants,"
I said. "Sit down with me now, and
stop staring as if I were a snake
returned to the Island."
He shook his head and remained
standing. "Have your say, Mr.
Houlihan. And afterward we'll appreciate
it if you'll go away and
leave us to our work."
"Well, now, your work," I said,
and glanced at the spaceship.
"That's exactly what's got me curious."
The others had edged in a bit
now and were standing in a circle,
intently staring at me. I took out my
pipe. "Why," I asked, "would a
group of little people be building a
spaceship here in America—out in
this lonely place?"
Keech stared back without much
expression, and said, "I've been
wondering how you guessed it was
a spaceship. I was surprised enough
when you told me you could see us
but not overwhelmingly so. I've run
into believers before who could see
the little people. It happens every
so often, though not as frequently
as it did a century ago. But knowing
a spaceship at first glance! Well, I
must confess that
does
astonish
me."
"And why wouldn't I know a
spaceship when I see one?" I said.
"It just so happens I'm a doctor of
science."
"A doctor of science, now," said
Keech.
"Invited by the American government
to work on the first moon
rocket here at the nuclear propulsion
center. Since it's no secret I
can advise you of it."
"A scientist, is it," said Keech.
"Well, now, that's very interesting."
"I'll make no apologies for it," I
said.
"Oh, there's no need for apology,"
said Keech. "Though in truth
we prefer poets to scientists. But it
has just now crossed my mind, Mr.
Houlihan that you, being a scientist,
might be of help to us."
"How?" I asked.
"Well, I might try starting at the
beginning," he replied.
"You might," I said. "A man
usually does."
Keech took out his own pipe—a
clay dudeen—and looked hopeful.
I gave him a pinch of tobacco from
my pouch. "Well, now," he said,
"first of all you're no doubt surprised
to find us here in America."
"I am surprised from time to
time to find myself here," I said.
"But continue."
"We had to come here," said
Keech, "to learn how to make a
spaceship."
"A spaceship, now," I said, unconsciously
adopting some of the
old manner.
"Leprechauns are not really mechanically
inclined," said Keech.
"Their major passions are music
and laughter and mischief, as anyone
knows."
"Myself included," I agreed.
"Then why do you need a spaceship?"
"Well, if I may use an old expression,
we've had a feelin' lately
that we're not long for this world.
Or let me put it this way. We feel
the world isn't long for itself."
I scratched my cheek. "How
would a man unravel a statement
such as that?"
"It's very simple. With all the
super weapons you mortals have
developed, there's the distinct possibility
you might be blowin' us all
up in the process of destroying
yourselves."
"There
is
that possibility," I said.
"Well, then, as I say," said
Keech, "the little people have decided
to leave the planet in a spaceship.
Which we're buildin' here and
now. We've spied upon you and
learned how to do it. Well—almost
how to do it. We haven't learned
yet how to control the power—"
"Hold on, now," I said. "Leaving
the planet, you say. And where
would you be going?"
"There's another committee
working on that. 'Tis not our concern.
I was inclined to suggest the
constellation Orion, which sounds
as though it has a good Irish name,
but I was hooted down. Be that as it
may, my own job was to go into
your nuclear center, learn how to
make the ship, and proceed with its
construction. Naturally, we didn't
understand all of your high-flyin'
science, but some of our people are
pretty clever at gettin' up replicas
of things."
"You mean you've been spying
on us at the center all this time? Do
you know, we often had the feeling
we were being watched, but we
thought it was by the Russians.
There's one thing which puzzles
me, though. If you've been constantly
around us—and I'm still
able to see the little people—why
did I never see you before?"
"It may be we never crossed your
path. It may be you can only see us
when you're thinkin' of us, and of
course truly believin' in us. I don't
know—'tis a thing of the mind, and
not important at the moment.
What's important is for us to get
our first ship to workin' properly
and then we'll be on our way."
"You're determined to go."
"Truly we are, Mr. Houlihan.
Now—to business. Just during
these last few minutes a certain matter
has crossed my mind. That's
why I'm wastin' all this time with
you, sir. You say you are a scientist."
"A nuclear engineer."
"Well, then, it may be that you
can help us—now that you know
we're here."
"Help you?"
"The power control, Mr. Houlihan.
As I understand it, 'tis necessary
to know at any instant exactly
how much thrust is bein' delivered
through the little holes in back.
And on paper it looks simple
enough—the square of somethin' or
other. I've got the figures jotted in
a book when I need 'em. But when
you get to doin' it it doesn't come
out exactly as it does on paper."
"You're referring to the necessity
for a coefficient of discharge."
"Whatever it might be named,"
said Keech, shrugging. "'Tis the
one thing we lack. I suppose eventually
you people will be gettin'
around to it. But meanwhile we
need it right now, if we're to make
our ship move."
"And you want me to help you
with this?"
"That is exactly what crossed my
mind."
I nodded and looked grave and
kneaded my chin for a moment softly.
"Well, now, Keech," I said
finally, "why should I help you?"
"Ha!" said Keech, grinning, but
not with humor, "the avarice of
humans! I knew it! Well, Mr. Houlihan,
I'll give you reason enough.
The pot o' gold, Mr. Houlihan!"
"The one at the end of the rainbow?"
"It's not at the end of the rainbow.
That's a grandmother's tale.
Nor is it actually in an earthen
crock. But there's gold, all right,
enough to make you rich for the
rest of your life. And I'll make you
a proposition."
"Go ahead."
"We'll not be needin' gold where
we're goin'. It's yours if you show
us how to make our ship work."
"Well, now, that's quite an
offer," I said. Keech had the goodness
to be quiet while I sat and
thought for a while. My pipe had
gone out and I lit it again. I finally
said, "Let's have a look at your
ship's drive and see what we can
see."
"You accept the proposition
then?"
"Let's have a look," I said, and
that was all.
Well, we had a look, and then
several looks, and before the morning
was out we had half the spaceship
apart, and were deep in argument
about the whole project.
It was a most fascinating session.
I had often wished for a true working
model at the center, but no allowance
had been inserted in the
budget for it. Keech brought me
paper and pencil and I talked with
the aid of diagrams, as engineers
are wont to do. Although the pencils
were small and I had to hold
them between thumb and forefinger,
as you would a needle, I was
able to make many sensible observations
and even a few innovations.
I came back again the next day—and
every day for the following
two weeks. It rained several times,
but Keech and his people made a
canopy of boughs and leaves and I
was comfortable enough. Every once
in a while someone from the town
or the center itself would pass by,
and stop to watch me. But of course
they wouldn't see the leprechauns
or anything the leprechauns had
made, not being believers.
I would halt work, pass the time
of day, and then, in subtle fashion,
send the intruder on his way. Keech
and the little people just stood by
and grinned all the while.
At the end of sixteen days I had
the entire problem all but whipped.
It is not difficult to understand why.
The working model and the fact
that the small people with their
quick eyes and clever fingers could
spot all sorts of minute shortcomings
was a great help. And I was
hearing the old tongue and talking
of the old things every day, and
truly that went far to take the clutter
out of my mind. I was no longer
so lonely that I couldn't think properly.
On the sixteenth day I covered a
piece of paper with tiny mathematical
symbols and handed it to Keech.
"Here is your equation," I said. "It
will enable you to know your thrust
at any given moment, under any
circumstances, in or out of gravity,
and under all conditions of friction
and combustion."
"Thank you, Mr. Houlihan," said
Keech. All his people had gathered
in a loose circle, as though attending
a rite. They were all looking at
me quietly.
"Mr. Houlihan," said Keech,
"you will not be forgotten by the
leprechauns. If we ever meet again,
upon another world perchance,
you'll find our friendship always
eager and ready."
"Thank you," I said.
"And now, Mr. Houlihan," said
Keech, "I'll see that a quantity of
gold is delivered to your rooms tonight,
and so keep my part of the
bargain."
"I'll not be needing the gold," I
said.
Keech's eyebrows popped upward.
"What's this now?"
"I'll not be needing it," I repeated.
"I don't feel it would be
right to take it for a service of this
sort."
"Well," said Keech in surprise,
and in some awe, too, "well, now,
musha Lord help us! 'Tis the first
time I ever heard such a speech
from a mortal." He turned to his
people. "We'll have three cheers
now, do you hear, for Mr. Houlihan—friend
of the little people as
long as he shall live!"
And they cheered. And little tears
crept into the corners of some of
their turned-up eyes.
We shook hands, all of us, and I
left.
I walked through the park, and
back to the nuclear propulsion center.
It was another cool, green morning
with the leaves making only
soft noises as the breezes came
along. It smelled exactly like a
wood I had known in Roscommon.
And I lit my pipe and smoked it
slowly and chuckled to myself at
how I had gotten the best of the
little people. Surely it was not every
mortal who could accomplish that. I
had given them the wrong equation,
of course. They would never get
their spaceship to work now, and
later, if they tried to spy out the
right information I would take special
measures to prevent it, for I had
the advantage of being able to see
them.
As for our own rocket ship, it
should be well on its way by next
St. Patrick's Day. For I had indeed
determined the true coefficient of
discharge, which I never could have
done so quickly without those sessions
in the glade with Keech and
his working model.
It would go down in scientific
literature now, I suppose, as Houlihan's
Equation, and that was honor
and glory enough for me. I could
do without Keech's pot of gold,
though it would have been pleasant
to be truly rich for a change.
There was no sense in cheating
him out of the gold to boot, for
leprechauns are most clever in matters
of this sort and he would have
had it back soon enough—or else
made it a burden in some way.
Indeed, I had done a piece of
work greatly to my advantage, and
also to the advantage of humankind,
and when a man can do the first and
include the second as a fortunate byproduct
it is a most happy accident.
For if I had shown the little people
how to make a spaceship they
would have left our world. And
this world, as long as it lasts—what
would it be in that event? I ask you
now, wouldn't we be even
more
likely to blow ourselves to Kingdom
Come without the little people here
for us to believe in every now and
then?
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Fantastic Universe
September 1955.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | Poets are more likely than scientists to collaborate with leprechauns without expecting compensation | Poets are less likely than scientists to want to capture and experiment with the leprechauns | Poets are less likely than scientists to understand the leprechauns' mission | Poets are more likely than scientists to show compassion to non-human species | 1 |
29168_4D0KU2UQ_5 | What motivated the leprechauns to build a spaceship? | Every writer must seek his own Flowery Kingdom in imagination's wide
demesne, and if that search can begin and end on Earth his problem has
been greatly simplified. In post-war Japan Walt Sheldon has found not only
serenity, but complete freedom to write undisturbed about the things he
treasures most. A one-time Air Force officer, he has turned to fantasy in
his lighter moments, to bring us such brightly sparkling little gems as this.
houlihan's
equation
by ... Walt Sheldon
The tiny spaceship had been built for a journey to a star. But its
small, mischievous pilots had a rendezvous with destiny—on Earth.
I must
admit that at first I
wasn't sure I was hearing those
noises. It was in a park near the
nuclear propulsion center—a cool,
green spot, with the leaves all telling
each other to hush, be quiet,
and the soft breeze stirring them up
again. I had known precisely such
a secluded little green sanctuary just
over the hill from Mr. Riordan's
farm when I was a boy.
Now it was a place I came to
when I had a problem to thrash out.
That morning I had been trying to
work out an equation to give the
coefficient of discharge for the matter
in combustion. You may call it
gas, if you wish, for we treated it
like gas at the center for convenience—as
it came from the rocket
tubes in our engine.
Without this coefficient to give
us control, we would have lacked a
workable equation when we set
about putting the first moon rocket
around those extraordinary engines
of ours, which were still in the undeveloped
blueprint stage.
I see I shall have to explain this,
although I had hoped to get right
along with my story. When you
start from scratch, matter discharged
from any orifice has a velocity directly
proportional to the square
root of the pressure-head driving it.
But when you actually put things
together, contractions or expansions
in the gas, surface roughness
and other factors make the velocity
a bit smaller.
At the terrible discharge speed
of nuclear explosion—which is
what the drive amounts to despite
the fact that it is simply water in
which nuclear salts have been previously
dissolved—this small factor
makes quite a difference. I had
to figure everything into it—diameter
of the nozzle, sharpness of the
edge, the velocity of approach to the
point of discharge, atomic weight
and structure— Oh, there is so
much of this that if you're not a
nuclear engineer yourself it's certain
to weary you.
Perhaps you had better take my
word for it that without this equation—correctly
stated, mind you—mankind
would be well advised not
to make a first trip to the moon.
And all this talk of coefficients and
equations sits strangely, you might
say, upon the tongue of a man
named Kevin Francis Houlihan.
But I am, after all, a scientist. If I
had not been a specialist in my field
I would hardly have found myself
engaged in vital research at the
center.
Anyway, I heard these little
noises in the park. They sounded
like small working sounds, blending
in eerily mysterious fashion with a
chorus of small voices. I thought at
first it might be children at play,
but then at the time I was a bit
absent-minded. I tiptoed to the edge
of the trees, not wanting to deprive
any small scalawags of their pleasure,
and peered out between the
branches. And what do you suppose
I saw? Not children, but a
group of little people, hard at work.
There was a leader, an older one
with a crank face. He was beating
the air with his arms and piping:
"Over here, now! All right, bring
those electrical connections over
here—and see you're not slow as
treacle about it!"
There were perhaps fifty of the
little people. I was more than startled
by it, too. I had not seen little
people in—oh, close to thirty years.
I had seen them first as a boy of
eight, and then, very briefly again,
on my tenth birthday. And I had
become convinced they could
never
be seen here in America. I had
never seen them so busy, either.
They were building something in
the middle of the glade. It was long
and shiny and upright and a little
over five feet in height.
"Come along now, people!" said
this crotchety one, looking straight
at me. "Stop starin' and get to
work! You'll not be needin' to
mind that man standin' there! You
know he can't see nor hear us!"
Oh, it was good to hear the rich
old tongue again. I smiled, and the
foreman of the leprechauns—if
that's what he was—saw me smile
and became stiff and alert for a moment,
as though suspecting that perhaps
I actually could see him. Then
he shrugged and turned away, clearly
deeming such a thing impossible.
I said, "Just a minute, friend,
and I'll beg your pardon. It so happens
I
can
see you."
He whirled to face me again,
staring open-mouthed. Then he
said, "What? What's that, now?"
"I can see you," I said.
"Ohhh!" he said and put his
palms to his cheekbones. "Saints be
with us! He's a believer! Run everybody—run
for your lives!"
And they all began running, in
as many directions as there were
little souls. They began to scurry
behind the trees and bushes, and a
sloping embankment nearby.
"No, wait!" I said. "Don't go
away! I'll not be hurting you!"
They continued to scurry.
I knew what it was they feared.
"I don't intend catching one of
you!" I said. "Come back, you daft
little creatures!"
But the glade was silent, and they
had all disappeared. They thought I
wanted their crock of gold, of
course. I'd be entitled to it if I could
catch one and keep him. Or so the
legends affirmed, though I've wondered
often about the truth of them.
But I was after no gold. I only wanted
to hear the music of an Irish
tongue. I was lonely here in America,
even if I had latched on to a fine
job of work for almost shamefully
generous pay. You see, in a place as
full of science as the nuclear propulsion
center there is not much
time for the old things. I very much
wanted to talk to the little people.
I walked over to the center of
the glade where the curious shiny
object was standing. It was as
smooth as glass and shaped like a
huge cigar. There were a pair of
triangular fins down at the bottom,
and stubby wings amidships. Of
course it was a spaceship, or a
miniature replica of one. I looked
at it more closely. Everything seemed
almost miraculously complete
and workable.
I shook my head in wonder, then
stepped back from the spaceship
and looked about the glade. I knew
they were all hiding nearby, watching
me apprehensively. I lifted my
head to them.
"Listen to me now, little people!"
I called out. "My name's
Houlihan of the Roscommon Houlihans.
I am descended from King
Niall himself—or so at least my
father used to say! Come on out
now, and pass the time o' day!"
Then I waited, but they didn't
answer. The little people always
had been shy. Yet without reaching
a decision in so many words I knew
suddenly that I
had
to talk to them.
I'd come to the glen to work out a
knotty problem, and I was up
against a blank wall. Simply because
I was so lonely that my mind had
become clogged.
I knew that if I could just once
hear the old tongue again, and talk
about the old things, I might be able
to think the problem through to a
satisfactory conclusion.
So I stepped back to the tiny
spaceship, and this time I struck it
a resounding blow with my fist.
"Hear me now, little people! If you
don't show yourselves and come out
and talk to me, I'll wreck this spaceship
from stem to stern!"
I heard only the leaves rustling
softly.
"Do you understand? I'll give
you until I count three to make an
appearance! One!"
The glade remained deathly silent.
"Two!"
I thought I heard a stirring somewhere,
as if a small, brittle twig had
snapped in the underbrush.
"
Three!
"
And with that the little people
suddenly appeared.
The leader—he seemed more
wizened and bent than before—approached
me slowly and warily as I
stood there. The others all followed
at a safe distance. I smiled to reassure
them and then waved my arm
in a friendly gesture of greeting.
"Good morning," I said.
"Good morning," the foreman
said with some caution. "My name
is Keech."
"And mine's Houlihan, as I've
told you. Are you convinced now
that I have no intention of doing
you any injury?"
"Mr. Houlihan," said Keech,
drawing a kind of peppered dignity
up about himself, "in such matters
I am never fully convinced. After
living for many centuries I am all
too acutely aware of the perversity
of human nature."
"Yes," I said. "Well, as you will
quickly see, all I want to do is
talk." I nodded as I spoke, and sat
down cross-legged upon the grass.
"Any Irishman wants to talk, Mr.
Houlihan."
"And often that's
all
he wants,"
I said. "Sit down with me now, and
stop staring as if I were a snake
returned to the Island."
He shook his head and remained
standing. "Have your say, Mr.
Houlihan. And afterward we'll appreciate
it if you'll go away and
leave us to our work."
"Well, now, your work," I said,
and glanced at the spaceship.
"That's exactly what's got me curious."
The others had edged in a bit
now and were standing in a circle,
intently staring at me. I took out my
pipe. "Why," I asked, "would a
group of little people be building a
spaceship here in America—out in
this lonely place?"
Keech stared back without much
expression, and said, "I've been
wondering how you guessed it was
a spaceship. I was surprised enough
when you told me you could see us
but not overwhelmingly so. I've run
into believers before who could see
the little people. It happens every
so often, though not as frequently
as it did a century ago. But knowing
a spaceship at first glance! Well, I
must confess that
does
astonish
me."
"And why wouldn't I know a
spaceship when I see one?" I said.
"It just so happens I'm a doctor of
science."
"A doctor of science, now," said
Keech.
"Invited by the American government
to work on the first moon
rocket here at the nuclear propulsion
center. Since it's no secret I
can advise you of it."
"A scientist, is it," said Keech.
"Well, now, that's very interesting."
"I'll make no apologies for it," I
said.
"Oh, there's no need for apology,"
said Keech. "Though in truth
we prefer poets to scientists. But it
has just now crossed my mind, Mr.
Houlihan that you, being a scientist,
might be of help to us."
"How?" I asked.
"Well, I might try starting at the
beginning," he replied.
"You might," I said. "A man
usually does."
Keech took out his own pipe—a
clay dudeen—and looked hopeful.
I gave him a pinch of tobacco from
my pouch. "Well, now," he said,
"first of all you're no doubt surprised
to find us here in America."
"I am surprised from time to
time to find myself here," I said.
"But continue."
"We had to come here," said
Keech, "to learn how to make a
spaceship."
"A spaceship, now," I said, unconsciously
adopting some of the
old manner.
"Leprechauns are not really mechanically
inclined," said Keech.
"Their major passions are music
and laughter and mischief, as anyone
knows."
"Myself included," I agreed.
"Then why do you need a spaceship?"
"Well, if I may use an old expression,
we've had a feelin' lately
that we're not long for this world.
Or let me put it this way. We feel
the world isn't long for itself."
I scratched my cheek. "How
would a man unravel a statement
such as that?"
"It's very simple. With all the
super weapons you mortals have
developed, there's the distinct possibility
you might be blowin' us all
up in the process of destroying
yourselves."
"There
is
that possibility," I said.
"Well, then, as I say," said
Keech, "the little people have decided
to leave the planet in a spaceship.
Which we're buildin' here and
now. We've spied upon you and
learned how to do it. Well—almost
how to do it. We haven't learned
yet how to control the power—"
"Hold on, now," I said. "Leaving
the planet, you say. And where
would you be going?"
"There's another committee
working on that. 'Tis not our concern.
I was inclined to suggest the
constellation Orion, which sounds
as though it has a good Irish name,
but I was hooted down. Be that as it
may, my own job was to go into
your nuclear center, learn how to
make the ship, and proceed with its
construction. Naturally, we didn't
understand all of your high-flyin'
science, but some of our people are
pretty clever at gettin' up replicas
of things."
"You mean you've been spying
on us at the center all this time? Do
you know, we often had the feeling
we were being watched, but we
thought it was by the Russians.
There's one thing which puzzles
me, though. If you've been constantly
around us—and I'm still
able to see the little people—why
did I never see you before?"
"It may be we never crossed your
path. It may be you can only see us
when you're thinkin' of us, and of
course truly believin' in us. I don't
know—'tis a thing of the mind, and
not important at the moment.
What's important is for us to get
our first ship to workin' properly
and then we'll be on our way."
"You're determined to go."
"Truly we are, Mr. Houlihan.
Now—to business. Just during
these last few minutes a certain matter
has crossed my mind. That's
why I'm wastin' all this time with
you, sir. You say you are a scientist."
"A nuclear engineer."
"Well, then, it may be that you
can help us—now that you know
we're here."
"Help you?"
"The power control, Mr. Houlihan.
As I understand it, 'tis necessary
to know at any instant exactly
how much thrust is bein' delivered
through the little holes in back.
And on paper it looks simple
enough—the square of somethin' or
other. I've got the figures jotted in
a book when I need 'em. But when
you get to doin' it it doesn't come
out exactly as it does on paper."
"You're referring to the necessity
for a coefficient of discharge."
"Whatever it might be named,"
said Keech, shrugging. "'Tis the
one thing we lack. I suppose eventually
you people will be gettin'
around to it. But meanwhile we
need it right now, if we're to make
our ship move."
"And you want me to help you
with this?"
"That is exactly what crossed my
mind."
I nodded and looked grave and
kneaded my chin for a moment softly.
"Well, now, Keech," I said
finally, "why should I help you?"
"Ha!" said Keech, grinning, but
not with humor, "the avarice of
humans! I knew it! Well, Mr. Houlihan,
I'll give you reason enough.
The pot o' gold, Mr. Houlihan!"
"The one at the end of the rainbow?"
"It's not at the end of the rainbow.
That's a grandmother's tale.
Nor is it actually in an earthen
crock. But there's gold, all right,
enough to make you rich for the
rest of your life. And I'll make you
a proposition."
"Go ahead."
"We'll not be needin' gold where
we're goin'. It's yours if you show
us how to make our ship work."
"Well, now, that's quite an
offer," I said. Keech had the goodness
to be quiet while I sat and
thought for a while. My pipe had
gone out and I lit it again. I finally
said, "Let's have a look at your
ship's drive and see what we can
see."
"You accept the proposition
then?"
"Let's have a look," I said, and
that was all.
Well, we had a look, and then
several looks, and before the morning
was out we had half the spaceship
apart, and were deep in argument
about the whole project.
It was a most fascinating session.
I had often wished for a true working
model at the center, but no allowance
had been inserted in the
budget for it. Keech brought me
paper and pencil and I talked with
the aid of diagrams, as engineers
are wont to do. Although the pencils
were small and I had to hold
them between thumb and forefinger,
as you would a needle, I was
able to make many sensible observations
and even a few innovations.
I came back again the next day—and
every day for the following
two weeks. It rained several times,
but Keech and his people made a
canopy of boughs and leaves and I
was comfortable enough. Every once
in a while someone from the town
or the center itself would pass by,
and stop to watch me. But of course
they wouldn't see the leprechauns
or anything the leprechauns had
made, not being believers.
I would halt work, pass the time
of day, and then, in subtle fashion,
send the intruder on his way. Keech
and the little people just stood by
and grinned all the while.
At the end of sixteen days I had
the entire problem all but whipped.
It is not difficult to understand why.
The working model and the fact
that the small people with their
quick eyes and clever fingers could
spot all sorts of minute shortcomings
was a great help. And I was
hearing the old tongue and talking
of the old things every day, and
truly that went far to take the clutter
out of my mind. I was no longer
so lonely that I couldn't think properly.
On the sixteenth day I covered a
piece of paper with tiny mathematical
symbols and handed it to Keech.
"Here is your equation," I said. "It
will enable you to know your thrust
at any given moment, under any
circumstances, in or out of gravity,
and under all conditions of friction
and combustion."
"Thank you, Mr. Houlihan," said
Keech. All his people had gathered
in a loose circle, as though attending
a rite. They were all looking at
me quietly.
"Mr. Houlihan," said Keech,
"you will not be forgotten by the
leprechauns. If we ever meet again,
upon another world perchance,
you'll find our friendship always
eager and ready."
"Thank you," I said.
"And now, Mr. Houlihan," said
Keech, "I'll see that a quantity of
gold is delivered to your rooms tonight,
and so keep my part of the
bargain."
"I'll not be needing the gold," I
said.
Keech's eyebrows popped upward.
"What's this now?"
"I'll not be needing it," I repeated.
"I don't feel it would be
right to take it for a service of this
sort."
"Well," said Keech in surprise,
and in some awe, too, "well, now,
musha Lord help us! 'Tis the first
time I ever heard such a speech
from a mortal." He turned to his
people. "We'll have three cheers
now, do you hear, for Mr. Houlihan—friend
of the little people as
long as he shall live!"
And they cheered. And little tears
crept into the corners of some of
their turned-up eyes.
We shook hands, all of us, and I
left.
I walked through the park, and
back to the nuclear propulsion center.
It was another cool, green morning
with the leaves making only
soft noises as the breezes came
along. It smelled exactly like a
wood I had known in Roscommon.
And I lit my pipe and smoked it
slowly and chuckled to myself at
how I had gotten the best of the
little people. Surely it was not every
mortal who could accomplish that. I
had given them the wrong equation,
of course. They would never get
their spaceship to work now, and
later, if they tried to spy out the
right information I would take special
measures to prevent it, for I had
the advantage of being able to see
them.
As for our own rocket ship, it
should be well on its way by next
St. Patrick's Day. For I had indeed
determined the true coefficient of
discharge, which I never could have
done so quickly without those sessions
in the glade with Keech and
his working model.
It would go down in scientific
literature now, I suppose, as Houlihan's
Equation, and that was honor
and glory enough for me. I could
do without Keech's pot of gold,
though it would have been pleasant
to be truly rich for a change.
There was no sense in cheating
him out of the gold to boot, for
leprechauns are most clever in matters
of this sort and he would have
had it back soon enough—or else
made it a burden in some way.
Indeed, I had done a piece of
work greatly to my advantage, and
also to the advantage of humankind,
and when a man can do the first and
include the second as a fortunate byproduct
it is a most happy accident.
For if I had shown the little people
how to make a spaceship they
would have left our world. And
this world, as long as it lasts—what
would it be in that event? I ask you
now, wouldn't we be even
more
likely to blow ourselves to Kingdom
Come without the little people here
for us to believe in every now and
then?
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Fantastic Universe
September 1955.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | They desire to seek and add more riches to their already expansive collection | They believe that humans' obsession with technology will make the world inhabitable | They fear that their race will soon become extinct due to population decline | They wish to transport their riches to another location where humans will never steal it | 1 |
29168_4D0KU2UQ_6 | Why is the narrator unafraid to work openly in the park among the leprechauns? Others aren't believers | Every writer must seek his own Flowery Kingdom in imagination's wide
demesne, and if that search can begin and end on Earth his problem has
been greatly simplified. In post-war Japan Walt Sheldon has found not only
serenity, but complete freedom to write undisturbed about the things he
treasures most. A one-time Air Force officer, he has turned to fantasy in
his lighter moments, to bring us such brightly sparkling little gems as this.
houlihan's
equation
by ... Walt Sheldon
The tiny spaceship had been built for a journey to a star. But its
small, mischievous pilots had a rendezvous with destiny—on Earth.
I must
admit that at first I
wasn't sure I was hearing those
noises. It was in a park near the
nuclear propulsion center—a cool,
green spot, with the leaves all telling
each other to hush, be quiet,
and the soft breeze stirring them up
again. I had known precisely such
a secluded little green sanctuary just
over the hill from Mr. Riordan's
farm when I was a boy.
Now it was a place I came to
when I had a problem to thrash out.
That morning I had been trying to
work out an equation to give the
coefficient of discharge for the matter
in combustion. You may call it
gas, if you wish, for we treated it
like gas at the center for convenience—as
it came from the rocket
tubes in our engine.
Without this coefficient to give
us control, we would have lacked a
workable equation when we set
about putting the first moon rocket
around those extraordinary engines
of ours, which were still in the undeveloped
blueprint stage.
I see I shall have to explain this,
although I had hoped to get right
along with my story. When you
start from scratch, matter discharged
from any orifice has a velocity directly
proportional to the square
root of the pressure-head driving it.
But when you actually put things
together, contractions or expansions
in the gas, surface roughness
and other factors make the velocity
a bit smaller.
At the terrible discharge speed
of nuclear explosion—which is
what the drive amounts to despite
the fact that it is simply water in
which nuclear salts have been previously
dissolved—this small factor
makes quite a difference. I had
to figure everything into it—diameter
of the nozzle, sharpness of the
edge, the velocity of approach to the
point of discharge, atomic weight
and structure— Oh, there is so
much of this that if you're not a
nuclear engineer yourself it's certain
to weary you.
Perhaps you had better take my
word for it that without this equation—correctly
stated, mind you—mankind
would be well advised not
to make a first trip to the moon.
And all this talk of coefficients and
equations sits strangely, you might
say, upon the tongue of a man
named Kevin Francis Houlihan.
But I am, after all, a scientist. If I
had not been a specialist in my field
I would hardly have found myself
engaged in vital research at the
center.
Anyway, I heard these little
noises in the park. They sounded
like small working sounds, blending
in eerily mysterious fashion with a
chorus of small voices. I thought at
first it might be children at play,
but then at the time I was a bit
absent-minded. I tiptoed to the edge
of the trees, not wanting to deprive
any small scalawags of their pleasure,
and peered out between the
branches. And what do you suppose
I saw? Not children, but a
group of little people, hard at work.
There was a leader, an older one
with a crank face. He was beating
the air with his arms and piping:
"Over here, now! All right, bring
those electrical connections over
here—and see you're not slow as
treacle about it!"
There were perhaps fifty of the
little people. I was more than startled
by it, too. I had not seen little
people in—oh, close to thirty years.
I had seen them first as a boy of
eight, and then, very briefly again,
on my tenth birthday. And I had
become convinced they could
never
be seen here in America. I had
never seen them so busy, either.
They were building something in
the middle of the glade. It was long
and shiny and upright and a little
over five feet in height.
"Come along now, people!" said
this crotchety one, looking straight
at me. "Stop starin' and get to
work! You'll not be needin' to
mind that man standin' there! You
know he can't see nor hear us!"
Oh, it was good to hear the rich
old tongue again. I smiled, and the
foreman of the leprechauns—if
that's what he was—saw me smile
and became stiff and alert for a moment,
as though suspecting that perhaps
I actually could see him. Then
he shrugged and turned away, clearly
deeming such a thing impossible.
I said, "Just a minute, friend,
and I'll beg your pardon. It so happens
I
can
see you."
He whirled to face me again,
staring open-mouthed. Then he
said, "What? What's that, now?"
"I can see you," I said.
"Ohhh!" he said and put his
palms to his cheekbones. "Saints be
with us! He's a believer! Run everybody—run
for your lives!"
And they all began running, in
as many directions as there were
little souls. They began to scurry
behind the trees and bushes, and a
sloping embankment nearby.
"No, wait!" I said. "Don't go
away! I'll not be hurting you!"
They continued to scurry.
I knew what it was they feared.
"I don't intend catching one of
you!" I said. "Come back, you daft
little creatures!"
But the glade was silent, and they
had all disappeared. They thought I
wanted their crock of gold, of
course. I'd be entitled to it if I could
catch one and keep him. Or so the
legends affirmed, though I've wondered
often about the truth of them.
But I was after no gold. I only wanted
to hear the music of an Irish
tongue. I was lonely here in America,
even if I had latched on to a fine
job of work for almost shamefully
generous pay. You see, in a place as
full of science as the nuclear propulsion
center there is not much
time for the old things. I very much
wanted to talk to the little people.
I walked over to the center of
the glade where the curious shiny
object was standing. It was as
smooth as glass and shaped like a
huge cigar. There were a pair of
triangular fins down at the bottom,
and stubby wings amidships. Of
course it was a spaceship, or a
miniature replica of one. I looked
at it more closely. Everything seemed
almost miraculously complete
and workable.
I shook my head in wonder, then
stepped back from the spaceship
and looked about the glade. I knew
they were all hiding nearby, watching
me apprehensively. I lifted my
head to them.
"Listen to me now, little people!"
I called out. "My name's
Houlihan of the Roscommon Houlihans.
I am descended from King
Niall himself—or so at least my
father used to say! Come on out
now, and pass the time o' day!"
Then I waited, but they didn't
answer. The little people always
had been shy. Yet without reaching
a decision in so many words I knew
suddenly that I
had
to talk to them.
I'd come to the glen to work out a
knotty problem, and I was up
against a blank wall. Simply because
I was so lonely that my mind had
become clogged.
I knew that if I could just once
hear the old tongue again, and talk
about the old things, I might be able
to think the problem through to a
satisfactory conclusion.
So I stepped back to the tiny
spaceship, and this time I struck it
a resounding blow with my fist.
"Hear me now, little people! If you
don't show yourselves and come out
and talk to me, I'll wreck this spaceship
from stem to stern!"
I heard only the leaves rustling
softly.
"Do you understand? I'll give
you until I count three to make an
appearance! One!"
The glade remained deathly silent.
"Two!"
I thought I heard a stirring somewhere,
as if a small, brittle twig had
snapped in the underbrush.
"
Three!
"
And with that the little people
suddenly appeared.
The leader—he seemed more
wizened and bent than before—approached
me slowly and warily as I
stood there. The others all followed
at a safe distance. I smiled to reassure
them and then waved my arm
in a friendly gesture of greeting.
"Good morning," I said.
"Good morning," the foreman
said with some caution. "My name
is Keech."
"And mine's Houlihan, as I've
told you. Are you convinced now
that I have no intention of doing
you any injury?"
"Mr. Houlihan," said Keech,
drawing a kind of peppered dignity
up about himself, "in such matters
I am never fully convinced. After
living for many centuries I am all
too acutely aware of the perversity
of human nature."
"Yes," I said. "Well, as you will
quickly see, all I want to do is
talk." I nodded as I spoke, and sat
down cross-legged upon the grass.
"Any Irishman wants to talk, Mr.
Houlihan."
"And often that's
all
he wants,"
I said. "Sit down with me now, and
stop staring as if I were a snake
returned to the Island."
He shook his head and remained
standing. "Have your say, Mr.
Houlihan. And afterward we'll appreciate
it if you'll go away and
leave us to our work."
"Well, now, your work," I said,
and glanced at the spaceship.
"That's exactly what's got me curious."
The others had edged in a bit
now and were standing in a circle,
intently staring at me. I took out my
pipe. "Why," I asked, "would a
group of little people be building a
spaceship here in America—out in
this lonely place?"
Keech stared back without much
expression, and said, "I've been
wondering how you guessed it was
a spaceship. I was surprised enough
when you told me you could see us
but not overwhelmingly so. I've run
into believers before who could see
the little people. It happens every
so often, though not as frequently
as it did a century ago. But knowing
a spaceship at first glance! Well, I
must confess that
does
astonish
me."
"And why wouldn't I know a
spaceship when I see one?" I said.
"It just so happens I'm a doctor of
science."
"A doctor of science, now," said
Keech.
"Invited by the American government
to work on the first moon
rocket here at the nuclear propulsion
center. Since it's no secret I
can advise you of it."
"A scientist, is it," said Keech.
"Well, now, that's very interesting."
"I'll make no apologies for it," I
said.
"Oh, there's no need for apology,"
said Keech. "Though in truth
we prefer poets to scientists. But it
has just now crossed my mind, Mr.
Houlihan that you, being a scientist,
might be of help to us."
"How?" I asked.
"Well, I might try starting at the
beginning," he replied.
"You might," I said. "A man
usually does."
Keech took out his own pipe—a
clay dudeen—and looked hopeful.
I gave him a pinch of tobacco from
my pouch. "Well, now," he said,
"first of all you're no doubt surprised
to find us here in America."
"I am surprised from time to
time to find myself here," I said.
"But continue."
"We had to come here," said
Keech, "to learn how to make a
spaceship."
"A spaceship, now," I said, unconsciously
adopting some of the
old manner.
"Leprechauns are not really mechanically
inclined," said Keech.
"Their major passions are music
and laughter and mischief, as anyone
knows."
"Myself included," I agreed.
"Then why do you need a spaceship?"
"Well, if I may use an old expression,
we've had a feelin' lately
that we're not long for this world.
Or let me put it this way. We feel
the world isn't long for itself."
I scratched my cheek. "How
would a man unravel a statement
such as that?"
"It's very simple. With all the
super weapons you mortals have
developed, there's the distinct possibility
you might be blowin' us all
up in the process of destroying
yourselves."
"There
is
that possibility," I said.
"Well, then, as I say," said
Keech, "the little people have decided
to leave the planet in a spaceship.
Which we're buildin' here and
now. We've spied upon you and
learned how to do it. Well—almost
how to do it. We haven't learned
yet how to control the power—"
"Hold on, now," I said. "Leaving
the planet, you say. And where
would you be going?"
"There's another committee
working on that. 'Tis not our concern.
I was inclined to suggest the
constellation Orion, which sounds
as though it has a good Irish name,
but I was hooted down. Be that as it
may, my own job was to go into
your nuclear center, learn how to
make the ship, and proceed with its
construction. Naturally, we didn't
understand all of your high-flyin'
science, but some of our people are
pretty clever at gettin' up replicas
of things."
"You mean you've been spying
on us at the center all this time? Do
you know, we often had the feeling
we were being watched, but we
thought it was by the Russians.
There's one thing which puzzles
me, though. If you've been constantly
around us—and I'm still
able to see the little people—why
did I never see you before?"
"It may be we never crossed your
path. It may be you can only see us
when you're thinkin' of us, and of
course truly believin' in us. I don't
know—'tis a thing of the mind, and
not important at the moment.
What's important is for us to get
our first ship to workin' properly
and then we'll be on our way."
"You're determined to go."
"Truly we are, Mr. Houlihan.
Now—to business. Just during
these last few minutes a certain matter
has crossed my mind. That's
why I'm wastin' all this time with
you, sir. You say you are a scientist."
"A nuclear engineer."
"Well, then, it may be that you
can help us—now that you know
we're here."
"Help you?"
"The power control, Mr. Houlihan.
As I understand it, 'tis necessary
to know at any instant exactly
how much thrust is bein' delivered
through the little holes in back.
And on paper it looks simple
enough—the square of somethin' or
other. I've got the figures jotted in
a book when I need 'em. But when
you get to doin' it it doesn't come
out exactly as it does on paper."
"You're referring to the necessity
for a coefficient of discharge."
"Whatever it might be named,"
said Keech, shrugging. "'Tis the
one thing we lack. I suppose eventually
you people will be gettin'
around to it. But meanwhile we
need it right now, if we're to make
our ship move."
"And you want me to help you
with this?"
"That is exactly what crossed my
mind."
I nodded and looked grave and
kneaded my chin for a moment softly.
"Well, now, Keech," I said
finally, "why should I help you?"
"Ha!" said Keech, grinning, but
not with humor, "the avarice of
humans! I knew it! Well, Mr. Houlihan,
I'll give you reason enough.
The pot o' gold, Mr. Houlihan!"
"The one at the end of the rainbow?"
"It's not at the end of the rainbow.
That's a grandmother's tale.
Nor is it actually in an earthen
crock. But there's gold, all right,
enough to make you rich for the
rest of your life. And I'll make you
a proposition."
"Go ahead."
"We'll not be needin' gold where
we're goin'. It's yours if you show
us how to make our ship work."
"Well, now, that's quite an
offer," I said. Keech had the goodness
to be quiet while I sat and
thought for a while. My pipe had
gone out and I lit it again. I finally
said, "Let's have a look at your
ship's drive and see what we can
see."
"You accept the proposition
then?"
"Let's have a look," I said, and
that was all.
Well, we had a look, and then
several looks, and before the morning
was out we had half the spaceship
apart, and were deep in argument
about the whole project.
It was a most fascinating session.
I had often wished for a true working
model at the center, but no allowance
had been inserted in the
budget for it. Keech brought me
paper and pencil and I talked with
the aid of diagrams, as engineers
are wont to do. Although the pencils
were small and I had to hold
them between thumb and forefinger,
as you would a needle, I was
able to make many sensible observations
and even a few innovations.
I came back again the next day—and
every day for the following
two weeks. It rained several times,
but Keech and his people made a
canopy of boughs and leaves and I
was comfortable enough. Every once
in a while someone from the town
or the center itself would pass by,
and stop to watch me. But of course
they wouldn't see the leprechauns
or anything the leprechauns had
made, not being believers.
I would halt work, pass the time
of day, and then, in subtle fashion,
send the intruder on his way. Keech
and the little people just stood by
and grinned all the while.
At the end of sixteen days I had
the entire problem all but whipped.
It is not difficult to understand why.
The working model and the fact
that the small people with their
quick eyes and clever fingers could
spot all sorts of minute shortcomings
was a great help. And I was
hearing the old tongue and talking
of the old things every day, and
truly that went far to take the clutter
out of my mind. I was no longer
so lonely that I couldn't think properly.
On the sixteenth day I covered a
piece of paper with tiny mathematical
symbols and handed it to Keech.
"Here is your equation," I said. "It
will enable you to know your thrust
at any given moment, under any
circumstances, in or out of gravity,
and under all conditions of friction
and combustion."
"Thank you, Mr. Houlihan," said
Keech. All his people had gathered
in a loose circle, as though attending
a rite. They were all looking at
me quietly.
"Mr. Houlihan," said Keech,
"you will not be forgotten by the
leprechauns. If we ever meet again,
upon another world perchance,
you'll find our friendship always
eager and ready."
"Thank you," I said.
"And now, Mr. Houlihan," said
Keech, "I'll see that a quantity of
gold is delivered to your rooms tonight,
and so keep my part of the
bargain."
"I'll not be needing the gold," I
said.
Keech's eyebrows popped upward.
"What's this now?"
"I'll not be needing it," I repeated.
"I don't feel it would be
right to take it for a service of this
sort."
"Well," said Keech in surprise,
and in some awe, too, "well, now,
musha Lord help us! 'Tis the first
time I ever heard such a speech
from a mortal." He turned to his
people. "We'll have three cheers
now, do you hear, for Mr. Houlihan—friend
of the little people as
long as he shall live!"
And they cheered. And little tears
crept into the corners of some of
their turned-up eyes.
We shook hands, all of us, and I
left.
I walked through the park, and
back to the nuclear propulsion center.
It was another cool, green morning
with the leaves making only
soft noises as the breezes came
along. It smelled exactly like a
wood I had known in Roscommon.
And I lit my pipe and smoked it
slowly and chuckled to myself at
how I had gotten the best of the
little people. Surely it was not every
mortal who could accomplish that. I
had given them the wrong equation,
of course. They would never get
their spaceship to work now, and
later, if they tried to spy out the
right information I would take special
measures to prevent it, for I had
the advantage of being able to see
them.
As for our own rocket ship, it
should be well on its way by next
St. Patrick's Day. For I had indeed
determined the true coefficient of
discharge, which I never could have
done so quickly without those sessions
in the glade with Keech and
his working model.
It would go down in scientific
literature now, I suppose, as Houlihan's
Equation, and that was honor
and glory enough for me. I could
do without Keech's pot of gold,
though it would have been pleasant
to be truly rich for a change.
There was no sense in cheating
him out of the gold to boot, for
leprechauns are most clever in matters
of this sort and he would have
had it back soon enough—or else
made it a burden in some way.
Indeed, I had done a piece of
work greatly to my advantage, and
also to the advantage of humankind,
and when a man can do the first and
include the second as a fortunate byproduct
it is a most happy accident.
For if I had shown the little people
how to make a spaceship they
would have left our world. And
this world, as long as it lasts—what
would it be in that event? I ask you
now, wouldn't we be even
more
likely to blow ourselves to Kingdom
Come without the little people here
for us to believe in every now and
then?
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Fantastic Universe
September 1955.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | He feels that he and the leprechauns can protect themselves through cunning ways and physical strength | He doubts that his colleagues at the Center would ever venture outdoors to the park area | He knows that it is rare to find believers among his colleagues and fellow humans | He believes strongly in the importance of his collaboration with the leprechauns and is willing to take the risk of being discovered | 2 |
29168_4D0KU2UQ_7 | What helps Houlihan to focus more intently on his own problem? | Every writer must seek his own Flowery Kingdom in imagination's wide
demesne, and if that search can begin and end on Earth his problem has
been greatly simplified. In post-war Japan Walt Sheldon has found not only
serenity, but complete freedom to write undisturbed about the things he
treasures most. A one-time Air Force officer, he has turned to fantasy in
his lighter moments, to bring us such brightly sparkling little gems as this.
houlihan's
equation
by ... Walt Sheldon
The tiny spaceship had been built for a journey to a star. But its
small, mischievous pilots had a rendezvous with destiny—on Earth.
I must
admit that at first I
wasn't sure I was hearing those
noises. It was in a park near the
nuclear propulsion center—a cool,
green spot, with the leaves all telling
each other to hush, be quiet,
and the soft breeze stirring them up
again. I had known precisely such
a secluded little green sanctuary just
over the hill from Mr. Riordan's
farm when I was a boy.
Now it was a place I came to
when I had a problem to thrash out.
That morning I had been trying to
work out an equation to give the
coefficient of discharge for the matter
in combustion. You may call it
gas, if you wish, for we treated it
like gas at the center for convenience—as
it came from the rocket
tubes in our engine.
Without this coefficient to give
us control, we would have lacked a
workable equation when we set
about putting the first moon rocket
around those extraordinary engines
of ours, which were still in the undeveloped
blueprint stage.
I see I shall have to explain this,
although I had hoped to get right
along with my story. When you
start from scratch, matter discharged
from any orifice has a velocity directly
proportional to the square
root of the pressure-head driving it.
But when you actually put things
together, contractions or expansions
in the gas, surface roughness
and other factors make the velocity
a bit smaller.
At the terrible discharge speed
of nuclear explosion—which is
what the drive amounts to despite
the fact that it is simply water in
which nuclear salts have been previously
dissolved—this small factor
makes quite a difference. I had
to figure everything into it—diameter
of the nozzle, sharpness of the
edge, the velocity of approach to the
point of discharge, atomic weight
and structure— Oh, there is so
much of this that if you're not a
nuclear engineer yourself it's certain
to weary you.
Perhaps you had better take my
word for it that without this equation—correctly
stated, mind you—mankind
would be well advised not
to make a first trip to the moon.
And all this talk of coefficients and
equations sits strangely, you might
say, upon the tongue of a man
named Kevin Francis Houlihan.
But I am, after all, a scientist. If I
had not been a specialist in my field
I would hardly have found myself
engaged in vital research at the
center.
Anyway, I heard these little
noises in the park. They sounded
like small working sounds, blending
in eerily mysterious fashion with a
chorus of small voices. I thought at
first it might be children at play,
but then at the time I was a bit
absent-minded. I tiptoed to the edge
of the trees, not wanting to deprive
any small scalawags of their pleasure,
and peered out between the
branches. And what do you suppose
I saw? Not children, but a
group of little people, hard at work.
There was a leader, an older one
with a crank face. He was beating
the air with his arms and piping:
"Over here, now! All right, bring
those electrical connections over
here—and see you're not slow as
treacle about it!"
There were perhaps fifty of the
little people. I was more than startled
by it, too. I had not seen little
people in—oh, close to thirty years.
I had seen them first as a boy of
eight, and then, very briefly again,
on my tenth birthday. And I had
become convinced they could
never
be seen here in America. I had
never seen them so busy, either.
They were building something in
the middle of the glade. It was long
and shiny and upright and a little
over five feet in height.
"Come along now, people!" said
this crotchety one, looking straight
at me. "Stop starin' and get to
work! You'll not be needin' to
mind that man standin' there! You
know he can't see nor hear us!"
Oh, it was good to hear the rich
old tongue again. I smiled, and the
foreman of the leprechauns—if
that's what he was—saw me smile
and became stiff and alert for a moment,
as though suspecting that perhaps
I actually could see him. Then
he shrugged and turned away, clearly
deeming such a thing impossible.
I said, "Just a minute, friend,
and I'll beg your pardon. It so happens
I
can
see you."
He whirled to face me again,
staring open-mouthed. Then he
said, "What? What's that, now?"
"I can see you," I said.
"Ohhh!" he said and put his
palms to his cheekbones. "Saints be
with us! He's a believer! Run everybody—run
for your lives!"
And they all began running, in
as many directions as there were
little souls. They began to scurry
behind the trees and bushes, and a
sloping embankment nearby.
"No, wait!" I said. "Don't go
away! I'll not be hurting you!"
They continued to scurry.
I knew what it was they feared.
"I don't intend catching one of
you!" I said. "Come back, you daft
little creatures!"
But the glade was silent, and they
had all disappeared. They thought I
wanted their crock of gold, of
course. I'd be entitled to it if I could
catch one and keep him. Or so the
legends affirmed, though I've wondered
often about the truth of them.
But I was after no gold. I only wanted
to hear the music of an Irish
tongue. I was lonely here in America,
even if I had latched on to a fine
job of work for almost shamefully
generous pay. You see, in a place as
full of science as the nuclear propulsion
center there is not much
time for the old things. I very much
wanted to talk to the little people.
I walked over to the center of
the glade where the curious shiny
object was standing. It was as
smooth as glass and shaped like a
huge cigar. There were a pair of
triangular fins down at the bottom,
and stubby wings amidships. Of
course it was a spaceship, or a
miniature replica of one. I looked
at it more closely. Everything seemed
almost miraculously complete
and workable.
I shook my head in wonder, then
stepped back from the spaceship
and looked about the glade. I knew
they were all hiding nearby, watching
me apprehensively. I lifted my
head to them.
"Listen to me now, little people!"
I called out. "My name's
Houlihan of the Roscommon Houlihans.
I am descended from King
Niall himself—or so at least my
father used to say! Come on out
now, and pass the time o' day!"
Then I waited, but they didn't
answer. The little people always
had been shy. Yet without reaching
a decision in so many words I knew
suddenly that I
had
to talk to them.
I'd come to the glen to work out a
knotty problem, and I was up
against a blank wall. Simply because
I was so lonely that my mind had
become clogged.
I knew that if I could just once
hear the old tongue again, and talk
about the old things, I might be able
to think the problem through to a
satisfactory conclusion.
So I stepped back to the tiny
spaceship, and this time I struck it
a resounding blow with my fist.
"Hear me now, little people! If you
don't show yourselves and come out
and talk to me, I'll wreck this spaceship
from stem to stern!"
I heard only the leaves rustling
softly.
"Do you understand? I'll give
you until I count three to make an
appearance! One!"
The glade remained deathly silent.
"Two!"
I thought I heard a stirring somewhere,
as if a small, brittle twig had
snapped in the underbrush.
"
Three!
"
And with that the little people
suddenly appeared.
The leader—he seemed more
wizened and bent than before—approached
me slowly and warily as I
stood there. The others all followed
at a safe distance. I smiled to reassure
them and then waved my arm
in a friendly gesture of greeting.
"Good morning," I said.
"Good morning," the foreman
said with some caution. "My name
is Keech."
"And mine's Houlihan, as I've
told you. Are you convinced now
that I have no intention of doing
you any injury?"
"Mr. Houlihan," said Keech,
drawing a kind of peppered dignity
up about himself, "in such matters
I am never fully convinced. After
living for many centuries I am all
too acutely aware of the perversity
of human nature."
"Yes," I said. "Well, as you will
quickly see, all I want to do is
talk." I nodded as I spoke, and sat
down cross-legged upon the grass.
"Any Irishman wants to talk, Mr.
Houlihan."
"And often that's
all
he wants,"
I said. "Sit down with me now, and
stop staring as if I were a snake
returned to the Island."
He shook his head and remained
standing. "Have your say, Mr.
Houlihan. And afterward we'll appreciate
it if you'll go away and
leave us to our work."
"Well, now, your work," I said,
and glanced at the spaceship.
"That's exactly what's got me curious."
The others had edged in a bit
now and were standing in a circle,
intently staring at me. I took out my
pipe. "Why," I asked, "would a
group of little people be building a
spaceship here in America—out in
this lonely place?"
Keech stared back without much
expression, and said, "I've been
wondering how you guessed it was
a spaceship. I was surprised enough
when you told me you could see us
but not overwhelmingly so. I've run
into believers before who could see
the little people. It happens every
so often, though not as frequently
as it did a century ago. But knowing
a spaceship at first glance! Well, I
must confess that
does
astonish
me."
"And why wouldn't I know a
spaceship when I see one?" I said.
"It just so happens I'm a doctor of
science."
"A doctor of science, now," said
Keech.
"Invited by the American government
to work on the first moon
rocket here at the nuclear propulsion
center. Since it's no secret I
can advise you of it."
"A scientist, is it," said Keech.
"Well, now, that's very interesting."
"I'll make no apologies for it," I
said.
"Oh, there's no need for apology,"
said Keech. "Though in truth
we prefer poets to scientists. But it
has just now crossed my mind, Mr.
Houlihan that you, being a scientist,
might be of help to us."
"How?" I asked.
"Well, I might try starting at the
beginning," he replied.
"You might," I said. "A man
usually does."
Keech took out his own pipe—a
clay dudeen—and looked hopeful.
I gave him a pinch of tobacco from
my pouch. "Well, now," he said,
"first of all you're no doubt surprised
to find us here in America."
"I am surprised from time to
time to find myself here," I said.
"But continue."
"We had to come here," said
Keech, "to learn how to make a
spaceship."
"A spaceship, now," I said, unconsciously
adopting some of the
old manner.
"Leprechauns are not really mechanically
inclined," said Keech.
"Their major passions are music
and laughter and mischief, as anyone
knows."
"Myself included," I agreed.
"Then why do you need a spaceship?"
"Well, if I may use an old expression,
we've had a feelin' lately
that we're not long for this world.
Or let me put it this way. We feel
the world isn't long for itself."
I scratched my cheek. "How
would a man unravel a statement
such as that?"
"It's very simple. With all the
super weapons you mortals have
developed, there's the distinct possibility
you might be blowin' us all
up in the process of destroying
yourselves."
"There
is
that possibility," I said.
"Well, then, as I say," said
Keech, "the little people have decided
to leave the planet in a spaceship.
Which we're buildin' here and
now. We've spied upon you and
learned how to do it. Well—almost
how to do it. We haven't learned
yet how to control the power—"
"Hold on, now," I said. "Leaving
the planet, you say. And where
would you be going?"
"There's another committee
working on that. 'Tis not our concern.
I was inclined to suggest the
constellation Orion, which sounds
as though it has a good Irish name,
but I was hooted down. Be that as it
may, my own job was to go into
your nuclear center, learn how to
make the ship, and proceed with its
construction. Naturally, we didn't
understand all of your high-flyin'
science, but some of our people are
pretty clever at gettin' up replicas
of things."
"You mean you've been spying
on us at the center all this time? Do
you know, we often had the feeling
we were being watched, but we
thought it was by the Russians.
There's one thing which puzzles
me, though. If you've been constantly
around us—and I'm still
able to see the little people—why
did I never see you before?"
"It may be we never crossed your
path. It may be you can only see us
when you're thinkin' of us, and of
course truly believin' in us. I don't
know—'tis a thing of the mind, and
not important at the moment.
What's important is for us to get
our first ship to workin' properly
and then we'll be on our way."
"You're determined to go."
"Truly we are, Mr. Houlihan.
Now—to business. Just during
these last few minutes a certain matter
has crossed my mind. That's
why I'm wastin' all this time with
you, sir. You say you are a scientist."
"A nuclear engineer."
"Well, then, it may be that you
can help us—now that you know
we're here."
"Help you?"
"The power control, Mr. Houlihan.
As I understand it, 'tis necessary
to know at any instant exactly
how much thrust is bein' delivered
through the little holes in back.
And on paper it looks simple
enough—the square of somethin' or
other. I've got the figures jotted in
a book when I need 'em. But when
you get to doin' it it doesn't come
out exactly as it does on paper."
"You're referring to the necessity
for a coefficient of discharge."
"Whatever it might be named,"
said Keech, shrugging. "'Tis the
one thing we lack. I suppose eventually
you people will be gettin'
around to it. But meanwhile we
need it right now, if we're to make
our ship move."
"And you want me to help you
with this?"
"That is exactly what crossed my
mind."
I nodded and looked grave and
kneaded my chin for a moment softly.
"Well, now, Keech," I said
finally, "why should I help you?"
"Ha!" said Keech, grinning, but
not with humor, "the avarice of
humans! I knew it! Well, Mr. Houlihan,
I'll give you reason enough.
The pot o' gold, Mr. Houlihan!"
"The one at the end of the rainbow?"
"It's not at the end of the rainbow.
That's a grandmother's tale.
Nor is it actually in an earthen
crock. But there's gold, all right,
enough to make you rich for the
rest of your life. And I'll make you
a proposition."
"Go ahead."
"We'll not be needin' gold where
we're goin'. It's yours if you show
us how to make our ship work."
"Well, now, that's quite an
offer," I said. Keech had the goodness
to be quiet while I sat and
thought for a while. My pipe had
gone out and I lit it again. I finally
said, "Let's have a look at your
ship's drive and see what we can
see."
"You accept the proposition
then?"
"Let's have a look," I said, and
that was all.
Well, we had a look, and then
several looks, and before the morning
was out we had half the spaceship
apart, and were deep in argument
about the whole project.
It was a most fascinating session.
I had often wished for a true working
model at the center, but no allowance
had been inserted in the
budget for it. Keech brought me
paper and pencil and I talked with
the aid of diagrams, as engineers
are wont to do. Although the pencils
were small and I had to hold
them between thumb and forefinger,
as you would a needle, I was
able to make many sensible observations
and even a few innovations.
I came back again the next day—and
every day for the following
two weeks. It rained several times,
but Keech and his people made a
canopy of boughs and leaves and I
was comfortable enough. Every once
in a while someone from the town
or the center itself would pass by,
and stop to watch me. But of course
they wouldn't see the leprechauns
or anything the leprechauns had
made, not being believers.
I would halt work, pass the time
of day, and then, in subtle fashion,
send the intruder on his way. Keech
and the little people just stood by
and grinned all the while.
At the end of sixteen days I had
the entire problem all but whipped.
It is not difficult to understand why.
The working model and the fact
that the small people with their
quick eyes and clever fingers could
spot all sorts of minute shortcomings
was a great help. And I was
hearing the old tongue and talking
of the old things every day, and
truly that went far to take the clutter
out of my mind. I was no longer
so lonely that I couldn't think properly.
On the sixteenth day I covered a
piece of paper with tiny mathematical
symbols and handed it to Keech.
"Here is your equation," I said. "It
will enable you to know your thrust
at any given moment, under any
circumstances, in or out of gravity,
and under all conditions of friction
and combustion."
"Thank you, Mr. Houlihan," said
Keech. All his people had gathered
in a loose circle, as though attending
a rite. They were all looking at
me quietly.
"Mr. Houlihan," said Keech,
"you will not be forgotten by the
leprechauns. If we ever meet again,
upon another world perchance,
you'll find our friendship always
eager and ready."
"Thank you," I said.
"And now, Mr. Houlihan," said
Keech, "I'll see that a quantity of
gold is delivered to your rooms tonight,
and so keep my part of the
bargain."
"I'll not be needing the gold," I
said.
Keech's eyebrows popped upward.
"What's this now?"
"I'll not be needing it," I repeated.
"I don't feel it would be
right to take it for a service of this
sort."
"Well," said Keech in surprise,
and in some awe, too, "well, now,
musha Lord help us! 'Tis the first
time I ever heard such a speech
from a mortal." He turned to his
people. "We'll have three cheers
now, do you hear, for Mr. Houlihan—friend
of the little people as
long as he shall live!"
And they cheered. And little tears
crept into the corners of some of
their turned-up eyes.
We shook hands, all of us, and I
left.
I walked through the park, and
back to the nuclear propulsion center.
It was another cool, green morning
with the leaves making only
soft noises as the breezes came
along. It smelled exactly like a
wood I had known in Roscommon.
And I lit my pipe and smoked it
slowly and chuckled to myself at
how I had gotten the best of the
little people. Surely it was not every
mortal who could accomplish that. I
had given them the wrong equation,
of course. They would never get
their spaceship to work now, and
later, if they tried to spy out the
right information I would take special
measures to prevent it, for I had
the advantage of being able to see
them.
As for our own rocket ship, it
should be well on its way by next
St. Patrick's Day. For I had indeed
determined the true coefficient of
discharge, which I never could have
done so quickly without those sessions
in the glade with Keech and
his working model.
It would go down in scientific
literature now, I suppose, as Houlihan's
Equation, and that was honor
and glory enough for me. I could
do without Keech's pot of gold,
though it would have been pleasant
to be truly rich for a change.
There was no sense in cheating
him out of the gold to boot, for
leprechauns are most clever in matters
of this sort and he would have
had it back soon enough—or else
made it a burden in some way.
Indeed, I had done a piece of
work greatly to my advantage, and
also to the advantage of humankind,
and when a man can do the first and
include the second as a fortunate byproduct
it is a most happy accident.
For if I had shown the little people
how to make a spaceship they
would have left our world. And
this world, as long as it lasts—what
would it be in that event? I ask you
now, wouldn't we be even
more
likely to blow ourselves to Kingdom
Come without the little people here
for us to believe in every now and
then?
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Fantastic Universe
September 1955.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | collaborating with the leprechauns, who speak his same language | imagining the pot of gold that awaits him if he is able to solve the equation | being outdoors, where his creativity is stimulated | venturing outside of the Center, where he is not worried about competition among colleagues | 0 |
99903_Y162MI8V_1 | What is the purpose of the article? | Face value
When the BBC broadcast the recent documentary by Louis Theroux that looked back at the time he spent in the company of Jimmy Savile, there was disbelief across social media that no one had stepped in to stop Savile from committing his crimes. Some blamed the BBC, some blamed those in Savile's immediate circle, but others blamed a simple error of human judgment.
"He literally couldn't look more like a paedophile," read one post – one of many to state a supposedly incontrovertible truth: that Savile's criminal tendencies could have been detected from the shape of his features, his eyes, his hair. Moreover, this has nothing to do with the benefit of hindsight and should have been picked up at the time. His looks, they suggested, were a moral indicator, with a wealth of compelling visual evidence to support the claim.
We know that paedophiles, murderers and other violent criminals come in many shapes and sizes. If we knew nothing about their criminal history, some of their photos might even appear attractive. But the idea that someone's features betray their character is something rooted deep within us; it's the reason why certain photos perform well on dating apps, or why trustworthy-looking politicians might rack up votes. But how wrong are our hunches of perceived criminality?
A recent paper, published by Xiaolin Wu and Xi Zhang of Shanghai's Jiao Tong University, claims to be the first to use machine learning and neural networks to attempt a fully automated inference of criminality from facial images, removing prejudice from the equation and testing the validity of our gut feelings. "What facial features influence the average Joe's impulsive and yet consensual judgments on social attributes?" they ask. Through a study of 1,856 images ("controlled for race, gender, age and facial expression") they claim to have established the validity of "automated, face-induced inference on criminality, despite the historical controversy surrounding this line of enquiry."
In other words, they believe that they've found a relationship between looking like a criminal and actually being one.
It's a claim that's been made many times over the years. Physiognomy, the 'science' of judging people by their appearance, was first theorised by the ancient Greeks in around the 5th century BC. Aristotle's pronouncement that "it is possible to infer character from features" led to a number of works relating to 'Physiognomica', a word derived from
physis
(nature),
nomos
(law) and (or)
gnomon
(judge or interpreter).
All of Greek society, it was claimed, could benefit from this skill: it could assist with choosing an employee, a slave or a spouse, while its inherent vagueness made it intriguing to philosophers and useful for scientists who bent the theories to support their own beliefs. It became a recognised science in the Islamic world, and was used and taught in Europe throughout late antiquity and the early Middle Ages, despite nagging doubts among thinkers and physicians of the day. In the early 16th century, Leonardo da Vinci claimed not to "concern myself with false physiognomy, because these chimeras have no scientific foundation."
Theories of physiognomy, however, would persist beyond the Renaissance. In 1586, Italian scholar Giambattista della Porta published a book, De humana physiognomonia libri IIII, which established him as the 'father of Physiognomy'. Della Porta's thinking was based on the 'doctrine of signatures'; the idea that the appearance of plants and animals offers clues to their nature. For example, as one writer of the time suggested, walnuts are good for curing headaches because they're shaped a bit like a human head. The theories in della Porta's book were supported by dozens of detailed illustrations which, by comparing human faces to those of animals, suggested that they must surely share similar character traits.
In the 17th century, Swiss poet Johann Caspar Lavater took della Porta's methodology and ran with it, commissioning artists to illustrate his popular Essays On Physiognomy – which, to the chagrin of his contemporary, the writer Hannah More, sold for "fifteen guineas a set… while in vain we boast that philosophy [has] broken down all the strongholds of prejudice, ignorance, and superstition."
Lavater's work was criticised for being ridden with bias (black faces rarely emerged well from his analyses) but he was right in one respect: "Whether they are or are not sensible of it," he wrote, "all men are daily influenced by physiognomy."
Many studies have been done into our psychological response to faces, and it's clear that a so-called halo effect will inevitably work its magic. "Attractive people are regarded as better at everything," says Professor Peter Hancock, lecturer in Psychology at Stirling University. "And we can't shake that off because there's some truth to it. Good genes produce intelligent people, attractive faces, fit bodies, and we imagine that they're going to be good at everything else, too. We don't have good insight into our own behaviour. We tend to think we understand what we're doing, but we don't."
Hancock describes attending a conference where one speaker showed a series of black faces and white faces to students (who were mostly white) and asked them what they thought the experiment was about. "They knew that he was trying to assess whether they would rate the black ones as more criminal," says Hancock. "But then they did!"
We attribute social characteristics based on opinions we already hold about certain kinds of faces: whether they look unusual in some way, whether they resemble a partner, a family member or even ourselves, or perhaps have some other cultural association. Physiognomy ultimately stems from what Alexander Todorov, professor of psychology at Princeton University, calls an 'overgeneralisation hypothesis'. "People," he wrote, "use easily accessible facial information (eg an expression such as a smile, cues to gender and ethnic group) to make social attributions congruent with this information (eg a nice person)."
In a social media age, the pictures we choose to represent ourselves online are a form of self-presentation driven by those social attributions and the knowledge that our pictures are being judged.
Experiments at Princeton found that we take less than one tenth of a second to form an opinion of strangers from their pictures, and those opinions tend to stand firm even if we're exposed to those pictures for a longer period of time. That tendency to judge instantly gives rise to a number of selfie tropes that are deemed to elicit positive responses, particularly when it comes to photos on dating profiles: certain angles, particular expressions, minute adjustments of eyebrows and lips that might appear to be about narcissism and vanity, but are more about a fear of being incorrectly assessed. After all, false suppositions based on people's faces are hugely influential within society, and in extreme cases they can have a huge impact on people's lives.
When retired teacher Christopher Jefferies was held by police in connection with the murder of Joanna Yeates in Bristol back in 2010, more than half a dozen newspapers gave his unusual appearance particular scrutiny and made assumptions accordingly, which in turn influenced public opinion. This culminated in substantial damages for defamation, two convictions for contempt of court and a painful ordeal for Jefferies, who was entirely innocent.
This kind of deep-seated bias looms large throughout physiognomic works of the 19th and 20th centuries, from absurdities such as Vaught's Practical Character Reader of 1902 (handy if you want to find out what a "deceitful chin" looks like) to more inherently troubling volumes such as Cesare Lombroso's Criminal Man.
After performing a number of autopsies on criminals, the Italian physician claimed to have discovered a number of common characteristics, and it's worth listing them if only to establish the supposed criminality of pretty much everyone you know:
Unusually short or tall height; small head, but large face; fleshy lips, but thin upper lip; protuberances on head and around ear; wrinkles on forehead and face; large sinus cavities or bumpy face; tattoos; receding hairline; large incisors; bushy eyebrows, tending to meet across nose; large eye sockets but deep-set eyes; beaked or flat nose; strong jaw line; small and sloping forehead; small or weak chin; thin neck; sloping shoulders but large chest; large, protruding ears; long arms; high cheek bones; pointy or snubbed fingers or toes.
In a woeful misreading of Darwinian theory, Lombroso unwittingly founded the field of anthropological criminology, and more specifically the idea of the born criminal: a hereditary quality that posed a danger to society and must be rooted out. His theories became discredited during the 20th century, but the kind of bias displayed by Lombroso can still be found in legal systems across the world; studies show that people with stereotypically 'untrustworthy' faces tend to receive harsher treatment than those who don't. There's evidently some consensus over people's attitudes toward certain faces, but it doesn't follow that the consensus is correct.
The only attributes that we're reasonably good at detecting, according to research done at the University of Michigan in the 1960s and later tested at the University of Stirling in 2007, are extroversion and conscientiousness. For other traits there's insufficient evidence that our hunches are correct, with anomalies explained by our evolved aversion to 'ugliness', established links between broader faces and powerful physiques, or cultural associations with certain demographics which are reinforced with nagging regularity by newspapers, books, television and film.
Data-driven studies, based upon huge quantities of facial data, would seem to offer the final word on this. Since 2005, computational models have used various techniques to test for links between social attributes and facial features, resulting in suggestions that our faces can betray, for example, political leanings, sexual orientation and criminality. One BBC Future article from 2015 even describes the 'discipline' of physiognomy as 'gaining credibility'. But Todorov details many problems with these studies, pointing out the challenging nature of doing such experiments with sufficient rigour – not least because different images of the same people can prompt wildly differing results.
The aforementioned study at Shanghai's Jiao Tong University, with its enthusiastic, data-driven analyses of such questions as "What features of a human face betray its owner's propensity for crimes?" prompted a wave of press coverage.
The vision outlined in these articles is of an unethical dystopia where neural networks can assess our faces and establish a likely score for criminality – but Todorov is scathing about this paper, too. "The main problem is the sampling of the images," he says. "There is not enough information about the [nature of] the images of the people who were convicted. Second, clearly, there are huge differences between the two samples [of convicts and non-convicts] [in terms of] education and socio-economic status."
In other words, your appearance is affected by the kind of life you've led, so the classifiers within the computer program are simply distinguishing between different demographics rather than detecting a propensity for criminal behaviour.
Todorov is also wary of these classifiers misidentifying more 'innocent' people than identifying actual criminals, and accuracy is a concern shared by Peter Hancock. "Networks don't assess faces in the same way that we do," he says. "One of our systems, which is a deep network, has a recognition engine which generates an ordered list of how similar various faces are. And sometimes you get good matches – but other times you look at them and say, well, it's the wrong race! To humans they look completely different. And that underlines the fact that the networks are working in a different sort of way, and actually you don't really know how they're working. They're the ultimate black box."
This isn't to say that the use of big data, and particularly the use of composite imagery (digitally blending together certain types of faces) doesn't give us useful information and fascinating correlations. "You can, for example, take a given face and use computer software to make it look more or less trustworthy," says Hancock. "I remember a colleague playing with this and he made a less trustworthy version of George W Bush – and how shifty did he look! I'm surprised that they're not using these techniques in political advertising, because you couldn't tell that anything had been done [to the picture], but when you look at it you think 'I wouldn't trust him'."
The revitalisation of the theory of physiognomy by the Shanghai students is, according to Todorov, deeply problematic on a theoretical level. "Are we back to Lombroso's theory," he asks, "that criminals were anomalous creatures, evolutionary degenerates? How does one become criminal, and what role do various life forces play into this? There are people making claims that you just need to look at the face to predict personality and behaviour, but many of these people have not given much thought to their underlying assumptions."
While it's true that we judge books by their covers, covers are more than just faces; we piece together all kinds of cues from people to form our impressions of them. Jimmy Savile's appearance was unusual by any standards, but we absorbed a great deal of information about him over the years that will have influenced our opinions – not least from the original Louis Theroux programme from 2000 that was reexamined in that recent BBC documentary. Savile's vague resemblance to the Child Catcher from the film Chitty Chitty Bang Bang is convenient but ultimately misleading, and the way it reinforces the idea of what a paedophile might 'look like' is unfortunate; not least because it helps to sustain a low-level belief in the 'science' of physiognomy, despite its tendency to crumble under the slightest cross examination.
This article was originally published on TheLong+Short. Read the original article. | To explain how physiognomy has evolved over time and affected society in harmful ways | To provide an impartial historical account of physiognomy, a once popular branch of science | To predict how physiognomy could be manipulated to worsen current social inequities | To convince an audience of the benefits of physiognomy as a criminal justice tool | 0 |
99903_Y162MI8V_2 | What terms best describes the author's attitude toward hunches of perceived criminality based on one's physical appearance? | Face value
When the BBC broadcast the recent documentary by Louis Theroux that looked back at the time he spent in the company of Jimmy Savile, there was disbelief across social media that no one had stepped in to stop Savile from committing his crimes. Some blamed the BBC, some blamed those in Savile's immediate circle, but others blamed a simple error of human judgment.
"He literally couldn't look more like a paedophile," read one post – one of many to state a supposedly incontrovertible truth: that Savile's criminal tendencies could have been detected from the shape of his features, his eyes, his hair. Moreover, this has nothing to do with the benefit of hindsight and should have been picked up at the time. His looks, they suggested, were a moral indicator, with a wealth of compelling visual evidence to support the claim.
We know that paedophiles, murderers and other violent criminals come in many shapes and sizes. If we knew nothing about their criminal history, some of their photos might even appear attractive. But the idea that someone's features betray their character is something rooted deep within us; it's the reason why certain photos perform well on dating apps, or why trustworthy-looking politicians might rack up votes. But how wrong are our hunches of perceived criminality?
A recent paper, published by Xiaolin Wu and Xi Zhang of Shanghai's Jiao Tong University, claims to be the first to use machine learning and neural networks to attempt a fully automated inference of criminality from facial images, removing prejudice from the equation and testing the validity of our gut feelings. "What facial features influence the average Joe's impulsive and yet consensual judgments on social attributes?" they ask. Through a study of 1,856 images ("controlled for race, gender, age and facial expression") they claim to have established the validity of "automated, face-induced inference on criminality, despite the historical controversy surrounding this line of enquiry."
In other words, they believe that they've found a relationship between looking like a criminal and actually being one.
It's a claim that's been made many times over the years. Physiognomy, the 'science' of judging people by their appearance, was first theorised by the ancient Greeks in around the 5th century BC. Aristotle's pronouncement that "it is possible to infer character from features" led to a number of works relating to 'Physiognomica', a word derived from
physis
(nature),
nomos
(law) and (or)
gnomon
(judge or interpreter).
All of Greek society, it was claimed, could benefit from this skill: it could assist with choosing an employee, a slave or a spouse, while its inherent vagueness made it intriguing to philosophers and useful for scientists who bent the theories to support their own beliefs. It became a recognised science in the Islamic world, and was used and taught in Europe throughout late antiquity and the early Middle Ages, despite nagging doubts among thinkers and physicians of the day. In the early 16th century, Leonardo da Vinci claimed not to "concern myself with false physiognomy, because these chimeras have no scientific foundation."
Theories of physiognomy, however, would persist beyond the Renaissance. In 1586, Italian scholar Giambattista della Porta published a book, De humana physiognomonia libri IIII, which established him as the 'father of Physiognomy'. Della Porta's thinking was based on the 'doctrine of signatures'; the idea that the appearance of plants and animals offers clues to their nature. For example, as one writer of the time suggested, walnuts are good for curing headaches because they're shaped a bit like a human head. The theories in della Porta's book were supported by dozens of detailed illustrations which, by comparing human faces to those of animals, suggested that they must surely share similar character traits.
In the 17th century, Swiss poet Johann Caspar Lavater took della Porta's methodology and ran with it, commissioning artists to illustrate his popular Essays On Physiognomy – which, to the chagrin of his contemporary, the writer Hannah More, sold for "fifteen guineas a set… while in vain we boast that philosophy [has] broken down all the strongholds of prejudice, ignorance, and superstition."
Lavater's work was criticised for being ridden with bias (black faces rarely emerged well from his analyses) but he was right in one respect: "Whether they are or are not sensible of it," he wrote, "all men are daily influenced by physiognomy."
Many studies have been done into our psychological response to faces, and it's clear that a so-called halo effect will inevitably work its magic. "Attractive people are regarded as better at everything," says Professor Peter Hancock, lecturer in Psychology at Stirling University. "And we can't shake that off because there's some truth to it. Good genes produce intelligent people, attractive faces, fit bodies, and we imagine that they're going to be good at everything else, too. We don't have good insight into our own behaviour. We tend to think we understand what we're doing, but we don't."
Hancock describes attending a conference where one speaker showed a series of black faces and white faces to students (who were mostly white) and asked them what they thought the experiment was about. "They knew that he was trying to assess whether they would rate the black ones as more criminal," says Hancock. "But then they did!"
We attribute social characteristics based on opinions we already hold about certain kinds of faces: whether they look unusual in some way, whether they resemble a partner, a family member or even ourselves, or perhaps have some other cultural association. Physiognomy ultimately stems from what Alexander Todorov, professor of psychology at Princeton University, calls an 'overgeneralisation hypothesis'. "People," he wrote, "use easily accessible facial information (eg an expression such as a smile, cues to gender and ethnic group) to make social attributions congruent with this information (eg a nice person)."
In a social media age, the pictures we choose to represent ourselves online are a form of self-presentation driven by those social attributions and the knowledge that our pictures are being judged.
Experiments at Princeton found that we take less than one tenth of a second to form an opinion of strangers from their pictures, and those opinions tend to stand firm even if we're exposed to those pictures for a longer period of time. That tendency to judge instantly gives rise to a number of selfie tropes that are deemed to elicit positive responses, particularly when it comes to photos on dating profiles: certain angles, particular expressions, minute adjustments of eyebrows and lips that might appear to be about narcissism and vanity, but are more about a fear of being incorrectly assessed. After all, false suppositions based on people's faces are hugely influential within society, and in extreme cases they can have a huge impact on people's lives.
When retired teacher Christopher Jefferies was held by police in connection with the murder of Joanna Yeates in Bristol back in 2010, more than half a dozen newspapers gave his unusual appearance particular scrutiny and made assumptions accordingly, which in turn influenced public opinion. This culminated in substantial damages for defamation, two convictions for contempt of court and a painful ordeal for Jefferies, who was entirely innocent.
This kind of deep-seated bias looms large throughout physiognomic works of the 19th and 20th centuries, from absurdities such as Vaught's Practical Character Reader of 1902 (handy if you want to find out what a "deceitful chin" looks like) to more inherently troubling volumes such as Cesare Lombroso's Criminal Man.
After performing a number of autopsies on criminals, the Italian physician claimed to have discovered a number of common characteristics, and it's worth listing them if only to establish the supposed criminality of pretty much everyone you know:
Unusually short or tall height; small head, but large face; fleshy lips, but thin upper lip; protuberances on head and around ear; wrinkles on forehead and face; large sinus cavities or bumpy face; tattoos; receding hairline; large incisors; bushy eyebrows, tending to meet across nose; large eye sockets but deep-set eyes; beaked or flat nose; strong jaw line; small and sloping forehead; small or weak chin; thin neck; sloping shoulders but large chest; large, protruding ears; long arms; high cheek bones; pointy or snubbed fingers or toes.
In a woeful misreading of Darwinian theory, Lombroso unwittingly founded the field of anthropological criminology, and more specifically the idea of the born criminal: a hereditary quality that posed a danger to society and must be rooted out. His theories became discredited during the 20th century, but the kind of bias displayed by Lombroso can still be found in legal systems across the world; studies show that people with stereotypically 'untrustworthy' faces tend to receive harsher treatment than those who don't. There's evidently some consensus over people's attitudes toward certain faces, but it doesn't follow that the consensus is correct.
The only attributes that we're reasonably good at detecting, according to research done at the University of Michigan in the 1960s and later tested at the University of Stirling in 2007, are extroversion and conscientiousness. For other traits there's insufficient evidence that our hunches are correct, with anomalies explained by our evolved aversion to 'ugliness', established links between broader faces and powerful physiques, or cultural associations with certain demographics which are reinforced with nagging regularity by newspapers, books, television and film.
Data-driven studies, based upon huge quantities of facial data, would seem to offer the final word on this. Since 2005, computational models have used various techniques to test for links between social attributes and facial features, resulting in suggestions that our faces can betray, for example, political leanings, sexual orientation and criminality. One BBC Future article from 2015 even describes the 'discipline' of physiognomy as 'gaining credibility'. But Todorov details many problems with these studies, pointing out the challenging nature of doing such experiments with sufficient rigour – not least because different images of the same people can prompt wildly differing results.
The aforementioned study at Shanghai's Jiao Tong University, with its enthusiastic, data-driven analyses of such questions as "What features of a human face betray its owner's propensity for crimes?" prompted a wave of press coverage.
The vision outlined in these articles is of an unethical dystopia where neural networks can assess our faces and establish a likely score for criminality – but Todorov is scathing about this paper, too. "The main problem is the sampling of the images," he says. "There is not enough information about the [nature of] the images of the people who were convicted. Second, clearly, there are huge differences between the two samples [of convicts and non-convicts] [in terms of] education and socio-economic status."
In other words, your appearance is affected by the kind of life you've led, so the classifiers within the computer program are simply distinguishing between different demographics rather than detecting a propensity for criminal behaviour.
Todorov is also wary of these classifiers misidentifying more 'innocent' people than identifying actual criminals, and accuracy is a concern shared by Peter Hancock. "Networks don't assess faces in the same way that we do," he says. "One of our systems, which is a deep network, has a recognition engine which generates an ordered list of how similar various faces are. And sometimes you get good matches – but other times you look at them and say, well, it's the wrong race! To humans they look completely different. And that underlines the fact that the networks are working in a different sort of way, and actually you don't really know how they're working. They're the ultimate black box."
This isn't to say that the use of big data, and particularly the use of composite imagery (digitally blending together certain types of faces) doesn't give us useful information and fascinating correlations. "You can, for example, take a given face and use computer software to make it look more or less trustworthy," says Hancock. "I remember a colleague playing with this and he made a less trustworthy version of George W Bush – and how shifty did he look! I'm surprised that they're not using these techniques in political advertising, because you couldn't tell that anything had been done [to the picture], but when you look at it you think 'I wouldn't trust him'."
The revitalisation of the theory of physiognomy by the Shanghai students is, according to Todorov, deeply problematic on a theoretical level. "Are we back to Lombroso's theory," he asks, "that criminals were anomalous creatures, evolutionary degenerates? How does one become criminal, and what role do various life forces play into this? There are people making claims that you just need to look at the face to predict personality and behaviour, but many of these people have not given much thought to their underlying assumptions."
While it's true that we judge books by their covers, covers are more than just faces; we piece together all kinds of cues from people to form our impressions of them. Jimmy Savile's appearance was unusual by any standards, but we absorbed a great deal of information about him over the years that will have influenced our opinions – not least from the original Louis Theroux programme from 2000 that was reexamined in that recent BBC documentary. Savile's vague resemblance to the Child Catcher from the film Chitty Chitty Bang Bang is convenient but ultimately misleading, and the way it reinforces the idea of what a paedophile might 'look like' is unfortunate; not least because it helps to sustain a low-level belief in the 'science' of physiognomy, despite its tendency to crumble under the slightest cross examination.
This article was originally published on TheLong+Short. Read the original article. | skeptical and dismissive | neutral and hypothetical | incredulous and antagonistic | curious and imaginative | 0 |
99903_Y162MI8V_3 | Historical figures have proposed all of the following theories regarding physiognomy EXCEPT for the idea that: | Face value
When the BBC broadcast the recent documentary by Louis Theroux that looked back at the time he spent in the company of Jimmy Savile, there was disbelief across social media that no one had stepped in to stop Savile from committing his crimes. Some blamed the BBC, some blamed those in Savile's immediate circle, but others blamed a simple error of human judgment.
"He literally couldn't look more like a paedophile," read one post – one of many to state a supposedly incontrovertible truth: that Savile's criminal tendencies could have been detected from the shape of his features, his eyes, his hair. Moreover, this has nothing to do with the benefit of hindsight and should have been picked up at the time. His looks, they suggested, were a moral indicator, with a wealth of compelling visual evidence to support the claim.
We know that paedophiles, murderers and other violent criminals come in many shapes and sizes. If we knew nothing about their criminal history, some of their photos might even appear attractive. But the idea that someone's features betray their character is something rooted deep within us; it's the reason why certain photos perform well on dating apps, or why trustworthy-looking politicians might rack up votes. But how wrong are our hunches of perceived criminality?
A recent paper, published by Xiaolin Wu and Xi Zhang of Shanghai's Jiao Tong University, claims to be the first to use machine learning and neural networks to attempt a fully automated inference of criminality from facial images, removing prejudice from the equation and testing the validity of our gut feelings. "What facial features influence the average Joe's impulsive and yet consensual judgments on social attributes?" they ask. Through a study of 1,856 images ("controlled for race, gender, age and facial expression") they claim to have established the validity of "automated, face-induced inference on criminality, despite the historical controversy surrounding this line of enquiry."
In other words, they believe that they've found a relationship between looking like a criminal and actually being one.
It's a claim that's been made many times over the years. Physiognomy, the 'science' of judging people by their appearance, was first theorised by the ancient Greeks in around the 5th century BC. Aristotle's pronouncement that "it is possible to infer character from features" led to a number of works relating to 'Physiognomica', a word derived from
physis
(nature),
nomos
(law) and (or)
gnomon
(judge or interpreter).
All of Greek society, it was claimed, could benefit from this skill: it could assist with choosing an employee, a slave or a spouse, while its inherent vagueness made it intriguing to philosophers and useful for scientists who bent the theories to support their own beliefs. It became a recognised science in the Islamic world, and was used and taught in Europe throughout late antiquity and the early Middle Ages, despite nagging doubts among thinkers and physicians of the day. In the early 16th century, Leonardo da Vinci claimed not to "concern myself with false physiognomy, because these chimeras have no scientific foundation."
Theories of physiognomy, however, would persist beyond the Renaissance. In 1586, Italian scholar Giambattista della Porta published a book, De humana physiognomonia libri IIII, which established him as the 'father of Physiognomy'. Della Porta's thinking was based on the 'doctrine of signatures'; the idea that the appearance of plants and animals offers clues to their nature. For example, as one writer of the time suggested, walnuts are good for curing headaches because they're shaped a bit like a human head. The theories in della Porta's book were supported by dozens of detailed illustrations which, by comparing human faces to those of animals, suggested that they must surely share similar character traits.
In the 17th century, Swiss poet Johann Caspar Lavater took della Porta's methodology and ran with it, commissioning artists to illustrate his popular Essays On Physiognomy – which, to the chagrin of his contemporary, the writer Hannah More, sold for "fifteen guineas a set… while in vain we boast that philosophy [has] broken down all the strongholds of prejudice, ignorance, and superstition."
Lavater's work was criticised for being ridden with bias (black faces rarely emerged well from his analyses) but he was right in one respect: "Whether they are or are not sensible of it," he wrote, "all men are daily influenced by physiognomy."
Many studies have been done into our psychological response to faces, and it's clear that a so-called halo effect will inevitably work its magic. "Attractive people are regarded as better at everything," says Professor Peter Hancock, lecturer in Psychology at Stirling University. "And we can't shake that off because there's some truth to it. Good genes produce intelligent people, attractive faces, fit bodies, and we imagine that they're going to be good at everything else, too. We don't have good insight into our own behaviour. We tend to think we understand what we're doing, but we don't."
Hancock describes attending a conference where one speaker showed a series of black faces and white faces to students (who were mostly white) and asked them what they thought the experiment was about. "They knew that he was trying to assess whether they would rate the black ones as more criminal," says Hancock. "But then they did!"
We attribute social characteristics based on opinions we already hold about certain kinds of faces: whether they look unusual in some way, whether they resemble a partner, a family member or even ourselves, or perhaps have some other cultural association. Physiognomy ultimately stems from what Alexander Todorov, professor of psychology at Princeton University, calls an 'overgeneralisation hypothesis'. "People," he wrote, "use easily accessible facial information (eg an expression such as a smile, cues to gender and ethnic group) to make social attributions congruent with this information (eg a nice person)."
In a social media age, the pictures we choose to represent ourselves online are a form of self-presentation driven by those social attributions and the knowledge that our pictures are being judged.
Experiments at Princeton found that we take less than one tenth of a second to form an opinion of strangers from their pictures, and those opinions tend to stand firm even if we're exposed to those pictures for a longer period of time. That tendency to judge instantly gives rise to a number of selfie tropes that are deemed to elicit positive responses, particularly when it comes to photos on dating profiles: certain angles, particular expressions, minute adjustments of eyebrows and lips that might appear to be about narcissism and vanity, but are more about a fear of being incorrectly assessed. After all, false suppositions based on people's faces are hugely influential within society, and in extreme cases they can have a huge impact on people's lives.
When retired teacher Christopher Jefferies was held by police in connection with the murder of Joanna Yeates in Bristol back in 2010, more than half a dozen newspapers gave his unusual appearance particular scrutiny and made assumptions accordingly, which in turn influenced public opinion. This culminated in substantial damages for defamation, two convictions for contempt of court and a painful ordeal for Jefferies, who was entirely innocent.
This kind of deep-seated bias looms large throughout physiognomic works of the 19th and 20th centuries, from absurdities such as Vaught's Practical Character Reader of 1902 (handy if you want to find out what a "deceitful chin" looks like) to more inherently troubling volumes such as Cesare Lombroso's Criminal Man.
After performing a number of autopsies on criminals, the Italian physician claimed to have discovered a number of common characteristics, and it's worth listing them if only to establish the supposed criminality of pretty much everyone you know:
Unusually short or tall height; small head, but large face; fleshy lips, but thin upper lip; protuberances on head and around ear; wrinkles on forehead and face; large sinus cavities or bumpy face; tattoos; receding hairline; large incisors; bushy eyebrows, tending to meet across nose; large eye sockets but deep-set eyes; beaked or flat nose; strong jaw line; small and sloping forehead; small or weak chin; thin neck; sloping shoulders but large chest; large, protruding ears; long arms; high cheek bones; pointy or snubbed fingers or toes.
In a woeful misreading of Darwinian theory, Lombroso unwittingly founded the field of anthropological criminology, and more specifically the idea of the born criminal: a hereditary quality that posed a danger to society and must be rooted out. His theories became discredited during the 20th century, but the kind of bias displayed by Lombroso can still be found in legal systems across the world; studies show that people with stereotypically 'untrustworthy' faces tend to receive harsher treatment than those who don't. There's evidently some consensus over people's attitudes toward certain faces, but it doesn't follow that the consensus is correct.
The only attributes that we're reasonably good at detecting, according to research done at the University of Michigan in the 1960s and later tested at the University of Stirling in 2007, are extroversion and conscientiousness. For other traits there's insufficient evidence that our hunches are correct, with anomalies explained by our evolved aversion to 'ugliness', established links between broader faces and powerful physiques, or cultural associations with certain demographics which are reinforced with nagging regularity by newspapers, books, television and film.
Data-driven studies, based upon huge quantities of facial data, would seem to offer the final word on this. Since 2005, computational models have used various techniques to test for links between social attributes and facial features, resulting in suggestions that our faces can betray, for example, political leanings, sexual orientation and criminality. One BBC Future article from 2015 even describes the 'discipline' of physiognomy as 'gaining credibility'. But Todorov details many problems with these studies, pointing out the challenging nature of doing such experiments with sufficient rigour – not least because different images of the same people can prompt wildly differing results.
The aforementioned study at Shanghai's Jiao Tong University, with its enthusiastic, data-driven analyses of such questions as "What features of a human face betray its owner's propensity for crimes?" prompted a wave of press coverage.
The vision outlined in these articles is of an unethical dystopia where neural networks can assess our faces and establish a likely score for criminality – but Todorov is scathing about this paper, too. "The main problem is the sampling of the images," he says. "There is not enough information about the [nature of] the images of the people who were convicted. Second, clearly, there are huge differences between the two samples [of convicts and non-convicts] [in terms of] education and socio-economic status."
In other words, your appearance is affected by the kind of life you've led, so the classifiers within the computer program are simply distinguishing between different demographics rather than detecting a propensity for criminal behaviour.
Todorov is also wary of these classifiers misidentifying more 'innocent' people than identifying actual criminals, and accuracy is a concern shared by Peter Hancock. "Networks don't assess faces in the same way that we do," he says. "One of our systems, which is a deep network, has a recognition engine which generates an ordered list of how similar various faces are. And sometimes you get good matches – but other times you look at them and say, well, it's the wrong race! To humans they look completely different. And that underlines the fact that the networks are working in a different sort of way, and actually you don't really know how they're working. They're the ultimate black box."
This isn't to say that the use of big data, and particularly the use of composite imagery (digitally blending together certain types of faces) doesn't give us useful information and fascinating correlations. "You can, for example, take a given face and use computer software to make it look more or less trustworthy," says Hancock. "I remember a colleague playing with this and he made a less trustworthy version of George W Bush – and how shifty did he look! I'm surprised that they're not using these techniques in political advertising, because you couldn't tell that anything had been done [to the picture], but when you look at it you think 'I wouldn't trust him'."
The revitalisation of the theory of physiognomy by the Shanghai students is, according to Todorov, deeply problematic on a theoretical level. "Are we back to Lombroso's theory," he asks, "that criminals were anomalous creatures, evolutionary degenerates? How does one become criminal, and what role do various life forces play into this? There are people making claims that you just need to look at the face to predict personality and behaviour, but many of these people have not given much thought to their underlying assumptions."
While it's true that we judge books by their covers, covers are more than just faces; we piece together all kinds of cues from people to form our impressions of them. Jimmy Savile's appearance was unusual by any standards, but we absorbed a great deal of information about him over the years that will have influenced our opinions – not least from the original Louis Theroux programme from 2000 that was reexamined in that recent BBC documentary. Savile's vague resemblance to the Child Catcher from the film Chitty Chitty Bang Bang is convenient but ultimately misleading, and the way it reinforces the idea of what a paedophile might 'look like' is unfortunate; not least because it helps to sustain a low-level belief in the 'science' of physiognomy, despite its tendency to crumble under the slightest cross examination.
This article was originally published on TheLong+Short. Read the original article. | humans share similar characteristics to animals based on their facial features and mannerisms | humans can use physiognomy to select which employees, slaves, and mates may be most compatible with them | humans are constantly influenced by physiognomy on a daily basis | humans will never be able to eliminate the effects of physiognomy from their decision-making | 3 |
99903_Y162MI8V_4 | What is one halo effect of physiognomy? | Face value
When the BBC broadcast the recent documentary by Louis Theroux that looked back at the time he spent in the company of Jimmy Savile, there was disbelief across social media that no one had stepped in to stop Savile from committing his crimes. Some blamed the BBC, some blamed those in Savile's immediate circle, but others blamed a simple error of human judgment.
"He literally couldn't look more like a paedophile," read one post – one of many to state a supposedly incontrovertible truth: that Savile's criminal tendencies could have been detected from the shape of his features, his eyes, his hair. Moreover, this has nothing to do with the benefit of hindsight and should have been picked up at the time. His looks, they suggested, were a moral indicator, with a wealth of compelling visual evidence to support the claim.
We know that paedophiles, murderers and other violent criminals come in many shapes and sizes. If we knew nothing about their criminal history, some of their photos might even appear attractive. But the idea that someone's features betray their character is something rooted deep within us; it's the reason why certain photos perform well on dating apps, or why trustworthy-looking politicians might rack up votes. But how wrong are our hunches of perceived criminality?
A recent paper, published by Xiaolin Wu and Xi Zhang of Shanghai's Jiao Tong University, claims to be the first to use machine learning and neural networks to attempt a fully automated inference of criminality from facial images, removing prejudice from the equation and testing the validity of our gut feelings. "What facial features influence the average Joe's impulsive and yet consensual judgments on social attributes?" they ask. Through a study of 1,856 images ("controlled for race, gender, age and facial expression") they claim to have established the validity of "automated, face-induced inference on criminality, despite the historical controversy surrounding this line of enquiry."
In other words, they believe that they've found a relationship between looking like a criminal and actually being one.
It's a claim that's been made many times over the years. Physiognomy, the 'science' of judging people by their appearance, was first theorised by the ancient Greeks in around the 5th century BC. Aristotle's pronouncement that "it is possible to infer character from features" led to a number of works relating to 'Physiognomica', a word derived from
physis
(nature),
nomos
(law) and (or)
gnomon
(judge or interpreter).
All of Greek society, it was claimed, could benefit from this skill: it could assist with choosing an employee, a slave or a spouse, while its inherent vagueness made it intriguing to philosophers and useful for scientists who bent the theories to support their own beliefs. It became a recognised science in the Islamic world, and was used and taught in Europe throughout late antiquity and the early Middle Ages, despite nagging doubts among thinkers and physicians of the day. In the early 16th century, Leonardo da Vinci claimed not to "concern myself with false physiognomy, because these chimeras have no scientific foundation."
Theories of physiognomy, however, would persist beyond the Renaissance. In 1586, Italian scholar Giambattista della Porta published a book, De humana physiognomonia libri IIII, which established him as the 'father of Physiognomy'. Della Porta's thinking was based on the 'doctrine of signatures'; the idea that the appearance of plants and animals offers clues to their nature. For example, as one writer of the time suggested, walnuts are good for curing headaches because they're shaped a bit like a human head. The theories in della Porta's book were supported by dozens of detailed illustrations which, by comparing human faces to those of animals, suggested that they must surely share similar character traits.
In the 17th century, Swiss poet Johann Caspar Lavater took della Porta's methodology and ran with it, commissioning artists to illustrate his popular Essays On Physiognomy – which, to the chagrin of his contemporary, the writer Hannah More, sold for "fifteen guineas a set… while in vain we boast that philosophy [has] broken down all the strongholds of prejudice, ignorance, and superstition."
Lavater's work was criticised for being ridden with bias (black faces rarely emerged well from his analyses) but he was right in one respect: "Whether they are or are not sensible of it," he wrote, "all men are daily influenced by physiognomy."
Many studies have been done into our psychological response to faces, and it's clear that a so-called halo effect will inevitably work its magic. "Attractive people are regarded as better at everything," says Professor Peter Hancock, lecturer in Psychology at Stirling University. "And we can't shake that off because there's some truth to it. Good genes produce intelligent people, attractive faces, fit bodies, and we imagine that they're going to be good at everything else, too. We don't have good insight into our own behaviour. We tend to think we understand what we're doing, but we don't."
Hancock describes attending a conference where one speaker showed a series of black faces and white faces to students (who were mostly white) and asked them what they thought the experiment was about. "They knew that he was trying to assess whether they would rate the black ones as more criminal," says Hancock. "But then they did!"
We attribute social characteristics based on opinions we already hold about certain kinds of faces: whether they look unusual in some way, whether they resemble a partner, a family member or even ourselves, or perhaps have some other cultural association. Physiognomy ultimately stems from what Alexander Todorov, professor of psychology at Princeton University, calls an 'overgeneralisation hypothesis'. "People," he wrote, "use easily accessible facial information (eg an expression such as a smile, cues to gender and ethnic group) to make social attributions congruent with this information (eg a nice person)."
In a social media age, the pictures we choose to represent ourselves online are a form of self-presentation driven by those social attributions and the knowledge that our pictures are being judged.
Experiments at Princeton found that we take less than one tenth of a second to form an opinion of strangers from their pictures, and those opinions tend to stand firm even if we're exposed to those pictures for a longer period of time. That tendency to judge instantly gives rise to a number of selfie tropes that are deemed to elicit positive responses, particularly when it comes to photos on dating profiles: certain angles, particular expressions, minute adjustments of eyebrows and lips that might appear to be about narcissism and vanity, but are more about a fear of being incorrectly assessed. After all, false suppositions based on people's faces are hugely influential within society, and in extreme cases they can have a huge impact on people's lives.
When retired teacher Christopher Jefferies was held by police in connection with the murder of Joanna Yeates in Bristol back in 2010, more than half a dozen newspapers gave his unusual appearance particular scrutiny and made assumptions accordingly, which in turn influenced public opinion. This culminated in substantial damages for defamation, two convictions for contempt of court and a painful ordeal for Jefferies, who was entirely innocent.
This kind of deep-seated bias looms large throughout physiognomic works of the 19th and 20th centuries, from absurdities such as Vaught's Practical Character Reader of 1902 (handy if you want to find out what a "deceitful chin" looks like) to more inherently troubling volumes such as Cesare Lombroso's Criminal Man.
After performing a number of autopsies on criminals, the Italian physician claimed to have discovered a number of common characteristics, and it's worth listing them if only to establish the supposed criminality of pretty much everyone you know:
Unusually short or tall height; small head, but large face; fleshy lips, but thin upper lip; protuberances on head and around ear; wrinkles on forehead and face; large sinus cavities or bumpy face; tattoos; receding hairline; large incisors; bushy eyebrows, tending to meet across nose; large eye sockets but deep-set eyes; beaked or flat nose; strong jaw line; small and sloping forehead; small or weak chin; thin neck; sloping shoulders but large chest; large, protruding ears; long arms; high cheek bones; pointy or snubbed fingers or toes.
In a woeful misreading of Darwinian theory, Lombroso unwittingly founded the field of anthropological criminology, and more specifically the idea of the born criminal: a hereditary quality that posed a danger to society and must be rooted out. His theories became discredited during the 20th century, but the kind of bias displayed by Lombroso can still be found in legal systems across the world; studies show that people with stereotypically 'untrustworthy' faces tend to receive harsher treatment than those who don't. There's evidently some consensus over people's attitudes toward certain faces, but it doesn't follow that the consensus is correct.
The only attributes that we're reasonably good at detecting, according to research done at the University of Michigan in the 1960s and later tested at the University of Stirling in 2007, are extroversion and conscientiousness. For other traits there's insufficient evidence that our hunches are correct, with anomalies explained by our evolved aversion to 'ugliness', established links between broader faces and powerful physiques, or cultural associations with certain demographics which are reinforced with nagging regularity by newspapers, books, television and film.
Data-driven studies, based upon huge quantities of facial data, would seem to offer the final word on this. Since 2005, computational models have used various techniques to test for links between social attributes and facial features, resulting in suggestions that our faces can betray, for example, political leanings, sexual orientation and criminality. One BBC Future article from 2015 even describes the 'discipline' of physiognomy as 'gaining credibility'. But Todorov details many problems with these studies, pointing out the challenging nature of doing such experiments with sufficient rigour – not least because different images of the same people can prompt wildly differing results.
The aforementioned study at Shanghai's Jiao Tong University, with its enthusiastic, data-driven analyses of such questions as "What features of a human face betray its owner's propensity for crimes?" prompted a wave of press coverage.
The vision outlined in these articles is of an unethical dystopia where neural networks can assess our faces and establish a likely score for criminality – but Todorov is scathing about this paper, too. "The main problem is the sampling of the images," he says. "There is not enough information about the [nature of] the images of the people who were convicted. Second, clearly, there are huge differences between the two samples [of convicts and non-convicts] [in terms of] education and socio-economic status."
In other words, your appearance is affected by the kind of life you've led, so the classifiers within the computer program are simply distinguishing between different demographics rather than detecting a propensity for criminal behaviour.
Todorov is also wary of these classifiers misidentifying more 'innocent' people than identifying actual criminals, and accuracy is a concern shared by Peter Hancock. "Networks don't assess faces in the same way that we do," he says. "One of our systems, which is a deep network, has a recognition engine which generates an ordered list of how similar various faces are. And sometimes you get good matches – but other times you look at them and say, well, it's the wrong race! To humans they look completely different. And that underlines the fact that the networks are working in a different sort of way, and actually you don't really know how they're working. They're the ultimate black box."
This isn't to say that the use of big data, and particularly the use of composite imagery (digitally blending together certain types of faces) doesn't give us useful information and fascinating correlations. "You can, for example, take a given face and use computer software to make it look more or less trustworthy," says Hancock. "I remember a colleague playing with this and he made a less trustworthy version of George W Bush – and how shifty did he look! I'm surprised that they're not using these techniques in political advertising, because you couldn't tell that anything had been done [to the picture], but when you look at it you think 'I wouldn't trust him'."
The revitalisation of the theory of physiognomy by the Shanghai students is, according to Todorov, deeply problematic on a theoretical level. "Are we back to Lombroso's theory," he asks, "that criminals were anomalous creatures, evolutionary degenerates? How does one become criminal, and what role do various life forces play into this? There are people making claims that you just need to look at the face to predict personality and behaviour, but many of these people have not given much thought to their underlying assumptions."
While it's true that we judge books by their covers, covers are more than just faces; we piece together all kinds of cues from people to form our impressions of them. Jimmy Savile's appearance was unusual by any standards, but we absorbed a great deal of information about him over the years that will have influenced our opinions – not least from the original Louis Theroux programme from 2000 that was reexamined in that recent BBC documentary. Savile's vague resemblance to the Child Catcher from the film Chitty Chitty Bang Bang is convenient but ultimately misleading, and the way it reinforces the idea of what a paedophile might 'look like' is unfortunate; not least because it helps to sustain a low-level belief in the 'science' of physiognomy, despite its tendency to crumble under the slightest cross examination.
This article was originally published on TheLong+Short. Read the original article. | It has morphed to become something more credible than its original version | It has morphed to become something less credible than its original version | It has created a trend that imprisons innocent people | It has created a bias that favors more attractive people | 3 |
99903_Y162MI8V_5 | According to the author, what drives our decisions to publish certain content on social media platforms? | Face value
When the BBC broadcast the recent documentary by Louis Theroux that looked back at the time he spent in the company of Jimmy Savile, there was disbelief across social media that no one had stepped in to stop Savile from committing his crimes. Some blamed the BBC, some blamed those in Savile's immediate circle, but others blamed a simple error of human judgment.
"He literally couldn't look more like a paedophile," read one post – one of many to state a supposedly incontrovertible truth: that Savile's criminal tendencies could have been detected from the shape of his features, his eyes, his hair. Moreover, this has nothing to do with the benefit of hindsight and should have been picked up at the time. His looks, they suggested, were a moral indicator, with a wealth of compelling visual evidence to support the claim.
We know that paedophiles, murderers and other violent criminals come in many shapes and sizes. If we knew nothing about their criminal history, some of their photos might even appear attractive. But the idea that someone's features betray their character is something rooted deep within us; it's the reason why certain photos perform well on dating apps, or why trustworthy-looking politicians might rack up votes. But how wrong are our hunches of perceived criminality?
A recent paper, published by Xiaolin Wu and Xi Zhang of Shanghai's Jiao Tong University, claims to be the first to use machine learning and neural networks to attempt a fully automated inference of criminality from facial images, removing prejudice from the equation and testing the validity of our gut feelings. "What facial features influence the average Joe's impulsive and yet consensual judgments on social attributes?" they ask. Through a study of 1,856 images ("controlled for race, gender, age and facial expression") they claim to have established the validity of "automated, face-induced inference on criminality, despite the historical controversy surrounding this line of enquiry."
In other words, they believe that they've found a relationship between looking like a criminal and actually being one.
It's a claim that's been made many times over the years. Physiognomy, the 'science' of judging people by their appearance, was first theorised by the ancient Greeks in around the 5th century BC. Aristotle's pronouncement that "it is possible to infer character from features" led to a number of works relating to 'Physiognomica', a word derived from
physis
(nature),
nomos
(law) and (or)
gnomon
(judge or interpreter).
All of Greek society, it was claimed, could benefit from this skill: it could assist with choosing an employee, a slave or a spouse, while its inherent vagueness made it intriguing to philosophers and useful for scientists who bent the theories to support their own beliefs. It became a recognised science in the Islamic world, and was used and taught in Europe throughout late antiquity and the early Middle Ages, despite nagging doubts among thinkers and physicians of the day. In the early 16th century, Leonardo da Vinci claimed not to "concern myself with false physiognomy, because these chimeras have no scientific foundation."
Theories of physiognomy, however, would persist beyond the Renaissance. In 1586, Italian scholar Giambattista della Porta published a book, De humana physiognomonia libri IIII, which established him as the 'father of Physiognomy'. Della Porta's thinking was based on the 'doctrine of signatures'; the idea that the appearance of plants and animals offers clues to their nature. For example, as one writer of the time suggested, walnuts are good for curing headaches because they're shaped a bit like a human head. The theories in della Porta's book were supported by dozens of detailed illustrations which, by comparing human faces to those of animals, suggested that they must surely share similar character traits.
In the 17th century, Swiss poet Johann Caspar Lavater took della Porta's methodology and ran with it, commissioning artists to illustrate his popular Essays On Physiognomy – which, to the chagrin of his contemporary, the writer Hannah More, sold for "fifteen guineas a set… while in vain we boast that philosophy [has] broken down all the strongholds of prejudice, ignorance, and superstition."
Lavater's work was criticised for being ridden with bias (black faces rarely emerged well from his analyses) but he was right in one respect: "Whether they are or are not sensible of it," he wrote, "all men are daily influenced by physiognomy."
Many studies have been done into our psychological response to faces, and it's clear that a so-called halo effect will inevitably work its magic. "Attractive people are regarded as better at everything," says Professor Peter Hancock, lecturer in Psychology at Stirling University. "And we can't shake that off because there's some truth to it. Good genes produce intelligent people, attractive faces, fit bodies, and we imagine that they're going to be good at everything else, too. We don't have good insight into our own behaviour. We tend to think we understand what we're doing, but we don't."
Hancock describes attending a conference where one speaker showed a series of black faces and white faces to students (who were mostly white) and asked them what they thought the experiment was about. "They knew that he was trying to assess whether they would rate the black ones as more criminal," says Hancock. "But then they did!"
We attribute social characteristics based on opinions we already hold about certain kinds of faces: whether they look unusual in some way, whether they resemble a partner, a family member or even ourselves, or perhaps have some other cultural association. Physiognomy ultimately stems from what Alexander Todorov, professor of psychology at Princeton University, calls an 'overgeneralisation hypothesis'. "People," he wrote, "use easily accessible facial information (eg an expression such as a smile, cues to gender and ethnic group) to make social attributions congruent with this information (eg a nice person)."
In a social media age, the pictures we choose to represent ourselves online are a form of self-presentation driven by those social attributions and the knowledge that our pictures are being judged.
Experiments at Princeton found that we take less than one tenth of a second to form an opinion of strangers from their pictures, and those opinions tend to stand firm even if we're exposed to those pictures for a longer period of time. That tendency to judge instantly gives rise to a number of selfie tropes that are deemed to elicit positive responses, particularly when it comes to photos on dating profiles: certain angles, particular expressions, minute adjustments of eyebrows and lips that might appear to be about narcissism and vanity, but are more about a fear of being incorrectly assessed. After all, false suppositions based on people's faces are hugely influential within society, and in extreme cases they can have a huge impact on people's lives.
When retired teacher Christopher Jefferies was held by police in connection with the murder of Joanna Yeates in Bristol back in 2010, more than half a dozen newspapers gave his unusual appearance particular scrutiny and made assumptions accordingly, which in turn influenced public opinion. This culminated in substantial damages for defamation, two convictions for contempt of court and a painful ordeal for Jefferies, who was entirely innocent.
This kind of deep-seated bias looms large throughout physiognomic works of the 19th and 20th centuries, from absurdities such as Vaught's Practical Character Reader of 1902 (handy if you want to find out what a "deceitful chin" looks like) to more inherently troubling volumes such as Cesare Lombroso's Criminal Man.
After performing a number of autopsies on criminals, the Italian physician claimed to have discovered a number of common characteristics, and it's worth listing them if only to establish the supposed criminality of pretty much everyone you know:
Unusually short or tall height; small head, but large face; fleshy lips, but thin upper lip; protuberances on head and around ear; wrinkles on forehead and face; large sinus cavities or bumpy face; tattoos; receding hairline; large incisors; bushy eyebrows, tending to meet across nose; large eye sockets but deep-set eyes; beaked or flat nose; strong jaw line; small and sloping forehead; small or weak chin; thin neck; sloping shoulders but large chest; large, protruding ears; long arms; high cheek bones; pointy or snubbed fingers or toes.
In a woeful misreading of Darwinian theory, Lombroso unwittingly founded the field of anthropological criminology, and more specifically the idea of the born criminal: a hereditary quality that posed a danger to society and must be rooted out. His theories became discredited during the 20th century, but the kind of bias displayed by Lombroso can still be found in legal systems across the world; studies show that people with stereotypically 'untrustworthy' faces tend to receive harsher treatment than those who don't. There's evidently some consensus over people's attitudes toward certain faces, but it doesn't follow that the consensus is correct.
The only attributes that we're reasonably good at detecting, according to research done at the University of Michigan in the 1960s and later tested at the University of Stirling in 2007, are extroversion and conscientiousness. For other traits there's insufficient evidence that our hunches are correct, with anomalies explained by our evolved aversion to 'ugliness', established links between broader faces and powerful physiques, or cultural associations with certain demographics which are reinforced with nagging regularity by newspapers, books, television and film.
Data-driven studies, based upon huge quantities of facial data, would seem to offer the final word on this. Since 2005, computational models have used various techniques to test for links between social attributes and facial features, resulting in suggestions that our faces can betray, for example, political leanings, sexual orientation and criminality. One BBC Future article from 2015 even describes the 'discipline' of physiognomy as 'gaining credibility'. But Todorov details many problems with these studies, pointing out the challenging nature of doing such experiments with sufficient rigour – not least because different images of the same people can prompt wildly differing results.
The aforementioned study at Shanghai's Jiao Tong University, with its enthusiastic, data-driven analyses of such questions as "What features of a human face betray its owner's propensity for crimes?" prompted a wave of press coverage.
The vision outlined in these articles is of an unethical dystopia where neural networks can assess our faces and establish a likely score for criminality – but Todorov is scathing about this paper, too. "The main problem is the sampling of the images," he says. "There is not enough information about the [nature of] the images of the people who were convicted. Second, clearly, there are huge differences between the two samples [of convicts and non-convicts] [in terms of] education and socio-economic status."
In other words, your appearance is affected by the kind of life you've led, so the classifiers within the computer program are simply distinguishing between different demographics rather than detecting a propensity for criminal behaviour.
Todorov is also wary of these classifiers misidentifying more 'innocent' people than identifying actual criminals, and accuracy is a concern shared by Peter Hancock. "Networks don't assess faces in the same way that we do," he says. "One of our systems, which is a deep network, has a recognition engine which generates an ordered list of how similar various faces are. And sometimes you get good matches – but other times you look at them and say, well, it's the wrong race! To humans they look completely different. And that underlines the fact that the networks are working in a different sort of way, and actually you don't really know how they're working. They're the ultimate black box."
This isn't to say that the use of big data, and particularly the use of composite imagery (digitally blending together certain types of faces) doesn't give us useful information and fascinating correlations. "You can, for example, take a given face and use computer software to make it look more or less trustworthy," says Hancock. "I remember a colleague playing with this and he made a less trustworthy version of George W Bush – and how shifty did he look! I'm surprised that they're not using these techniques in political advertising, because you couldn't tell that anything had been done [to the picture], but when you look at it you think 'I wouldn't trust him'."
The revitalisation of the theory of physiognomy by the Shanghai students is, according to Todorov, deeply problematic on a theoretical level. "Are we back to Lombroso's theory," he asks, "that criminals were anomalous creatures, evolutionary degenerates? How does one become criminal, and what role do various life forces play into this? There are people making claims that you just need to look at the face to predict personality and behaviour, but many of these people have not given much thought to their underlying assumptions."
While it's true that we judge books by their covers, covers are more than just faces; we piece together all kinds of cues from people to form our impressions of them. Jimmy Savile's appearance was unusual by any standards, but we absorbed a great deal of information about him over the years that will have influenced our opinions – not least from the original Louis Theroux programme from 2000 that was reexamined in that recent BBC documentary. Savile's vague resemblance to the Child Catcher from the film Chitty Chitty Bang Bang is convenient but ultimately misleading, and the way it reinforces the idea of what a paedophile might 'look like' is unfortunate; not least because it helps to sustain a low-level belief in the 'science' of physiognomy, despite its tendency to crumble under the slightest cross examination.
This article was originally published on TheLong+Short. Read the original article. | awareness of being judged | potential for monetization | rejection of conformity | fear of not fitting in | 0 |
99903_Y162MI8V_6 | What is the danger of using certain pictures to represent people in court? | Face value
When the BBC broadcast the recent documentary by Louis Theroux that looked back at the time he spent in the company of Jimmy Savile, there was disbelief across social media that no one had stepped in to stop Savile from committing his crimes. Some blamed the BBC, some blamed those in Savile's immediate circle, but others blamed a simple error of human judgment.
"He literally couldn't look more like a paedophile," read one post – one of many to state a supposedly incontrovertible truth: that Savile's criminal tendencies could have been detected from the shape of his features, his eyes, his hair. Moreover, this has nothing to do with the benefit of hindsight and should have been picked up at the time. His looks, they suggested, were a moral indicator, with a wealth of compelling visual evidence to support the claim.
We know that paedophiles, murderers and other violent criminals come in many shapes and sizes. If we knew nothing about their criminal history, some of their photos might even appear attractive. But the idea that someone's features betray their character is something rooted deep within us; it's the reason why certain photos perform well on dating apps, or why trustworthy-looking politicians might rack up votes. But how wrong are our hunches of perceived criminality?
A recent paper, published by Xiaolin Wu and Xi Zhang of Shanghai's Jiao Tong University, claims to be the first to use machine learning and neural networks to attempt a fully automated inference of criminality from facial images, removing prejudice from the equation and testing the validity of our gut feelings. "What facial features influence the average Joe's impulsive and yet consensual judgments on social attributes?" they ask. Through a study of 1,856 images ("controlled for race, gender, age and facial expression") they claim to have established the validity of "automated, face-induced inference on criminality, despite the historical controversy surrounding this line of enquiry."
In other words, they believe that they've found a relationship between looking like a criminal and actually being one.
It's a claim that's been made many times over the years. Physiognomy, the 'science' of judging people by their appearance, was first theorised by the ancient Greeks in around the 5th century BC. Aristotle's pronouncement that "it is possible to infer character from features" led to a number of works relating to 'Physiognomica', a word derived from
physis
(nature),
nomos
(law) and (or)
gnomon
(judge or interpreter).
All of Greek society, it was claimed, could benefit from this skill: it could assist with choosing an employee, a slave or a spouse, while its inherent vagueness made it intriguing to philosophers and useful for scientists who bent the theories to support their own beliefs. It became a recognised science in the Islamic world, and was used and taught in Europe throughout late antiquity and the early Middle Ages, despite nagging doubts among thinkers and physicians of the day. In the early 16th century, Leonardo da Vinci claimed not to "concern myself with false physiognomy, because these chimeras have no scientific foundation."
Theories of physiognomy, however, would persist beyond the Renaissance. In 1586, Italian scholar Giambattista della Porta published a book, De humana physiognomonia libri IIII, which established him as the 'father of Physiognomy'. Della Porta's thinking was based on the 'doctrine of signatures'; the idea that the appearance of plants and animals offers clues to their nature. For example, as one writer of the time suggested, walnuts are good for curing headaches because they're shaped a bit like a human head. The theories in della Porta's book were supported by dozens of detailed illustrations which, by comparing human faces to those of animals, suggested that they must surely share similar character traits.
In the 17th century, Swiss poet Johann Caspar Lavater took della Porta's methodology and ran with it, commissioning artists to illustrate his popular Essays On Physiognomy – which, to the chagrin of his contemporary, the writer Hannah More, sold for "fifteen guineas a set… while in vain we boast that philosophy [has] broken down all the strongholds of prejudice, ignorance, and superstition."
Lavater's work was criticised for being ridden with bias (black faces rarely emerged well from his analyses) but he was right in one respect: "Whether they are or are not sensible of it," he wrote, "all men are daily influenced by physiognomy."
Many studies have been done into our psychological response to faces, and it's clear that a so-called halo effect will inevitably work its magic. "Attractive people are regarded as better at everything," says Professor Peter Hancock, lecturer in Psychology at Stirling University. "And we can't shake that off because there's some truth to it. Good genes produce intelligent people, attractive faces, fit bodies, and we imagine that they're going to be good at everything else, too. We don't have good insight into our own behaviour. We tend to think we understand what we're doing, but we don't."
Hancock describes attending a conference where one speaker showed a series of black faces and white faces to students (who were mostly white) and asked them what they thought the experiment was about. "They knew that he was trying to assess whether they would rate the black ones as more criminal," says Hancock. "But then they did!"
We attribute social characteristics based on opinions we already hold about certain kinds of faces: whether they look unusual in some way, whether they resemble a partner, a family member or even ourselves, or perhaps have some other cultural association. Physiognomy ultimately stems from what Alexander Todorov, professor of psychology at Princeton University, calls an 'overgeneralisation hypothesis'. "People," he wrote, "use easily accessible facial information (eg an expression such as a smile, cues to gender and ethnic group) to make social attributions congruent with this information (eg a nice person)."
In a social media age, the pictures we choose to represent ourselves online are a form of self-presentation driven by those social attributions and the knowledge that our pictures are being judged.
Experiments at Princeton found that we take less than one tenth of a second to form an opinion of strangers from their pictures, and those opinions tend to stand firm even if we're exposed to those pictures for a longer period of time. That tendency to judge instantly gives rise to a number of selfie tropes that are deemed to elicit positive responses, particularly when it comes to photos on dating profiles: certain angles, particular expressions, minute adjustments of eyebrows and lips that might appear to be about narcissism and vanity, but are more about a fear of being incorrectly assessed. After all, false suppositions based on people's faces are hugely influential within society, and in extreme cases they can have a huge impact on people's lives.
When retired teacher Christopher Jefferies was held by police in connection with the murder of Joanna Yeates in Bristol back in 2010, more than half a dozen newspapers gave his unusual appearance particular scrutiny and made assumptions accordingly, which in turn influenced public opinion. This culminated in substantial damages for defamation, two convictions for contempt of court and a painful ordeal for Jefferies, who was entirely innocent.
This kind of deep-seated bias looms large throughout physiognomic works of the 19th and 20th centuries, from absurdities such as Vaught's Practical Character Reader of 1902 (handy if you want to find out what a "deceitful chin" looks like) to more inherently troubling volumes such as Cesare Lombroso's Criminal Man.
After performing a number of autopsies on criminals, the Italian physician claimed to have discovered a number of common characteristics, and it's worth listing them if only to establish the supposed criminality of pretty much everyone you know:
Unusually short or tall height; small head, but large face; fleshy lips, but thin upper lip; protuberances on head and around ear; wrinkles on forehead and face; large sinus cavities or bumpy face; tattoos; receding hairline; large incisors; bushy eyebrows, tending to meet across nose; large eye sockets but deep-set eyes; beaked or flat nose; strong jaw line; small and sloping forehead; small or weak chin; thin neck; sloping shoulders but large chest; large, protruding ears; long arms; high cheek bones; pointy or snubbed fingers or toes.
In a woeful misreading of Darwinian theory, Lombroso unwittingly founded the field of anthropological criminology, and more specifically the idea of the born criminal: a hereditary quality that posed a danger to society and must be rooted out. His theories became discredited during the 20th century, but the kind of bias displayed by Lombroso can still be found in legal systems across the world; studies show that people with stereotypically 'untrustworthy' faces tend to receive harsher treatment than those who don't. There's evidently some consensus over people's attitudes toward certain faces, but it doesn't follow that the consensus is correct.
The only attributes that we're reasonably good at detecting, according to research done at the University of Michigan in the 1960s and later tested at the University of Stirling in 2007, are extroversion and conscientiousness. For other traits there's insufficient evidence that our hunches are correct, with anomalies explained by our evolved aversion to 'ugliness', established links between broader faces and powerful physiques, or cultural associations with certain demographics which are reinforced with nagging regularity by newspapers, books, television and film.
Data-driven studies, based upon huge quantities of facial data, would seem to offer the final word on this. Since 2005, computational models have used various techniques to test for links between social attributes and facial features, resulting in suggestions that our faces can betray, for example, political leanings, sexual orientation and criminality. One BBC Future article from 2015 even describes the 'discipline' of physiognomy as 'gaining credibility'. But Todorov details many problems with these studies, pointing out the challenging nature of doing such experiments with sufficient rigour – not least because different images of the same people can prompt wildly differing results.
The aforementioned study at Shanghai's Jiao Tong University, with its enthusiastic, data-driven analyses of such questions as "What features of a human face betray its owner's propensity for crimes?" prompted a wave of press coverage.
The vision outlined in these articles is of an unethical dystopia where neural networks can assess our faces and establish a likely score for criminality – but Todorov is scathing about this paper, too. "The main problem is the sampling of the images," he says. "There is not enough information about the [nature of] the images of the people who were convicted. Second, clearly, there are huge differences between the two samples [of convicts and non-convicts] [in terms of] education and socio-economic status."
In other words, your appearance is affected by the kind of life you've led, so the classifiers within the computer program are simply distinguishing between different demographics rather than detecting a propensity for criminal behaviour.
Todorov is also wary of these classifiers misidentifying more 'innocent' people than identifying actual criminals, and accuracy is a concern shared by Peter Hancock. "Networks don't assess faces in the same way that we do," he says. "One of our systems, which is a deep network, has a recognition engine which generates an ordered list of how similar various faces are. And sometimes you get good matches – but other times you look at them and say, well, it's the wrong race! To humans they look completely different. And that underlines the fact that the networks are working in a different sort of way, and actually you don't really know how they're working. They're the ultimate black box."
This isn't to say that the use of big data, and particularly the use of composite imagery (digitally blending together certain types of faces) doesn't give us useful information and fascinating correlations. "You can, for example, take a given face and use computer software to make it look more or less trustworthy," says Hancock. "I remember a colleague playing with this and he made a less trustworthy version of George W Bush – and how shifty did he look! I'm surprised that they're not using these techniques in political advertising, because you couldn't tell that anything had been done [to the picture], but when you look at it you think 'I wouldn't trust him'."
The revitalisation of the theory of physiognomy by the Shanghai students is, according to Todorov, deeply problematic on a theoretical level. "Are we back to Lombroso's theory," he asks, "that criminals were anomalous creatures, evolutionary degenerates? How does one become criminal, and what role do various life forces play into this? There are people making claims that you just need to look at the face to predict personality and behaviour, but many of these people have not given much thought to their underlying assumptions."
While it's true that we judge books by their covers, covers are more than just faces; we piece together all kinds of cues from people to form our impressions of them. Jimmy Savile's appearance was unusual by any standards, but we absorbed a great deal of information about him over the years that will have influenced our opinions – not least from the original Louis Theroux programme from 2000 that was reexamined in that recent BBC documentary. Savile's vague resemblance to the Child Catcher from the film Chitty Chitty Bang Bang is convenient but ultimately misleading, and the way it reinforces the idea of what a paedophile might 'look like' is unfortunate; not least because it helps to sustain a low-level belief in the 'science' of physiognomy, despite its tendency to crumble under the slightest cross examination.
This article was originally published on TheLong+Short. Read the original article. | The pictures can cause further emotional distress for families who have been affected by a perpetrator. | The pictures can elicit negative or guilty connotations, which can influence a jury or the public before a trial. | The pictures may have been edited in order to make the defendant look more guilty of criminal behavior. | The pictures may not represent what the person look like during the time they were accused of committing the crime. | 1 |
99903_Y162MI8V_7 | Which type of person is likely to receive the most brutal treatment in the legal system, compared to the other response options? | Face value
When the BBC broadcast the recent documentary by Louis Theroux that looked back at the time he spent in the company of Jimmy Savile, there was disbelief across social media that no one had stepped in to stop Savile from committing his crimes. Some blamed the BBC, some blamed those in Savile's immediate circle, but others blamed a simple error of human judgment.
"He literally couldn't look more like a paedophile," read one post – one of many to state a supposedly incontrovertible truth: that Savile's criminal tendencies could have been detected from the shape of his features, his eyes, his hair. Moreover, this has nothing to do with the benefit of hindsight and should have been picked up at the time. His looks, they suggested, were a moral indicator, with a wealth of compelling visual evidence to support the claim.
We know that paedophiles, murderers and other violent criminals come in many shapes and sizes. If we knew nothing about their criminal history, some of their photos might even appear attractive. But the idea that someone's features betray their character is something rooted deep within us; it's the reason why certain photos perform well on dating apps, or why trustworthy-looking politicians might rack up votes. But how wrong are our hunches of perceived criminality?
A recent paper, published by Xiaolin Wu and Xi Zhang of Shanghai's Jiao Tong University, claims to be the first to use machine learning and neural networks to attempt a fully automated inference of criminality from facial images, removing prejudice from the equation and testing the validity of our gut feelings. "What facial features influence the average Joe's impulsive and yet consensual judgments on social attributes?" they ask. Through a study of 1,856 images ("controlled for race, gender, age and facial expression") they claim to have established the validity of "automated, face-induced inference on criminality, despite the historical controversy surrounding this line of enquiry."
In other words, they believe that they've found a relationship between looking like a criminal and actually being one.
It's a claim that's been made many times over the years. Physiognomy, the 'science' of judging people by their appearance, was first theorised by the ancient Greeks in around the 5th century BC. Aristotle's pronouncement that "it is possible to infer character from features" led to a number of works relating to 'Physiognomica', a word derived from
physis
(nature),
nomos
(law) and (or)
gnomon
(judge or interpreter).
All of Greek society, it was claimed, could benefit from this skill: it could assist with choosing an employee, a slave or a spouse, while its inherent vagueness made it intriguing to philosophers and useful for scientists who bent the theories to support their own beliefs. It became a recognised science in the Islamic world, and was used and taught in Europe throughout late antiquity and the early Middle Ages, despite nagging doubts among thinkers and physicians of the day. In the early 16th century, Leonardo da Vinci claimed not to "concern myself with false physiognomy, because these chimeras have no scientific foundation."
Theories of physiognomy, however, would persist beyond the Renaissance. In 1586, Italian scholar Giambattista della Porta published a book, De humana physiognomonia libri IIII, which established him as the 'father of Physiognomy'. Della Porta's thinking was based on the 'doctrine of signatures'; the idea that the appearance of plants and animals offers clues to their nature. For example, as one writer of the time suggested, walnuts are good for curing headaches because they're shaped a bit like a human head. The theories in della Porta's book were supported by dozens of detailed illustrations which, by comparing human faces to those of animals, suggested that they must surely share similar character traits.
In the 17th century, Swiss poet Johann Caspar Lavater took della Porta's methodology and ran with it, commissioning artists to illustrate his popular Essays On Physiognomy – which, to the chagrin of his contemporary, the writer Hannah More, sold for "fifteen guineas a set… while in vain we boast that philosophy [has] broken down all the strongholds of prejudice, ignorance, and superstition."
Lavater's work was criticised for being ridden with bias (black faces rarely emerged well from his analyses) but he was right in one respect: "Whether they are or are not sensible of it," he wrote, "all men are daily influenced by physiognomy."
Many studies have been done into our psychological response to faces, and it's clear that a so-called halo effect will inevitably work its magic. "Attractive people are regarded as better at everything," says Professor Peter Hancock, lecturer in Psychology at Stirling University. "And we can't shake that off because there's some truth to it. Good genes produce intelligent people, attractive faces, fit bodies, and we imagine that they're going to be good at everything else, too. We don't have good insight into our own behaviour. We tend to think we understand what we're doing, but we don't."
Hancock describes attending a conference where one speaker showed a series of black faces and white faces to students (who were mostly white) and asked them what they thought the experiment was about. "They knew that he was trying to assess whether they would rate the black ones as more criminal," says Hancock. "But then they did!"
We attribute social characteristics based on opinions we already hold about certain kinds of faces: whether they look unusual in some way, whether they resemble a partner, a family member or even ourselves, or perhaps have some other cultural association. Physiognomy ultimately stems from what Alexander Todorov, professor of psychology at Princeton University, calls an 'overgeneralisation hypothesis'. "People," he wrote, "use easily accessible facial information (eg an expression such as a smile, cues to gender and ethnic group) to make social attributions congruent with this information (eg a nice person)."
In a social media age, the pictures we choose to represent ourselves online are a form of self-presentation driven by those social attributions and the knowledge that our pictures are being judged.
Experiments at Princeton found that we take less than one tenth of a second to form an opinion of strangers from their pictures, and those opinions tend to stand firm even if we're exposed to those pictures for a longer period of time. That tendency to judge instantly gives rise to a number of selfie tropes that are deemed to elicit positive responses, particularly when it comes to photos on dating profiles: certain angles, particular expressions, minute adjustments of eyebrows and lips that might appear to be about narcissism and vanity, but are more about a fear of being incorrectly assessed. After all, false suppositions based on people's faces are hugely influential within society, and in extreme cases they can have a huge impact on people's lives.
When retired teacher Christopher Jefferies was held by police in connection with the murder of Joanna Yeates in Bristol back in 2010, more than half a dozen newspapers gave his unusual appearance particular scrutiny and made assumptions accordingly, which in turn influenced public opinion. This culminated in substantial damages for defamation, two convictions for contempt of court and a painful ordeal for Jefferies, who was entirely innocent.
This kind of deep-seated bias looms large throughout physiognomic works of the 19th and 20th centuries, from absurdities such as Vaught's Practical Character Reader of 1902 (handy if you want to find out what a "deceitful chin" looks like) to more inherently troubling volumes such as Cesare Lombroso's Criminal Man.
After performing a number of autopsies on criminals, the Italian physician claimed to have discovered a number of common characteristics, and it's worth listing them if only to establish the supposed criminality of pretty much everyone you know:
Unusually short or tall height; small head, but large face; fleshy lips, but thin upper lip; protuberances on head and around ear; wrinkles on forehead and face; large sinus cavities or bumpy face; tattoos; receding hairline; large incisors; bushy eyebrows, tending to meet across nose; large eye sockets but deep-set eyes; beaked or flat nose; strong jaw line; small and sloping forehead; small or weak chin; thin neck; sloping shoulders but large chest; large, protruding ears; long arms; high cheek bones; pointy or snubbed fingers or toes.
In a woeful misreading of Darwinian theory, Lombroso unwittingly founded the field of anthropological criminology, and more specifically the idea of the born criminal: a hereditary quality that posed a danger to society and must be rooted out. His theories became discredited during the 20th century, but the kind of bias displayed by Lombroso can still be found in legal systems across the world; studies show that people with stereotypically 'untrustworthy' faces tend to receive harsher treatment than those who don't. There's evidently some consensus over people's attitudes toward certain faces, but it doesn't follow that the consensus is correct.
The only attributes that we're reasonably good at detecting, according to research done at the University of Michigan in the 1960s and later tested at the University of Stirling in 2007, are extroversion and conscientiousness. For other traits there's insufficient evidence that our hunches are correct, with anomalies explained by our evolved aversion to 'ugliness', established links between broader faces and powerful physiques, or cultural associations with certain demographics which are reinforced with nagging regularity by newspapers, books, television and film.
Data-driven studies, based upon huge quantities of facial data, would seem to offer the final word on this. Since 2005, computational models have used various techniques to test for links between social attributes and facial features, resulting in suggestions that our faces can betray, for example, political leanings, sexual orientation and criminality. One BBC Future article from 2015 even describes the 'discipline' of physiognomy as 'gaining credibility'. But Todorov details many problems with these studies, pointing out the challenging nature of doing such experiments with sufficient rigour – not least because different images of the same people can prompt wildly differing results.
The aforementioned study at Shanghai's Jiao Tong University, with its enthusiastic, data-driven analyses of such questions as "What features of a human face betray its owner's propensity for crimes?" prompted a wave of press coverage.
The vision outlined in these articles is of an unethical dystopia where neural networks can assess our faces and establish a likely score for criminality – but Todorov is scathing about this paper, too. "The main problem is the sampling of the images," he says. "There is not enough information about the [nature of] the images of the people who were convicted. Second, clearly, there are huge differences between the two samples [of convicts and non-convicts] [in terms of] education and socio-economic status."
In other words, your appearance is affected by the kind of life you've led, so the classifiers within the computer program are simply distinguishing between different demographics rather than detecting a propensity for criminal behaviour.
Todorov is also wary of these classifiers misidentifying more 'innocent' people than identifying actual criminals, and accuracy is a concern shared by Peter Hancock. "Networks don't assess faces in the same way that we do," he says. "One of our systems, which is a deep network, has a recognition engine which generates an ordered list of how similar various faces are. And sometimes you get good matches – but other times you look at them and say, well, it's the wrong race! To humans they look completely different. And that underlines the fact that the networks are working in a different sort of way, and actually you don't really know how they're working. They're the ultimate black box."
This isn't to say that the use of big data, and particularly the use of composite imagery (digitally blending together certain types of faces) doesn't give us useful information and fascinating correlations. "You can, for example, take a given face and use computer software to make it look more or less trustworthy," says Hancock. "I remember a colleague playing with this and he made a less trustworthy version of George W Bush – and how shifty did he look! I'm surprised that they're not using these techniques in political advertising, because you couldn't tell that anything had been done [to the picture], but when you look at it you think 'I wouldn't trust him'."
The revitalisation of the theory of physiognomy by the Shanghai students is, according to Todorov, deeply problematic on a theoretical level. "Are we back to Lombroso's theory," he asks, "that criminals were anomalous creatures, evolutionary degenerates? How does one become criminal, and what role do various life forces play into this? There are people making claims that you just need to look at the face to predict personality and behaviour, but many of these people have not given much thought to their underlying assumptions."
While it's true that we judge books by their covers, covers are more than just faces; we piece together all kinds of cues from people to form our impressions of them. Jimmy Savile's appearance was unusual by any standards, but we absorbed a great deal of information about him over the years that will have influenced our opinions – not least from the original Louis Theroux programme from 2000 that was reexamined in that recent BBC documentary. Savile's vague resemblance to the Child Catcher from the film Chitty Chitty Bang Bang is convenient but ultimately misleading, and the way it reinforces the idea of what a paedophile might 'look like' is unfortunate; not least because it helps to sustain a low-level belief in the 'science' of physiognomy, despite its tendency to crumble under the slightest cross examination.
This article was originally published on TheLong+Short. Read the original article. | masculine faces | sharp-featured faces | overfamiliar faces | suspicious faces | 3 |
99903_Y162MI8V_8 | According to the author, what are people actually judging when they believe they're detecting a proclivity for delinquent behavior? | Face value
When the BBC broadcast the recent documentary by Louis Theroux that looked back at the time he spent in the company of Jimmy Savile, there was disbelief across social media that no one had stepped in to stop Savile from committing his crimes. Some blamed the BBC, some blamed those in Savile's immediate circle, but others blamed a simple error of human judgment.
"He literally couldn't look more like a paedophile," read one post – one of many to state a supposedly incontrovertible truth: that Savile's criminal tendencies could have been detected from the shape of his features, his eyes, his hair. Moreover, this has nothing to do with the benefit of hindsight and should have been picked up at the time. His looks, they suggested, were a moral indicator, with a wealth of compelling visual evidence to support the claim.
We know that paedophiles, murderers and other violent criminals come in many shapes and sizes. If we knew nothing about their criminal history, some of their photos might even appear attractive. But the idea that someone's features betray their character is something rooted deep within us; it's the reason why certain photos perform well on dating apps, or why trustworthy-looking politicians might rack up votes. But how wrong are our hunches of perceived criminality?
A recent paper, published by Xiaolin Wu and Xi Zhang of Shanghai's Jiao Tong University, claims to be the first to use machine learning and neural networks to attempt a fully automated inference of criminality from facial images, removing prejudice from the equation and testing the validity of our gut feelings. "What facial features influence the average Joe's impulsive and yet consensual judgments on social attributes?" they ask. Through a study of 1,856 images ("controlled for race, gender, age and facial expression") they claim to have established the validity of "automated, face-induced inference on criminality, despite the historical controversy surrounding this line of enquiry."
In other words, they believe that they've found a relationship between looking like a criminal and actually being one.
It's a claim that's been made many times over the years. Physiognomy, the 'science' of judging people by their appearance, was first theorised by the ancient Greeks in around the 5th century BC. Aristotle's pronouncement that "it is possible to infer character from features" led to a number of works relating to 'Physiognomica', a word derived from
physis
(nature),
nomos
(law) and (or)
gnomon
(judge or interpreter).
All of Greek society, it was claimed, could benefit from this skill: it could assist with choosing an employee, a slave or a spouse, while its inherent vagueness made it intriguing to philosophers and useful for scientists who bent the theories to support their own beliefs. It became a recognised science in the Islamic world, and was used and taught in Europe throughout late antiquity and the early Middle Ages, despite nagging doubts among thinkers and physicians of the day. In the early 16th century, Leonardo da Vinci claimed not to "concern myself with false physiognomy, because these chimeras have no scientific foundation."
Theories of physiognomy, however, would persist beyond the Renaissance. In 1586, Italian scholar Giambattista della Porta published a book, De humana physiognomonia libri IIII, which established him as the 'father of Physiognomy'. Della Porta's thinking was based on the 'doctrine of signatures'; the idea that the appearance of plants and animals offers clues to their nature. For example, as one writer of the time suggested, walnuts are good for curing headaches because they're shaped a bit like a human head. The theories in della Porta's book were supported by dozens of detailed illustrations which, by comparing human faces to those of animals, suggested that they must surely share similar character traits.
In the 17th century, Swiss poet Johann Caspar Lavater took della Porta's methodology and ran with it, commissioning artists to illustrate his popular Essays On Physiognomy – which, to the chagrin of his contemporary, the writer Hannah More, sold for "fifteen guineas a set… while in vain we boast that philosophy [has] broken down all the strongholds of prejudice, ignorance, and superstition."
Lavater's work was criticised for being ridden with bias (black faces rarely emerged well from his analyses) but he was right in one respect: "Whether they are or are not sensible of it," he wrote, "all men are daily influenced by physiognomy."
Many studies have been done into our psychological response to faces, and it's clear that a so-called halo effect will inevitably work its magic. "Attractive people are regarded as better at everything," says Professor Peter Hancock, lecturer in Psychology at Stirling University. "And we can't shake that off because there's some truth to it. Good genes produce intelligent people, attractive faces, fit bodies, and we imagine that they're going to be good at everything else, too. We don't have good insight into our own behaviour. We tend to think we understand what we're doing, but we don't."
Hancock describes attending a conference where one speaker showed a series of black faces and white faces to students (who were mostly white) and asked them what they thought the experiment was about. "They knew that he was trying to assess whether they would rate the black ones as more criminal," says Hancock. "But then they did!"
We attribute social characteristics based on opinions we already hold about certain kinds of faces: whether they look unusual in some way, whether they resemble a partner, a family member or even ourselves, or perhaps have some other cultural association. Physiognomy ultimately stems from what Alexander Todorov, professor of psychology at Princeton University, calls an 'overgeneralisation hypothesis'. "People," he wrote, "use easily accessible facial information (eg an expression such as a smile, cues to gender and ethnic group) to make social attributions congruent with this information (eg a nice person)."
In a social media age, the pictures we choose to represent ourselves online are a form of self-presentation driven by those social attributions and the knowledge that our pictures are being judged.
Experiments at Princeton found that we take less than one tenth of a second to form an opinion of strangers from their pictures, and those opinions tend to stand firm even if we're exposed to those pictures for a longer period of time. That tendency to judge instantly gives rise to a number of selfie tropes that are deemed to elicit positive responses, particularly when it comes to photos on dating profiles: certain angles, particular expressions, minute adjustments of eyebrows and lips that might appear to be about narcissism and vanity, but are more about a fear of being incorrectly assessed. After all, false suppositions based on people's faces are hugely influential within society, and in extreme cases they can have a huge impact on people's lives.
When retired teacher Christopher Jefferies was held by police in connection with the murder of Joanna Yeates in Bristol back in 2010, more than half a dozen newspapers gave his unusual appearance particular scrutiny and made assumptions accordingly, which in turn influenced public opinion. This culminated in substantial damages for defamation, two convictions for contempt of court and a painful ordeal for Jefferies, who was entirely innocent.
This kind of deep-seated bias looms large throughout physiognomic works of the 19th and 20th centuries, from absurdities such as Vaught's Practical Character Reader of 1902 (handy if you want to find out what a "deceitful chin" looks like) to more inherently troubling volumes such as Cesare Lombroso's Criminal Man.
After performing a number of autopsies on criminals, the Italian physician claimed to have discovered a number of common characteristics, and it's worth listing them if only to establish the supposed criminality of pretty much everyone you know:
Unusually short or tall height; small head, but large face; fleshy lips, but thin upper lip; protuberances on head and around ear; wrinkles on forehead and face; large sinus cavities or bumpy face; tattoos; receding hairline; large incisors; bushy eyebrows, tending to meet across nose; large eye sockets but deep-set eyes; beaked or flat nose; strong jaw line; small and sloping forehead; small or weak chin; thin neck; sloping shoulders but large chest; large, protruding ears; long arms; high cheek bones; pointy or snubbed fingers or toes.
In a woeful misreading of Darwinian theory, Lombroso unwittingly founded the field of anthropological criminology, and more specifically the idea of the born criminal: a hereditary quality that posed a danger to society and must be rooted out. His theories became discredited during the 20th century, but the kind of bias displayed by Lombroso can still be found in legal systems across the world; studies show that people with stereotypically 'untrustworthy' faces tend to receive harsher treatment than those who don't. There's evidently some consensus over people's attitudes toward certain faces, but it doesn't follow that the consensus is correct.
The only attributes that we're reasonably good at detecting, according to research done at the University of Michigan in the 1960s and later tested at the University of Stirling in 2007, are extroversion and conscientiousness. For other traits there's insufficient evidence that our hunches are correct, with anomalies explained by our evolved aversion to 'ugliness', established links between broader faces and powerful physiques, or cultural associations with certain demographics which are reinforced with nagging regularity by newspapers, books, television and film.
Data-driven studies, based upon huge quantities of facial data, would seem to offer the final word on this. Since 2005, computational models have used various techniques to test for links between social attributes and facial features, resulting in suggestions that our faces can betray, for example, political leanings, sexual orientation and criminality. One BBC Future article from 2015 even describes the 'discipline' of physiognomy as 'gaining credibility'. But Todorov details many problems with these studies, pointing out the challenging nature of doing such experiments with sufficient rigour – not least because different images of the same people can prompt wildly differing results.
The aforementioned study at Shanghai's Jiao Tong University, with its enthusiastic, data-driven analyses of such questions as "What features of a human face betray its owner's propensity for crimes?" prompted a wave of press coverage.
The vision outlined in these articles is of an unethical dystopia where neural networks can assess our faces and establish a likely score for criminality – but Todorov is scathing about this paper, too. "The main problem is the sampling of the images," he says. "There is not enough information about the [nature of] the images of the people who were convicted. Second, clearly, there are huge differences between the two samples [of convicts and non-convicts] [in terms of] education and socio-economic status."
In other words, your appearance is affected by the kind of life you've led, so the classifiers within the computer program are simply distinguishing between different demographics rather than detecting a propensity for criminal behaviour.
Todorov is also wary of these classifiers misidentifying more 'innocent' people than identifying actual criminals, and accuracy is a concern shared by Peter Hancock. "Networks don't assess faces in the same way that we do," he says. "One of our systems, which is a deep network, has a recognition engine which generates an ordered list of how similar various faces are. And sometimes you get good matches – but other times you look at them and say, well, it's the wrong race! To humans they look completely different. And that underlines the fact that the networks are working in a different sort of way, and actually you don't really know how they're working. They're the ultimate black box."
This isn't to say that the use of big data, and particularly the use of composite imagery (digitally blending together certain types of faces) doesn't give us useful information and fascinating correlations. "You can, for example, take a given face and use computer software to make it look more or less trustworthy," says Hancock. "I remember a colleague playing with this and he made a less trustworthy version of George W Bush – and how shifty did he look! I'm surprised that they're not using these techniques in political advertising, because you couldn't tell that anything had been done [to the picture], but when you look at it you think 'I wouldn't trust him'."
The revitalisation of the theory of physiognomy by the Shanghai students is, according to Todorov, deeply problematic on a theoretical level. "Are we back to Lombroso's theory," he asks, "that criminals were anomalous creatures, evolutionary degenerates? How does one become criminal, and what role do various life forces play into this? There are people making claims that you just need to look at the face to predict personality and behaviour, but many of these people have not given much thought to their underlying assumptions."
While it's true that we judge books by their covers, covers are more than just faces; we piece together all kinds of cues from people to form our impressions of them. Jimmy Savile's appearance was unusual by any standards, but we absorbed a great deal of information about him over the years that will have influenced our opinions – not least from the original Louis Theroux programme from 2000 that was reexamined in that recent BBC documentary. Savile's vague resemblance to the Child Catcher from the film Chitty Chitty Bang Bang is convenient but ultimately misleading, and the way it reinforces the idea of what a paedophile might 'look like' is unfortunate; not least because it helps to sustain a low-level belief in the 'science' of physiognomy, despite its tendency to crumble under the slightest cross examination.
This article was originally published on TheLong+Short. Read the original article. | media filtering | prejudice | intelligence | demographics | 3 |
99901_QY51J48X_1 | Which statement best describes the purpose of this text? | AI: what's the worst that could happen?
The Centre for the Future of Intelligence is seeking to investigate the implications of artificial intelligence for humanity, and make sure humans take advantage of the opportunities while dodging the risks. It launched at the University of Cambridge last October, and is a collaboration between four universities and colleges – Cambridge, Oxford, Imperial and Berkeley – backed with a 10-year, £10m grant from the Leverhulme Trust.
Because no single discipline is ideally suited to this task, the centre emphasises the importance of interdisciplinary knowledge-sharing and collaboration. It is bringing together a diverse community of some of the world's best researchers, philosophers, psychologists, lawyers and computer scientists.
Executive director of the centre is Stephen Cave, a writer, philosopher and former diplomat. Harry Armstrong, head of futures at Nesta, which publishes The Long + Short, spoke with Cave about the impact of AI.
Their conversation has been edited.
Harry Armstrong: Do you see the interdisciplinary nature of the centre as one of its key values and one of the key impacts you hope it will have on the field?
Stephen Cave: Thinking about the impact of AI is not something that any one discipline owns or does in any very systematic way. So if academia is going to rise to the challenge and provide thought leadership on this hugely important issue, then we’re going to need to do it by breaking down current disciplinary boundaries and bringing people with very different expertise together.
That means bringing together the technologists and the experts at developing these algorithms together with social scientists, philosophers, legal scholars and so forth.
I think there are many areas of science where more interdisciplinary engagement would be valuable. Biotech’s another example. In that sense AI isn’t unique, but I think because thinking about AI is still in very early stages, we have an opportunity to shape the way in which we think about it, and build that community.
We want to create a space where many different disciplines can come together and develop a shared language, learn from each other’s approaches, and hopefully very quickly move to be able to actually develop new ideas, new conclusions, together. But the first step is learning how to talk to each other.
At a recent talk, Naomi Klein said that addressing the challenge of climate change could not have come at a worse time. The current dominant political and economic ideologies, along with growing isolationist sentiment, runs contrary to the bipartisan, collaborative approaches needed to solve global issues like climate change. Do you see the same issues hampering a global effort to respond to the challenges AI raises?
Climate change suffers from the problem that the costs are not incurred in any direct way by the industrialists who own the technology and are profiting from it. With AI, that has been the case so far; although not on the same scale. There has been disruption but so far, compared to industrialisation, the impact has been fairly small. That will probably change.
AI companies, and in particular the big tech companies, are very concerned that this won't go like climate change, but rather it will go like GMOs: that people will have a gut reaction to this technology as soon as the first great swathe of job losses take hold. People speculate that 50m jobs could be lost in the US if trucking is automated, which is conceivable within 10 years. You could imagine a populist US government therefore simply banning driverless cars.
So I think there is anxiety in the tech industry that there could be a serious reaction against this technology at any point. And so my impression is that there is a feeling within these companies that these ethical and social implications need to be taken very seriously, now. And that a broad buy-in by society into some kind of vision of the future in which this technology plays a role is required, if a dangerous – or to them dangerous – counteraction is to be avoided.
My personal experience working with these tech companies is that they are concerned for their businesses and genuinely want to do the right thing. Of course there are intellectual challenges and there is money to be made, but equally they are people who don't think when they get up in the morning that they're going to put people out of jobs or bring about the downfall of humanity. As the industry matures it's developing a sense of responsibility.
So I think we've got a real opportunity, despite the general climate, and in some ways because of it. There's a great opportunity to bring industry on board to make sure the technology is developed in the right way.
One of the dominant narratives around not only AI but technology and automation more generally is that we, as humans, are at the mercy of technological progress. If you try and push against this idea you can be labelled as being anti-progress and stuck in the past. But we do have a lot more control than we give ourselves credit for. For example, routineness and susceptibility to automation are not inevitable features of occupations, job design is hugely important. How do we design jobs? How do we create jobs that allow people to do the kind of work they want to do? There can be a bit of a conflict between being impacted by what's happening and having some sort of control over what we want to happen.
Certainly, we encounter technological determinism a lot. And it's understandable. For us as individuals, of course it does feel like it always is happening and we just have to cope. No one individual can do much about it, other than adapt.
But that's different when we consider ourselves at a level of a society, as a polis [city state], or as an international community. I think we can shape the way in which technology develops. We have various tools. In any given country, we have regulations. There's a possibility of international regulation.
Technology is emerging from a certain legal, political, normative, cultural, and social framework. It's coming from a certain place. And it is shaped by all of those things.
And I think the more we understand a technology's relationship with those things, and the more we then consciously try to shape those things, the more we are going to influence the technology. So, for example, developing a culture of responsible innovation. For example, a kind of Hippocratic oath for AI developers. These things are within the realms of what is feasible, and I think will help to shape the future.
One of the problems with intervention, generally, is that we cannot control the course of events. We can attempt to, but we don't know how things are going to evolve. The reality is, societies are much too complex for us to be able to shape them in any very specific way, as plenty of ideologies and political movements have found to their cost. There are often unforeseen consequences that can derail a project.
I think, nonetheless, there are things we can do. We can try to imagine how things might go very badly wrong, and then work hard to develop systems that will stop that from happening. We can also try collectively to imagine how things could go very right. The kind of society that we actually want to live in that uses this technology. And I'm sure that will be skewed in all sorts of ways, and we might imagine things that seem wonderful and actually have terrible by-products.
This conversation cannot be in the hands of any one group. It oughtn't be in the hands of Silicon Valley billionaires alone. They've got their role to play, but this is a conversation we need to be having as widely as possible.
The centre is developing some really interesting projects but perhaps one of the most interesting is the discussion of what intelligence might be. Could you go into a bit more detail about the kinds of questions you are trying to explore in this area?
You mean kinds of intelligence?
Yeah.
I think this is very important because historically, we've had an overwhelming tendency to anthropomorphise. We define what intelligence is, historically, as being human-like. And then within that, being like certain humans.
And it's taken a very long time for the academic community to accept that there could be such a thing as non-human intelligence at all. We know that crows, for example, who have had a completely different evolutionary history, or octopuses, who have an even more different evolutionary history, might have a kind of intelligence that's very different to ours. That in some ways rivals our own, and so forth.
But luckily, we have got to that point in recent years of accepting that we are not the only form of intelligence. But now, AI is challenging that from a different direction. Just as we are accepting that the natural world offers this enormous range of different intelligences, we are at the same time inventing new intelligences that are radically different to humans.
And I think, still, this anthropomorphic picture of the kind of humanoid android, the robot, dominates our idea of what AI is too much. And too many people, and the industry as well, talk about human-level artificial intelligence as a goal, or general AI, which basically means like a human. But actually what we're building is nothing like a human.
When the first pocket calculator was made, it didn't do maths like a human. It was vastly better. It didn't make the occasional mistake. When we set about creating these artificial agents to solve these problems, because they have a completely different evolutionary history to humans, they solve problems in very different ways.
And until now, people have been fairly shy about describing them as intelligent. Or rather, in the history of AIs, we think solving a particular problem would require intelligence. Then we solve it. And then that's no longer intelligence, because we've solved it. Chess is a good example.
But the reality is, we are creating a whole new world of different artificial agents. And we need to understand that world. We need to understand all the different ways of being clever, if you like. How you can be extremely sophisticated at some particular rational process, and yet extremely bad at another one in a way that bears no relation to the way humans are on these axes.
And this is important, partly because we need to expand our sense of what is intelligent, like we have done with the natural world. Because lots of things follow from saying something is intelligent. Historically, we have a long tradition in Western philosophy of saying those who are intelligent should rule. So if intelligence equates to power, then obviously we need to think about what we mean by intelligence. Who has it and who doesn't. Or how it equates to rights and responsibilities.
It certainly is a very ambitious project to create the atlas of intelligence.
There was a point I read in something you wrote on our ideas of intelligence that I thought was very interesting. We actually tend to think of intelligence at the societal level when we think about human ability, rather than at the individual level but in the end conflate the two. I think that's a very good point, when we think about our capabilities, we think about what we can achieve as a whole, not individually. But when we talk about AI, we tend to think about that individual piece of technology, or that individual system. So for example if we think about the internet of things and AI, we should discuss intelligence as something encompassed by the whole.
Yeah, absolutely. Yes, right now, perhaps it is a product of our anthropomorphising bias. But there is a tendency to see a narrative of AI versus humanity, as if it's one or the other. And yet, obviously, there are risks in this technology long before it acquires any kind of manipulative agency.
Robotic technology is dangerous. Or potentially dangerous. But at the same time, most of what we're using technology for is to enhance ourselves, to increase our capacities. And a lot of what AI is going to be doing is augmenting us – we're going to be working as teams, AI-human teams.
Where do you think this AI-human conflict, or concept of a conflict, comes from? Do you think that's just a reflection of historical conversations we've had about automation, or do you think it is a deeper fear?
I do think it comes both from some biases that might well be innate, such as anthropomorphism, or our human tendency to ascribe agency to other objects, particularly moving ones, is well-established and probably has sound evolutionary roots. If it moves, it's probably wise to start asking yourself questions like, "What is it? What might it want? Where might it be going? Might it be hungry? Do I look like food to it?" I think it makes sense, it's natural for us to think in terms of agency. And when we do, it's natural for us to project our own ways of being and acting. And we, as primates, are profoundly co-operative.
But at the same time, we're competitive and murderous. We have a strong sense of in-group versus out-group, which is responsible for both a great deal of cooperation, within the in-group, but also terrible crimes. Murder, rape, pillage, genocide; and they're pointed at the out-group.
And so I think it's very natural for us to see AIs in terms of agents. We anthropomorphise them as these kind of android robots. And then we think about, well, you know, are they part of our in-group, or are they some other group? If they're some other group, it's us against them. Who's going to win? Well, let's see. So I think that's very natural, I think that's very human.
There is this long tradition, in Western culture in particular, with associating intelligence and dominance and power. It's interesting to speculate about how, and I wish I knew more about it, and I'd like to see more research on this, about how different cultures perceive AI. It's well known that Japan is very accepting of technology and robots, for example.
You can think, well, we in the West have long been justifying power relations of a certain kind on the basis that we're 'cleverer'. That's why men get to vote and women don't, or whatever. In a culture where power is not based on intelligence but, say, on a caste system, which is purely hereditary, we’d build an AI, and it would just tune in, drop out, attain enlightenment, just sit in the corner. Or we beg it to come back and help us find enlightenment. It might be that we find a completely different narrative to the one that's dominant in the West.
One of the projects the centre is running is looking into what kind of AI breakthroughs may come, when and what the social consequences could be. What do you think the future holds? What are your fears – what do you think could go right and wrong in the short, medium and long term?
That's a big question. Certainly I don't lie awake at night worried that robots are going to knock the door down and come in with a machine gun. If the robots take over the world, it won't be by knocking the door down. At the moment, I think it's certainly as big a risk that we have a GMO moment, and there's a powerful reaction against the technology which prevents us from reaping the benefits, which are enormous. I think that's as big a risk as the risks from the technologies themselves.
I think one worry that we haven't talked about is that we've become extremely dependent upon this technology. And that we essentially become deskilled. There's an extent to which the history of civilisation is the history of the domestication of the human species sort of by ourselves, and also by our technology, to some extent. And AI certainly allows for that to reach a whole new level.
Just think about GPs with diagnostic tools. Even now, my GP consults the computer fairly regularly. But as diagnostic tools get better, what are they going to be doing other than just typing something into the computer and reading out what comes back? At which point, you might as well do away with the GP. But then, who does know about medicine?
And so we do need to worry about deskilling and about becoming dependent. And it is entirely possible that you can imagine a society in which we're all sort of prosperous, in a sense. Our basic bodily needs are provided for, perhaps, in a way, to an extent that we've never before even dreamed of. Unprecedented in human history.
And yet, we're stripped of any kind of meaningful work. We have no purpose. We're escaping to virtual reality. And then you could imagine all sorts of worrying countercultures or Luddite movements or what have you. I guess that's the kind of scenario that – I haven't sketched it terribly well – but that's the kind of thing that worries me more than missile-toting giant robots.
As to utopian, yes, that's interesting. I certainly mentioned a couple of things. One thing that I hope is that this new technological revolution enables us to undo some of the damage of the last one. That's a very utopian thought and not terribly realistic, but we use fossil fuels so incredibly efficiently. The idea that driverless cars that are shared, basically a kind of shared service located off a Brownfield site does away with 95 per cent of all cars, freeing up a huge amount of space in the city to be greener, many fewer cars need to be produced, they would be on the road much less, there'd be fewer traffic jams.
It's just one example, but the idea that we can live much more resource-efficiently, because we are living more intelligently through using these tools. And therefore can undo some of the damage of the last Industrial Revolution. That's my main utopian hope, I guess.
Vintage toy robot image by josefkubes/Shutterstock
This article was originally published on TheLong+Short. Read the original article. | To propose potential pathways that AI could take to eliminate social and environmental problems in the near future | To explain how industries are approaching collaboration and making decisions in AI with regard to social responses | To demonstrate how humans are taking advantages of AI-related opportunities while dodging the risks | To make an argument in support of more checks and balances within the institution of AI development | 1 |
99901_QY51J48X_2 | Which term best describes the approach Cave supports with regard to AI development? | AI: what's the worst that could happen?
The Centre for the Future of Intelligence is seeking to investigate the implications of artificial intelligence for humanity, and make sure humans take advantage of the opportunities while dodging the risks. It launched at the University of Cambridge last October, and is a collaboration between four universities and colleges – Cambridge, Oxford, Imperial and Berkeley – backed with a 10-year, £10m grant from the Leverhulme Trust.
Because no single discipline is ideally suited to this task, the centre emphasises the importance of interdisciplinary knowledge-sharing and collaboration. It is bringing together a diverse community of some of the world's best researchers, philosophers, psychologists, lawyers and computer scientists.
Executive director of the centre is Stephen Cave, a writer, philosopher and former diplomat. Harry Armstrong, head of futures at Nesta, which publishes The Long + Short, spoke with Cave about the impact of AI.
Their conversation has been edited.
Harry Armstrong: Do you see the interdisciplinary nature of the centre as one of its key values and one of the key impacts you hope it will have on the field?
Stephen Cave: Thinking about the impact of AI is not something that any one discipline owns or does in any very systematic way. So if academia is going to rise to the challenge and provide thought leadership on this hugely important issue, then we’re going to need to do it by breaking down current disciplinary boundaries and bringing people with very different expertise together.
That means bringing together the technologists and the experts at developing these algorithms together with social scientists, philosophers, legal scholars and so forth.
I think there are many areas of science where more interdisciplinary engagement would be valuable. Biotech’s another example. In that sense AI isn’t unique, but I think because thinking about AI is still in very early stages, we have an opportunity to shape the way in which we think about it, and build that community.
We want to create a space where many different disciplines can come together and develop a shared language, learn from each other’s approaches, and hopefully very quickly move to be able to actually develop new ideas, new conclusions, together. But the first step is learning how to talk to each other.
At a recent talk, Naomi Klein said that addressing the challenge of climate change could not have come at a worse time. The current dominant political and economic ideologies, along with growing isolationist sentiment, runs contrary to the bipartisan, collaborative approaches needed to solve global issues like climate change. Do you see the same issues hampering a global effort to respond to the challenges AI raises?
Climate change suffers from the problem that the costs are not incurred in any direct way by the industrialists who own the technology and are profiting from it. With AI, that has been the case so far; although not on the same scale. There has been disruption but so far, compared to industrialisation, the impact has been fairly small. That will probably change.
AI companies, and in particular the big tech companies, are very concerned that this won't go like climate change, but rather it will go like GMOs: that people will have a gut reaction to this technology as soon as the first great swathe of job losses take hold. People speculate that 50m jobs could be lost in the US if trucking is automated, which is conceivable within 10 years. You could imagine a populist US government therefore simply banning driverless cars.
So I think there is anxiety in the tech industry that there could be a serious reaction against this technology at any point. And so my impression is that there is a feeling within these companies that these ethical and social implications need to be taken very seriously, now. And that a broad buy-in by society into some kind of vision of the future in which this technology plays a role is required, if a dangerous – or to them dangerous – counteraction is to be avoided.
My personal experience working with these tech companies is that they are concerned for their businesses and genuinely want to do the right thing. Of course there are intellectual challenges and there is money to be made, but equally they are people who don't think when they get up in the morning that they're going to put people out of jobs or bring about the downfall of humanity. As the industry matures it's developing a sense of responsibility.
So I think we've got a real opportunity, despite the general climate, and in some ways because of it. There's a great opportunity to bring industry on board to make sure the technology is developed in the right way.
One of the dominant narratives around not only AI but technology and automation more generally is that we, as humans, are at the mercy of technological progress. If you try and push against this idea you can be labelled as being anti-progress and stuck in the past. But we do have a lot more control than we give ourselves credit for. For example, routineness and susceptibility to automation are not inevitable features of occupations, job design is hugely important. How do we design jobs? How do we create jobs that allow people to do the kind of work they want to do? There can be a bit of a conflict between being impacted by what's happening and having some sort of control over what we want to happen.
Certainly, we encounter technological determinism a lot. And it's understandable. For us as individuals, of course it does feel like it always is happening and we just have to cope. No one individual can do much about it, other than adapt.
But that's different when we consider ourselves at a level of a society, as a polis [city state], or as an international community. I think we can shape the way in which technology develops. We have various tools. In any given country, we have regulations. There's a possibility of international regulation.
Technology is emerging from a certain legal, political, normative, cultural, and social framework. It's coming from a certain place. And it is shaped by all of those things.
And I think the more we understand a technology's relationship with those things, and the more we then consciously try to shape those things, the more we are going to influence the technology. So, for example, developing a culture of responsible innovation. For example, a kind of Hippocratic oath for AI developers. These things are within the realms of what is feasible, and I think will help to shape the future.
One of the problems with intervention, generally, is that we cannot control the course of events. We can attempt to, but we don't know how things are going to evolve. The reality is, societies are much too complex for us to be able to shape them in any very specific way, as plenty of ideologies and political movements have found to their cost. There are often unforeseen consequences that can derail a project.
I think, nonetheless, there are things we can do. We can try to imagine how things might go very badly wrong, and then work hard to develop systems that will stop that from happening. We can also try collectively to imagine how things could go very right. The kind of society that we actually want to live in that uses this technology. And I'm sure that will be skewed in all sorts of ways, and we might imagine things that seem wonderful and actually have terrible by-products.
This conversation cannot be in the hands of any one group. It oughtn't be in the hands of Silicon Valley billionaires alone. They've got their role to play, but this is a conversation we need to be having as widely as possible.
The centre is developing some really interesting projects but perhaps one of the most interesting is the discussion of what intelligence might be. Could you go into a bit more detail about the kinds of questions you are trying to explore in this area?
You mean kinds of intelligence?
Yeah.
I think this is very important because historically, we've had an overwhelming tendency to anthropomorphise. We define what intelligence is, historically, as being human-like. And then within that, being like certain humans.
And it's taken a very long time for the academic community to accept that there could be such a thing as non-human intelligence at all. We know that crows, for example, who have had a completely different evolutionary history, or octopuses, who have an even more different evolutionary history, might have a kind of intelligence that's very different to ours. That in some ways rivals our own, and so forth.
But luckily, we have got to that point in recent years of accepting that we are not the only form of intelligence. But now, AI is challenging that from a different direction. Just as we are accepting that the natural world offers this enormous range of different intelligences, we are at the same time inventing new intelligences that are radically different to humans.
And I think, still, this anthropomorphic picture of the kind of humanoid android, the robot, dominates our idea of what AI is too much. And too many people, and the industry as well, talk about human-level artificial intelligence as a goal, or general AI, which basically means like a human. But actually what we're building is nothing like a human.
When the first pocket calculator was made, it didn't do maths like a human. It was vastly better. It didn't make the occasional mistake. When we set about creating these artificial agents to solve these problems, because they have a completely different evolutionary history to humans, they solve problems in very different ways.
And until now, people have been fairly shy about describing them as intelligent. Or rather, in the history of AIs, we think solving a particular problem would require intelligence. Then we solve it. And then that's no longer intelligence, because we've solved it. Chess is a good example.
But the reality is, we are creating a whole new world of different artificial agents. And we need to understand that world. We need to understand all the different ways of being clever, if you like. How you can be extremely sophisticated at some particular rational process, and yet extremely bad at another one in a way that bears no relation to the way humans are on these axes.
And this is important, partly because we need to expand our sense of what is intelligent, like we have done with the natural world. Because lots of things follow from saying something is intelligent. Historically, we have a long tradition in Western philosophy of saying those who are intelligent should rule. So if intelligence equates to power, then obviously we need to think about what we mean by intelligence. Who has it and who doesn't. Or how it equates to rights and responsibilities.
It certainly is a very ambitious project to create the atlas of intelligence.
There was a point I read in something you wrote on our ideas of intelligence that I thought was very interesting. We actually tend to think of intelligence at the societal level when we think about human ability, rather than at the individual level but in the end conflate the two. I think that's a very good point, when we think about our capabilities, we think about what we can achieve as a whole, not individually. But when we talk about AI, we tend to think about that individual piece of technology, or that individual system. So for example if we think about the internet of things and AI, we should discuss intelligence as something encompassed by the whole.
Yeah, absolutely. Yes, right now, perhaps it is a product of our anthropomorphising bias. But there is a tendency to see a narrative of AI versus humanity, as if it's one or the other. And yet, obviously, there are risks in this technology long before it acquires any kind of manipulative agency.
Robotic technology is dangerous. Or potentially dangerous. But at the same time, most of what we're using technology for is to enhance ourselves, to increase our capacities. And a lot of what AI is going to be doing is augmenting us – we're going to be working as teams, AI-human teams.
Where do you think this AI-human conflict, or concept of a conflict, comes from? Do you think that's just a reflection of historical conversations we've had about automation, or do you think it is a deeper fear?
I do think it comes both from some biases that might well be innate, such as anthropomorphism, or our human tendency to ascribe agency to other objects, particularly moving ones, is well-established and probably has sound evolutionary roots. If it moves, it's probably wise to start asking yourself questions like, "What is it? What might it want? Where might it be going? Might it be hungry? Do I look like food to it?" I think it makes sense, it's natural for us to think in terms of agency. And when we do, it's natural for us to project our own ways of being and acting. And we, as primates, are profoundly co-operative.
But at the same time, we're competitive and murderous. We have a strong sense of in-group versus out-group, which is responsible for both a great deal of cooperation, within the in-group, but also terrible crimes. Murder, rape, pillage, genocide; and they're pointed at the out-group.
And so I think it's very natural for us to see AIs in terms of agents. We anthropomorphise them as these kind of android robots. And then we think about, well, you know, are they part of our in-group, or are they some other group? If they're some other group, it's us against them. Who's going to win? Well, let's see. So I think that's very natural, I think that's very human.
There is this long tradition, in Western culture in particular, with associating intelligence and dominance and power. It's interesting to speculate about how, and I wish I knew more about it, and I'd like to see more research on this, about how different cultures perceive AI. It's well known that Japan is very accepting of technology and robots, for example.
You can think, well, we in the West have long been justifying power relations of a certain kind on the basis that we're 'cleverer'. That's why men get to vote and women don't, or whatever. In a culture where power is not based on intelligence but, say, on a caste system, which is purely hereditary, we’d build an AI, and it would just tune in, drop out, attain enlightenment, just sit in the corner. Or we beg it to come back and help us find enlightenment. It might be that we find a completely different narrative to the one that's dominant in the West.
One of the projects the centre is running is looking into what kind of AI breakthroughs may come, when and what the social consequences could be. What do you think the future holds? What are your fears – what do you think could go right and wrong in the short, medium and long term?
That's a big question. Certainly I don't lie awake at night worried that robots are going to knock the door down and come in with a machine gun. If the robots take over the world, it won't be by knocking the door down. At the moment, I think it's certainly as big a risk that we have a GMO moment, and there's a powerful reaction against the technology which prevents us from reaping the benefits, which are enormous. I think that's as big a risk as the risks from the technologies themselves.
I think one worry that we haven't talked about is that we've become extremely dependent upon this technology. And that we essentially become deskilled. There's an extent to which the history of civilisation is the history of the domestication of the human species sort of by ourselves, and also by our technology, to some extent. And AI certainly allows for that to reach a whole new level.
Just think about GPs with diagnostic tools. Even now, my GP consults the computer fairly regularly. But as diagnostic tools get better, what are they going to be doing other than just typing something into the computer and reading out what comes back? At which point, you might as well do away with the GP. But then, who does know about medicine?
And so we do need to worry about deskilling and about becoming dependent. And it is entirely possible that you can imagine a society in which we're all sort of prosperous, in a sense. Our basic bodily needs are provided for, perhaps, in a way, to an extent that we've never before even dreamed of. Unprecedented in human history.
And yet, we're stripped of any kind of meaningful work. We have no purpose. We're escaping to virtual reality. And then you could imagine all sorts of worrying countercultures or Luddite movements or what have you. I guess that's the kind of scenario that – I haven't sketched it terribly well – but that's the kind of thing that worries me more than missile-toting giant robots.
As to utopian, yes, that's interesting. I certainly mentioned a couple of things. One thing that I hope is that this new technological revolution enables us to undo some of the damage of the last one. That's a very utopian thought and not terribly realistic, but we use fossil fuels so incredibly efficiently. The idea that driverless cars that are shared, basically a kind of shared service located off a Brownfield site does away with 95 per cent of all cars, freeing up a huge amount of space in the city to be greener, many fewer cars need to be produced, they would be on the road much less, there'd be fewer traffic jams.
It's just one example, but the idea that we can live much more resource-efficiently, because we are living more intelligently through using these tools. And therefore can undo some of the damage of the last Industrial Revolution. That's my main utopian hope, I guess.
Vintage toy robot image by josefkubes/Shutterstock
This article was originally published on TheLong+Short. Read the original article. | multifaceted | reductionist | isolationist | divergent | 0 |
99901_QY51J48X_3 | According to Cave, what must happen before different disciplines converge to guide AI development? | AI: what's the worst that could happen?
The Centre for the Future of Intelligence is seeking to investigate the implications of artificial intelligence for humanity, and make sure humans take advantage of the opportunities while dodging the risks. It launched at the University of Cambridge last October, and is a collaboration between four universities and colleges – Cambridge, Oxford, Imperial and Berkeley – backed with a 10-year, £10m grant from the Leverhulme Trust.
Because no single discipline is ideally suited to this task, the centre emphasises the importance of interdisciplinary knowledge-sharing and collaboration. It is bringing together a diverse community of some of the world's best researchers, philosophers, psychologists, lawyers and computer scientists.
Executive director of the centre is Stephen Cave, a writer, philosopher and former diplomat. Harry Armstrong, head of futures at Nesta, which publishes The Long + Short, spoke with Cave about the impact of AI.
Their conversation has been edited.
Harry Armstrong: Do you see the interdisciplinary nature of the centre as one of its key values and one of the key impacts you hope it will have on the field?
Stephen Cave: Thinking about the impact of AI is not something that any one discipline owns or does in any very systematic way. So if academia is going to rise to the challenge and provide thought leadership on this hugely important issue, then we’re going to need to do it by breaking down current disciplinary boundaries and bringing people with very different expertise together.
That means bringing together the technologists and the experts at developing these algorithms together with social scientists, philosophers, legal scholars and so forth.
I think there are many areas of science where more interdisciplinary engagement would be valuable. Biotech’s another example. In that sense AI isn’t unique, but I think because thinking about AI is still in very early stages, we have an opportunity to shape the way in which we think about it, and build that community.
We want to create a space where many different disciplines can come together and develop a shared language, learn from each other’s approaches, and hopefully very quickly move to be able to actually develop new ideas, new conclusions, together. But the first step is learning how to talk to each other.
At a recent talk, Naomi Klein said that addressing the challenge of climate change could not have come at a worse time. The current dominant political and economic ideologies, along with growing isolationist sentiment, runs contrary to the bipartisan, collaborative approaches needed to solve global issues like climate change. Do you see the same issues hampering a global effort to respond to the challenges AI raises?
Climate change suffers from the problem that the costs are not incurred in any direct way by the industrialists who own the technology and are profiting from it. With AI, that has been the case so far; although not on the same scale. There has been disruption but so far, compared to industrialisation, the impact has been fairly small. That will probably change.
AI companies, and in particular the big tech companies, are very concerned that this won't go like climate change, but rather it will go like GMOs: that people will have a gut reaction to this technology as soon as the first great swathe of job losses take hold. People speculate that 50m jobs could be lost in the US if trucking is automated, which is conceivable within 10 years. You could imagine a populist US government therefore simply banning driverless cars.
So I think there is anxiety in the tech industry that there could be a serious reaction against this technology at any point. And so my impression is that there is a feeling within these companies that these ethical and social implications need to be taken very seriously, now. And that a broad buy-in by society into some kind of vision of the future in which this technology plays a role is required, if a dangerous – or to them dangerous – counteraction is to be avoided.
My personal experience working with these tech companies is that they are concerned for their businesses and genuinely want to do the right thing. Of course there are intellectual challenges and there is money to be made, but equally they are people who don't think when they get up in the morning that they're going to put people out of jobs or bring about the downfall of humanity. As the industry matures it's developing a sense of responsibility.
So I think we've got a real opportunity, despite the general climate, and in some ways because of it. There's a great opportunity to bring industry on board to make sure the technology is developed in the right way.
One of the dominant narratives around not only AI but technology and automation more generally is that we, as humans, are at the mercy of technological progress. If you try and push against this idea you can be labelled as being anti-progress and stuck in the past. But we do have a lot more control than we give ourselves credit for. For example, routineness and susceptibility to automation are not inevitable features of occupations, job design is hugely important. How do we design jobs? How do we create jobs that allow people to do the kind of work they want to do? There can be a bit of a conflict between being impacted by what's happening and having some sort of control over what we want to happen.
Certainly, we encounter technological determinism a lot. And it's understandable. For us as individuals, of course it does feel like it always is happening and we just have to cope. No one individual can do much about it, other than adapt.
But that's different when we consider ourselves at a level of a society, as a polis [city state], or as an international community. I think we can shape the way in which technology develops. We have various tools. In any given country, we have regulations. There's a possibility of international regulation.
Technology is emerging from a certain legal, political, normative, cultural, and social framework. It's coming from a certain place. And it is shaped by all of those things.
And I think the more we understand a technology's relationship with those things, and the more we then consciously try to shape those things, the more we are going to influence the technology. So, for example, developing a culture of responsible innovation. For example, a kind of Hippocratic oath for AI developers. These things are within the realms of what is feasible, and I think will help to shape the future.
One of the problems with intervention, generally, is that we cannot control the course of events. We can attempt to, but we don't know how things are going to evolve. The reality is, societies are much too complex for us to be able to shape them in any very specific way, as plenty of ideologies and political movements have found to their cost. There are often unforeseen consequences that can derail a project.
I think, nonetheless, there are things we can do. We can try to imagine how things might go very badly wrong, and then work hard to develop systems that will stop that from happening. We can also try collectively to imagine how things could go very right. The kind of society that we actually want to live in that uses this technology. And I'm sure that will be skewed in all sorts of ways, and we might imagine things that seem wonderful and actually have terrible by-products.
This conversation cannot be in the hands of any one group. It oughtn't be in the hands of Silicon Valley billionaires alone. They've got their role to play, but this is a conversation we need to be having as widely as possible.
The centre is developing some really interesting projects but perhaps one of the most interesting is the discussion of what intelligence might be. Could you go into a bit more detail about the kinds of questions you are trying to explore in this area?
You mean kinds of intelligence?
Yeah.
I think this is very important because historically, we've had an overwhelming tendency to anthropomorphise. We define what intelligence is, historically, as being human-like. And then within that, being like certain humans.
And it's taken a very long time for the academic community to accept that there could be such a thing as non-human intelligence at all. We know that crows, for example, who have had a completely different evolutionary history, or octopuses, who have an even more different evolutionary history, might have a kind of intelligence that's very different to ours. That in some ways rivals our own, and so forth.
But luckily, we have got to that point in recent years of accepting that we are not the only form of intelligence. But now, AI is challenging that from a different direction. Just as we are accepting that the natural world offers this enormous range of different intelligences, we are at the same time inventing new intelligences that are radically different to humans.
And I think, still, this anthropomorphic picture of the kind of humanoid android, the robot, dominates our idea of what AI is too much. And too many people, and the industry as well, talk about human-level artificial intelligence as a goal, or general AI, which basically means like a human. But actually what we're building is nothing like a human.
When the first pocket calculator was made, it didn't do maths like a human. It was vastly better. It didn't make the occasional mistake. When we set about creating these artificial agents to solve these problems, because they have a completely different evolutionary history to humans, they solve problems in very different ways.
And until now, people have been fairly shy about describing them as intelligent. Or rather, in the history of AIs, we think solving a particular problem would require intelligence. Then we solve it. And then that's no longer intelligence, because we've solved it. Chess is a good example.
But the reality is, we are creating a whole new world of different artificial agents. And we need to understand that world. We need to understand all the different ways of being clever, if you like. How you can be extremely sophisticated at some particular rational process, and yet extremely bad at another one in a way that bears no relation to the way humans are on these axes.
And this is important, partly because we need to expand our sense of what is intelligent, like we have done with the natural world. Because lots of things follow from saying something is intelligent. Historically, we have a long tradition in Western philosophy of saying those who are intelligent should rule. So if intelligence equates to power, then obviously we need to think about what we mean by intelligence. Who has it and who doesn't. Or how it equates to rights and responsibilities.
It certainly is a very ambitious project to create the atlas of intelligence.
There was a point I read in something you wrote on our ideas of intelligence that I thought was very interesting. We actually tend to think of intelligence at the societal level when we think about human ability, rather than at the individual level but in the end conflate the two. I think that's a very good point, when we think about our capabilities, we think about what we can achieve as a whole, not individually. But when we talk about AI, we tend to think about that individual piece of technology, or that individual system. So for example if we think about the internet of things and AI, we should discuss intelligence as something encompassed by the whole.
Yeah, absolutely. Yes, right now, perhaps it is a product of our anthropomorphising bias. But there is a tendency to see a narrative of AI versus humanity, as if it's one or the other. And yet, obviously, there are risks in this technology long before it acquires any kind of manipulative agency.
Robotic technology is dangerous. Or potentially dangerous. But at the same time, most of what we're using technology for is to enhance ourselves, to increase our capacities. And a lot of what AI is going to be doing is augmenting us – we're going to be working as teams, AI-human teams.
Where do you think this AI-human conflict, or concept of a conflict, comes from? Do you think that's just a reflection of historical conversations we've had about automation, or do you think it is a deeper fear?
I do think it comes both from some biases that might well be innate, such as anthropomorphism, or our human tendency to ascribe agency to other objects, particularly moving ones, is well-established and probably has sound evolutionary roots. If it moves, it's probably wise to start asking yourself questions like, "What is it? What might it want? Where might it be going? Might it be hungry? Do I look like food to it?" I think it makes sense, it's natural for us to think in terms of agency. And when we do, it's natural for us to project our own ways of being and acting. And we, as primates, are profoundly co-operative.
But at the same time, we're competitive and murderous. We have a strong sense of in-group versus out-group, which is responsible for both a great deal of cooperation, within the in-group, but also terrible crimes. Murder, rape, pillage, genocide; and they're pointed at the out-group.
And so I think it's very natural for us to see AIs in terms of agents. We anthropomorphise them as these kind of android robots. And then we think about, well, you know, are they part of our in-group, or are they some other group? If they're some other group, it's us against them. Who's going to win? Well, let's see. So I think that's very natural, I think that's very human.
There is this long tradition, in Western culture in particular, with associating intelligence and dominance and power. It's interesting to speculate about how, and I wish I knew more about it, and I'd like to see more research on this, about how different cultures perceive AI. It's well known that Japan is very accepting of technology and robots, for example.
You can think, well, we in the West have long been justifying power relations of a certain kind on the basis that we're 'cleverer'. That's why men get to vote and women don't, or whatever. In a culture where power is not based on intelligence but, say, on a caste system, which is purely hereditary, we’d build an AI, and it would just tune in, drop out, attain enlightenment, just sit in the corner. Or we beg it to come back and help us find enlightenment. It might be that we find a completely different narrative to the one that's dominant in the West.
One of the projects the centre is running is looking into what kind of AI breakthroughs may come, when and what the social consequences could be. What do you think the future holds? What are your fears – what do you think could go right and wrong in the short, medium and long term?
That's a big question. Certainly I don't lie awake at night worried that robots are going to knock the door down and come in with a machine gun. If the robots take over the world, it won't be by knocking the door down. At the moment, I think it's certainly as big a risk that we have a GMO moment, and there's a powerful reaction against the technology which prevents us from reaping the benefits, which are enormous. I think that's as big a risk as the risks from the technologies themselves.
I think one worry that we haven't talked about is that we've become extremely dependent upon this technology. And that we essentially become deskilled. There's an extent to which the history of civilisation is the history of the domestication of the human species sort of by ourselves, and also by our technology, to some extent. And AI certainly allows for that to reach a whole new level.
Just think about GPs with diagnostic tools. Even now, my GP consults the computer fairly regularly. But as diagnostic tools get better, what are they going to be doing other than just typing something into the computer and reading out what comes back? At which point, you might as well do away with the GP. But then, who does know about medicine?
And so we do need to worry about deskilling and about becoming dependent. And it is entirely possible that you can imagine a society in which we're all sort of prosperous, in a sense. Our basic bodily needs are provided for, perhaps, in a way, to an extent that we've never before even dreamed of. Unprecedented in human history.
And yet, we're stripped of any kind of meaningful work. We have no purpose. We're escaping to virtual reality. And then you could imagine all sorts of worrying countercultures or Luddite movements or what have you. I guess that's the kind of scenario that – I haven't sketched it terribly well – but that's the kind of thing that worries me more than missile-toting giant robots.
As to utopian, yes, that's interesting. I certainly mentioned a couple of things. One thing that I hope is that this new technological revolution enables us to undo some of the damage of the last one. That's a very utopian thought and not terribly realistic, but we use fossil fuels so incredibly efficiently. The idea that driverless cars that are shared, basically a kind of shared service located off a Brownfield site does away with 95 per cent of all cars, freeing up a huge amount of space in the city to be greener, many fewer cars need to be produced, they would be on the road much less, there'd be fewer traffic jams.
It's just one example, but the idea that we can live much more resource-efficiently, because we are living more intelligently through using these tools. And therefore can undo some of the damage of the last Industrial Revolution. That's my main utopian hope, I guess.
Vintage toy robot image by josefkubes/Shutterstock
This article was originally published on TheLong+Short. Read the original article. | government support | signing a treatise | creating shared policies | establishing dialogue | 3 |
99901_QY51J48X_4 | According to Cave, what issue does AI development share with climate change threats? | AI: what's the worst that could happen?
The Centre for the Future of Intelligence is seeking to investigate the implications of artificial intelligence for humanity, and make sure humans take advantage of the opportunities while dodging the risks. It launched at the University of Cambridge last October, and is a collaboration between four universities and colleges – Cambridge, Oxford, Imperial and Berkeley – backed with a 10-year, £10m grant from the Leverhulme Trust.
Because no single discipline is ideally suited to this task, the centre emphasises the importance of interdisciplinary knowledge-sharing and collaboration. It is bringing together a diverse community of some of the world's best researchers, philosophers, psychologists, lawyers and computer scientists.
Executive director of the centre is Stephen Cave, a writer, philosopher and former diplomat. Harry Armstrong, head of futures at Nesta, which publishes The Long + Short, spoke with Cave about the impact of AI.
Their conversation has been edited.
Harry Armstrong: Do you see the interdisciplinary nature of the centre as one of its key values and one of the key impacts you hope it will have on the field?
Stephen Cave: Thinking about the impact of AI is not something that any one discipline owns or does in any very systematic way. So if academia is going to rise to the challenge and provide thought leadership on this hugely important issue, then we’re going to need to do it by breaking down current disciplinary boundaries and bringing people with very different expertise together.
That means bringing together the technologists and the experts at developing these algorithms together with social scientists, philosophers, legal scholars and so forth.
I think there are many areas of science where more interdisciplinary engagement would be valuable. Biotech’s another example. In that sense AI isn’t unique, but I think because thinking about AI is still in very early stages, we have an opportunity to shape the way in which we think about it, and build that community.
We want to create a space where many different disciplines can come together and develop a shared language, learn from each other’s approaches, and hopefully very quickly move to be able to actually develop new ideas, new conclusions, together. But the first step is learning how to talk to each other.
At a recent talk, Naomi Klein said that addressing the challenge of climate change could not have come at a worse time. The current dominant political and economic ideologies, along with growing isolationist sentiment, runs contrary to the bipartisan, collaborative approaches needed to solve global issues like climate change. Do you see the same issues hampering a global effort to respond to the challenges AI raises?
Climate change suffers from the problem that the costs are not incurred in any direct way by the industrialists who own the technology and are profiting from it. With AI, that has been the case so far; although not on the same scale. There has been disruption but so far, compared to industrialisation, the impact has been fairly small. That will probably change.
AI companies, and in particular the big tech companies, are very concerned that this won't go like climate change, but rather it will go like GMOs: that people will have a gut reaction to this technology as soon as the first great swathe of job losses take hold. People speculate that 50m jobs could be lost in the US if trucking is automated, which is conceivable within 10 years. You could imagine a populist US government therefore simply banning driverless cars.
So I think there is anxiety in the tech industry that there could be a serious reaction against this technology at any point. And so my impression is that there is a feeling within these companies that these ethical and social implications need to be taken very seriously, now. And that a broad buy-in by society into some kind of vision of the future in which this technology plays a role is required, if a dangerous – or to them dangerous – counteraction is to be avoided.
My personal experience working with these tech companies is that they are concerned for their businesses and genuinely want to do the right thing. Of course there are intellectual challenges and there is money to be made, but equally they are people who don't think when they get up in the morning that they're going to put people out of jobs or bring about the downfall of humanity. As the industry matures it's developing a sense of responsibility.
So I think we've got a real opportunity, despite the general climate, and in some ways because of it. There's a great opportunity to bring industry on board to make sure the technology is developed in the right way.
One of the dominant narratives around not only AI but technology and automation more generally is that we, as humans, are at the mercy of technological progress. If you try and push against this idea you can be labelled as being anti-progress and stuck in the past. But we do have a lot more control than we give ourselves credit for. For example, routineness and susceptibility to automation are not inevitable features of occupations, job design is hugely important. How do we design jobs? How do we create jobs that allow people to do the kind of work they want to do? There can be a bit of a conflict between being impacted by what's happening and having some sort of control over what we want to happen.
Certainly, we encounter technological determinism a lot. And it's understandable. For us as individuals, of course it does feel like it always is happening and we just have to cope. No one individual can do much about it, other than adapt.
But that's different when we consider ourselves at a level of a society, as a polis [city state], or as an international community. I think we can shape the way in which technology develops. We have various tools. In any given country, we have regulations. There's a possibility of international regulation.
Technology is emerging from a certain legal, political, normative, cultural, and social framework. It's coming from a certain place. And it is shaped by all of those things.
And I think the more we understand a technology's relationship with those things, and the more we then consciously try to shape those things, the more we are going to influence the technology. So, for example, developing a culture of responsible innovation. For example, a kind of Hippocratic oath for AI developers. These things are within the realms of what is feasible, and I think will help to shape the future.
One of the problems with intervention, generally, is that we cannot control the course of events. We can attempt to, but we don't know how things are going to evolve. The reality is, societies are much too complex for us to be able to shape them in any very specific way, as plenty of ideologies and political movements have found to their cost. There are often unforeseen consequences that can derail a project.
I think, nonetheless, there are things we can do. We can try to imagine how things might go very badly wrong, and then work hard to develop systems that will stop that from happening. We can also try collectively to imagine how things could go very right. The kind of society that we actually want to live in that uses this technology. And I'm sure that will be skewed in all sorts of ways, and we might imagine things that seem wonderful and actually have terrible by-products.
This conversation cannot be in the hands of any one group. It oughtn't be in the hands of Silicon Valley billionaires alone. They've got their role to play, but this is a conversation we need to be having as widely as possible.
The centre is developing some really interesting projects but perhaps one of the most interesting is the discussion of what intelligence might be. Could you go into a bit more detail about the kinds of questions you are trying to explore in this area?
You mean kinds of intelligence?
Yeah.
I think this is very important because historically, we've had an overwhelming tendency to anthropomorphise. We define what intelligence is, historically, as being human-like. And then within that, being like certain humans.
And it's taken a very long time for the academic community to accept that there could be such a thing as non-human intelligence at all. We know that crows, for example, who have had a completely different evolutionary history, or octopuses, who have an even more different evolutionary history, might have a kind of intelligence that's very different to ours. That in some ways rivals our own, and so forth.
But luckily, we have got to that point in recent years of accepting that we are not the only form of intelligence. But now, AI is challenging that from a different direction. Just as we are accepting that the natural world offers this enormous range of different intelligences, we are at the same time inventing new intelligences that are radically different to humans.
And I think, still, this anthropomorphic picture of the kind of humanoid android, the robot, dominates our idea of what AI is too much. And too many people, and the industry as well, talk about human-level artificial intelligence as a goal, or general AI, which basically means like a human. But actually what we're building is nothing like a human.
When the first pocket calculator was made, it didn't do maths like a human. It was vastly better. It didn't make the occasional mistake. When we set about creating these artificial agents to solve these problems, because they have a completely different evolutionary history to humans, they solve problems in very different ways.
And until now, people have been fairly shy about describing them as intelligent. Or rather, in the history of AIs, we think solving a particular problem would require intelligence. Then we solve it. And then that's no longer intelligence, because we've solved it. Chess is a good example.
But the reality is, we are creating a whole new world of different artificial agents. And we need to understand that world. We need to understand all the different ways of being clever, if you like. How you can be extremely sophisticated at some particular rational process, and yet extremely bad at another one in a way that bears no relation to the way humans are on these axes.
And this is important, partly because we need to expand our sense of what is intelligent, like we have done with the natural world. Because lots of things follow from saying something is intelligent. Historically, we have a long tradition in Western philosophy of saying those who are intelligent should rule. So if intelligence equates to power, then obviously we need to think about what we mean by intelligence. Who has it and who doesn't. Or how it equates to rights and responsibilities.
It certainly is a very ambitious project to create the atlas of intelligence.
There was a point I read in something you wrote on our ideas of intelligence that I thought was very interesting. We actually tend to think of intelligence at the societal level when we think about human ability, rather than at the individual level but in the end conflate the two. I think that's a very good point, when we think about our capabilities, we think about what we can achieve as a whole, not individually. But when we talk about AI, we tend to think about that individual piece of technology, or that individual system. So for example if we think about the internet of things and AI, we should discuss intelligence as something encompassed by the whole.
Yeah, absolutely. Yes, right now, perhaps it is a product of our anthropomorphising bias. But there is a tendency to see a narrative of AI versus humanity, as if it's one or the other. And yet, obviously, there are risks in this technology long before it acquires any kind of manipulative agency.
Robotic technology is dangerous. Or potentially dangerous. But at the same time, most of what we're using technology for is to enhance ourselves, to increase our capacities. And a lot of what AI is going to be doing is augmenting us – we're going to be working as teams, AI-human teams.
Where do you think this AI-human conflict, or concept of a conflict, comes from? Do you think that's just a reflection of historical conversations we've had about automation, or do you think it is a deeper fear?
I do think it comes both from some biases that might well be innate, such as anthropomorphism, or our human tendency to ascribe agency to other objects, particularly moving ones, is well-established and probably has sound evolutionary roots. If it moves, it's probably wise to start asking yourself questions like, "What is it? What might it want? Where might it be going? Might it be hungry? Do I look like food to it?" I think it makes sense, it's natural for us to think in terms of agency. And when we do, it's natural for us to project our own ways of being and acting. And we, as primates, are profoundly co-operative.
But at the same time, we're competitive and murderous. We have a strong sense of in-group versus out-group, which is responsible for both a great deal of cooperation, within the in-group, but also terrible crimes. Murder, rape, pillage, genocide; and they're pointed at the out-group.
And so I think it's very natural for us to see AIs in terms of agents. We anthropomorphise them as these kind of android robots. And then we think about, well, you know, are they part of our in-group, or are they some other group? If they're some other group, it's us against them. Who's going to win? Well, let's see. So I think that's very natural, I think that's very human.
There is this long tradition, in Western culture in particular, with associating intelligence and dominance and power. It's interesting to speculate about how, and I wish I knew more about it, and I'd like to see more research on this, about how different cultures perceive AI. It's well known that Japan is very accepting of technology and robots, for example.
You can think, well, we in the West have long been justifying power relations of a certain kind on the basis that we're 'cleverer'. That's why men get to vote and women don't, or whatever. In a culture where power is not based on intelligence but, say, on a caste system, which is purely hereditary, we’d build an AI, and it would just tune in, drop out, attain enlightenment, just sit in the corner. Or we beg it to come back and help us find enlightenment. It might be that we find a completely different narrative to the one that's dominant in the West.
One of the projects the centre is running is looking into what kind of AI breakthroughs may come, when and what the social consequences could be. What do you think the future holds? What are your fears – what do you think could go right and wrong in the short, medium and long term?
That's a big question. Certainly I don't lie awake at night worried that robots are going to knock the door down and come in with a machine gun. If the robots take over the world, it won't be by knocking the door down. At the moment, I think it's certainly as big a risk that we have a GMO moment, and there's a powerful reaction against the technology which prevents us from reaping the benefits, which are enormous. I think that's as big a risk as the risks from the technologies themselves.
I think one worry that we haven't talked about is that we've become extremely dependent upon this technology. And that we essentially become deskilled. There's an extent to which the history of civilisation is the history of the domestication of the human species sort of by ourselves, and also by our technology, to some extent. And AI certainly allows for that to reach a whole new level.
Just think about GPs with diagnostic tools. Even now, my GP consults the computer fairly regularly. But as diagnostic tools get better, what are they going to be doing other than just typing something into the computer and reading out what comes back? At which point, you might as well do away with the GP. But then, who does know about medicine?
And so we do need to worry about deskilling and about becoming dependent. And it is entirely possible that you can imagine a society in which we're all sort of prosperous, in a sense. Our basic bodily needs are provided for, perhaps, in a way, to an extent that we've never before even dreamed of. Unprecedented in human history.
And yet, we're stripped of any kind of meaningful work. We have no purpose. We're escaping to virtual reality. And then you could imagine all sorts of worrying countercultures or Luddite movements or what have you. I guess that's the kind of scenario that – I haven't sketched it terribly well – but that's the kind of thing that worries me more than missile-toting giant robots.
As to utopian, yes, that's interesting. I certainly mentioned a couple of things. One thing that I hope is that this new technological revolution enables us to undo some of the damage of the last one. That's a very utopian thought and not terribly realistic, but we use fossil fuels so incredibly efficiently. The idea that driverless cars that are shared, basically a kind of shared service located off a Brownfield site does away with 95 per cent of all cars, freeing up a huge amount of space in the city to be greener, many fewer cars need to be produced, they would be on the road much less, there'd be fewer traffic jams.
It's just one example, but the idea that we can live much more resource-efficiently, because we are living more intelligently through using these tools. And therefore can undo some of the damage of the last Industrial Revolution. That's my main utopian hope, I guess.
Vintage toy robot image by josefkubes/Shutterstock
This article was originally published on TheLong+Short. Read the original article. | Western industries rely too much on certain materials and technology to abandon use of AI and things like fossil fuels | Those in charge of climate change threats and AI don't experience societal costs sustained from negative outcomes | They inevitably contribute to a widening income disparity among the wealthy and those living in poverty | At a certain point, AI and responses to climate change will eradicate job positions that many humans currently fill | 1 |
99901_QY51J48X_5 | Cave acknowledges all of the potential concerns regarding AI EXCEPT: | AI: what's the worst that could happen?
The Centre for the Future of Intelligence is seeking to investigate the implications of artificial intelligence for humanity, and make sure humans take advantage of the opportunities while dodging the risks. It launched at the University of Cambridge last October, and is a collaboration between four universities and colleges – Cambridge, Oxford, Imperial and Berkeley – backed with a 10-year, £10m grant from the Leverhulme Trust.
Because no single discipline is ideally suited to this task, the centre emphasises the importance of interdisciplinary knowledge-sharing and collaboration. It is bringing together a diverse community of some of the world's best researchers, philosophers, psychologists, lawyers and computer scientists.
Executive director of the centre is Stephen Cave, a writer, philosopher and former diplomat. Harry Armstrong, head of futures at Nesta, which publishes The Long + Short, spoke with Cave about the impact of AI.
Their conversation has been edited.
Harry Armstrong: Do you see the interdisciplinary nature of the centre as one of its key values and one of the key impacts you hope it will have on the field?
Stephen Cave: Thinking about the impact of AI is not something that any one discipline owns or does in any very systematic way. So if academia is going to rise to the challenge and provide thought leadership on this hugely important issue, then we’re going to need to do it by breaking down current disciplinary boundaries and bringing people with very different expertise together.
That means bringing together the technologists and the experts at developing these algorithms together with social scientists, philosophers, legal scholars and so forth.
I think there are many areas of science where more interdisciplinary engagement would be valuable. Biotech’s another example. In that sense AI isn’t unique, but I think because thinking about AI is still in very early stages, we have an opportunity to shape the way in which we think about it, and build that community.
We want to create a space where many different disciplines can come together and develop a shared language, learn from each other’s approaches, and hopefully very quickly move to be able to actually develop new ideas, new conclusions, together. But the first step is learning how to talk to each other.
At a recent talk, Naomi Klein said that addressing the challenge of climate change could not have come at a worse time. The current dominant political and economic ideologies, along with growing isolationist sentiment, runs contrary to the bipartisan, collaborative approaches needed to solve global issues like climate change. Do you see the same issues hampering a global effort to respond to the challenges AI raises?
Climate change suffers from the problem that the costs are not incurred in any direct way by the industrialists who own the technology and are profiting from it. With AI, that has been the case so far; although not on the same scale. There has been disruption but so far, compared to industrialisation, the impact has been fairly small. That will probably change.
AI companies, and in particular the big tech companies, are very concerned that this won't go like climate change, but rather it will go like GMOs: that people will have a gut reaction to this technology as soon as the first great swathe of job losses take hold. People speculate that 50m jobs could be lost in the US if trucking is automated, which is conceivable within 10 years. You could imagine a populist US government therefore simply banning driverless cars.
So I think there is anxiety in the tech industry that there could be a serious reaction against this technology at any point. And so my impression is that there is a feeling within these companies that these ethical and social implications need to be taken very seriously, now. And that a broad buy-in by society into some kind of vision of the future in which this technology plays a role is required, if a dangerous – or to them dangerous – counteraction is to be avoided.
My personal experience working with these tech companies is that they are concerned for their businesses and genuinely want to do the right thing. Of course there are intellectual challenges and there is money to be made, but equally they are people who don't think when they get up in the morning that they're going to put people out of jobs or bring about the downfall of humanity. As the industry matures it's developing a sense of responsibility.
So I think we've got a real opportunity, despite the general climate, and in some ways because of it. There's a great opportunity to bring industry on board to make sure the technology is developed in the right way.
One of the dominant narratives around not only AI but technology and automation more generally is that we, as humans, are at the mercy of technological progress. If you try and push against this idea you can be labelled as being anti-progress and stuck in the past. But we do have a lot more control than we give ourselves credit for. For example, routineness and susceptibility to automation are not inevitable features of occupations, job design is hugely important. How do we design jobs? How do we create jobs that allow people to do the kind of work they want to do? There can be a bit of a conflict between being impacted by what's happening and having some sort of control over what we want to happen.
Certainly, we encounter technological determinism a lot. And it's understandable. For us as individuals, of course it does feel like it always is happening and we just have to cope. No one individual can do much about it, other than adapt.
But that's different when we consider ourselves at a level of a society, as a polis [city state], or as an international community. I think we can shape the way in which technology develops. We have various tools. In any given country, we have regulations. There's a possibility of international regulation.
Technology is emerging from a certain legal, political, normative, cultural, and social framework. It's coming from a certain place. And it is shaped by all of those things.
And I think the more we understand a technology's relationship with those things, and the more we then consciously try to shape those things, the more we are going to influence the technology. So, for example, developing a culture of responsible innovation. For example, a kind of Hippocratic oath for AI developers. These things are within the realms of what is feasible, and I think will help to shape the future.
One of the problems with intervention, generally, is that we cannot control the course of events. We can attempt to, but we don't know how things are going to evolve. The reality is, societies are much too complex for us to be able to shape them in any very specific way, as plenty of ideologies and political movements have found to their cost. There are often unforeseen consequences that can derail a project.
I think, nonetheless, there are things we can do. We can try to imagine how things might go very badly wrong, and then work hard to develop systems that will stop that from happening. We can also try collectively to imagine how things could go very right. The kind of society that we actually want to live in that uses this technology. And I'm sure that will be skewed in all sorts of ways, and we might imagine things that seem wonderful and actually have terrible by-products.
This conversation cannot be in the hands of any one group. It oughtn't be in the hands of Silicon Valley billionaires alone. They've got their role to play, but this is a conversation we need to be having as widely as possible.
The centre is developing some really interesting projects but perhaps one of the most interesting is the discussion of what intelligence might be. Could you go into a bit more detail about the kinds of questions you are trying to explore in this area?
You mean kinds of intelligence?
Yeah.
I think this is very important because historically, we've had an overwhelming tendency to anthropomorphise. We define what intelligence is, historically, as being human-like. And then within that, being like certain humans.
And it's taken a very long time for the academic community to accept that there could be such a thing as non-human intelligence at all. We know that crows, for example, who have had a completely different evolutionary history, or octopuses, who have an even more different evolutionary history, might have a kind of intelligence that's very different to ours. That in some ways rivals our own, and so forth.
But luckily, we have got to that point in recent years of accepting that we are not the only form of intelligence. But now, AI is challenging that from a different direction. Just as we are accepting that the natural world offers this enormous range of different intelligences, we are at the same time inventing new intelligences that are radically different to humans.
And I think, still, this anthropomorphic picture of the kind of humanoid android, the robot, dominates our idea of what AI is too much. And too many people, and the industry as well, talk about human-level artificial intelligence as a goal, or general AI, which basically means like a human. But actually what we're building is nothing like a human.
When the first pocket calculator was made, it didn't do maths like a human. It was vastly better. It didn't make the occasional mistake. When we set about creating these artificial agents to solve these problems, because they have a completely different evolutionary history to humans, they solve problems in very different ways.
And until now, people have been fairly shy about describing them as intelligent. Or rather, in the history of AIs, we think solving a particular problem would require intelligence. Then we solve it. And then that's no longer intelligence, because we've solved it. Chess is a good example.
But the reality is, we are creating a whole new world of different artificial agents. And we need to understand that world. We need to understand all the different ways of being clever, if you like. How you can be extremely sophisticated at some particular rational process, and yet extremely bad at another one in a way that bears no relation to the way humans are on these axes.
And this is important, partly because we need to expand our sense of what is intelligent, like we have done with the natural world. Because lots of things follow from saying something is intelligent. Historically, we have a long tradition in Western philosophy of saying those who are intelligent should rule. So if intelligence equates to power, then obviously we need to think about what we mean by intelligence. Who has it and who doesn't. Or how it equates to rights and responsibilities.
It certainly is a very ambitious project to create the atlas of intelligence.
There was a point I read in something you wrote on our ideas of intelligence that I thought was very interesting. We actually tend to think of intelligence at the societal level when we think about human ability, rather than at the individual level but in the end conflate the two. I think that's a very good point, when we think about our capabilities, we think about what we can achieve as a whole, not individually. But when we talk about AI, we tend to think about that individual piece of technology, or that individual system. So for example if we think about the internet of things and AI, we should discuss intelligence as something encompassed by the whole.
Yeah, absolutely. Yes, right now, perhaps it is a product of our anthropomorphising bias. But there is a tendency to see a narrative of AI versus humanity, as if it's one or the other. And yet, obviously, there are risks in this technology long before it acquires any kind of manipulative agency.
Robotic technology is dangerous. Or potentially dangerous. But at the same time, most of what we're using technology for is to enhance ourselves, to increase our capacities. And a lot of what AI is going to be doing is augmenting us – we're going to be working as teams, AI-human teams.
Where do you think this AI-human conflict, or concept of a conflict, comes from? Do you think that's just a reflection of historical conversations we've had about automation, or do you think it is a deeper fear?
I do think it comes both from some biases that might well be innate, such as anthropomorphism, or our human tendency to ascribe agency to other objects, particularly moving ones, is well-established and probably has sound evolutionary roots. If it moves, it's probably wise to start asking yourself questions like, "What is it? What might it want? Where might it be going? Might it be hungry? Do I look like food to it?" I think it makes sense, it's natural for us to think in terms of agency. And when we do, it's natural for us to project our own ways of being and acting. And we, as primates, are profoundly co-operative.
But at the same time, we're competitive and murderous. We have a strong sense of in-group versus out-group, which is responsible for both a great deal of cooperation, within the in-group, but also terrible crimes. Murder, rape, pillage, genocide; and they're pointed at the out-group.
And so I think it's very natural for us to see AIs in terms of agents. We anthropomorphise them as these kind of android robots. And then we think about, well, you know, are they part of our in-group, or are they some other group? If they're some other group, it's us against them. Who's going to win? Well, let's see. So I think that's very natural, I think that's very human.
There is this long tradition, in Western culture in particular, with associating intelligence and dominance and power. It's interesting to speculate about how, and I wish I knew more about it, and I'd like to see more research on this, about how different cultures perceive AI. It's well known that Japan is very accepting of technology and robots, for example.
You can think, well, we in the West have long been justifying power relations of a certain kind on the basis that we're 'cleverer'. That's why men get to vote and women don't, or whatever. In a culture where power is not based on intelligence but, say, on a caste system, which is purely hereditary, we’d build an AI, and it would just tune in, drop out, attain enlightenment, just sit in the corner. Or we beg it to come back and help us find enlightenment. It might be that we find a completely different narrative to the one that's dominant in the West.
One of the projects the centre is running is looking into what kind of AI breakthroughs may come, when and what the social consequences could be. What do you think the future holds? What are your fears – what do you think could go right and wrong in the short, medium and long term?
That's a big question. Certainly I don't lie awake at night worried that robots are going to knock the door down and come in with a machine gun. If the robots take over the world, it won't be by knocking the door down. At the moment, I think it's certainly as big a risk that we have a GMO moment, and there's a powerful reaction against the technology which prevents us from reaping the benefits, which are enormous. I think that's as big a risk as the risks from the technologies themselves.
I think one worry that we haven't talked about is that we've become extremely dependent upon this technology. And that we essentially become deskilled. There's an extent to which the history of civilisation is the history of the domestication of the human species sort of by ourselves, and also by our technology, to some extent. And AI certainly allows for that to reach a whole new level.
Just think about GPs with diagnostic tools. Even now, my GP consults the computer fairly regularly. But as diagnostic tools get better, what are they going to be doing other than just typing something into the computer and reading out what comes back? At which point, you might as well do away with the GP. But then, who does know about medicine?
And so we do need to worry about deskilling and about becoming dependent. And it is entirely possible that you can imagine a society in which we're all sort of prosperous, in a sense. Our basic bodily needs are provided for, perhaps, in a way, to an extent that we've never before even dreamed of. Unprecedented in human history.
And yet, we're stripped of any kind of meaningful work. We have no purpose. We're escaping to virtual reality. And then you could imagine all sorts of worrying countercultures or Luddite movements or what have you. I guess that's the kind of scenario that – I haven't sketched it terribly well – but that's the kind of thing that worries me more than missile-toting giant robots.
As to utopian, yes, that's interesting. I certainly mentioned a couple of things. One thing that I hope is that this new technological revolution enables us to undo some of the damage of the last one. That's a very utopian thought and not terribly realistic, but we use fossil fuels so incredibly efficiently. The idea that driverless cars that are shared, basically a kind of shared service located off a Brownfield site does away with 95 per cent of all cars, freeing up a huge amount of space in the city to be greener, many fewer cars need to be produced, they would be on the road much less, there'd be fewer traffic jams.
It's just one example, but the idea that we can live much more resource-efficiently, because we are living more intelligently through using these tools. And therefore can undo some of the damage of the last Industrial Revolution. That's my main utopian hope, I guess.
Vintage toy robot image by josefkubes/Shutterstock
This article was originally published on TheLong+Short. Read the original article. | contribution to a more apathetic society | mass casualties from AI-related accidents | tendency for use toward escapism | public reaction toward human job losses | 1 |
99901_QY51J48X_6 | Cave suggests all of the following ways for preventing a loss of control over AI EXCEPT: | AI: what's the worst that could happen?
The Centre for the Future of Intelligence is seeking to investigate the implications of artificial intelligence for humanity, and make sure humans take advantage of the opportunities while dodging the risks. It launched at the University of Cambridge last October, and is a collaboration between four universities and colleges – Cambridge, Oxford, Imperial and Berkeley – backed with a 10-year, £10m grant from the Leverhulme Trust.
Because no single discipline is ideally suited to this task, the centre emphasises the importance of interdisciplinary knowledge-sharing and collaboration. It is bringing together a diverse community of some of the world's best researchers, philosophers, psychologists, lawyers and computer scientists.
Executive director of the centre is Stephen Cave, a writer, philosopher and former diplomat. Harry Armstrong, head of futures at Nesta, which publishes The Long + Short, spoke with Cave about the impact of AI.
Their conversation has been edited.
Harry Armstrong: Do you see the interdisciplinary nature of the centre as one of its key values and one of the key impacts you hope it will have on the field?
Stephen Cave: Thinking about the impact of AI is not something that any one discipline owns or does in any very systematic way. So if academia is going to rise to the challenge and provide thought leadership on this hugely important issue, then we’re going to need to do it by breaking down current disciplinary boundaries and bringing people with very different expertise together.
That means bringing together the technologists and the experts at developing these algorithms together with social scientists, philosophers, legal scholars and so forth.
I think there are many areas of science where more interdisciplinary engagement would be valuable. Biotech’s another example. In that sense AI isn’t unique, but I think because thinking about AI is still in very early stages, we have an opportunity to shape the way in which we think about it, and build that community.
We want to create a space where many different disciplines can come together and develop a shared language, learn from each other’s approaches, and hopefully very quickly move to be able to actually develop new ideas, new conclusions, together. But the first step is learning how to talk to each other.
At a recent talk, Naomi Klein said that addressing the challenge of climate change could not have come at a worse time. The current dominant political and economic ideologies, along with growing isolationist sentiment, runs contrary to the bipartisan, collaborative approaches needed to solve global issues like climate change. Do you see the same issues hampering a global effort to respond to the challenges AI raises?
Climate change suffers from the problem that the costs are not incurred in any direct way by the industrialists who own the technology and are profiting from it. With AI, that has been the case so far; although not on the same scale. There has been disruption but so far, compared to industrialisation, the impact has been fairly small. That will probably change.
AI companies, and in particular the big tech companies, are very concerned that this won't go like climate change, but rather it will go like GMOs: that people will have a gut reaction to this technology as soon as the first great swathe of job losses take hold. People speculate that 50m jobs could be lost in the US if trucking is automated, which is conceivable within 10 years. You could imagine a populist US government therefore simply banning driverless cars.
So I think there is anxiety in the tech industry that there could be a serious reaction against this technology at any point. And so my impression is that there is a feeling within these companies that these ethical and social implications need to be taken very seriously, now. And that a broad buy-in by society into some kind of vision of the future in which this technology plays a role is required, if a dangerous – or to them dangerous – counteraction is to be avoided.
My personal experience working with these tech companies is that they are concerned for their businesses and genuinely want to do the right thing. Of course there are intellectual challenges and there is money to be made, but equally they are people who don't think when they get up in the morning that they're going to put people out of jobs or bring about the downfall of humanity. As the industry matures it's developing a sense of responsibility.
So I think we've got a real opportunity, despite the general climate, and in some ways because of it. There's a great opportunity to bring industry on board to make sure the technology is developed in the right way.
One of the dominant narratives around not only AI but technology and automation more generally is that we, as humans, are at the mercy of technological progress. If you try and push against this idea you can be labelled as being anti-progress and stuck in the past. But we do have a lot more control than we give ourselves credit for. For example, routineness and susceptibility to automation are not inevitable features of occupations, job design is hugely important. How do we design jobs? How do we create jobs that allow people to do the kind of work they want to do? There can be a bit of a conflict between being impacted by what's happening and having some sort of control over what we want to happen.
Certainly, we encounter technological determinism a lot. And it's understandable. For us as individuals, of course it does feel like it always is happening and we just have to cope. No one individual can do much about it, other than adapt.
But that's different when we consider ourselves at a level of a society, as a polis [city state], or as an international community. I think we can shape the way in which technology develops. We have various tools. In any given country, we have regulations. There's a possibility of international regulation.
Technology is emerging from a certain legal, political, normative, cultural, and social framework. It's coming from a certain place. And it is shaped by all of those things.
And I think the more we understand a technology's relationship with those things, and the more we then consciously try to shape those things, the more we are going to influence the technology. So, for example, developing a culture of responsible innovation. For example, a kind of Hippocratic oath for AI developers. These things are within the realms of what is feasible, and I think will help to shape the future.
One of the problems with intervention, generally, is that we cannot control the course of events. We can attempt to, but we don't know how things are going to evolve. The reality is, societies are much too complex for us to be able to shape them in any very specific way, as plenty of ideologies and political movements have found to their cost. There are often unforeseen consequences that can derail a project.
I think, nonetheless, there are things we can do. We can try to imagine how things might go very badly wrong, and then work hard to develop systems that will stop that from happening. We can also try collectively to imagine how things could go very right. The kind of society that we actually want to live in that uses this technology. And I'm sure that will be skewed in all sorts of ways, and we might imagine things that seem wonderful and actually have terrible by-products.
This conversation cannot be in the hands of any one group. It oughtn't be in the hands of Silicon Valley billionaires alone. They've got their role to play, but this is a conversation we need to be having as widely as possible.
The centre is developing some really interesting projects but perhaps one of the most interesting is the discussion of what intelligence might be. Could you go into a bit more detail about the kinds of questions you are trying to explore in this area?
You mean kinds of intelligence?
Yeah.
I think this is very important because historically, we've had an overwhelming tendency to anthropomorphise. We define what intelligence is, historically, as being human-like. And then within that, being like certain humans.
And it's taken a very long time for the academic community to accept that there could be such a thing as non-human intelligence at all. We know that crows, for example, who have had a completely different evolutionary history, or octopuses, who have an even more different evolutionary history, might have a kind of intelligence that's very different to ours. That in some ways rivals our own, and so forth.
But luckily, we have got to that point in recent years of accepting that we are not the only form of intelligence. But now, AI is challenging that from a different direction. Just as we are accepting that the natural world offers this enormous range of different intelligences, we are at the same time inventing new intelligences that are radically different to humans.
And I think, still, this anthropomorphic picture of the kind of humanoid android, the robot, dominates our idea of what AI is too much. And too many people, and the industry as well, talk about human-level artificial intelligence as a goal, or general AI, which basically means like a human. But actually what we're building is nothing like a human.
When the first pocket calculator was made, it didn't do maths like a human. It was vastly better. It didn't make the occasional mistake. When we set about creating these artificial agents to solve these problems, because they have a completely different evolutionary history to humans, they solve problems in very different ways.
And until now, people have been fairly shy about describing them as intelligent. Or rather, in the history of AIs, we think solving a particular problem would require intelligence. Then we solve it. And then that's no longer intelligence, because we've solved it. Chess is a good example.
But the reality is, we are creating a whole new world of different artificial agents. And we need to understand that world. We need to understand all the different ways of being clever, if you like. How you can be extremely sophisticated at some particular rational process, and yet extremely bad at another one in a way that bears no relation to the way humans are on these axes.
And this is important, partly because we need to expand our sense of what is intelligent, like we have done with the natural world. Because lots of things follow from saying something is intelligent. Historically, we have a long tradition in Western philosophy of saying those who are intelligent should rule. So if intelligence equates to power, then obviously we need to think about what we mean by intelligence. Who has it and who doesn't. Or how it equates to rights and responsibilities.
It certainly is a very ambitious project to create the atlas of intelligence.
There was a point I read in something you wrote on our ideas of intelligence that I thought was very interesting. We actually tend to think of intelligence at the societal level when we think about human ability, rather than at the individual level but in the end conflate the two. I think that's a very good point, when we think about our capabilities, we think about what we can achieve as a whole, not individually. But when we talk about AI, we tend to think about that individual piece of technology, or that individual system. So for example if we think about the internet of things and AI, we should discuss intelligence as something encompassed by the whole.
Yeah, absolutely. Yes, right now, perhaps it is a product of our anthropomorphising bias. But there is a tendency to see a narrative of AI versus humanity, as if it's one or the other. And yet, obviously, there are risks in this technology long before it acquires any kind of manipulative agency.
Robotic technology is dangerous. Or potentially dangerous. But at the same time, most of what we're using technology for is to enhance ourselves, to increase our capacities. And a lot of what AI is going to be doing is augmenting us – we're going to be working as teams, AI-human teams.
Where do you think this AI-human conflict, or concept of a conflict, comes from? Do you think that's just a reflection of historical conversations we've had about automation, or do you think it is a deeper fear?
I do think it comes both from some biases that might well be innate, such as anthropomorphism, or our human tendency to ascribe agency to other objects, particularly moving ones, is well-established and probably has sound evolutionary roots. If it moves, it's probably wise to start asking yourself questions like, "What is it? What might it want? Where might it be going? Might it be hungry? Do I look like food to it?" I think it makes sense, it's natural for us to think in terms of agency. And when we do, it's natural for us to project our own ways of being and acting. And we, as primates, are profoundly co-operative.
But at the same time, we're competitive and murderous. We have a strong sense of in-group versus out-group, which is responsible for both a great deal of cooperation, within the in-group, but also terrible crimes. Murder, rape, pillage, genocide; and they're pointed at the out-group.
And so I think it's very natural for us to see AIs in terms of agents. We anthropomorphise them as these kind of android robots. And then we think about, well, you know, are they part of our in-group, or are they some other group? If they're some other group, it's us against them. Who's going to win? Well, let's see. So I think that's very natural, I think that's very human.
There is this long tradition, in Western culture in particular, with associating intelligence and dominance and power. It's interesting to speculate about how, and I wish I knew more about it, and I'd like to see more research on this, about how different cultures perceive AI. It's well known that Japan is very accepting of technology and robots, for example.
You can think, well, we in the West have long been justifying power relations of a certain kind on the basis that we're 'cleverer'. That's why men get to vote and women don't, or whatever. In a culture where power is not based on intelligence but, say, on a caste system, which is purely hereditary, we’d build an AI, and it would just tune in, drop out, attain enlightenment, just sit in the corner. Or we beg it to come back and help us find enlightenment. It might be that we find a completely different narrative to the one that's dominant in the West.
One of the projects the centre is running is looking into what kind of AI breakthroughs may come, when and what the social consequences could be. What do you think the future holds? What are your fears – what do you think could go right and wrong in the short, medium and long term?
That's a big question. Certainly I don't lie awake at night worried that robots are going to knock the door down and come in with a machine gun. If the robots take over the world, it won't be by knocking the door down. At the moment, I think it's certainly as big a risk that we have a GMO moment, and there's a powerful reaction against the technology which prevents us from reaping the benefits, which are enormous. I think that's as big a risk as the risks from the technologies themselves.
I think one worry that we haven't talked about is that we've become extremely dependent upon this technology. And that we essentially become deskilled. There's an extent to which the history of civilisation is the history of the domestication of the human species sort of by ourselves, and also by our technology, to some extent. And AI certainly allows for that to reach a whole new level.
Just think about GPs with diagnostic tools. Even now, my GP consults the computer fairly regularly. But as diagnostic tools get better, what are they going to be doing other than just typing something into the computer and reading out what comes back? At which point, you might as well do away with the GP. But then, who does know about medicine?
And so we do need to worry about deskilling and about becoming dependent. And it is entirely possible that you can imagine a society in which we're all sort of prosperous, in a sense. Our basic bodily needs are provided for, perhaps, in a way, to an extent that we've never before even dreamed of. Unprecedented in human history.
And yet, we're stripped of any kind of meaningful work. We have no purpose. We're escaping to virtual reality. And then you could imagine all sorts of worrying countercultures or Luddite movements or what have you. I guess that's the kind of scenario that – I haven't sketched it terribly well – but that's the kind of thing that worries me more than missile-toting giant robots.
As to utopian, yes, that's interesting. I certainly mentioned a couple of things. One thing that I hope is that this new technological revolution enables us to undo some of the damage of the last one. That's a very utopian thought and not terribly realistic, but we use fossil fuels so incredibly efficiently. The idea that driverless cars that are shared, basically a kind of shared service located off a Brownfield site does away with 95 per cent of all cars, freeing up a huge amount of space in the city to be greener, many fewer cars need to be produced, they would be on the road much less, there'd be fewer traffic jams.
It's just one example, but the idea that we can live much more resource-efficiently, because we are living more intelligently through using these tools. And therefore can undo some of the damage of the last Industrial Revolution. That's my main utopian hope, I guess.
Vintage toy robot image by josefkubes/Shutterstock
This article was originally published on TheLong+Short. Read the original article. | developing an automatic shutdown option for AI that goes awry | maintaining a system of accountable design | engaging in interdisciplinary conversations | anticipating problems that may arise from technology | 0 |
99901_QY51J48X_7 | What does the author view as the purpose of AI | AI: what's the worst that could happen?
The Centre for the Future of Intelligence is seeking to investigate the implications of artificial intelligence for humanity, and make sure humans take advantage of the opportunities while dodging the risks. It launched at the University of Cambridge last October, and is a collaboration between four universities and colleges – Cambridge, Oxford, Imperial and Berkeley – backed with a 10-year, £10m grant from the Leverhulme Trust.
Because no single discipline is ideally suited to this task, the centre emphasises the importance of interdisciplinary knowledge-sharing and collaboration. It is bringing together a diverse community of some of the world's best researchers, philosophers, psychologists, lawyers and computer scientists.
Executive director of the centre is Stephen Cave, a writer, philosopher and former diplomat. Harry Armstrong, head of futures at Nesta, which publishes The Long + Short, spoke with Cave about the impact of AI.
Their conversation has been edited.
Harry Armstrong: Do you see the interdisciplinary nature of the centre as one of its key values and one of the key impacts you hope it will have on the field?
Stephen Cave: Thinking about the impact of AI is not something that any one discipline owns or does in any very systematic way. So if academia is going to rise to the challenge and provide thought leadership on this hugely important issue, then we’re going to need to do it by breaking down current disciplinary boundaries and bringing people with very different expertise together.
That means bringing together the technologists and the experts at developing these algorithms together with social scientists, philosophers, legal scholars and so forth.
I think there are many areas of science where more interdisciplinary engagement would be valuable. Biotech’s another example. In that sense AI isn’t unique, but I think because thinking about AI is still in very early stages, we have an opportunity to shape the way in which we think about it, and build that community.
We want to create a space where many different disciplines can come together and develop a shared language, learn from each other’s approaches, and hopefully very quickly move to be able to actually develop new ideas, new conclusions, together. But the first step is learning how to talk to each other.
At a recent talk, Naomi Klein said that addressing the challenge of climate change could not have come at a worse time. The current dominant political and economic ideologies, along with growing isolationist sentiment, runs contrary to the bipartisan, collaborative approaches needed to solve global issues like climate change. Do you see the same issues hampering a global effort to respond to the challenges AI raises?
Climate change suffers from the problem that the costs are not incurred in any direct way by the industrialists who own the technology and are profiting from it. With AI, that has been the case so far; although not on the same scale. There has been disruption but so far, compared to industrialisation, the impact has been fairly small. That will probably change.
AI companies, and in particular the big tech companies, are very concerned that this won't go like climate change, but rather it will go like GMOs: that people will have a gut reaction to this technology as soon as the first great swathe of job losses take hold. People speculate that 50m jobs could be lost in the US if trucking is automated, which is conceivable within 10 years. You could imagine a populist US government therefore simply banning driverless cars.
So I think there is anxiety in the tech industry that there could be a serious reaction against this technology at any point. And so my impression is that there is a feeling within these companies that these ethical and social implications need to be taken very seriously, now. And that a broad buy-in by society into some kind of vision of the future in which this technology plays a role is required, if a dangerous – or to them dangerous – counteraction is to be avoided.
My personal experience working with these tech companies is that they are concerned for their businesses and genuinely want to do the right thing. Of course there are intellectual challenges and there is money to be made, but equally they are people who don't think when they get up in the morning that they're going to put people out of jobs or bring about the downfall of humanity. As the industry matures it's developing a sense of responsibility.
So I think we've got a real opportunity, despite the general climate, and in some ways because of it. There's a great opportunity to bring industry on board to make sure the technology is developed in the right way.
One of the dominant narratives around not only AI but technology and automation more generally is that we, as humans, are at the mercy of technological progress. If you try and push against this idea you can be labelled as being anti-progress and stuck in the past. But we do have a lot more control than we give ourselves credit for. For example, routineness and susceptibility to automation are not inevitable features of occupations, job design is hugely important. How do we design jobs? How do we create jobs that allow people to do the kind of work they want to do? There can be a bit of a conflict between being impacted by what's happening and having some sort of control over what we want to happen.
Certainly, we encounter technological determinism a lot. And it's understandable. For us as individuals, of course it does feel like it always is happening and we just have to cope. No one individual can do much about it, other than adapt.
But that's different when we consider ourselves at a level of a society, as a polis [city state], or as an international community. I think we can shape the way in which technology develops. We have various tools. In any given country, we have regulations. There's a possibility of international regulation.
Technology is emerging from a certain legal, political, normative, cultural, and social framework. It's coming from a certain place. And it is shaped by all of those things.
And I think the more we understand a technology's relationship with those things, and the more we then consciously try to shape those things, the more we are going to influence the technology. So, for example, developing a culture of responsible innovation. For example, a kind of Hippocratic oath for AI developers. These things are within the realms of what is feasible, and I think will help to shape the future.
One of the problems with intervention, generally, is that we cannot control the course of events. We can attempt to, but we don't know how things are going to evolve. The reality is, societies are much too complex for us to be able to shape them in any very specific way, as plenty of ideologies and political movements have found to their cost. There are often unforeseen consequences that can derail a project.
I think, nonetheless, there are things we can do. We can try to imagine how things might go very badly wrong, and then work hard to develop systems that will stop that from happening. We can also try collectively to imagine how things could go very right. The kind of society that we actually want to live in that uses this technology. And I'm sure that will be skewed in all sorts of ways, and we might imagine things that seem wonderful and actually have terrible by-products.
This conversation cannot be in the hands of any one group. It oughtn't be in the hands of Silicon Valley billionaires alone. They've got their role to play, but this is a conversation we need to be having as widely as possible.
The centre is developing some really interesting projects but perhaps one of the most interesting is the discussion of what intelligence might be. Could you go into a bit more detail about the kinds of questions you are trying to explore in this area?
You mean kinds of intelligence?
Yeah.
I think this is very important because historically, we've had an overwhelming tendency to anthropomorphise. We define what intelligence is, historically, as being human-like. And then within that, being like certain humans.
And it's taken a very long time for the academic community to accept that there could be such a thing as non-human intelligence at all. We know that crows, for example, who have had a completely different evolutionary history, or octopuses, who have an even more different evolutionary history, might have a kind of intelligence that's very different to ours. That in some ways rivals our own, and so forth.
But luckily, we have got to that point in recent years of accepting that we are not the only form of intelligence. But now, AI is challenging that from a different direction. Just as we are accepting that the natural world offers this enormous range of different intelligences, we are at the same time inventing new intelligences that are radically different to humans.
And I think, still, this anthropomorphic picture of the kind of humanoid android, the robot, dominates our idea of what AI is too much. And too many people, and the industry as well, talk about human-level artificial intelligence as a goal, or general AI, which basically means like a human. But actually what we're building is nothing like a human.
When the first pocket calculator was made, it didn't do maths like a human. It was vastly better. It didn't make the occasional mistake. When we set about creating these artificial agents to solve these problems, because they have a completely different evolutionary history to humans, they solve problems in very different ways.
And until now, people have been fairly shy about describing them as intelligent. Or rather, in the history of AIs, we think solving a particular problem would require intelligence. Then we solve it. And then that's no longer intelligence, because we've solved it. Chess is a good example.
But the reality is, we are creating a whole new world of different artificial agents. And we need to understand that world. We need to understand all the different ways of being clever, if you like. How you can be extremely sophisticated at some particular rational process, and yet extremely bad at another one in a way that bears no relation to the way humans are on these axes.
And this is important, partly because we need to expand our sense of what is intelligent, like we have done with the natural world. Because lots of things follow from saying something is intelligent. Historically, we have a long tradition in Western philosophy of saying those who are intelligent should rule. So if intelligence equates to power, then obviously we need to think about what we mean by intelligence. Who has it and who doesn't. Or how it equates to rights and responsibilities.
It certainly is a very ambitious project to create the atlas of intelligence.
There was a point I read in something you wrote on our ideas of intelligence that I thought was very interesting. We actually tend to think of intelligence at the societal level when we think about human ability, rather than at the individual level but in the end conflate the two. I think that's a very good point, when we think about our capabilities, we think about what we can achieve as a whole, not individually. But when we talk about AI, we tend to think about that individual piece of technology, or that individual system. So for example if we think about the internet of things and AI, we should discuss intelligence as something encompassed by the whole.
Yeah, absolutely. Yes, right now, perhaps it is a product of our anthropomorphising bias. But there is a tendency to see a narrative of AI versus humanity, as if it's one or the other. And yet, obviously, there are risks in this technology long before it acquires any kind of manipulative agency.
Robotic technology is dangerous. Or potentially dangerous. But at the same time, most of what we're using technology for is to enhance ourselves, to increase our capacities. And a lot of what AI is going to be doing is augmenting us – we're going to be working as teams, AI-human teams.
Where do you think this AI-human conflict, or concept of a conflict, comes from? Do you think that's just a reflection of historical conversations we've had about automation, or do you think it is a deeper fear?
I do think it comes both from some biases that might well be innate, such as anthropomorphism, or our human tendency to ascribe agency to other objects, particularly moving ones, is well-established and probably has sound evolutionary roots. If it moves, it's probably wise to start asking yourself questions like, "What is it? What might it want? Where might it be going? Might it be hungry? Do I look like food to it?" I think it makes sense, it's natural for us to think in terms of agency. And when we do, it's natural for us to project our own ways of being and acting. And we, as primates, are profoundly co-operative.
But at the same time, we're competitive and murderous. We have a strong sense of in-group versus out-group, which is responsible for both a great deal of cooperation, within the in-group, but also terrible crimes. Murder, rape, pillage, genocide; and they're pointed at the out-group.
And so I think it's very natural for us to see AIs in terms of agents. We anthropomorphise them as these kind of android robots. And then we think about, well, you know, are they part of our in-group, or are they some other group? If they're some other group, it's us against them. Who's going to win? Well, let's see. So I think that's very natural, I think that's very human.
There is this long tradition, in Western culture in particular, with associating intelligence and dominance and power. It's interesting to speculate about how, and I wish I knew more about it, and I'd like to see more research on this, about how different cultures perceive AI. It's well known that Japan is very accepting of technology and robots, for example.
You can think, well, we in the West have long been justifying power relations of a certain kind on the basis that we're 'cleverer'. That's why men get to vote and women don't, or whatever. In a culture where power is not based on intelligence but, say, on a caste system, which is purely hereditary, we’d build an AI, and it would just tune in, drop out, attain enlightenment, just sit in the corner. Or we beg it to come back and help us find enlightenment. It might be that we find a completely different narrative to the one that's dominant in the West.
One of the projects the centre is running is looking into what kind of AI breakthroughs may come, when and what the social consequences could be. What do you think the future holds? What are your fears – what do you think could go right and wrong in the short, medium and long term?
That's a big question. Certainly I don't lie awake at night worried that robots are going to knock the door down and come in with a machine gun. If the robots take over the world, it won't be by knocking the door down. At the moment, I think it's certainly as big a risk that we have a GMO moment, and there's a powerful reaction against the technology which prevents us from reaping the benefits, which are enormous. I think that's as big a risk as the risks from the technologies themselves.
I think one worry that we haven't talked about is that we've become extremely dependent upon this technology. And that we essentially become deskilled. There's an extent to which the history of civilisation is the history of the domestication of the human species sort of by ourselves, and also by our technology, to some extent. And AI certainly allows for that to reach a whole new level.
Just think about GPs with diagnostic tools. Even now, my GP consults the computer fairly regularly. But as diagnostic tools get better, what are they going to be doing other than just typing something into the computer and reading out what comes back? At which point, you might as well do away with the GP. But then, who does know about medicine?
And so we do need to worry about deskilling and about becoming dependent. And it is entirely possible that you can imagine a society in which we're all sort of prosperous, in a sense. Our basic bodily needs are provided for, perhaps, in a way, to an extent that we've never before even dreamed of. Unprecedented in human history.
And yet, we're stripped of any kind of meaningful work. We have no purpose. We're escaping to virtual reality. And then you could imagine all sorts of worrying countercultures or Luddite movements or what have you. I guess that's the kind of scenario that – I haven't sketched it terribly well – but that's the kind of thing that worries me more than missile-toting giant robots.
As to utopian, yes, that's interesting. I certainly mentioned a couple of things. One thing that I hope is that this new technological revolution enables us to undo some of the damage of the last one. That's a very utopian thought and not terribly realistic, but we use fossil fuels so incredibly efficiently. The idea that driverless cars that are shared, basically a kind of shared service located off a Brownfield site does away with 95 per cent of all cars, freeing up a huge amount of space in the city to be greener, many fewer cars need to be produced, they would be on the road much less, there'd be fewer traffic jams.
It's just one example, but the idea that we can live much more resource-efficiently, because we are living more intelligently through using these tools. And therefore can undo some of the damage of the last Industrial Revolution. That's my main utopian hope, I guess.
Vintage toy robot image by josefkubes/Shutterstock
This article was originally published on TheLong+Short. Read the original article. | To eliminate natural selection | To achieve ultimate convenience | To amplify social improvement | To mitigate climate threats | 2 |
99901_QY51J48X_8 | To what does Cave attribute general human skepticism of AI? | AI: what's the worst that could happen?
The Centre for the Future of Intelligence is seeking to investigate the implications of artificial intelligence for humanity, and make sure humans take advantage of the opportunities while dodging the risks. It launched at the University of Cambridge last October, and is a collaboration between four universities and colleges – Cambridge, Oxford, Imperial and Berkeley – backed with a 10-year, £10m grant from the Leverhulme Trust.
Because no single discipline is ideally suited to this task, the centre emphasises the importance of interdisciplinary knowledge-sharing and collaboration. It is bringing together a diverse community of some of the world's best researchers, philosophers, psychologists, lawyers and computer scientists.
Executive director of the centre is Stephen Cave, a writer, philosopher and former diplomat. Harry Armstrong, head of futures at Nesta, which publishes The Long + Short, spoke with Cave about the impact of AI.
Their conversation has been edited.
Harry Armstrong: Do you see the interdisciplinary nature of the centre as one of its key values and one of the key impacts you hope it will have on the field?
Stephen Cave: Thinking about the impact of AI is not something that any one discipline owns or does in any very systematic way. So if academia is going to rise to the challenge and provide thought leadership on this hugely important issue, then we’re going to need to do it by breaking down current disciplinary boundaries and bringing people with very different expertise together.
That means bringing together the technologists and the experts at developing these algorithms together with social scientists, philosophers, legal scholars and so forth.
I think there are many areas of science where more interdisciplinary engagement would be valuable. Biotech’s another example. In that sense AI isn’t unique, but I think because thinking about AI is still in very early stages, we have an opportunity to shape the way in which we think about it, and build that community.
We want to create a space where many different disciplines can come together and develop a shared language, learn from each other’s approaches, and hopefully very quickly move to be able to actually develop new ideas, new conclusions, together. But the first step is learning how to talk to each other.
At a recent talk, Naomi Klein said that addressing the challenge of climate change could not have come at a worse time. The current dominant political and economic ideologies, along with growing isolationist sentiment, runs contrary to the bipartisan, collaborative approaches needed to solve global issues like climate change. Do you see the same issues hampering a global effort to respond to the challenges AI raises?
Climate change suffers from the problem that the costs are not incurred in any direct way by the industrialists who own the technology and are profiting from it. With AI, that has been the case so far; although not on the same scale. There has been disruption but so far, compared to industrialisation, the impact has been fairly small. That will probably change.
AI companies, and in particular the big tech companies, are very concerned that this won't go like climate change, but rather it will go like GMOs: that people will have a gut reaction to this technology as soon as the first great swathe of job losses take hold. People speculate that 50m jobs could be lost in the US if trucking is automated, which is conceivable within 10 years. You could imagine a populist US government therefore simply banning driverless cars.
So I think there is anxiety in the tech industry that there could be a serious reaction against this technology at any point. And so my impression is that there is a feeling within these companies that these ethical and social implications need to be taken very seriously, now. And that a broad buy-in by society into some kind of vision of the future in which this technology plays a role is required, if a dangerous – or to them dangerous – counteraction is to be avoided.
My personal experience working with these tech companies is that they are concerned for their businesses and genuinely want to do the right thing. Of course there are intellectual challenges and there is money to be made, but equally they are people who don't think when they get up in the morning that they're going to put people out of jobs or bring about the downfall of humanity. As the industry matures it's developing a sense of responsibility.
So I think we've got a real opportunity, despite the general climate, and in some ways because of it. There's a great opportunity to bring industry on board to make sure the technology is developed in the right way.
One of the dominant narratives around not only AI but technology and automation more generally is that we, as humans, are at the mercy of technological progress. If you try and push against this idea you can be labelled as being anti-progress and stuck in the past. But we do have a lot more control than we give ourselves credit for. For example, routineness and susceptibility to automation are not inevitable features of occupations, job design is hugely important. How do we design jobs? How do we create jobs that allow people to do the kind of work they want to do? There can be a bit of a conflict between being impacted by what's happening and having some sort of control over what we want to happen.
Certainly, we encounter technological determinism a lot. And it's understandable. For us as individuals, of course it does feel like it always is happening and we just have to cope. No one individual can do much about it, other than adapt.
But that's different when we consider ourselves at a level of a society, as a polis [city state], or as an international community. I think we can shape the way in which technology develops. We have various tools. In any given country, we have regulations. There's a possibility of international regulation.
Technology is emerging from a certain legal, political, normative, cultural, and social framework. It's coming from a certain place. And it is shaped by all of those things.
And I think the more we understand a technology's relationship with those things, and the more we then consciously try to shape those things, the more we are going to influence the technology. So, for example, developing a culture of responsible innovation. For example, a kind of Hippocratic oath for AI developers. These things are within the realms of what is feasible, and I think will help to shape the future.
One of the problems with intervention, generally, is that we cannot control the course of events. We can attempt to, but we don't know how things are going to evolve. The reality is, societies are much too complex for us to be able to shape them in any very specific way, as plenty of ideologies and political movements have found to their cost. There are often unforeseen consequences that can derail a project.
I think, nonetheless, there are things we can do. We can try to imagine how things might go very badly wrong, and then work hard to develop systems that will stop that from happening. We can also try collectively to imagine how things could go very right. The kind of society that we actually want to live in that uses this technology. And I'm sure that will be skewed in all sorts of ways, and we might imagine things that seem wonderful and actually have terrible by-products.
This conversation cannot be in the hands of any one group. It oughtn't be in the hands of Silicon Valley billionaires alone. They've got their role to play, but this is a conversation we need to be having as widely as possible.
The centre is developing some really interesting projects but perhaps one of the most interesting is the discussion of what intelligence might be. Could you go into a bit more detail about the kinds of questions you are trying to explore in this area?
You mean kinds of intelligence?
Yeah.
I think this is very important because historically, we've had an overwhelming tendency to anthropomorphise. We define what intelligence is, historically, as being human-like. And then within that, being like certain humans.
And it's taken a very long time for the academic community to accept that there could be such a thing as non-human intelligence at all. We know that crows, for example, who have had a completely different evolutionary history, or octopuses, who have an even more different evolutionary history, might have a kind of intelligence that's very different to ours. That in some ways rivals our own, and so forth.
But luckily, we have got to that point in recent years of accepting that we are not the only form of intelligence. But now, AI is challenging that from a different direction. Just as we are accepting that the natural world offers this enormous range of different intelligences, we are at the same time inventing new intelligences that are radically different to humans.
And I think, still, this anthropomorphic picture of the kind of humanoid android, the robot, dominates our idea of what AI is too much. And too many people, and the industry as well, talk about human-level artificial intelligence as a goal, or general AI, which basically means like a human. But actually what we're building is nothing like a human.
When the first pocket calculator was made, it didn't do maths like a human. It was vastly better. It didn't make the occasional mistake. When we set about creating these artificial agents to solve these problems, because they have a completely different evolutionary history to humans, they solve problems in very different ways.
And until now, people have been fairly shy about describing them as intelligent. Or rather, in the history of AIs, we think solving a particular problem would require intelligence. Then we solve it. And then that's no longer intelligence, because we've solved it. Chess is a good example.
But the reality is, we are creating a whole new world of different artificial agents. And we need to understand that world. We need to understand all the different ways of being clever, if you like. How you can be extremely sophisticated at some particular rational process, and yet extremely bad at another one in a way that bears no relation to the way humans are on these axes.
And this is important, partly because we need to expand our sense of what is intelligent, like we have done with the natural world. Because lots of things follow from saying something is intelligent. Historically, we have a long tradition in Western philosophy of saying those who are intelligent should rule. So if intelligence equates to power, then obviously we need to think about what we mean by intelligence. Who has it and who doesn't. Or how it equates to rights and responsibilities.
It certainly is a very ambitious project to create the atlas of intelligence.
There was a point I read in something you wrote on our ideas of intelligence that I thought was very interesting. We actually tend to think of intelligence at the societal level when we think about human ability, rather than at the individual level but in the end conflate the two. I think that's a very good point, when we think about our capabilities, we think about what we can achieve as a whole, not individually. But when we talk about AI, we tend to think about that individual piece of technology, or that individual system. So for example if we think about the internet of things and AI, we should discuss intelligence as something encompassed by the whole.
Yeah, absolutely. Yes, right now, perhaps it is a product of our anthropomorphising bias. But there is a tendency to see a narrative of AI versus humanity, as if it's one or the other. And yet, obviously, there are risks in this technology long before it acquires any kind of manipulative agency.
Robotic technology is dangerous. Or potentially dangerous. But at the same time, most of what we're using technology for is to enhance ourselves, to increase our capacities. And a lot of what AI is going to be doing is augmenting us – we're going to be working as teams, AI-human teams.
Where do you think this AI-human conflict, or concept of a conflict, comes from? Do you think that's just a reflection of historical conversations we've had about automation, or do you think it is a deeper fear?
I do think it comes both from some biases that might well be innate, such as anthropomorphism, or our human tendency to ascribe agency to other objects, particularly moving ones, is well-established and probably has sound evolutionary roots. If it moves, it's probably wise to start asking yourself questions like, "What is it? What might it want? Where might it be going? Might it be hungry? Do I look like food to it?" I think it makes sense, it's natural for us to think in terms of agency. And when we do, it's natural for us to project our own ways of being and acting. And we, as primates, are profoundly co-operative.
But at the same time, we're competitive and murderous. We have a strong sense of in-group versus out-group, which is responsible for both a great deal of cooperation, within the in-group, but also terrible crimes. Murder, rape, pillage, genocide; and they're pointed at the out-group.
And so I think it's very natural for us to see AIs in terms of agents. We anthropomorphise them as these kind of android robots. And then we think about, well, you know, are they part of our in-group, or are they some other group? If they're some other group, it's us against them. Who's going to win? Well, let's see. So I think that's very natural, I think that's very human.
There is this long tradition, in Western culture in particular, with associating intelligence and dominance and power. It's interesting to speculate about how, and I wish I knew more about it, and I'd like to see more research on this, about how different cultures perceive AI. It's well known that Japan is very accepting of technology and robots, for example.
You can think, well, we in the West have long been justifying power relations of a certain kind on the basis that we're 'cleverer'. That's why men get to vote and women don't, or whatever. In a culture where power is not based on intelligence but, say, on a caste system, which is purely hereditary, we’d build an AI, and it would just tune in, drop out, attain enlightenment, just sit in the corner. Or we beg it to come back and help us find enlightenment. It might be that we find a completely different narrative to the one that's dominant in the West.
One of the projects the centre is running is looking into what kind of AI breakthroughs may come, when and what the social consequences could be. What do you think the future holds? What are your fears – what do you think could go right and wrong in the short, medium and long term?
That's a big question. Certainly I don't lie awake at night worried that robots are going to knock the door down and come in with a machine gun. If the robots take over the world, it won't be by knocking the door down. At the moment, I think it's certainly as big a risk that we have a GMO moment, and there's a powerful reaction against the technology which prevents us from reaping the benefits, which are enormous. I think that's as big a risk as the risks from the technologies themselves.
I think one worry that we haven't talked about is that we've become extremely dependent upon this technology. And that we essentially become deskilled. There's an extent to which the history of civilisation is the history of the domestication of the human species sort of by ourselves, and also by our technology, to some extent. And AI certainly allows for that to reach a whole new level.
Just think about GPs with diagnostic tools. Even now, my GP consults the computer fairly regularly. But as diagnostic tools get better, what are they going to be doing other than just typing something into the computer and reading out what comes back? At which point, you might as well do away with the GP. But then, who does know about medicine?
And so we do need to worry about deskilling and about becoming dependent. And it is entirely possible that you can imagine a society in which we're all sort of prosperous, in a sense. Our basic bodily needs are provided for, perhaps, in a way, to an extent that we've never before even dreamed of. Unprecedented in human history.
And yet, we're stripped of any kind of meaningful work. We have no purpose. We're escaping to virtual reality. And then you could imagine all sorts of worrying countercultures or Luddite movements or what have you. I guess that's the kind of scenario that – I haven't sketched it terribly well – but that's the kind of thing that worries me more than missile-toting giant robots.
As to utopian, yes, that's interesting. I certainly mentioned a couple of things. One thing that I hope is that this new technological revolution enables us to undo some of the damage of the last one. That's a very utopian thought and not terribly realistic, but we use fossil fuels so incredibly efficiently. The idea that driverless cars that are shared, basically a kind of shared service located off a Brownfield site does away with 95 per cent of all cars, freeing up a huge amount of space in the city to be greener, many fewer cars need to be produced, they would be on the road much less, there'd be fewer traffic jams.
It's just one example, but the idea that we can live much more resource-efficiently, because we are living more intelligently through using these tools. And therefore can undo some of the damage of the last Industrial Revolution. That's my main utopian hope, I guess.
Vintage toy robot image by josefkubes/Shutterstock
This article was originally published on TheLong+Short. Read the original article. | fear of domestication | evolutionary biases | media portrayals | loss of autonomy | 1 |
99901_QY51J48X_9 | GP most likely stands for? | AI: what's the worst that could happen?
The Centre for the Future of Intelligence is seeking to investigate the implications of artificial intelligence for humanity, and make sure humans take advantage of the opportunities while dodging the risks. It launched at the University of Cambridge last October, and is a collaboration between four universities and colleges – Cambridge, Oxford, Imperial and Berkeley – backed with a 10-year, £10m grant from the Leverhulme Trust.
Because no single discipline is ideally suited to this task, the centre emphasises the importance of interdisciplinary knowledge-sharing and collaboration. It is bringing together a diverse community of some of the world's best researchers, philosophers, psychologists, lawyers and computer scientists.
Executive director of the centre is Stephen Cave, a writer, philosopher and former diplomat. Harry Armstrong, head of futures at Nesta, which publishes The Long + Short, spoke with Cave about the impact of AI.
Their conversation has been edited.
Harry Armstrong: Do you see the interdisciplinary nature of the centre as one of its key values and one of the key impacts you hope it will have on the field?
Stephen Cave: Thinking about the impact of AI is not something that any one discipline owns or does in any very systematic way. So if academia is going to rise to the challenge and provide thought leadership on this hugely important issue, then we’re going to need to do it by breaking down current disciplinary boundaries and bringing people with very different expertise together.
That means bringing together the technologists and the experts at developing these algorithms together with social scientists, philosophers, legal scholars and so forth.
I think there are many areas of science where more interdisciplinary engagement would be valuable. Biotech’s another example. In that sense AI isn’t unique, but I think because thinking about AI is still in very early stages, we have an opportunity to shape the way in which we think about it, and build that community.
We want to create a space where many different disciplines can come together and develop a shared language, learn from each other’s approaches, and hopefully very quickly move to be able to actually develop new ideas, new conclusions, together. But the first step is learning how to talk to each other.
At a recent talk, Naomi Klein said that addressing the challenge of climate change could not have come at a worse time. The current dominant political and economic ideologies, along with growing isolationist sentiment, runs contrary to the bipartisan, collaborative approaches needed to solve global issues like climate change. Do you see the same issues hampering a global effort to respond to the challenges AI raises?
Climate change suffers from the problem that the costs are not incurred in any direct way by the industrialists who own the technology and are profiting from it. With AI, that has been the case so far; although not on the same scale. There has been disruption but so far, compared to industrialisation, the impact has been fairly small. That will probably change.
AI companies, and in particular the big tech companies, are very concerned that this won't go like climate change, but rather it will go like GMOs: that people will have a gut reaction to this technology as soon as the first great swathe of job losses take hold. People speculate that 50m jobs could be lost in the US if trucking is automated, which is conceivable within 10 years. You could imagine a populist US government therefore simply banning driverless cars.
So I think there is anxiety in the tech industry that there could be a serious reaction against this technology at any point. And so my impression is that there is a feeling within these companies that these ethical and social implications need to be taken very seriously, now. And that a broad buy-in by society into some kind of vision of the future in which this technology plays a role is required, if a dangerous – or to them dangerous – counteraction is to be avoided.
My personal experience working with these tech companies is that they are concerned for their businesses and genuinely want to do the right thing. Of course there are intellectual challenges and there is money to be made, but equally they are people who don't think when they get up in the morning that they're going to put people out of jobs or bring about the downfall of humanity. As the industry matures it's developing a sense of responsibility.
So I think we've got a real opportunity, despite the general climate, and in some ways because of it. There's a great opportunity to bring industry on board to make sure the technology is developed in the right way.
One of the dominant narratives around not only AI but technology and automation more generally is that we, as humans, are at the mercy of technological progress. If you try and push against this idea you can be labelled as being anti-progress and stuck in the past. But we do have a lot more control than we give ourselves credit for. For example, routineness and susceptibility to automation are not inevitable features of occupations, job design is hugely important. How do we design jobs? How do we create jobs that allow people to do the kind of work they want to do? There can be a bit of a conflict between being impacted by what's happening and having some sort of control over what we want to happen.
Certainly, we encounter technological determinism a lot. And it's understandable. For us as individuals, of course it does feel like it always is happening and we just have to cope. No one individual can do much about it, other than adapt.
But that's different when we consider ourselves at a level of a society, as a polis [city state], or as an international community. I think we can shape the way in which technology develops. We have various tools. In any given country, we have regulations. There's a possibility of international regulation.
Technology is emerging from a certain legal, political, normative, cultural, and social framework. It's coming from a certain place. And it is shaped by all of those things.
And I think the more we understand a technology's relationship with those things, and the more we then consciously try to shape those things, the more we are going to influence the technology. So, for example, developing a culture of responsible innovation. For example, a kind of Hippocratic oath for AI developers. These things are within the realms of what is feasible, and I think will help to shape the future.
One of the problems with intervention, generally, is that we cannot control the course of events. We can attempt to, but we don't know how things are going to evolve. The reality is, societies are much too complex for us to be able to shape them in any very specific way, as plenty of ideologies and political movements have found to their cost. There are often unforeseen consequences that can derail a project.
I think, nonetheless, there are things we can do. We can try to imagine how things might go very badly wrong, and then work hard to develop systems that will stop that from happening. We can also try collectively to imagine how things could go very right. The kind of society that we actually want to live in that uses this technology. And I'm sure that will be skewed in all sorts of ways, and we might imagine things that seem wonderful and actually have terrible by-products.
This conversation cannot be in the hands of any one group. It oughtn't be in the hands of Silicon Valley billionaires alone. They've got their role to play, but this is a conversation we need to be having as widely as possible.
The centre is developing some really interesting projects but perhaps one of the most interesting is the discussion of what intelligence might be. Could you go into a bit more detail about the kinds of questions you are trying to explore in this area?
You mean kinds of intelligence?
Yeah.
I think this is very important because historically, we've had an overwhelming tendency to anthropomorphise. We define what intelligence is, historically, as being human-like. And then within that, being like certain humans.
And it's taken a very long time for the academic community to accept that there could be such a thing as non-human intelligence at all. We know that crows, for example, who have had a completely different evolutionary history, or octopuses, who have an even more different evolutionary history, might have a kind of intelligence that's very different to ours. That in some ways rivals our own, and so forth.
But luckily, we have got to that point in recent years of accepting that we are not the only form of intelligence. But now, AI is challenging that from a different direction. Just as we are accepting that the natural world offers this enormous range of different intelligences, we are at the same time inventing new intelligences that are radically different to humans.
And I think, still, this anthropomorphic picture of the kind of humanoid android, the robot, dominates our idea of what AI is too much. And too many people, and the industry as well, talk about human-level artificial intelligence as a goal, or general AI, which basically means like a human. But actually what we're building is nothing like a human.
When the first pocket calculator was made, it didn't do maths like a human. It was vastly better. It didn't make the occasional mistake. When we set about creating these artificial agents to solve these problems, because they have a completely different evolutionary history to humans, they solve problems in very different ways.
And until now, people have been fairly shy about describing them as intelligent. Or rather, in the history of AIs, we think solving a particular problem would require intelligence. Then we solve it. And then that's no longer intelligence, because we've solved it. Chess is a good example.
But the reality is, we are creating a whole new world of different artificial agents. And we need to understand that world. We need to understand all the different ways of being clever, if you like. How you can be extremely sophisticated at some particular rational process, and yet extremely bad at another one in a way that bears no relation to the way humans are on these axes.
And this is important, partly because we need to expand our sense of what is intelligent, like we have done with the natural world. Because lots of things follow from saying something is intelligent. Historically, we have a long tradition in Western philosophy of saying those who are intelligent should rule. So if intelligence equates to power, then obviously we need to think about what we mean by intelligence. Who has it and who doesn't. Or how it equates to rights and responsibilities.
It certainly is a very ambitious project to create the atlas of intelligence.
There was a point I read in something you wrote on our ideas of intelligence that I thought was very interesting. We actually tend to think of intelligence at the societal level when we think about human ability, rather than at the individual level but in the end conflate the two. I think that's a very good point, when we think about our capabilities, we think about what we can achieve as a whole, not individually. But when we talk about AI, we tend to think about that individual piece of technology, or that individual system. So for example if we think about the internet of things and AI, we should discuss intelligence as something encompassed by the whole.
Yeah, absolutely. Yes, right now, perhaps it is a product of our anthropomorphising bias. But there is a tendency to see a narrative of AI versus humanity, as if it's one or the other. And yet, obviously, there are risks in this technology long before it acquires any kind of manipulative agency.
Robotic technology is dangerous. Or potentially dangerous. But at the same time, most of what we're using technology for is to enhance ourselves, to increase our capacities. And a lot of what AI is going to be doing is augmenting us – we're going to be working as teams, AI-human teams.
Where do you think this AI-human conflict, or concept of a conflict, comes from? Do you think that's just a reflection of historical conversations we've had about automation, or do you think it is a deeper fear?
I do think it comes both from some biases that might well be innate, such as anthropomorphism, or our human tendency to ascribe agency to other objects, particularly moving ones, is well-established and probably has sound evolutionary roots. If it moves, it's probably wise to start asking yourself questions like, "What is it? What might it want? Where might it be going? Might it be hungry? Do I look like food to it?" I think it makes sense, it's natural for us to think in terms of agency. And when we do, it's natural for us to project our own ways of being and acting. And we, as primates, are profoundly co-operative.
But at the same time, we're competitive and murderous. We have a strong sense of in-group versus out-group, which is responsible for both a great deal of cooperation, within the in-group, but also terrible crimes. Murder, rape, pillage, genocide; and they're pointed at the out-group.
And so I think it's very natural for us to see AIs in terms of agents. We anthropomorphise them as these kind of android robots. And then we think about, well, you know, are they part of our in-group, or are they some other group? If they're some other group, it's us against them. Who's going to win? Well, let's see. So I think that's very natural, I think that's very human.
There is this long tradition, in Western culture in particular, with associating intelligence and dominance and power. It's interesting to speculate about how, and I wish I knew more about it, and I'd like to see more research on this, about how different cultures perceive AI. It's well known that Japan is very accepting of technology and robots, for example.
You can think, well, we in the West have long been justifying power relations of a certain kind on the basis that we're 'cleverer'. That's why men get to vote and women don't, or whatever. In a culture where power is not based on intelligence but, say, on a caste system, which is purely hereditary, we’d build an AI, and it would just tune in, drop out, attain enlightenment, just sit in the corner. Or we beg it to come back and help us find enlightenment. It might be that we find a completely different narrative to the one that's dominant in the West.
One of the projects the centre is running is looking into what kind of AI breakthroughs may come, when and what the social consequences could be. What do you think the future holds? What are your fears – what do you think could go right and wrong in the short, medium and long term?
That's a big question. Certainly I don't lie awake at night worried that robots are going to knock the door down and come in with a machine gun. If the robots take over the world, it won't be by knocking the door down. At the moment, I think it's certainly as big a risk that we have a GMO moment, and there's a powerful reaction against the technology which prevents us from reaping the benefits, which are enormous. I think that's as big a risk as the risks from the technologies themselves.
I think one worry that we haven't talked about is that we've become extremely dependent upon this technology. And that we essentially become deskilled. There's an extent to which the history of civilisation is the history of the domestication of the human species sort of by ourselves, and also by our technology, to some extent. And AI certainly allows for that to reach a whole new level.
Just think about GPs with diagnostic tools. Even now, my GP consults the computer fairly regularly. But as diagnostic tools get better, what are they going to be doing other than just typing something into the computer and reading out what comes back? At which point, you might as well do away with the GP. But then, who does know about medicine?
And so we do need to worry about deskilling and about becoming dependent. And it is entirely possible that you can imagine a society in which we're all sort of prosperous, in a sense. Our basic bodily needs are provided for, perhaps, in a way, to an extent that we've never before even dreamed of. Unprecedented in human history.
And yet, we're stripped of any kind of meaningful work. We have no purpose. We're escaping to virtual reality. And then you could imagine all sorts of worrying countercultures or Luddite movements or what have you. I guess that's the kind of scenario that – I haven't sketched it terribly well – but that's the kind of thing that worries me more than missile-toting giant robots.
As to utopian, yes, that's interesting. I certainly mentioned a couple of things. One thing that I hope is that this new technological revolution enables us to undo some of the damage of the last one. That's a very utopian thought and not terribly realistic, but we use fossil fuels so incredibly efficiently. The idea that driverless cars that are shared, basically a kind of shared service located off a Brownfield site does away with 95 per cent of all cars, freeing up a huge amount of space in the city to be greener, many fewer cars need to be produced, they would be on the road much less, there'd be fewer traffic jams.
It's just one example, but the idea that we can live much more resource-efficiently, because we are living more intelligently through using these tools. And therefore can undo some of the damage of the last Industrial Revolution. That's my main utopian hope, I guess.
Vintage toy robot image by josefkubes/Shutterstock
This article was originally published on TheLong+Short. Read the original article. | generic pharmaceutical | ghost publisher | geriatric patient | general practitioner | 3 |
99902_1IHVLLLA_1 | Which term best describes Sara's relationship with her parents? | Divided we stand
Sara lets the Lyft park itself in the drive, lets out a sigh, and tweets
wish me luck
plus some emojis before slipping her phone into a hoody pocket. Curtains twitch, and before she can get her bag out of the back Mom is there, right there next to her, their hands touching on the handle as they compete for control.
"It's OK Mom, I got it."
"You should have let us come pick you up."
"It's fine, there was no need. I didn't want to put any-"
"But you shouldn't be wasting money, not with how much rent you pay and-"
Jesus. Not this already. "Mom. I can afford a cab ride. I'm not
that
much of a failure."
Mom sighs, shoulders falling, looks at Sara directly. "I'm sorry honey." She looks old, Sara thinks, watching a resigned tiredness flicker across her face in a way she'd not noticed before. Like she's exhausted by conflict, surrendered to it. "Now, don't I get a hug?"
Sara smiles. They hold each other for a few long seconds, rubbing and squeezing each other as the Lyft silently backs itself out of the driveway. When they part it's Mom's hand that's on the bag's handle.
Inside she unwraps herself from scarves and layers, the heat in the house almost a shock after the cold air. Michigan in February. Mom is already halfway up the stairs, bag in tow, headed for her room.
"Mom, just leave that and I'll…"
"Your father's in the front room," she says, just before she disappears from view. "Go say hi."
For a few seconds Sara is alone in the hallway, the smell of cooking meat coming from one doorway, the sound of rolling news from another. She shakes her head, kicks off shoes, tucks hair behind her ears. Braces herself.
He's sat in the living room, reclining in the Lazy Boy. He doesn't hear her enter - her socked feet silent on the pile carpet floor, his attention lost in the screen that fills most of the wall. Fox News. She braces herself again.
"Hey Dad."
His head jerks to look at her. "Hey! When did you get here?" He starts to push himself up.
"Don't get up Dad, it's fine. Really." She takes a seat on the couch. "I just got here, like two minutes ago."
"Good flight?"
"Yeah. Fine. Y'know. Same as always."
He smiles back at her, nods knowingly.
Their first words in nearly a year. Fine. So far. She relaxes. Of course it is. How bad could it be?
"I thought I was gonna come pick you up from the airport?"
"Ah, no. I got a cab. I didn't want to bother you."
"Bother me? You think I'm too old and infirm to pick my own daughter up from the airport?"
"No Dad, of course not."
The war spills out of Fox News, casualty figures scrolling across monochrome drone footage, attack helicopters circling over Caracas apartment blocks, pundits with bronzed skin and immaculate blond hair smiling from four-way split screens.
"So you just got a cab?"
"Yeah."
"How much did that cost?"
"Not much. Really. I can afford-"
"Cabs are expensive. You shouldn't be wasting your money."
"It wasn't expensive. It wasn't a cab, it was a Lyft."
"One of those driverless things?"
"Yeah."
Ad break. An elderly couple ride a tandem bicycle through a park, laughing and smiling in Instagram-perfect sunshine, as a calm, relaxing voice lists the potentially lethal side effects of a diabetes drug.
Dad shakes his head. "I don't know how you can use those things. I don't trust them."
"Dad, they're perfectly safe."
"That's not what I mean. They're stealing people's jobs."
There's a brief second, a fleeting moment, where Sara can bite her lip, let it go. She misses it. "But I thought it was immigrants that are stealing people's jobs?"
"You might think it's funny little lady, but let me tell you - you remember Kyle and Max, Bill Cooper's boys? Live up off Lafayette, past the Checkers?"
"Nope."
"Well let me tell you," He shifts in the recliner, with some obvious pain and effort, to face her. "Both of 'em lost their jobs just this last year. Both of 'em were truckers. Both of 'em been driving trucks since high school. Now the damn trucks are driving themselves and they're both out of work. And they got families to support. Kids."
"Well I'm sure they'll be fine." She regrets the sarcasm as soon as she hears it in her own voice, but she still can't stop herself, like it's expected, like it's part of the routine. Part of their schtick. "They just got to get themselves out there, huh Dad? Pull themselves up by their bootstraps. That's the American way, right?"
"I'm glad you think this is funny, I really do. But what you New York types need to realise is-"
"Ed!" Mom had appeared in the doorway. "Please! Both of you. No fighting today, please."
"Sheryl-"
"No. I don't want to hear you two as much as disagreeing about anything today, unless it's about the game. And even then you'd better keep it civil. Otherwise you can both go hungry. Understand?"
Awkward pause.
"Fine."
"Sorry Mom."
Sara turns back to the TV, to watching the war, to trying to work out which one it is.
It had always been this way, ever since she was about thirteen. Up until then it just seemed like constant warmth, as though she didn't have any childhood concept of Dad apart from him getting home from work, then her sitting on his knee, eating cookies and watching football highlights until Mom came in and scolded them both for ruining their appetites before dinner.
And then everything changed. Suddenly there was rap music and nose rings, sneaking out of the house to see her friends and not wanting to go to church. Suddenly he was no longer this lovable bear-man that ruffled her hair and gave her candy and explained defensive plays to her, but this huge obelisk of injustice that just wanted to crush her high school life into dust. It was constant warfare; every opinion she had became a battle, every decision she made a conflict. Getting away to college gave her escape, but bred resentment too; he hated that she went to New York, even though NYU was a good school, and her decision to stay there after she finished made things even worse. And then politics got all crazy, weirder then ever, and it became impossible for them to talk without it erupting into fights almost instantly. It was bad enough when the smart, young guy she liked was president and Dad constantly spewed his hate for him at her, but somehow it got even worse when the old, racist, women hating war-starter he liked won. Twice.
So they didn't talk much now, barely online, never on the phone. Since her second year of school he'd never been to NYC to visit her. She came back when she could face it; sometimes for birthdays, sometimes for Thanksgiving. Maybe for Christmas. But somehow always, like now, for the Super Bowl. Like football was the one thing they still had, that one thing they could still sit in the same room together for. Shouting at players, screaming at the ref, laughing at the ads.
Dad is in the bathroom, and Sara has had enough of Fox and whichever war this is. She reaches over and grabs the remote from the arm of his chair, and tries to find something else to watch. The government had scrapped all the rules about how the internet worked, and for most people like her parents it had suddenly gotten a lot cheaper to get their TV through Facebook, so all she can find is
Fox, Breitbart News, Family Values TV, Info Wars, The Rebel, Glenn Beck, The Voice of America, America First, The Bible Today
and lots of hunting and sports channels she doesn't even recognise. It's signed in to her Dad's FB account, and the last thing she wants is to try and log in on hers before he gets back from the john. Yeah. There was no way that would end up with them keeping it civil.
In her pocket her phone vibrates, purrs against her skin, reminding her it's there, making sure she's not forgotten where her real friends are, that there's a world outside, beyond Dad and his TV. She takes it out and cradles it in her hands, the dark screen fleetingly reflecting back her face before it jumps awake at her very touch, opening up to bathe her in blue light, in comfort and warmth and the familiar. For the first time since she got home she feels herself relax.
Dinner is Mom's meatloaf, with gravy and mashed potatoes. Cornbread and broccoli. Every mouthful tastes like nostalgia, and Sara can feel herself being encompassed by a bubble, this barrier of warm air and long forgotten simplicity enveloping her body, protecting her from the confusion of the world outside.
"How's work, honey?" Mom asks.
"Yeah, going OK." Sara works for a non-profit in Brooklyn that helps big organisations to transition to renewable energy. The pay is lousy but it feels important. "We just got the last few schools in the city to agree to put solar panels on their roofs. Big deal for us. I've been working on them for the last two years."
Mom says nothing, just looks down at her plate.
Dad finishes chewing his mouthful, swallows, wipes his beard with a napkin. Sighs, barely controlled anger simmering behind his face. "Solar panels cause cancer."
Sara laughs, covering her mouth as she nearly chokes on chewed food. "What? No they don't Dad."
"They do. The material they use to coat them reacts to sunlight, and produces an airborne carcinogen. It's based on a particular kind of rare earth. It's a bit like teflon. The Chinese have known about this for decades but have kept it covered up, because they-"
"Dad, no. Just no. Trust me."
"-because they are the world's largest manufacturers of solar panels. But the research has been done. The scientific evidence is out there. Look it up."
"Look it up?" Sara shakes her head, not knowing where to even start. "Dad, who is telling you this stuff?"
"No one is telling me it, Sara. I read it. It's in the news. I mean, really, I'm surprised you've not seen it. It was all over Facebook."
"Maybe on yours, but it's not all over my Facebook." She doesn't have the heart to tell him she muted him six months ago.
"Well, I don't read the news and I don't know any science," says Mom, "But I do know this: after they opened that solar farm up near Mary, within just a few years her and two of her neighbours had cancer. I mean I don't know anything for sure honey, but given the risk are you sure it's safe to be putting these panels on top of schools?"
"There's no risk, Mom. None at all. Dad, I wish you'd stop believing everything you see on Facebook."
"Well, maybe you should read things yourself before passing judgement on them." He pushes himself up from his seat, steps away from the table. Sara sighs, thinking she's upset him that much that he's actually abandoning his dinner, but he stops to grab something off a nearby shelf. His iPad. He heads back and takes his seat again.
Oh, here we fucking go
she thinks to herself.
He stabs at the screen, looks for a while, stabs again. Flips it over and hands it to her. "Here. Read."
Reluctantly, she takes it. His Facebook feed. Somewhere in the middle of it is the article, a very to the point CHINESE SOLAR PANELS CAUSE CANCER headline. But she can't even focus on it, because the rest of the screen is filled with distractions, looping videos and animated gifs, all adverts, and all for guns. Or security systems. Panic rooms. Back up power generators. Emergency rations. More guns.
"Jesus Christ Dad, these ads!"
"No blasphemy at the dinner table, please honey" says Mom.
"What about them?"
"Just… just look at them. They're terrifying. They're like… like adverts for the end of the world! You know they show you this stuff just to make you scared, right? Just to keep you paranoid."
"They show me this stuff because they've got products to sell. That's how the economy works. That's how we create jobs. Godammit Sara, are you telling me you hate
advertising
now? Do you just hate everything about America?"
Sara looks over to Mom, who looks like she's on the brink of tears. Suddenly she finds she's also lost the will to fight. Gently she closes the iPad and puts it down on the table, next to her plate.
"No, of course not Dad. Maybe I'll read this later, after the game."
After dinner she helps Mom clean-up, the two of them loading the dishwasher in near silence. She's leaning against the counter, scrolling through Twitter on her phone, when Mom finally speaks.
"You should go easy on your father, you know. He's worried about a lot of things."
"What things? Solar panel cancer?"
"Don't joke Sara, I'm serious. There's a lot that bothers him. The state of the world. The future. All these damn wars."
"We're all worried about all that, Mom."
"He's worried about his health.
I'm
worried about his health. Probably more than he is."
Sara looks up from her phone, genuine concern. "Is he OK?"
"I don't know. He won't go to the doctor. Hasn't been in months. He's worried about his insurance."
"I had no idea-"
"Yeah, well you know your father. Doesn't like to talk about it. Doesn't want to burden other people with his problems. Hates pity." She pauses, looks out the window into the yard. When she turns back to Sara her eyes are damp. "This is why I was so excited about you coming back. Why he was so excited! I thought it'd take his mind of all this. He was so excited to see you. You know he loves watching the game with you, Sara."
"I know. I'm sorry I-"
"And the ads! The Super Bowl ads! You know how much he loves watching the new ads with you. It's a stupid thing, sure, but he loves it. Talks about it all the time. It's like a tradition to him. That's why he got so upset over dinner when you got angry at his ads. It's something special he has with you, he doesn't want to lose it."
Sara slips her phone into her pocket, genuine guilt. Feels like a spoiled kid. "I didn't realise. I'm sorry."
Mom smiles, walks over and kisses her on the forehead. "It's OK honey. Don't feel bad. Just go. Just go sit in there with him and watch some TV. Please."
It's the second down on the Falcon's 60 yard line with 30 yards to cover, and the Lions need one touchdown to equalise. Sara and her Dad are sat in the front room, working their way through a family sized pack of Oreos, when the ad break starts.
Dawn. Red skies over the desert. A Chevrolet truck pulls up next to a large, trailer. Low shot next to the front tire, as a cowboy booted foot drops down from the door, disturbing dust.
Cut to: internal shot of the trailer, darkness split by morning light through the opening door. The figure enters, flicks on lights. The room is full of equipment, computers. The figure takes a seat, puts on a headset, thumbs on screens. Rests their hands on two large joysticks on the desk.
Cut to: airfield, the desert. The distinctive silhouette of a Predator drone taxis across the screen, rising heat shimmering the air around it.
Cut to: interior of the trailer. The faceless figure works controls, the joysticks, touch screens.
Voiceover: They say you need to get up pretty early to get past America's finest. But the truth is we never sleep.
Cut to: a uniformed guard on top of the border wall. He looks up and gives a salute to the drone as it soars above him, out and across the desert.
Cut to: drone footage. Grainy, monochrome. A group of figures move slowly through the desert. The camera tracks them. Zooms in. The pilot punches buttons. The figures become highlighted by a computer overlay, text appears next to them. ILLEGAL ENTRY ATTEMPT SUSPECTED. GROUND PATROLS ALERTED.
"Fuck this," says Sara, getting up from her seat.
"Sara!" says Mom.
"No I'm sorry, I can't. I can't sit here and watch this… this bullshit. This propaganda." She storms out of the room.
"Sara!" Mom makes to get up.
"No, just leave her," says Dad, gently, his eyes still fixed on the screen. "Just let her go."
Out in the kitchen Sara sits at the table and wants to scream. She's angry, mainly with herself. She should never have fucking come here. She should have known better. There was never any fucking way anything good was going to come from this. As much as Mom wants to romanticise things, to make them sound cute and adorable, the truth is shit with Dad has never been right since she was a teenager. Too much resentment, too much bad blood, too much control and rebellion. They hadn't agreed on anything - they hadn't managed to have a simple conversation that didn't descend into fighting - in 15 goddamn years, and no amount of eating cookies and watching fucking Super Bowl ads on the TV was going to fix that.
She sighs, wipes a tear from her cheek. On autopilot she takes her phone from her pocket, feels its reassuring warmth in her hand, and swipes open Twitter.
Everybody seems to be talking about the same thing.
omg im crying
holy shit that chevrolet ad /fire emoji
that was sooooo beautiful
who knew chevrolet were so woke
i can't believe they did that, so amazing
Hang on, are they taking about the same ad?
Hastily she opens her FB TV app, pulls up the game. The ad is just finishing. She hits the 10-second rewind icon a couple of times, then leans the phone on its side against a ketchup bottle.
Cut to: drone footage. Grainy, monochrome. A group of figures move slowly through the desert. The camera tracks them. Zooms in. The pilot punches buttons. The figures become highlighted by a computer overlay, text appears next to them. ILLEGAL ENTRY ATTEMPT SUSPECTED. GROUND PATROLS ALERTED.
Cut to: on the ground, in the desert. The group of figures are revealed to be a Mexican family, maybe two. Men, women, children. They look tired, hungry. They stop to rest, sipping the little water they have left from tattered plastic bottles.
A little way away from the main group sits a small child, a girl. Maybe 8 years old. She is drawing shapes in the dust with a stick. She's drawn quite a bit it looks like, but from our angle we can't see what.
Cut to: drone footage. The pilot is watching the group. As he tracks away from the main party to where the girl is sat, the camera reveals what she has drawn.
A large, child's rendition of the American flag.
Underneath it, it childlike handwriting, some words. 'I have a dream'
Text flashes across the screen. ALERT CANCELLED. ALL PATROLS: STAND DOWN
Cut to: the drone, banking and turning, flying away.
Cut to: exterior shot of the trailer. The still anonymous pilot exits, walks back towards his jeep.
Voiceover: Keeping America safe means never sleeping, but keeping America great means never forgetting who we are, and how we got here.
The jeep starts up, pulls away from the camera in a cloud of dust.
Fade to black. Chevrolet logo. White text against black.
'We know what really makes America great'
Sara finds herself in the front room, sobbing.
"Honey?"
Dad pauses the TV, looks up at her. It looks like he's been crying too. "Sara?"
"Did you - did you watch it?"
"The Chevrolet ad?"
"Yeah."
"Yeah, we did." Embarrassed, he wipes a tear from his cheek. "It was… it was very moving."
She falls on him, wrapping her arms around his neck, burying her face in his chest. "I'm sorry Dad. I'm so sorry. I didn't mean to be so mean-"
"It's OK, honey. It really is."
"No, no it's not. We always fight. And I know that's mainly my fault-"
'Well, now, c'mon-"
"No, it is. It's my fault. I got myself into thinking we can never agree on anything, that we can never see eye to eye. That we've got nothing in common anymore." She lifts her head to look up at him. "But I know that's wrong. That I shouldn't assume things about you. That there's still things that can bring us together."
He grins back at her. "Like Super Bowl ads?"
She laughs. "I guess. But you know what I mean, really."
"I know honey. And I'm sorry too. I didn't mean what I said earlier. I know you don't really hate this country." He gestures to the couch next to him. "Why don't you sit down, huh? We can watch the rest of the game together."
She straightens herself up, wipes her eyes. Suddenly feels a little self conscious. "Sure. Let me just go freshen up first."
"Of course honey."
Mom and Dad watch Sara leave the room, and then look at each other.
"Well."
"Well indeed."
"What did I tell you? You two just needed to spend some time together. Some quality time."
"I guess so. What did I ever do to deserve a woman as hot and as smart as you, huh Sheryl?"
Mom stands up and makes to leave the room, leaning down to kiss him as she passes. "I ask myself that question every day."
Alone, seen only by the TV, Dad smiles to himself. He picks up the remote, but instead of hitting play, he finds himself hitting rewind.
Cut to: drone footage. Grainy, monochrome. A group of figures move slowly through the desert. The camera tracks them. Zooms in. The pilot punches buttons. The figures become highlighted by a computer overlay, text appears next to them. ILLEGAL ENTRY ATTEMPT SUSPECTED. GROUND PATROLS ALERTED.
Cut to: on the ground, in the desert. The group of figures are all men. Dirty, scruffy, furtive. Like they mean business.They carry guns, pistols, and assault riffles. Bad hombres. One of them pulls open a bag, looks inside.
Cut to: close up of the inside of the bag. Inside are packets of white powder.
Suddenly, one of the party looks up, shouts something in Spanish. They all go to grab their guns.
But it's too late.
From three different directions, three different Chevrolet jeeps appear, screeching to a halt, kicking up dust. From them jump Border Patrol agents and Minutemen militia, guns drawn and ready.
The gang of men don't even put up a fight. They know they're surrounded, they drop their weapons and pathetically raise their hands.
All except one. The guy with the bag full of drugs. He's got nothing to lose. He reaches for his rifle.
Cut to: Border Patrol agents, opening fire.
Text flashes across the screen. ALERT CANCELLED. THREAT NEUTRALISED.
Cut to: the drone, banking and turning, flying away.
Cut to: exterior shot of the trailer. The still anonymous pilot exits, walks back towards his jeep.
Voiceover: Keeping America safe means never sleeping, but keeping America great means never forgetting who we are, and what keeps us strong.
The jeep starts up, pulls away from the camera in a cloud of dust.
Fade to black. Chevrolet logo. White text against black.
'We know what really makes America great'
Dad wipes another team from his eye. "I think we're going to be OK," he says to himself. "I think we're going to be just fine."
This article was originally published on TheLong+Short. Read the original article. | inflammatory | tenuous | strained | obligatory | 2 |
99902_1IHVLLLA_2 | Why have Sara and her father not spoken in over a year? | Divided we stand
Sara lets the Lyft park itself in the drive, lets out a sigh, and tweets
wish me luck
plus some emojis before slipping her phone into a hoody pocket. Curtains twitch, and before she can get her bag out of the back Mom is there, right there next to her, their hands touching on the handle as they compete for control.
"It's OK Mom, I got it."
"You should have let us come pick you up."
"It's fine, there was no need. I didn't want to put any-"
"But you shouldn't be wasting money, not with how much rent you pay and-"
Jesus. Not this already. "Mom. I can afford a cab ride. I'm not
that
much of a failure."
Mom sighs, shoulders falling, looks at Sara directly. "I'm sorry honey." She looks old, Sara thinks, watching a resigned tiredness flicker across her face in a way she'd not noticed before. Like she's exhausted by conflict, surrendered to it. "Now, don't I get a hug?"
Sara smiles. They hold each other for a few long seconds, rubbing and squeezing each other as the Lyft silently backs itself out of the driveway. When they part it's Mom's hand that's on the bag's handle.
Inside she unwraps herself from scarves and layers, the heat in the house almost a shock after the cold air. Michigan in February. Mom is already halfway up the stairs, bag in tow, headed for her room.
"Mom, just leave that and I'll…"
"Your father's in the front room," she says, just before she disappears from view. "Go say hi."
For a few seconds Sara is alone in the hallway, the smell of cooking meat coming from one doorway, the sound of rolling news from another. She shakes her head, kicks off shoes, tucks hair behind her ears. Braces herself.
He's sat in the living room, reclining in the Lazy Boy. He doesn't hear her enter - her socked feet silent on the pile carpet floor, his attention lost in the screen that fills most of the wall. Fox News. She braces herself again.
"Hey Dad."
His head jerks to look at her. "Hey! When did you get here?" He starts to push himself up.
"Don't get up Dad, it's fine. Really." She takes a seat on the couch. "I just got here, like two minutes ago."
"Good flight?"
"Yeah. Fine. Y'know. Same as always."
He smiles back at her, nods knowingly.
Their first words in nearly a year. Fine. So far. She relaxes. Of course it is. How bad could it be?
"I thought I was gonna come pick you up from the airport?"
"Ah, no. I got a cab. I didn't want to bother you."
"Bother me? You think I'm too old and infirm to pick my own daughter up from the airport?"
"No Dad, of course not."
The war spills out of Fox News, casualty figures scrolling across monochrome drone footage, attack helicopters circling over Caracas apartment blocks, pundits with bronzed skin and immaculate blond hair smiling from four-way split screens.
"So you just got a cab?"
"Yeah."
"How much did that cost?"
"Not much. Really. I can afford-"
"Cabs are expensive. You shouldn't be wasting your money."
"It wasn't expensive. It wasn't a cab, it was a Lyft."
"One of those driverless things?"
"Yeah."
Ad break. An elderly couple ride a tandem bicycle through a park, laughing and smiling in Instagram-perfect sunshine, as a calm, relaxing voice lists the potentially lethal side effects of a diabetes drug.
Dad shakes his head. "I don't know how you can use those things. I don't trust them."
"Dad, they're perfectly safe."
"That's not what I mean. They're stealing people's jobs."
There's a brief second, a fleeting moment, where Sara can bite her lip, let it go. She misses it. "But I thought it was immigrants that are stealing people's jobs?"
"You might think it's funny little lady, but let me tell you - you remember Kyle and Max, Bill Cooper's boys? Live up off Lafayette, past the Checkers?"
"Nope."
"Well let me tell you," He shifts in the recliner, with some obvious pain and effort, to face her. "Both of 'em lost their jobs just this last year. Both of 'em were truckers. Both of 'em been driving trucks since high school. Now the damn trucks are driving themselves and they're both out of work. And they got families to support. Kids."
"Well I'm sure they'll be fine." She regrets the sarcasm as soon as she hears it in her own voice, but she still can't stop herself, like it's expected, like it's part of the routine. Part of their schtick. "They just got to get themselves out there, huh Dad? Pull themselves up by their bootstraps. That's the American way, right?"
"I'm glad you think this is funny, I really do. But what you New York types need to realise is-"
"Ed!" Mom had appeared in the doorway. "Please! Both of you. No fighting today, please."
"Sheryl-"
"No. I don't want to hear you two as much as disagreeing about anything today, unless it's about the game. And even then you'd better keep it civil. Otherwise you can both go hungry. Understand?"
Awkward pause.
"Fine."
"Sorry Mom."
Sara turns back to the TV, to watching the war, to trying to work out which one it is.
It had always been this way, ever since she was about thirteen. Up until then it just seemed like constant warmth, as though she didn't have any childhood concept of Dad apart from him getting home from work, then her sitting on his knee, eating cookies and watching football highlights until Mom came in and scolded them both for ruining their appetites before dinner.
And then everything changed. Suddenly there was rap music and nose rings, sneaking out of the house to see her friends and not wanting to go to church. Suddenly he was no longer this lovable bear-man that ruffled her hair and gave her candy and explained defensive plays to her, but this huge obelisk of injustice that just wanted to crush her high school life into dust. It was constant warfare; every opinion she had became a battle, every decision she made a conflict. Getting away to college gave her escape, but bred resentment too; he hated that she went to New York, even though NYU was a good school, and her decision to stay there after she finished made things even worse. And then politics got all crazy, weirder then ever, and it became impossible for them to talk without it erupting into fights almost instantly. It was bad enough when the smart, young guy she liked was president and Dad constantly spewed his hate for him at her, but somehow it got even worse when the old, racist, women hating war-starter he liked won. Twice.
So they didn't talk much now, barely online, never on the phone. Since her second year of school he'd never been to NYC to visit her. She came back when she could face it; sometimes for birthdays, sometimes for Thanksgiving. Maybe for Christmas. But somehow always, like now, for the Super Bowl. Like football was the one thing they still had, that one thing they could still sit in the same room together for. Shouting at players, screaming at the ref, laughing at the ads.
Dad is in the bathroom, and Sara has had enough of Fox and whichever war this is. She reaches over and grabs the remote from the arm of his chair, and tries to find something else to watch. The government had scrapped all the rules about how the internet worked, and for most people like her parents it had suddenly gotten a lot cheaper to get their TV through Facebook, so all she can find is
Fox, Breitbart News, Family Values TV, Info Wars, The Rebel, Glenn Beck, The Voice of America, America First, The Bible Today
and lots of hunting and sports channels she doesn't even recognise. It's signed in to her Dad's FB account, and the last thing she wants is to try and log in on hers before he gets back from the john. Yeah. There was no way that would end up with them keeping it civil.
In her pocket her phone vibrates, purrs against her skin, reminding her it's there, making sure she's not forgotten where her real friends are, that there's a world outside, beyond Dad and his TV. She takes it out and cradles it in her hands, the dark screen fleetingly reflecting back her face before it jumps awake at her very touch, opening up to bathe her in blue light, in comfort and warmth and the familiar. For the first time since she got home she feels herself relax.
Dinner is Mom's meatloaf, with gravy and mashed potatoes. Cornbread and broccoli. Every mouthful tastes like nostalgia, and Sara can feel herself being encompassed by a bubble, this barrier of warm air and long forgotten simplicity enveloping her body, protecting her from the confusion of the world outside.
"How's work, honey?" Mom asks.
"Yeah, going OK." Sara works for a non-profit in Brooklyn that helps big organisations to transition to renewable energy. The pay is lousy but it feels important. "We just got the last few schools in the city to agree to put solar panels on their roofs. Big deal for us. I've been working on them for the last two years."
Mom says nothing, just looks down at her plate.
Dad finishes chewing his mouthful, swallows, wipes his beard with a napkin. Sighs, barely controlled anger simmering behind his face. "Solar panels cause cancer."
Sara laughs, covering her mouth as she nearly chokes on chewed food. "What? No they don't Dad."
"They do. The material they use to coat them reacts to sunlight, and produces an airborne carcinogen. It's based on a particular kind of rare earth. It's a bit like teflon. The Chinese have known about this for decades but have kept it covered up, because they-"
"Dad, no. Just no. Trust me."
"-because they are the world's largest manufacturers of solar panels. But the research has been done. The scientific evidence is out there. Look it up."
"Look it up?" Sara shakes her head, not knowing where to even start. "Dad, who is telling you this stuff?"
"No one is telling me it, Sara. I read it. It's in the news. I mean, really, I'm surprised you've not seen it. It was all over Facebook."
"Maybe on yours, but it's not all over my Facebook." She doesn't have the heart to tell him she muted him six months ago.
"Well, I don't read the news and I don't know any science," says Mom, "But I do know this: after they opened that solar farm up near Mary, within just a few years her and two of her neighbours had cancer. I mean I don't know anything for sure honey, but given the risk are you sure it's safe to be putting these panels on top of schools?"
"There's no risk, Mom. None at all. Dad, I wish you'd stop believing everything you see on Facebook."
"Well, maybe you should read things yourself before passing judgement on them." He pushes himself up from his seat, steps away from the table. Sara sighs, thinking she's upset him that much that he's actually abandoning his dinner, but he stops to grab something off a nearby shelf. His iPad. He heads back and takes his seat again.
Oh, here we fucking go
she thinks to herself.
He stabs at the screen, looks for a while, stabs again. Flips it over and hands it to her. "Here. Read."
Reluctantly, she takes it. His Facebook feed. Somewhere in the middle of it is the article, a very to the point CHINESE SOLAR PANELS CAUSE CANCER headline. But she can't even focus on it, because the rest of the screen is filled with distractions, looping videos and animated gifs, all adverts, and all for guns. Or security systems. Panic rooms. Back up power generators. Emergency rations. More guns.
"Jesus Christ Dad, these ads!"
"No blasphemy at the dinner table, please honey" says Mom.
"What about them?"
"Just… just look at them. They're terrifying. They're like… like adverts for the end of the world! You know they show you this stuff just to make you scared, right? Just to keep you paranoid."
"They show me this stuff because they've got products to sell. That's how the economy works. That's how we create jobs. Godammit Sara, are you telling me you hate
advertising
now? Do you just hate everything about America?"
Sara looks over to Mom, who looks like she's on the brink of tears. Suddenly she finds she's also lost the will to fight. Gently she closes the iPad and puts it down on the table, next to her plate.
"No, of course not Dad. Maybe I'll read this later, after the game."
After dinner she helps Mom clean-up, the two of them loading the dishwasher in near silence. She's leaning against the counter, scrolling through Twitter on her phone, when Mom finally speaks.
"You should go easy on your father, you know. He's worried about a lot of things."
"What things? Solar panel cancer?"
"Don't joke Sara, I'm serious. There's a lot that bothers him. The state of the world. The future. All these damn wars."
"We're all worried about all that, Mom."
"He's worried about his health.
I'm
worried about his health. Probably more than he is."
Sara looks up from her phone, genuine concern. "Is he OK?"
"I don't know. He won't go to the doctor. Hasn't been in months. He's worried about his insurance."
"I had no idea-"
"Yeah, well you know your father. Doesn't like to talk about it. Doesn't want to burden other people with his problems. Hates pity." She pauses, looks out the window into the yard. When she turns back to Sara her eyes are damp. "This is why I was so excited about you coming back. Why he was so excited! I thought it'd take his mind of all this. He was so excited to see you. You know he loves watching the game with you, Sara."
"I know. I'm sorry I-"
"And the ads! The Super Bowl ads! You know how much he loves watching the new ads with you. It's a stupid thing, sure, but he loves it. Talks about it all the time. It's like a tradition to him. That's why he got so upset over dinner when you got angry at his ads. It's something special he has with you, he doesn't want to lose it."
Sara slips her phone into her pocket, genuine guilt. Feels like a spoiled kid. "I didn't realise. I'm sorry."
Mom smiles, walks over and kisses her on the forehead. "It's OK honey. Don't feel bad. Just go. Just go sit in there with him and watch some TV. Please."
It's the second down on the Falcon's 60 yard line with 30 yards to cover, and the Lions need one touchdown to equalise. Sara and her Dad are sat in the front room, working their way through a family sized pack of Oreos, when the ad break starts.
Dawn. Red skies over the desert. A Chevrolet truck pulls up next to a large, trailer. Low shot next to the front tire, as a cowboy booted foot drops down from the door, disturbing dust.
Cut to: internal shot of the trailer, darkness split by morning light through the opening door. The figure enters, flicks on lights. The room is full of equipment, computers. The figure takes a seat, puts on a headset, thumbs on screens. Rests their hands on two large joysticks on the desk.
Cut to: airfield, the desert. The distinctive silhouette of a Predator drone taxis across the screen, rising heat shimmering the air around it.
Cut to: interior of the trailer. The faceless figure works controls, the joysticks, touch screens.
Voiceover: They say you need to get up pretty early to get past America's finest. But the truth is we never sleep.
Cut to: a uniformed guard on top of the border wall. He looks up and gives a salute to the drone as it soars above him, out and across the desert.
Cut to: drone footage. Grainy, monochrome. A group of figures move slowly through the desert. The camera tracks them. Zooms in. The pilot punches buttons. The figures become highlighted by a computer overlay, text appears next to them. ILLEGAL ENTRY ATTEMPT SUSPECTED. GROUND PATROLS ALERTED.
"Fuck this," says Sara, getting up from her seat.
"Sara!" says Mom.
"No I'm sorry, I can't. I can't sit here and watch this… this bullshit. This propaganda." She storms out of the room.
"Sara!" Mom makes to get up.
"No, just leave her," says Dad, gently, his eyes still fixed on the screen. "Just let her go."
Out in the kitchen Sara sits at the table and wants to scream. She's angry, mainly with herself. She should never have fucking come here. She should have known better. There was never any fucking way anything good was going to come from this. As much as Mom wants to romanticise things, to make them sound cute and adorable, the truth is shit with Dad has never been right since she was a teenager. Too much resentment, too much bad blood, too much control and rebellion. They hadn't agreed on anything - they hadn't managed to have a simple conversation that didn't descend into fighting - in 15 goddamn years, and no amount of eating cookies and watching fucking Super Bowl ads on the TV was going to fix that.
She sighs, wipes a tear from her cheek. On autopilot she takes her phone from her pocket, feels its reassuring warmth in her hand, and swipes open Twitter.
Everybody seems to be talking about the same thing.
omg im crying
holy shit that chevrolet ad /fire emoji
that was sooooo beautiful
who knew chevrolet were so woke
i can't believe they did that, so amazing
Hang on, are they taking about the same ad?
Hastily she opens her FB TV app, pulls up the game. The ad is just finishing. She hits the 10-second rewind icon a couple of times, then leans the phone on its side against a ketchup bottle.
Cut to: drone footage. Grainy, monochrome. A group of figures move slowly through the desert. The camera tracks them. Zooms in. The pilot punches buttons. The figures become highlighted by a computer overlay, text appears next to them. ILLEGAL ENTRY ATTEMPT SUSPECTED. GROUND PATROLS ALERTED.
Cut to: on the ground, in the desert. The group of figures are revealed to be a Mexican family, maybe two. Men, women, children. They look tired, hungry. They stop to rest, sipping the little water they have left from tattered plastic bottles.
A little way away from the main group sits a small child, a girl. Maybe 8 years old. She is drawing shapes in the dust with a stick. She's drawn quite a bit it looks like, but from our angle we can't see what.
Cut to: drone footage. The pilot is watching the group. As he tracks away from the main party to where the girl is sat, the camera reveals what she has drawn.
A large, child's rendition of the American flag.
Underneath it, it childlike handwriting, some words. 'I have a dream'
Text flashes across the screen. ALERT CANCELLED. ALL PATROLS: STAND DOWN
Cut to: the drone, banking and turning, flying away.
Cut to: exterior shot of the trailer. The still anonymous pilot exits, walks back towards his jeep.
Voiceover: Keeping America safe means never sleeping, but keeping America great means never forgetting who we are, and how we got here.
The jeep starts up, pulls away from the camera in a cloud of dust.
Fade to black. Chevrolet logo. White text against black.
'We know what really makes America great'
Sara finds herself in the front room, sobbing.
"Honey?"
Dad pauses the TV, looks up at her. It looks like he's been crying too. "Sara?"
"Did you - did you watch it?"
"The Chevrolet ad?"
"Yeah."
"Yeah, we did." Embarrassed, he wipes a tear from his cheek. "It was… it was very moving."
She falls on him, wrapping her arms around his neck, burying her face in his chest. "I'm sorry Dad. I'm so sorry. I didn't mean to be so mean-"
"It's OK, honey. It really is."
"No, no it's not. We always fight. And I know that's mainly my fault-"
'Well, now, c'mon-"
"No, it is. It's my fault. I got myself into thinking we can never agree on anything, that we can never see eye to eye. That we've got nothing in common anymore." She lifts her head to look up at him. "But I know that's wrong. That I shouldn't assume things about you. That there's still things that can bring us together."
He grins back at her. "Like Super Bowl ads?"
She laughs. "I guess. But you know what I mean, really."
"I know honey. And I'm sorry too. I didn't mean what I said earlier. I know you don't really hate this country." He gestures to the couch next to him. "Why don't you sit down, huh? We can watch the rest of the game together."
She straightens herself up, wipes her eyes. Suddenly feels a little self conscious. "Sure. Let me just go freshen up first."
"Of course honey."
Mom and Dad watch Sara leave the room, and then look at each other.
"Well."
"Well indeed."
"What did I tell you? You two just needed to spend some time together. Some quality time."
"I guess so. What did I ever do to deserve a woman as hot and as smart as you, huh Sheryl?"
Mom stands up and makes to leave the room, leaning down to kiss him as she passes. "I ask myself that question every day."
Alone, seen only by the TV, Dad smiles to himself. He picks up the remote, but instead of hitting play, he finds himself hitting rewind.
Cut to: drone footage. Grainy, monochrome. A group of figures move slowly through the desert. The camera tracks them. Zooms in. The pilot punches buttons. The figures become highlighted by a computer overlay, text appears next to them. ILLEGAL ENTRY ATTEMPT SUSPECTED. GROUND PATROLS ALERTED.
Cut to: on the ground, in the desert. The group of figures are all men. Dirty, scruffy, furtive. Like they mean business.They carry guns, pistols, and assault riffles. Bad hombres. One of them pulls open a bag, looks inside.
Cut to: close up of the inside of the bag. Inside are packets of white powder.
Suddenly, one of the party looks up, shouts something in Spanish. They all go to grab their guns.
But it's too late.
From three different directions, three different Chevrolet jeeps appear, screeching to a halt, kicking up dust. From them jump Border Patrol agents and Minutemen militia, guns drawn and ready.
The gang of men don't even put up a fight. They know they're surrounded, they drop their weapons and pathetically raise their hands.
All except one. The guy with the bag full of drugs. He's got nothing to lose. He reaches for his rifle.
Cut to: Border Patrol agents, opening fire.
Text flashes across the screen. ALERT CANCELLED. THREAT NEUTRALISED.
Cut to: the drone, banking and turning, flying away.
Cut to: exterior shot of the trailer. The still anonymous pilot exits, walks back towards his jeep.
Voiceover: Keeping America safe means never sleeping, but keeping America great means never forgetting who we are, and what keeps us strong.
The jeep starts up, pulls away from the camera in a cloud of dust.
Fade to black. Chevrolet logo. White text against black.
'We know what really makes America great'
Dad wipes another team from his eye. "I think we're going to be OK," he says to himself. "I think we're going to be just fine."
This article was originally published on TheLong+Short. Read the original article. | Sara attended college in New York and stayed there after graduating. | They have intense disagreements on most political issues. | Sara and her father voted for different presidential candidates. | Sara's father was an authoritative presence during her high school years. | 1 |
99902_1IHVLLLA_3 | At what point did Sara's relationship with her father sharply transition? | Divided we stand
Sara lets the Lyft park itself in the drive, lets out a sigh, and tweets
wish me luck
plus some emojis before slipping her phone into a hoody pocket. Curtains twitch, and before she can get her bag out of the back Mom is there, right there next to her, their hands touching on the handle as they compete for control.
"It's OK Mom, I got it."
"You should have let us come pick you up."
"It's fine, there was no need. I didn't want to put any-"
"But you shouldn't be wasting money, not with how much rent you pay and-"
Jesus. Not this already. "Mom. I can afford a cab ride. I'm not
that
much of a failure."
Mom sighs, shoulders falling, looks at Sara directly. "I'm sorry honey." She looks old, Sara thinks, watching a resigned tiredness flicker across her face in a way she'd not noticed before. Like she's exhausted by conflict, surrendered to it. "Now, don't I get a hug?"
Sara smiles. They hold each other for a few long seconds, rubbing and squeezing each other as the Lyft silently backs itself out of the driveway. When they part it's Mom's hand that's on the bag's handle.
Inside she unwraps herself from scarves and layers, the heat in the house almost a shock after the cold air. Michigan in February. Mom is already halfway up the stairs, bag in tow, headed for her room.
"Mom, just leave that and I'll…"
"Your father's in the front room," she says, just before she disappears from view. "Go say hi."
For a few seconds Sara is alone in the hallway, the smell of cooking meat coming from one doorway, the sound of rolling news from another. She shakes her head, kicks off shoes, tucks hair behind her ears. Braces herself.
He's sat in the living room, reclining in the Lazy Boy. He doesn't hear her enter - her socked feet silent on the pile carpet floor, his attention lost in the screen that fills most of the wall. Fox News. She braces herself again.
"Hey Dad."
His head jerks to look at her. "Hey! When did you get here?" He starts to push himself up.
"Don't get up Dad, it's fine. Really." She takes a seat on the couch. "I just got here, like two minutes ago."
"Good flight?"
"Yeah. Fine. Y'know. Same as always."
He smiles back at her, nods knowingly.
Their first words in nearly a year. Fine. So far. She relaxes. Of course it is. How bad could it be?
"I thought I was gonna come pick you up from the airport?"
"Ah, no. I got a cab. I didn't want to bother you."
"Bother me? You think I'm too old and infirm to pick my own daughter up from the airport?"
"No Dad, of course not."
The war spills out of Fox News, casualty figures scrolling across monochrome drone footage, attack helicopters circling over Caracas apartment blocks, pundits with bronzed skin and immaculate blond hair smiling from four-way split screens.
"So you just got a cab?"
"Yeah."
"How much did that cost?"
"Not much. Really. I can afford-"
"Cabs are expensive. You shouldn't be wasting your money."
"It wasn't expensive. It wasn't a cab, it was a Lyft."
"One of those driverless things?"
"Yeah."
Ad break. An elderly couple ride a tandem bicycle through a park, laughing and smiling in Instagram-perfect sunshine, as a calm, relaxing voice lists the potentially lethal side effects of a diabetes drug.
Dad shakes his head. "I don't know how you can use those things. I don't trust them."
"Dad, they're perfectly safe."
"That's not what I mean. They're stealing people's jobs."
There's a brief second, a fleeting moment, where Sara can bite her lip, let it go. She misses it. "But I thought it was immigrants that are stealing people's jobs?"
"You might think it's funny little lady, but let me tell you - you remember Kyle and Max, Bill Cooper's boys? Live up off Lafayette, past the Checkers?"
"Nope."
"Well let me tell you," He shifts in the recliner, with some obvious pain and effort, to face her. "Both of 'em lost their jobs just this last year. Both of 'em were truckers. Both of 'em been driving trucks since high school. Now the damn trucks are driving themselves and they're both out of work. And they got families to support. Kids."
"Well I'm sure they'll be fine." She regrets the sarcasm as soon as she hears it in her own voice, but she still can't stop herself, like it's expected, like it's part of the routine. Part of their schtick. "They just got to get themselves out there, huh Dad? Pull themselves up by their bootstraps. That's the American way, right?"
"I'm glad you think this is funny, I really do. But what you New York types need to realise is-"
"Ed!" Mom had appeared in the doorway. "Please! Both of you. No fighting today, please."
"Sheryl-"
"No. I don't want to hear you two as much as disagreeing about anything today, unless it's about the game. And even then you'd better keep it civil. Otherwise you can both go hungry. Understand?"
Awkward pause.
"Fine."
"Sorry Mom."
Sara turns back to the TV, to watching the war, to trying to work out which one it is.
It had always been this way, ever since she was about thirteen. Up until then it just seemed like constant warmth, as though she didn't have any childhood concept of Dad apart from him getting home from work, then her sitting on his knee, eating cookies and watching football highlights until Mom came in and scolded them both for ruining their appetites before dinner.
And then everything changed. Suddenly there was rap music and nose rings, sneaking out of the house to see her friends and not wanting to go to church. Suddenly he was no longer this lovable bear-man that ruffled her hair and gave her candy and explained defensive plays to her, but this huge obelisk of injustice that just wanted to crush her high school life into dust. It was constant warfare; every opinion she had became a battle, every decision she made a conflict. Getting away to college gave her escape, but bred resentment too; he hated that she went to New York, even though NYU was a good school, and her decision to stay there after she finished made things even worse. And then politics got all crazy, weirder then ever, and it became impossible for them to talk without it erupting into fights almost instantly. It was bad enough when the smart, young guy she liked was president and Dad constantly spewed his hate for him at her, but somehow it got even worse when the old, racist, women hating war-starter he liked won. Twice.
So they didn't talk much now, barely online, never on the phone. Since her second year of school he'd never been to NYC to visit her. She came back when she could face it; sometimes for birthdays, sometimes for Thanksgiving. Maybe for Christmas. But somehow always, like now, for the Super Bowl. Like football was the one thing they still had, that one thing they could still sit in the same room together for. Shouting at players, screaming at the ref, laughing at the ads.
Dad is in the bathroom, and Sara has had enough of Fox and whichever war this is. She reaches over and grabs the remote from the arm of his chair, and tries to find something else to watch. The government had scrapped all the rules about how the internet worked, and for most people like her parents it had suddenly gotten a lot cheaper to get their TV through Facebook, so all she can find is
Fox, Breitbart News, Family Values TV, Info Wars, The Rebel, Glenn Beck, The Voice of America, America First, The Bible Today
and lots of hunting and sports channels she doesn't even recognise. It's signed in to her Dad's FB account, and the last thing she wants is to try and log in on hers before he gets back from the john. Yeah. There was no way that would end up with them keeping it civil.
In her pocket her phone vibrates, purrs against her skin, reminding her it's there, making sure she's not forgotten where her real friends are, that there's a world outside, beyond Dad and his TV. She takes it out and cradles it in her hands, the dark screen fleetingly reflecting back her face before it jumps awake at her very touch, opening up to bathe her in blue light, in comfort and warmth and the familiar. For the first time since she got home she feels herself relax.
Dinner is Mom's meatloaf, with gravy and mashed potatoes. Cornbread and broccoli. Every mouthful tastes like nostalgia, and Sara can feel herself being encompassed by a bubble, this barrier of warm air and long forgotten simplicity enveloping her body, protecting her from the confusion of the world outside.
"How's work, honey?" Mom asks.
"Yeah, going OK." Sara works for a non-profit in Brooklyn that helps big organisations to transition to renewable energy. The pay is lousy but it feels important. "We just got the last few schools in the city to agree to put solar panels on their roofs. Big deal for us. I've been working on them for the last two years."
Mom says nothing, just looks down at her plate.
Dad finishes chewing his mouthful, swallows, wipes his beard with a napkin. Sighs, barely controlled anger simmering behind his face. "Solar panels cause cancer."
Sara laughs, covering her mouth as she nearly chokes on chewed food. "What? No they don't Dad."
"They do. The material they use to coat them reacts to sunlight, and produces an airborne carcinogen. It's based on a particular kind of rare earth. It's a bit like teflon. The Chinese have known about this for decades but have kept it covered up, because they-"
"Dad, no. Just no. Trust me."
"-because they are the world's largest manufacturers of solar panels. But the research has been done. The scientific evidence is out there. Look it up."
"Look it up?" Sara shakes her head, not knowing where to even start. "Dad, who is telling you this stuff?"
"No one is telling me it, Sara. I read it. It's in the news. I mean, really, I'm surprised you've not seen it. It was all over Facebook."
"Maybe on yours, but it's not all over my Facebook." She doesn't have the heart to tell him she muted him six months ago.
"Well, I don't read the news and I don't know any science," says Mom, "But I do know this: after they opened that solar farm up near Mary, within just a few years her and two of her neighbours had cancer. I mean I don't know anything for sure honey, but given the risk are you sure it's safe to be putting these panels on top of schools?"
"There's no risk, Mom. None at all. Dad, I wish you'd stop believing everything you see on Facebook."
"Well, maybe you should read things yourself before passing judgement on them." He pushes himself up from his seat, steps away from the table. Sara sighs, thinking she's upset him that much that he's actually abandoning his dinner, but he stops to grab something off a nearby shelf. His iPad. He heads back and takes his seat again.
Oh, here we fucking go
she thinks to herself.
He stabs at the screen, looks for a while, stabs again. Flips it over and hands it to her. "Here. Read."
Reluctantly, she takes it. His Facebook feed. Somewhere in the middle of it is the article, a very to the point CHINESE SOLAR PANELS CAUSE CANCER headline. But she can't even focus on it, because the rest of the screen is filled with distractions, looping videos and animated gifs, all adverts, and all for guns. Or security systems. Panic rooms. Back up power generators. Emergency rations. More guns.
"Jesus Christ Dad, these ads!"
"No blasphemy at the dinner table, please honey" says Mom.
"What about them?"
"Just… just look at them. They're terrifying. They're like… like adverts for the end of the world! You know they show you this stuff just to make you scared, right? Just to keep you paranoid."
"They show me this stuff because they've got products to sell. That's how the economy works. That's how we create jobs. Godammit Sara, are you telling me you hate
advertising
now? Do you just hate everything about America?"
Sara looks over to Mom, who looks like she's on the brink of tears. Suddenly she finds she's also lost the will to fight. Gently she closes the iPad and puts it down on the table, next to her plate.
"No, of course not Dad. Maybe I'll read this later, after the game."
After dinner she helps Mom clean-up, the two of them loading the dishwasher in near silence. She's leaning against the counter, scrolling through Twitter on her phone, when Mom finally speaks.
"You should go easy on your father, you know. He's worried about a lot of things."
"What things? Solar panel cancer?"
"Don't joke Sara, I'm serious. There's a lot that bothers him. The state of the world. The future. All these damn wars."
"We're all worried about all that, Mom."
"He's worried about his health.
I'm
worried about his health. Probably more than he is."
Sara looks up from her phone, genuine concern. "Is he OK?"
"I don't know. He won't go to the doctor. Hasn't been in months. He's worried about his insurance."
"I had no idea-"
"Yeah, well you know your father. Doesn't like to talk about it. Doesn't want to burden other people with his problems. Hates pity." She pauses, looks out the window into the yard. When she turns back to Sara her eyes are damp. "This is why I was so excited about you coming back. Why he was so excited! I thought it'd take his mind of all this. He was so excited to see you. You know he loves watching the game with you, Sara."
"I know. I'm sorry I-"
"And the ads! The Super Bowl ads! You know how much he loves watching the new ads with you. It's a stupid thing, sure, but he loves it. Talks about it all the time. It's like a tradition to him. That's why he got so upset over dinner when you got angry at his ads. It's something special he has with you, he doesn't want to lose it."
Sara slips her phone into her pocket, genuine guilt. Feels like a spoiled kid. "I didn't realise. I'm sorry."
Mom smiles, walks over and kisses her on the forehead. "It's OK honey. Don't feel bad. Just go. Just go sit in there with him and watch some TV. Please."
It's the second down on the Falcon's 60 yard line with 30 yards to cover, and the Lions need one touchdown to equalise. Sara and her Dad are sat in the front room, working their way through a family sized pack of Oreos, when the ad break starts.
Dawn. Red skies over the desert. A Chevrolet truck pulls up next to a large, trailer. Low shot next to the front tire, as a cowboy booted foot drops down from the door, disturbing dust.
Cut to: internal shot of the trailer, darkness split by morning light through the opening door. The figure enters, flicks on lights. The room is full of equipment, computers. The figure takes a seat, puts on a headset, thumbs on screens. Rests their hands on two large joysticks on the desk.
Cut to: airfield, the desert. The distinctive silhouette of a Predator drone taxis across the screen, rising heat shimmering the air around it.
Cut to: interior of the trailer. The faceless figure works controls, the joysticks, touch screens.
Voiceover: They say you need to get up pretty early to get past America's finest. But the truth is we never sleep.
Cut to: a uniformed guard on top of the border wall. He looks up and gives a salute to the drone as it soars above him, out and across the desert.
Cut to: drone footage. Grainy, monochrome. A group of figures move slowly through the desert. The camera tracks them. Zooms in. The pilot punches buttons. The figures become highlighted by a computer overlay, text appears next to them. ILLEGAL ENTRY ATTEMPT SUSPECTED. GROUND PATROLS ALERTED.
"Fuck this," says Sara, getting up from her seat.
"Sara!" says Mom.
"No I'm sorry, I can't. I can't sit here and watch this… this bullshit. This propaganda." She storms out of the room.
"Sara!" Mom makes to get up.
"No, just leave her," says Dad, gently, his eyes still fixed on the screen. "Just let her go."
Out in the kitchen Sara sits at the table and wants to scream. She's angry, mainly with herself. She should never have fucking come here. She should have known better. There was never any fucking way anything good was going to come from this. As much as Mom wants to romanticise things, to make them sound cute and adorable, the truth is shit with Dad has never been right since she was a teenager. Too much resentment, too much bad blood, too much control and rebellion. They hadn't agreed on anything - they hadn't managed to have a simple conversation that didn't descend into fighting - in 15 goddamn years, and no amount of eating cookies and watching fucking Super Bowl ads on the TV was going to fix that.
She sighs, wipes a tear from her cheek. On autopilot she takes her phone from her pocket, feels its reassuring warmth in her hand, and swipes open Twitter.
Everybody seems to be talking about the same thing.
omg im crying
holy shit that chevrolet ad /fire emoji
that was sooooo beautiful
who knew chevrolet were so woke
i can't believe they did that, so amazing
Hang on, are they taking about the same ad?
Hastily she opens her FB TV app, pulls up the game. The ad is just finishing. She hits the 10-second rewind icon a couple of times, then leans the phone on its side against a ketchup bottle.
Cut to: drone footage. Grainy, monochrome. A group of figures move slowly through the desert. The camera tracks them. Zooms in. The pilot punches buttons. The figures become highlighted by a computer overlay, text appears next to them. ILLEGAL ENTRY ATTEMPT SUSPECTED. GROUND PATROLS ALERTED.
Cut to: on the ground, in the desert. The group of figures are revealed to be a Mexican family, maybe two. Men, women, children. They look tired, hungry. They stop to rest, sipping the little water they have left from tattered plastic bottles.
A little way away from the main group sits a small child, a girl. Maybe 8 years old. She is drawing shapes in the dust with a stick. She's drawn quite a bit it looks like, but from our angle we can't see what.
Cut to: drone footage. The pilot is watching the group. As he tracks away from the main party to where the girl is sat, the camera reveals what she has drawn.
A large, child's rendition of the American flag.
Underneath it, it childlike handwriting, some words. 'I have a dream'
Text flashes across the screen. ALERT CANCELLED. ALL PATROLS: STAND DOWN
Cut to: the drone, banking and turning, flying away.
Cut to: exterior shot of the trailer. The still anonymous pilot exits, walks back towards his jeep.
Voiceover: Keeping America safe means never sleeping, but keeping America great means never forgetting who we are, and how we got here.
The jeep starts up, pulls away from the camera in a cloud of dust.
Fade to black. Chevrolet logo. White text against black.
'We know what really makes America great'
Sara finds herself in the front room, sobbing.
"Honey?"
Dad pauses the TV, looks up at her. It looks like he's been crying too. "Sara?"
"Did you - did you watch it?"
"The Chevrolet ad?"
"Yeah."
"Yeah, we did." Embarrassed, he wipes a tear from his cheek. "It was… it was very moving."
She falls on him, wrapping her arms around his neck, burying her face in his chest. "I'm sorry Dad. I'm so sorry. I didn't mean to be so mean-"
"It's OK, honey. It really is."
"No, no it's not. We always fight. And I know that's mainly my fault-"
'Well, now, c'mon-"
"No, it is. It's my fault. I got myself into thinking we can never agree on anything, that we can never see eye to eye. That we've got nothing in common anymore." She lifts her head to look up at him. "But I know that's wrong. That I shouldn't assume things about you. That there's still things that can bring us together."
He grins back at her. "Like Super Bowl ads?"
She laughs. "I guess. But you know what I mean, really."
"I know honey. And I'm sorry too. I didn't mean what I said earlier. I know you don't really hate this country." He gestures to the couch next to him. "Why don't you sit down, huh? We can watch the rest of the game together."
She straightens herself up, wipes her eyes. Suddenly feels a little self conscious. "Sure. Let me just go freshen up first."
"Of course honey."
Mom and Dad watch Sara leave the room, and then look at each other.
"Well."
"Well indeed."
"What did I tell you? You two just needed to spend some time together. Some quality time."
"I guess so. What did I ever do to deserve a woman as hot and as smart as you, huh Sheryl?"
Mom stands up and makes to leave the room, leaning down to kiss him as she passes. "I ask myself that question every day."
Alone, seen only by the TV, Dad smiles to himself. He picks up the remote, but instead of hitting play, he finds himself hitting rewind.
Cut to: drone footage. Grainy, monochrome. A group of figures move slowly through the desert. The camera tracks them. Zooms in. The pilot punches buttons. The figures become highlighted by a computer overlay, text appears next to them. ILLEGAL ENTRY ATTEMPT SUSPECTED. GROUND PATROLS ALERTED.
Cut to: on the ground, in the desert. The group of figures are all men. Dirty, scruffy, furtive. Like they mean business.They carry guns, pistols, and assault riffles. Bad hombres. One of them pulls open a bag, looks inside.
Cut to: close up of the inside of the bag. Inside are packets of white powder.
Suddenly, one of the party looks up, shouts something in Spanish. They all go to grab their guns.
But it's too late.
From three different directions, three different Chevrolet jeeps appear, screeching to a halt, kicking up dust. From them jump Border Patrol agents and Minutemen militia, guns drawn and ready.
The gang of men don't even put up a fight. They know they're surrounded, they drop their weapons and pathetically raise their hands.
All except one. The guy with the bag full of drugs. He's got nothing to lose. He reaches for his rifle.
Cut to: Border Patrol agents, opening fire.
Text flashes across the screen. ALERT CANCELLED. THREAT NEUTRALISED.
Cut to: the drone, banking and turning, flying away.
Cut to: exterior shot of the trailer. The still anonymous pilot exits, walks back towards his jeep.
Voiceover: Keeping America safe means never sleeping, but keeping America great means never forgetting who we are, and what keeps us strong.
The jeep starts up, pulls away from the camera in a cloud of dust.
Fade to black. Chevrolet logo. White text against black.
'We know what really makes America great'
Dad wipes another team from his eye. "I think we're going to be OK," he says to himself. "I think we're going to be just fine."
This article was originally published on TheLong+Short. Read the original article. | When she remained in New York after graduating from NYU | When she pierced her nose | When she began high school | When she moved to New York | 2 |
99902_1IHVLLLA_4 | Describe Sara's attitude toward Fox: | Divided we stand
Sara lets the Lyft park itself in the drive, lets out a sigh, and tweets
wish me luck
plus some emojis before slipping her phone into a hoody pocket. Curtains twitch, and before she can get her bag out of the back Mom is there, right there next to her, their hands touching on the handle as they compete for control.
"It's OK Mom, I got it."
"You should have let us come pick you up."
"It's fine, there was no need. I didn't want to put any-"
"But you shouldn't be wasting money, not with how much rent you pay and-"
Jesus. Not this already. "Mom. I can afford a cab ride. I'm not
that
much of a failure."
Mom sighs, shoulders falling, looks at Sara directly. "I'm sorry honey." She looks old, Sara thinks, watching a resigned tiredness flicker across her face in a way she'd not noticed before. Like she's exhausted by conflict, surrendered to it. "Now, don't I get a hug?"
Sara smiles. They hold each other for a few long seconds, rubbing and squeezing each other as the Lyft silently backs itself out of the driveway. When they part it's Mom's hand that's on the bag's handle.
Inside she unwraps herself from scarves and layers, the heat in the house almost a shock after the cold air. Michigan in February. Mom is already halfway up the stairs, bag in tow, headed for her room.
"Mom, just leave that and I'll…"
"Your father's in the front room," she says, just before she disappears from view. "Go say hi."
For a few seconds Sara is alone in the hallway, the smell of cooking meat coming from one doorway, the sound of rolling news from another. She shakes her head, kicks off shoes, tucks hair behind her ears. Braces herself.
He's sat in the living room, reclining in the Lazy Boy. He doesn't hear her enter - her socked feet silent on the pile carpet floor, his attention lost in the screen that fills most of the wall. Fox News. She braces herself again.
"Hey Dad."
His head jerks to look at her. "Hey! When did you get here?" He starts to push himself up.
"Don't get up Dad, it's fine. Really." She takes a seat on the couch. "I just got here, like two minutes ago."
"Good flight?"
"Yeah. Fine. Y'know. Same as always."
He smiles back at her, nods knowingly.
Their first words in nearly a year. Fine. So far. She relaxes. Of course it is. How bad could it be?
"I thought I was gonna come pick you up from the airport?"
"Ah, no. I got a cab. I didn't want to bother you."
"Bother me? You think I'm too old and infirm to pick my own daughter up from the airport?"
"No Dad, of course not."
The war spills out of Fox News, casualty figures scrolling across monochrome drone footage, attack helicopters circling over Caracas apartment blocks, pundits with bronzed skin and immaculate blond hair smiling from four-way split screens.
"So you just got a cab?"
"Yeah."
"How much did that cost?"
"Not much. Really. I can afford-"
"Cabs are expensive. You shouldn't be wasting your money."
"It wasn't expensive. It wasn't a cab, it was a Lyft."
"One of those driverless things?"
"Yeah."
Ad break. An elderly couple ride a tandem bicycle through a park, laughing and smiling in Instagram-perfect sunshine, as a calm, relaxing voice lists the potentially lethal side effects of a diabetes drug.
Dad shakes his head. "I don't know how you can use those things. I don't trust them."
"Dad, they're perfectly safe."
"That's not what I mean. They're stealing people's jobs."
There's a brief second, a fleeting moment, where Sara can bite her lip, let it go. She misses it. "But I thought it was immigrants that are stealing people's jobs?"
"You might think it's funny little lady, but let me tell you - you remember Kyle and Max, Bill Cooper's boys? Live up off Lafayette, past the Checkers?"
"Nope."
"Well let me tell you," He shifts in the recliner, with some obvious pain and effort, to face her. "Both of 'em lost their jobs just this last year. Both of 'em were truckers. Both of 'em been driving trucks since high school. Now the damn trucks are driving themselves and they're both out of work. And they got families to support. Kids."
"Well I'm sure they'll be fine." She regrets the sarcasm as soon as she hears it in her own voice, but she still can't stop herself, like it's expected, like it's part of the routine. Part of their schtick. "They just got to get themselves out there, huh Dad? Pull themselves up by their bootstraps. That's the American way, right?"
"I'm glad you think this is funny, I really do. But what you New York types need to realise is-"
"Ed!" Mom had appeared in the doorway. "Please! Both of you. No fighting today, please."
"Sheryl-"
"No. I don't want to hear you two as much as disagreeing about anything today, unless it's about the game. And even then you'd better keep it civil. Otherwise you can both go hungry. Understand?"
Awkward pause.
"Fine."
"Sorry Mom."
Sara turns back to the TV, to watching the war, to trying to work out which one it is.
It had always been this way, ever since she was about thirteen. Up until then it just seemed like constant warmth, as though she didn't have any childhood concept of Dad apart from him getting home from work, then her sitting on his knee, eating cookies and watching football highlights until Mom came in and scolded them both for ruining their appetites before dinner.
And then everything changed. Suddenly there was rap music and nose rings, sneaking out of the house to see her friends and not wanting to go to church. Suddenly he was no longer this lovable bear-man that ruffled her hair and gave her candy and explained defensive plays to her, but this huge obelisk of injustice that just wanted to crush her high school life into dust. It was constant warfare; every opinion she had became a battle, every decision she made a conflict. Getting away to college gave her escape, but bred resentment too; he hated that she went to New York, even though NYU was a good school, and her decision to stay there after she finished made things even worse. And then politics got all crazy, weirder then ever, and it became impossible for them to talk without it erupting into fights almost instantly. It was bad enough when the smart, young guy she liked was president and Dad constantly spewed his hate for him at her, but somehow it got even worse when the old, racist, women hating war-starter he liked won. Twice.
So they didn't talk much now, barely online, never on the phone. Since her second year of school he'd never been to NYC to visit her. She came back when she could face it; sometimes for birthdays, sometimes for Thanksgiving. Maybe for Christmas. But somehow always, like now, for the Super Bowl. Like football was the one thing they still had, that one thing they could still sit in the same room together for. Shouting at players, screaming at the ref, laughing at the ads.
Dad is in the bathroom, and Sara has had enough of Fox and whichever war this is. She reaches over and grabs the remote from the arm of his chair, and tries to find something else to watch. The government had scrapped all the rules about how the internet worked, and for most people like her parents it had suddenly gotten a lot cheaper to get their TV through Facebook, so all she can find is
Fox, Breitbart News, Family Values TV, Info Wars, The Rebel, Glenn Beck, The Voice of America, America First, The Bible Today
and lots of hunting and sports channels she doesn't even recognise. It's signed in to her Dad's FB account, and the last thing she wants is to try and log in on hers before he gets back from the john. Yeah. There was no way that would end up with them keeping it civil.
In her pocket her phone vibrates, purrs against her skin, reminding her it's there, making sure she's not forgotten where her real friends are, that there's a world outside, beyond Dad and his TV. She takes it out and cradles it in her hands, the dark screen fleetingly reflecting back her face before it jumps awake at her very touch, opening up to bathe her in blue light, in comfort and warmth and the familiar. For the first time since she got home she feels herself relax.
Dinner is Mom's meatloaf, with gravy and mashed potatoes. Cornbread and broccoli. Every mouthful tastes like nostalgia, and Sara can feel herself being encompassed by a bubble, this barrier of warm air and long forgotten simplicity enveloping her body, protecting her from the confusion of the world outside.
"How's work, honey?" Mom asks.
"Yeah, going OK." Sara works for a non-profit in Brooklyn that helps big organisations to transition to renewable energy. The pay is lousy but it feels important. "We just got the last few schools in the city to agree to put solar panels on their roofs. Big deal for us. I've been working on them for the last two years."
Mom says nothing, just looks down at her plate.
Dad finishes chewing his mouthful, swallows, wipes his beard with a napkin. Sighs, barely controlled anger simmering behind his face. "Solar panels cause cancer."
Sara laughs, covering her mouth as she nearly chokes on chewed food. "What? No they don't Dad."
"They do. The material they use to coat them reacts to sunlight, and produces an airborne carcinogen. It's based on a particular kind of rare earth. It's a bit like teflon. The Chinese have known about this for decades but have kept it covered up, because they-"
"Dad, no. Just no. Trust me."
"-because they are the world's largest manufacturers of solar panels. But the research has been done. The scientific evidence is out there. Look it up."
"Look it up?" Sara shakes her head, not knowing where to even start. "Dad, who is telling you this stuff?"
"No one is telling me it, Sara. I read it. It's in the news. I mean, really, I'm surprised you've not seen it. It was all over Facebook."
"Maybe on yours, but it's not all over my Facebook." She doesn't have the heart to tell him she muted him six months ago.
"Well, I don't read the news and I don't know any science," says Mom, "But I do know this: after they opened that solar farm up near Mary, within just a few years her and two of her neighbours had cancer. I mean I don't know anything for sure honey, but given the risk are you sure it's safe to be putting these panels on top of schools?"
"There's no risk, Mom. None at all. Dad, I wish you'd stop believing everything you see on Facebook."
"Well, maybe you should read things yourself before passing judgement on them." He pushes himself up from his seat, steps away from the table. Sara sighs, thinking she's upset him that much that he's actually abandoning his dinner, but he stops to grab something off a nearby shelf. His iPad. He heads back and takes his seat again.
Oh, here we fucking go
she thinks to herself.
He stabs at the screen, looks for a while, stabs again. Flips it over and hands it to her. "Here. Read."
Reluctantly, she takes it. His Facebook feed. Somewhere in the middle of it is the article, a very to the point CHINESE SOLAR PANELS CAUSE CANCER headline. But she can't even focus on it, because the rest of the screen is filled with distractions, looping videos and animated gifs, all adverts, and all for guns. Or security systems. Panic rooms. Back up power generators. Emergency rations. More guns.
"Jesus Christ Dad, these ads!"
"No blasphemy at the dinner table, please honey" says Mom.
"What about them?"
"Just… just look at them. They're terrifying. They're like… like adverts for the end of the world! You know they show you this stuff just to make you scared, right? Just to keep you paranoid."
"They show me this stuff because they've got products to sell. That's how the economy works. That's how we create jobs. Godammit Sara, are you telling me you hate
advertising
now? Do you just hate everything about America?"
Sara looks over to Mom, who looks like she's on the brink of tears. Suddenly she finds she's also lost the will to fight. Gently she closes the iPad and puts it down on the table, next to her plate.
"No, of course not Dad. Maybe I'll read this later, after the game."
After dinner she helps Mom clean-up, the two of them loading the dishwasher in near silence. She's leaning against the counter, scrolling through Twitter on her phone, when Mom finally speaks.
"You should go easy on your father, you know. He's worried about a lot of things."
"What things? Solar panel cancer?"
"Don't joke Sara, I'm serious. There's a lot that bothers him. The state of the world. The future. All these damn wars."
"We're all worried about all that, Mom."
"He's worried about his health.
I'm
worried about his health. Probably more than he is."
Sara looks up from her phone, genuine concern. "Is he OK?"
"I don't know. He won't go to the doctor. Hasn't been in months. He's worried about his insurance."
"I had no idea-"
"Yeah, well you know your father. Doesn't like to talk about it. Doesn't want to burden other people with his problems. Hates pity." She pauses, looks out the window into the yard. When she turns back to Sara her eyes are damp. "This is why I was so excited about you coming back. Why he was so excited! I thought it'd take his mind of all this. He was so excited to see you. You know he loves watching the game with you, Sara."
"I know. I'm sorry I-"
"And the ads! The Super Bowl ads! You know how much he loves watching the new ads with you. It's a stupid thing, sure, but he loves it. Talks about it all the time. It's like a tradition to him. That's why he got so upset over dinner when you got angry at his ads. It's something special he has with you, he doesn't want to lose it."
Sara slips her phone into her pocket, genuine guilt. Feels like a spoiled kid. "I didn't realise. I'm sorry."
Mom smiles, walks over and kisses her on the forehead. "It's OK honey. Don't feel bad. Just go. Just go sit in there with him and watch some TV. Please."
It's the second down on the Falcon's 60 yard line with 30 yards to cover, and the Lions need one touchdown to equalise. Sara and her Dad are sat in the front room, working their way through a family sized pack of Oreos, when the ad break starts.
Dawn. Red skies over the desert. A Chevrolet truck pulls up next to a large, trailer. Low shot next to the front tire, as a cowboy booted foot drops down from the door, disturbing dust.
Cut to: internal shot of the trailer, darkness split by morning light through the opening door. The figure enters, flicks on lights. The room is full of equipment, computers. The figure takes a seat, puts on a headset, thumbs on screens. Rests their hands on two large joysticks on the desk.
Cut to: airfield, the desert. The distinctive silhouette of a Predator drone taxis across the screen, rising heat shimmering the air around it.
Cut to: interior of the trailer. The faceless figure works controls, the joysticks, touch screens.
Voiceover: They say you need to get up pretty early to get past America's finest. But the truth is we never sleep.
Cut to: a uniformed guard on top of the border wall. He looks up and gives a salute to the drone as it soars above him, out and across the desert.
Cut to: drone footage. Grainy, monochrome. A group of figures move slowly through the desert. The camera tracks them. Zooms in. The pilot punches buttons. The figures become highlighted by a computer overlay, text appears next to them. ILLEGAL ENTRY ATTEMPT SUSPECTED. GROUND PATROLS ALERTED.
"Fuck this," says Sara, getting up from her seat.
"Sara!" says Mom.
"No I'm sorry, I can't. I can't sit here and watch this… this bullshit. This propaganda." She storms out of the room.
"Sara!" Mom makes to get up.
"No, just leave her," says Dad, gently, his eyes still fixed on the screen. "Just let her go."
Out in the kitchen Sara sits at the table and wants to scream. She's angry, mainly with herself. She should never have fucking come here. She should have known better. There was never any fucking way anything good was going to come from this. As much as Mom wants to romanticise things, to make them sound cute and adorable, the truth is shit with Dad has never been right since she was a teenager. Too much resentment, too much bad blood, too much control and rebellion. They hadn't agreed on anything - they hadn't managed to have a simple conversation that didn't descend into fighting - in 15 goddamn years, and no amount of eating cookies and watching fucking Super Bowl ads on the TV was going to fix that.
She sighs, wipes a tear from her cheek. On autopilot she takes her phone from her pocket, feels its reassuring warmth in her hand, and swipes open Twitter.
Everybody seems to be talking about the same thing.
omg im crying
holy shit that chevrolet ad /fire emoji
that was sooooo beautiful
who knew chevrolet were so woke
i can't believe they did that, so amazing
Hang on, are they taking about the same ad?
Hastily she opens her FB TV app, pulls up the game. The ad is just finishing. She hits the 10-second rewind icon a couple of times, then leans the phone on its side against a ketchup bottle.
Cut to: drone footage. Grainy, monochrome. A group of figures move slowly through the desert. The camera tracks them. Zooms in. The pilot punches buttons. The figures become highlighted by a computer overlay, text appears next to them. ILLEGAL ENTRY ATTEMPT SUSPECTED. GROUND PATROLS ALERTED.
Cut to: on the ground, in the desert. The group of figures are revealed to be a Mexican family, maybe two. Men, women, children. They look tired, hungry. They stop to rest, sipping the little water they have left from tattered plastic bottles.
A little way away from the main group sits a small child, a girl. Maybe 8 years old. She is drawing shapes in the dust with a stick. She's drawn quite a bit it looks like, but from our angle we can't see what.
Cut to: drone footage. The pilot is watching the group. As he tracks away from the main party to where the girl is sat, the camera reveals what she has drawn.
A large, child's rendition of the American flag.
Underneath it, it childlike handwriting, some words. 'I have a dream'
Text flashes across the screen. ALERT CANCELLED. ALL PATROLS: STAND DOWN
Cut to: the drone, banking and turning, flying away.
Cut to: exterior shot of the trailer. The still anonymous pilot exits, walks back towards his jeep.
Voiceover: Keeping America safe means never sleeping, but keeping America great means never forgetting who we are, and how we got here.
The jeep starts up, pulls away from the camera in a cloud of dust.
Fade to black. Chevrolet logo. White text against black.
'We know what really makes America great'
Sara finds herself in the front room, sobbing.
"Honey?"
Dad pauses the TV, looks up at her. It looks like he's been crying too. "Sara?"
"Did you - did you watch it?"
"The Chevrolet ad?"
"Yeah."
"Yeah, we did." Embarrassed, he wipes a tear from his cheek. "It was… it was very moving."
She falls on him, wrapping her arms around his neck, burying her face in his chest. "I'm sorry Dad. I'm so sorry. I didn't mean to be so mean-"
"It's OK, honey. It really is."
"No, no it's not. We always fight. And I know that's mainly my fault-"
'Well, now, c'mon-"
"No, it is. It's my fault. I got myself into thinking we can never agree on anything, that we can never see eye to eye. That we've got nothing in common anymore." She lifts her head to look up at him. "But I know that's wrong. That I shouldn't assume things about you. That there's still things that can bring us together."
He grins back at her. "Like Super Bowl ads?"
She laughs. "I guess. But you know what I mean, really."
"I know honey. And I'm sorry too. I didn't mean what I said earlier. I know you don't really hate this country." He gestures to the couch next to him. "Why don't you sit down, huh? We can watch the rest of the game together."
She straightens herself up, wipes her eyes. Suddenly feels a little self conscious. "Sure. Let me just go freshen up first."
"Of course honey."
Mom and Dad watch Sara leave the room, and then look at each other.
"Well."
"Well indeed."
"What did I tell you? You two just needed to spend some time together. Some quality time."
"I guess so. What did I ever do to deserve a woman as hot and as smart as you, huh Sheryl?"
Mom stands up and makes to leave the room, leaning down to kiss him as she passes. "I ask myself that question every day."
Alone, seen only by the TV, Dad smiles to himself. He picks up the remote, but instead of hitting play, he finds himself hitting rewind.
Cut to: drone footage. Grainy, monochrome. A group of figures move slowly through the desert. The camera tracks them. Zooms in. The pilot punches buttons. The figures become highlighted by a computer overlay, text appears next to them. ILLEGAL ENTRY ATTEMPT SUSPECTED. GROUND PATROLS ALERTED.
Cut to: on the ground, in the desert. The group of figures are all men. Dirty, scruffy, furtive. Like they mean business.They carry guns, pistols, and assault riffles. Bad hombres. One of them pulls open a bag, looks inside.
Cut to: close up of the inside of the bag. Inside are packets of white powder.
Suddenly, one of the party looks up, shouts something in Spanish. They all go to grab their guns.
But it's too late.
From three different directions, three different Chevrolet jeeps appear, screeching to a halt, kicking up dust. From them jump Border Patrol agents and Minutemen militia, guns drawn and ready.
The gang of men don't even put up a fight. They know they're surrounded, they drop their weapons and pathetically raise their hands.
All except one. The guy with the bag full of drugs. He's got nothing to lose. He reaches for his rifle.
Cut to: Border Patrol agents, opening fire.
Text flashes across the screen. ALERT CANCELLED. THREAT NEUTRALISED.
Cut to: the drone, banking and turning, flying away.
Cut to: exterior shot of the trailer. The still anonymous pilot exits, walks back towards his jeep.
Voiceover: Keeping America safe means never sleeping, but keeping America great means never forgetting who we are, and what keeps us strong.
The jeep starts up, pulls away from the camera in a cloud of dust.
Fade to black. Chevrolet logo. White text against black.
'We know what really makes America great'
Dad wipes another team from his eye. "I think we're going to be OK," he says to himself. "I think we're going to be just fine."
This article was originally published on TheLong+Short. Read the original article. | disgusted | irked | confused | ambivalent | 0 |
99902_1IHVLLLA_5 | What is ironic about Sara's father's justification for the ads on his page? | Divided we stand
Sara lets the Lyft park itself in the drive, lets out a sigh, and tweets
wish me luck
plus some emojis before slipping her phone into a hoody pocket. Curtains twitch, and before she can get her bag out of the back Mom is there, right there next to her, their hands touching on the handle as they compete for control.
"It's OK Mom, I got it."
"You should have let us come pick you up."
"It's fine, there was no need. I didn't want to put any-"
"But you shouldn't be wasting money, not with how much rent you pay and-"
Jesus. Not this already. "Mom. I can afford a cab ride. I'm not
that
much of a failure."
Mom sighs, shoulders falling, looks at Sara directly. "I'm sorry honey." She looks old, Sara thinks, watching a resigned tiredness flicker across her face in a way she'd not noticed before. Like she's exhausted by conflict, surrendered to it. "Now, don't I get a hug?"
Sara smiles. They hold each other for a few long seconds, rubbing and squeezing each other as the Lyft silently backs itself out of the driveway. When they part it's Mom's hand that's on the bag's handle.
Inside she unwraps herself from scarves and layers, the heat in the house almost a shock after the cold air. Michigan in February. Mom is already halfway up the stairs, bag in tow, headed for her room.
"Mom, just leave that and I'll…"
"Your father's in the front room," she says, just before she disappears from view. "Go say hi."
For a few seconds Sara is alone in the hallway, the smell of cooking meat coming from one doorway, the sound of rolling news from another. She shakes her head, kicks off shoes, tucks hair behind her ears. Braces herself.
He's sat in the living room, reclining in the Lazy Boy. He doesn't hear her enter - her socked feet silent on the pile carpet floor, his attention lost in the screen that fills most of the wall. Fox News. She braces herself again.
"Hey Dad."
His head jerks to look at her. "Hey! When did you get here?" He starts to push himself up.
"Don't get up Dad, it's fine. Really." She takes a seat on the couch. "I just got here, like two minutes ago."
"Good flight?"
"Yeah. Fine. Y'know. Same as always."
He smiles back at her, nods knowingly.
Their first words in nearly a year. Fine. So far. She relaxes. Of course it is. How bad could it be?
"I thought I was gonna come pick you up from the airport?"
"Ah, no. I got a cab. I didn't want to bother you."
"Bother me? You think I'm too old and infirm to pick my own daughter up from the airport?"
"No Dad, of course not."
The war spills out of Fox News, casualty figures scrolling across monochrome drone footage, attack helicopters circling over Caracas apartment blocks, pundits with bronzed skin and immaculate blond hair smiling from four-way split screens.
"So you just got a cab?"
"Yeah."
"How much did that cost?"
"Not much. Really. I can afford-"
"Cabs are expensive. You shouldn't be wasting your money."
"It wasn't expensive. It wasn't a cab, it was a Lyft."
"One of those driverless things?"
"Yeah."
Ad break. An elderly couple ride a tandem bicycle through a park, laughing and smiling in Instagram-perfect sunshine, as a calm, relaxing voice lists the potentially lethal side effects of a diabetes drug.
Dad shakes his head. "I don't know how you can use those things. I don't trust them."
"Dad, they're perfectly safe."
"That's not what I mean. They're stealing people's jobs."
There's a brief second, a fleeting moment, where Sara can bite her lip, let it go. She misses it. "But I thought it was immigrants that are stealing people's jobs?"
"You might think it's funny little lady, but let me tell you - you remember Kyle and Max, Bill Cooper's boys? Live up off Lafayette, past the Checkers?"
"Nope."
"Well let me tell you," He shifts in the recliner, with some obvious pain and effort, to face her. "Both of 'em lost their jobs just this last year. Both of 'em were truckers. Both of 'em been driving trucks since high school. Now the damn trucks are driving themselves and they're both out of work. And they got families to support. Kids."
"Well I'm sure they'll be fine." She regrets the sarcasm as soon as she hears it in her own voice, but she still can't stop herself, like it's expected, like it's part of the routine. Part of their schtick. "They just got to get themselves out there, huh Dad? Pull themselves up by their bootstraps. That's the American way, right?"
"I'm glad you think this is funny, I really do. But what you New York types need to realise is-"
"Ed!" Mom had appeared in the doorway. "Please! Both of you. No fighting today, please."
"Sheryl-"
"No. I don't want to hear you two as much as disagreeing about anything today, unless it's about the game. And even then you'd better keep it civil. Otherwise you can both go hungry. Understand?"
Awkward pause.
"Fine."
"Sorry Mom."
Sara turns back to the TV, to watching the war, to trying to work out which one it is.
It had always been this way, ever since she was about thirteen. Up until then it just seemed like constant warmth, as though she didn't have any childhood concept of Dad apart from him getting home from work, then her sitting on his knee, eating cookies and watching football highlights until Mom came in and scolded them both for ruining their appetites before dinner.
And then everything changed. Suddenly there was rap music and nose rings, sneaking out of the house to see her friends and not wanting to go to church. Suddenly he was no longer this lovable bear-man that ruffled her hair and gave her candy and explained defensive plays to her, but this huge obelisk of injustice that just wanted to crush her high school life into dust. It was constant warfare; every opinion she had became a battle, every decision she made a conflict. Getting away to college gave her escape, but bred resentment too; he hated that she went to New York, even though NYU was a good school, and her decision to stay there after she finished made things even worse. And then politics got all crazy, weirder then ever, and it became impossible for them to talk without it erupting into fights almost instantly. It was bad enough when the smart, young guy she liked was president and Dad constantly spewed his hate for him at her, but somehow it got even worse when the old, racist, women hating war-starter he liked won. Twice.
So they didn't talk much now, barely online, never on the phone. Since her second year of school he'd never been to NYC to visit her. She came back when she could face it; sometimes for birthdays, sometimes for Thanksgiving. Maybe for Christmas. But somehow always, like now, for the Super Bowl. Like football was the one thing they still had, that one thing they could still sit in the same room together for. Shouting at players, screaming at the ref, laughing at the ads.
Dad is in the bathroom, and Sara has had enough of Fox and whichever war this is. She reaches over and grabs the remote from the arm of his chair, and tries to find something else to watch. The government had scrapped all the rules about how the internet worked, and for most people like her parents it had suddenly gotten a lot cheaper to get their TV through Facebook, so all she can find is
Fox, Breitbart News, Family Values TV, Info Wars, The Rebel, Glenn Beck, The Voice of America, America First, The Bible Today
and lots of hunting and sports channels she doesn't even recognise. It's signed in to her Dad's FB account, and the last thing she wants is to try and log in on hers before he gets back from the john. Yeah. There was no way that would end up with them keeping it civil.
In her pocket her phone vibrates, purrs against her skin, reminding her it's there, making sure she's not forgotten where her real friends are, that there's a world outside, beyond Dad and his TV. She takes it out and cradles it in her hands, the dark screen fleetingly reflecting back her face before it jumps awake at her very touch, opening up to bathe her in blue light, in comfort and warmth and the familiar. For the first time since she got home she feels herself relax.
Dinner is Mom's meatloaf, with gravy and mashed potatoes. Cornbread and broccoli. Every mouthful tastes like nostalgia, and Sara can feel herself being encompassed by a bubble, this barrier of warm air and long forgotten simplicity enveloping her body, protecting her from the confusion of the world outside.
"How's work, honey?" Mom asks.
"Yeah, going OK." Sara works for a non-profit in Brooklyn that helps big organisations to transition to renewable energy. The pay is lousy but it feels important. "We just got the last few schools in the city to agree to put solar panels on their roofs. Big deal for us. I've been working on them for the last two years."
Mom says nothing, just looks down at her plate.
Dad finishes chewing his mouthful, swallows, wipes his beard with a napkin. Sighs, barely controlled anger simmering behind his face. "Solar panels cause cancer."
Sara laughs, covering her mouth as she nearly chokes on chewed food. "What? No they don't Dad."
"They do. The material they use to coat them reacts to sunlight, and produces an airborne carcinogen. It's based on a particular kind of rare earth. It's a bit like teflon. The Chinese have known about this for decades but have kept it covered up, because they-"
"Dad, no. Just no. Trust me."
"-because they are the world's largest manufacturers of solar panels. But the research has been done. The scientific evidence is out there. Look it up."
"Look it up?" Sara shakes her head, not knowing where to even start. "Dad, who is telling you this stuff?"
"No one is telling me it, Sara. I read it. It's in the news. I mean, really, I'm surprised you've not seen it. It was all over Facebook."
"Maybe on yours, but it's not all over my Facebook." She doesn't have the heart to tell him she muted him six months ago.
"Well, I don't read the news and I don't know any science," says Mom, "But I do know this: after they opened that solar farm up near Mary, within just a few years her and two of her neighbours had cancer. I mean I don't know anything for sure honey, but given the risk are you sure it's safe to be putting these panels on top of schools?"
"There's no risk, Mom. None at all. Dad, I wish you'd stop believing everything you see on Facebook."
"Well, maybe you should read things yourself before passing judgement on them." He pushes himself up from his seat, steps away from the table. Sara sighs, thinking she's upset him that much that he's actually abandoning his dinner, but he stops to grab something off a nearby shelf. His iPad. He heads back and takes his seat again.
Oh, here we fucking go
she thinks to herself.
He stabs at the screen, looks for a while, stabs again. Flips it over and hands it to her. "Here. Read."
Reluctantly, she takes it. His Facebook feed. Somewhere in the middle of it is the article, a very to the point CHINESE SOLAR PANELS CAUSE CANCER headline. But she can't even focus on it, because the rest of the screen is filled with distractions, looping videos and animated gifs, all adverts, and all for guns. Or security systems. Panic rooms. Back up power generators. Emergency rations. More guns.
"Jesus Christ Dad, these ads!"
"No blasphemy at the dinner table, please honey" says Mom.
"What about them?"
"Just… just look at them. They're terrifying. They're like… like adverts for the end of the world! You know they show you this stuff just to make you scared, right? Just to keep you paranoid."
"They show me this stuff because they've got products to sell. That's how the economy works. That's how we create jobs. Godammit Sara, are you telling me you hate
advertising
now? Do you just hate everything about America?"
Sara looks over to Mom, who looks like she's on the brink of tears. Suddenly she finds she's also lost the will to fight. Gently she closes the iPad and puts it down on the table, next to her plate.
"No, of course not Dad. Maybe I'll read this later, after the game."
After dinner she helps Mom clean-up, the two of them loading the dishwasher in near silence. She's leaning against the counter, scrolling through Twitter on her phone, when Mom finally speaks.
"You should go easy on your father, you know. He's worried about a lot of things."
"What things? Solar panel cancer?"
"Don't joke Sara, I'm serious. There's a lot that bothers him. The state of the world. The future. All these damn wars."
"We're all worried about all that, Mom."
"He's worried about his health.
I'm
worried about his health. Probably more than he is."
Sara looks up from her phone, genuine concern. "Is he OK?"
"I don't know. He won't go to the doctor. Hasn't been in months. He's worried about his insurance."
"I had no idea-"
"Yeah, well you know your father. Doesn't like to talk about it. Doesn't want to burden other people with his problems. Hates pity." She pauses, looks out the window into the yard. When she turns back to Sara her eyes are damp. "This is why I was so excited about you coming back. Why he was so excited! I thought it'd take his mind of all this. He was so excited to see you. You know he loves watching the game with you, Sara."
"I know. I'm sorry I-"
"And the ads! The Super Bowl ads! You know how much he loves watching the new ads with you. It's a stupid thing, sure, but he loves it. Talks about it all the time. It's like a tradition to him. That's why he got so upset over dinner when you got angry at his ads. It's something special he has with you, he doesn't want to lose it."
Sara slips her phone into her pocket, genuine guilt. Feels like a spoiled kid. "I didn't realise. I'm sorry."
Mom smiles, walks over and kisses her on the forehead. "It's OK honey. Don't feel bad. Just go. Just go sit in there with him and watch some TV. Please."
It's the second down on the Falcon's 60 yard line with 30 yards to cover, and the Lions need one touchdown to equalise. Sara and her Dad are sat in the front room, working their way through a family sized pack of Oreos, when the ad break starts.
Dawn. Red skies over the desert. A Chevrolet truck pulls up next to a large, trailer. Low shot next to the front tire, as a cowboy booted foot drops down from the door, disturbing dust.
Cut to: internal shot of the trailer, darkness split by morning light through the opening door. The figure enters, flicks on lights. The room is full of equipment, computers. The figure takes a seat, puts on a headset, thumbs on screens. Rests their hands on two large joysticks on the desk.
Cut to: airfield, the desert. The distinctive silhouette of a Predator drone taxis across the screen, rising heat shimmering the air around it.
Cut to: interior of the trailer. The faceless figure works controls, the joysticks, touch screens.
Voiceover: They say you need to get up pretty early to get past America's finest. But the truth is we never sleep.
Cut to: a uniformed guard on top of the border wall. He looks up and gives a salute to the drone as it soars above him, out and across the desert.
Cut to: drone footage. Grainy, monochrome. A group of figures move slowly through the desert. The camera tracks them. Zooms in. The pilot punches buttons. The figures become highlighted by a computer overlay, text appears next to them. ILLEGAL ENTRY ATTEMPT SUSPECTED. GROUND PATROLS ALERTED.
"Fuck this," says Sara, getting up from her seat.
"Sara!" says Mom.
"No I'm sorry, I can't. I can't sit here and watch this… this bullshit. This propaganda." She storms out of the room.
"Sara!" Mom makes to get up.
"No, just leave her," says Dad, gently, his eyes still fixed on the screen. "Just let her go."
Out in the kitchen Sara sits at the table and wants to scream. She's angry, mainly with herself. She should never have fucking come here. She should have known better. There was never any fucking way anything good was going to come from this. As much as Mom wants to romanticise things, to make them sound cute and adorable, the truth is shit with Dad has never been right since she was a teenager. Too much resentment, too much bad blood, too much control and rebellion. They hadn't agreed on anything - they hadn't managed to have a simple conversation that didn't descend into fighting - in 15 goddamn years, and no amount of eating cookies and watching fucking Super Bowl ads on the TV was going to fix that.
She sighs, wipes a tear from her cheek. On autopilot she takes her phone from her pocket, feels its reassuring warmth in her hand, and swipes open Twitter.
Everybody seems to be talking about the same thing.
omg im crying
holy shit that chevrolet ad /fire emoji
that was sooooo beautiful
who knew chevrolet were so woke
i can't believe they did that, so amazing
Hang on, are they taking about the same ad?
Hastily she opens her FB TV app, pulls up the game. The ad is just finishing. She hits the 10-second rewind icon a couple of times, then leans the phone on its side against a ketchup bottle.
Cut to: drone footage. Grainy, monochrome. A group of figures move slowly through the desert. The camera tracks them. Zooms in. The pilot punches buttons. The figures become highlighted by a computer overlay, text appears next to them. ILLEGAL ENTRY ATTEMPT SUSPECTED. GROUND PATROLS ALERTED.
Cut to: on the ground, in the desert. The group of figures are revealed to be a Mexican family, maybe two. Men, women, children. They look tired, hungry. They stop to rest, sipping the little water they have left from tattered plastic bottles.
A little way away from the main group sits a small child, a girl. Maybe 8 years old. She is drawing shapes in the dust with a stick. She's drawn quite a bit it looks like, but from our angle we can't see what.
Cut to: drone footage. The pilot is watching the group. As he tracks away from the main party to where the girl is sat, the camera reveals what she has drawn.
A large, child's rendition of the American flag.
Underneath it, it childlike handwriting, some words. 'I have a dream'
Text flashes across the screen. ALERT CANCELLED. ALL PATROLS: STAND DOWN
Cut to: the drone, banking and turning, flying away.
Cut to: exterior shot of the trailer. The still anonymous pilot exits, walks back towards his jeep.
Voiceover: Keeping America safe means never sleeping, but keeping America great means never forgetting who we are, and how we got here.
The jeep starts up, pulls away from the camera in a cloud of dust.
Fade to black. Chevrolet logo. White text against black.
'We know what really makes America great'
Sara finds herself in the front room, sobbing.
"Honey?"
Dad pauses the TV, looks up at her. It looks like he's been crying too. "Sara?"
"Did you - did you watch it?"
"The Chevrolet ad?"
"Yeah."
"Yeah, we did." Embarrassed, he wipes a tear from his cheek. "It was… it was very moving."
She falls on him, wrapping her arms around his neck, burying her face in his chest. "I'm sorry Dad. I'm so sorry. I didn't mean to be so mean-"
"It's OK, honey. It really is."
"No, no it's not. We always fight. And I know that's mainly my fault-"
'Well, now, c'mon-"
"No, it is. It's my fault. I got myself into thinking we can never agree on anything, that we can never see eye to eye. That we've got nothing in common anymore." She lifts her head to look up at him. "But I know that's wrong. That I shouldn't assume things about you. That there's still things that can bring us together."
He grins back at her. "Like Super Bowl ads?"
She laughs. "I guess. But you know what I mean, really."
"I know honey. And I'm sorry too. I didn't mean what I said earlier. I know you don't really hate this country." He gestures to the couch next to him. "Why don't you sit down, huh? We can watch the rest of the game together."
She straightens herself up, wipes her eyes. Suddenly feels a little self conscious. "Sure. Let me just go freshen up first."
"Of course honey."
Mom and Dad watch Sara leave the room, and then look at each other.
"Well."
"Well indeed."
"What did I tell you? You two just needed to spend some time together. Some quality time."
"I guess so. What did I ever do to deserve a woman as hot and as smart as you, huh Sheryl?"
Mom stands up and makes to leave the room, leaning down to kiss him as she passes. "I ask myself that question every day."
Alone, seen only by the TV, Dad smiles to himself. He picks up the remote, but instead of hitting play, he finds himself hitting rewind.
Cut to: drone footage. Grainy, monochrome. A group of figures move slowly through the desert. The camera tracks them. Zooms in. The pilot punches buttons. The figures become highlighted by a computer overlay, text appears next to them. ILLEGAL ENTRY ATTEMPT SUSPECTED. GROUND PATROLS ALERTED.
Cut to: on the ground, in the desert. The group of figures are all men. Dirty, scruffy, furtive. Like they mean business.They carry guns, pistols, and assault riffles. Bad hombres. One of them pulls open a bag, looks inside.
Cut to: close up of the inside of the bag. Inside are packets of white powder.
Suddenly, one of the party looks up, shouts something in Spanish. They all go to grab their guns.
But it's too late.
From three different directions, three different Chevrolet jeeps appear, screeching to a halt, kicking up dust. From them jump Border Patrol agents and Minutemen militia, guns drawn and ready.
The gang of men don't even put up a fight. They know they're surrounded, they drop their weapons and pathetically raise their hands.
All except one. The guy with the bag full of drugs. He's got nothing to lose. He reaches for his rifle.
Cut to: Border Patrol agents, opening fire.
Text flashes across the screen. ALERT CANCELLED. THREAT NEUTRALISED.
Cut to: the drone, banking and turning, flying away.
Cut to: exterior shot of the trailer. The still anonymous pilot exits, walks back towards his jeep.
Voiceover: Keeping America safe means never sleeping, but keeping America great means never forgetting who we are, and what keeps us strong.
The jeep starts up, pulls away from the camera in a cloud of dust.
Fade to black. Chevrolet logo. White text against black.
'We know what really makes America great'
Dad wipes another team from his eye. "I think we're going to be OK," he says to himself. "I think we're going to be just fine."
This article was originally published on TheLong+Short. Read the original article. | He claims to value entities that create jobs, and ignores the potential for solar energy to do the same. | He accuses Sara of hating advertising, when her job involves advertising. | He accuses Sara of hating America, when most of his ads are from other countries. | He dislikes modern ads for companies like Lyft, but supports them if they benefit him personally. | 0 |
99902_1IHVLLLA_6 | To what commonality are Sara and her father oblivious? | Divided we stand
Sara lets the Lyft park itself in the drive, lets out a sigh, and tweets
wish me luck
plus some emojis before slipping her phone into a hoody pocket. Curtains twitch, and before she can get her bag out of the back Mom is there, right there next to her, their hands touching on the handle as they compete for control.
"It's OK Mom, I got it."
"You should have let us come pick you up."
"It's fine, there was no need. I didn't want to put any-"
"But you shouldn't be wasting money, not with how much rent you pay and-"
Jesus. Not this already. "Mom. I can afford a cab ride. I'm not
that
much of a failure."
Mom sighs, shoulders falling, looks at Sara directly. "I'm sorry honey." She looks old, Sara thinks, watching a resigned tiredness flicker across her face in a way she'd not noticed before. Like she's exhausted by conflict, surrendered to it. "Now, don't I get a hug?"
Sara smiles. They hold each other for a few long seconds, rubbing and squeezing each other as the Lyft silently backs itself out of the driveway. When they part it's Mom's hand that's on the bag's handle.
Inside she unwraps herself from scarves and layers, the heat in the house almost a shock after the cold air. Michigan in February. Mom is already halfway up the stairs, bag in tow, headed for her room.
"Mom, just leave that and I'll…"
"Your father's in the front room," she says, just before she disappears from view. "Go say hi."
For a few seconds Sara is alone in the hallway, the smell of cooking meat coming from one doorway, the sound of rolling news from another. She shakes her head, kicks off shoes, tucks hair behind her ears. Braces herself.
He's sat in the living room, reclining in the Lazy Boy. He doesn't hear her enter - her socked feet silent on the pile carpet floor, his attention lost in the screen that fills most of the wall. Fox News. She braces herself again.
"Hey Dad."
His head jerks to look at her. "Hey! When did you get here?" He starts to push himself up.
"Don't get up Dad, it's fine. Really." She takes a seat on the couch. "I just got here, like two minutes ago."
"Good flight?"
"Yeah. Fine. Y'know. Same as always."
He smiles back at her, nods knowingly.
Their first words in nearly a year. Fine. So far. She relaxes. Of course it is. How bad could it be?
"I thought I was gonna come pick you up from the airport?"
"Ah, no. I got a cab. I didn't want to bother you."
"Bother me? You think I'm too old and infirm to pick my own daughter up from the airport?"
"No Dad, of course not."
The war spills out of Fox News, casualty figures scrolling across monochrome drone footage, attack helicopters circling over Caracas apartment blocks, pundits with bronzed skin and immaculate blond hair smiling from four-way split screens.
"So you just got a cab?"
"Yeah."
"How much did that cost?"
"Not much. Really. I can afford-"
"Cabs are expensive. You shouldn't be wasting your money."
"It wasn't expensive. It wasn't a cab, it was a Lyft."
"One of those driverless things?"
"Yeah."
Ad break. An elderly couple ride a tandem bicycle through a park, laughing and smiling in Instagram-perfect sunshine, as a calm, relaxing voice lists the potentially lethal side effects of a diabetes drug.
Dad shakes his head. "I don't know how you can use those things. I don't trust them."
"Dad, they're perfectly safe."
"That's not what I mean. They're stealing people's jobs."
There's a brief second, a fleeting moment, where Sara can bite her lip, let it go. She misses it. "But I thought it was immigrants that are stealing people's jobs?"
"You might think it's funny little lady, but let me tell you - you remember Kyle and Max, Bill Cooper's boys? Live up off Lafayette, past the Checkers?"
"Nope."
"Well let me tell you," He shifts in the recliner, with some obvious pain and effort, to face her. "Both of 'em lost their jobs just this last year. Both of 'em were truckers. Both of 'em been driving trucks since high school. Now the damn trucks are driving themselves and they're both out of work. And they got families to support. Kids."
"Well I'm sure they'll be fine." She regrets the sarcasm as soon as she hears it in her own voice, but she still can't stop herself, like it's expected, like it's part of the routine. Part of their schtick. "They just got to get themselves out there, huh Dad? Pull themselves up by their bootstraps. That's the American way, right?"
"I'm glad you think this is funny, I really do. But what you New York types need to realise is-"
"Ed!" Mom had appeared in the doorway. "Please! Both of you. No fighting today, please."
"Sheryl-"
"No. I don't want to hear you two as much as disagreeing about anything today, unless it's about the game. And even then you'd better keep it civil. Otherwise you can both go hungry. Understand?"
Awkward pause.
"Fine."
"Sorry Mom."
Sara turns back to the TV, to watching the war, to trying to work out which one it is.
It had always been this way, ever since she was about thirteen. Up until then it just seemed like constant warmth, as though she didn't have any childhood concept of Dad apart from him getting home from work, then her sitting on his knee, eating cookies and watching football highlights until Mom came in and scolded them both for ruining their appetites before dinner.
And then everything changed. Suddenly there was rap music and nose rings, sneaking out of the house to see her friends and not wanting to go to church. Suddenly he was no longer this lovable bear-man that ruffled her hair and gave her candy and explained defensive plays to her, but this huge obelisk of injustice that just wanted to crush her high school life into dust. It was constant warfare; every opinion she had became a battle, every decision she made a conflict. Getting away to college gave her escape, but bred resentment too; he hated that she went to New York, even though NYU was a good school, and her decision to stay there after she finished made things even worse. And then politics got all crazy, weirder then ever, and it became impossible for them to talk without it erupting into fights almost instantly. It was bad enough when the smart, young guy she liked was president and Dad constantly spewed his hate for him at her, but somehow it got even worse when the old, racist, women hating war-starter he liked won. Twice.
So they didn't talk much now, barely online, never on the phone. Since her second year of school he'd never been to NYC to visit her. She came back when she could face it; sometimes for birthdays, sometimes for Thanksgiving. Maybe for Christmas. But somehow always, like now, for the Super Bowl. Like football was the one thing they still had, that one thing they could still sit in the same room together for. Shouting at players, screaming at the ref, laughing at the ads.
Dad is in the bathroom, and Sara has had enough of Fox and whichever war this is. She reaches over and grabs the remote from the arm of his chair, and tries to find something else to watch. The government had scrapped all the rules about how the internet worked, and for most people like her parents it had suddenly gotten a lot cheaper to get their TV through Facebook, so all she can find is
Fox, Breitbart News, Family Values TV, Info Wars, The Rebel, Glenn Beck, The Voice of America, America First, The Bible Today
and lots of hunting and sports channels she doesn't even recognise. It's signed in to her Dad's FB account, and the last thing she wants is to try and log in on hers before he gets back from the john. Yeah. There was no way that would end up with them keeping it civil.
In her pocket her phone vibrates, purrs against her skin, reminding her it's there, making sure she's not forgotten where her real friends are, that there's a world outside, beyond Dad and his TV. She takes it out and cradles it in her hands, the dark screen fleetingly reflecting back her face before it jumps awake at her very touch, opening up to bathe her in blue light, in comfort and warmth and the familiar. For the first time since she got home she feels herself relax.
Dinner is Mom's meatloaf, with gravy and mashed potatoes. Cornbread and broccoli. Every mouthful tastes like nostalgia, and Sara can feel herself being encompassed by a bubble, this barrier of warm air and long forgotten simplicity enveloping her body, protecting her from the confusion of the world outside.
"How's work, honey?" Mom asks.
"Yeah, going OK." Sara works for a non-profit in Brooklyn that helps big organisations to transition to renewable energy. The pay is lousy but it feels important. "We just got the last few schools in the city to agree to put solar panels on their roofs. Big deal for us. I've been working on them for the last two years."
Mom says nothing, just looks down at her plate.
Dad finishes chewing his mouthful, swallows, wipes his beard with a napkin. Sighs, barely controlled anger simmering behind his face. "Solar panels cause cancer."
Sara laughs, covering her mouth as she nearly chokes on chewed food. "What? No they don't Dad."
"They do. The material they use to coat them reacts to sunlight, and produces an airborne carcinogen. It's based on a particular kind of rare earth. It's a bit like teflon. The Chinese have known about this for decades but have kept it covered up, because they-"
"Dad, no. Just no. Trust me."
"-because they are the world's largest manufacturers of solar panels. But the research has been done. The scientific evidence is out there. Look it up."
"Look it up?" Sara shakes her head, not knowing where to even start. "Dad, who is telling you this stuff?"
"No one is telling me it, Sara. I read it. It's in the news. I mean, really, I'm surprised you've not seen it. It was all over Facebook."
"Maybe on yours, but it's not all over my Facebook." She doesn't have the heart to tell him she muted him six months ago.
"Well, I don't read the news and I don't know any science," says Mom, "But I do know this: after they opened that solar farm up near Mary, within just a few years her and two of her neighbours had cancer. I mean I don't know anything for sure honey, but given the risk are you sure it's safe to be putting these panels on top of schools?"
"There's no risk, Mom. None at all. Dad, I wish you'd stop believing everything you see on Facebook."
"Well, maybe you should read things yourself before passing judgement on them." He pushes himself up from his seat, steps away from the table. Sara sighs, thinking she's upset him that much that he's actually abandoning his dinner, but he stops to grab something off a nearby shelf. His iPad. He heads back and takes his seat again.
Oh, here we fucking go
she thinks to herself.
He stabs at the screen, looks for a while, stabs again. Flips it over and hands it to her. "Here. Read."
Reluctantly, she takes it. His Facebook feed. Somewhere in the middle of it is the article, a very to the point CHINESE SOLAR PANELS CAUSE CANCER headline. But she can't even focus on it, because the rest of the screen is filled with distractions, looping videos and animated gifs, all adverts, and all for guns. Or security systems. Panic rooms. Back up power generators. Emergency rations. More guns.
"Jesus Christ Dad, these ads!"
"No blasphemy at the dinner table, please honey" says Mom.
"What about them?"
"Just… just look at them. They're terrifying. They're like… like adverts for the end of the world! You know they show you this stuff just to make you scared, right? Just to keep you paranoid."
"They show me this stuff because they've got products to sell. That's how the economy works. That's how we create jobs. Godammit Sara, are you telling me you hate
advertising
now? Do you just hate everything about America?"
Sara looks over to Mom, who looks like she's on the brink of tears. Suddenly she finds she's also lost the will to fight. Gently she closes the iPad and puts it down on the table, next to her plate.
"No, of course not Dad. Maybe I'll read this later, after the game."
After dinner she helps Mom clean-up, the two of them loading the dishwasher in near silence. She's leaning against the counter, scrolling through Twitter on her phone, when Mom finally speaks.
"You should go easy on your father, you know. He's worried about a lot of things."
"What things? Solar panel cancer?"
"Don't joke Sara, I'm serious. There's a lot that bothers him. The state of the world. The future. All these damn wars."
"We're all worried about all that, Mom."
"He's worried about his health.
I'm
worried about his health. Probably more than he is."
Sara looks up from her phone, genuine concern. "Is he OK?"
"I don't know. He won't go to the doctor. Hasn't been in months. He's worried about his insurance."
"I had no idea-"
"Yeah, well you know your father. Doesn't like to talk about it. Doesn't want to burden other people with his problems. Hates pity." She pauses, looks out the window into the yard. When she turns back to Sara her eyes are damp. "This is why I was so excited about you coming back. Why he was so excited! I thought it'd take his mind of all this. He was so excited to see you. You know he loves watching the game with you, Sara."
"I know. I'm sorry I-"
"And the ads! The Super Bowl ads! You know how much he loves watching the new ads with you. It's a stupid thing, sure, but he loves it. Talks about it all the time. It's like a tradition to him. That's why he got so upset over dinner when you got angry at his ads. It's something special he has with you, he doesn't want to lose it."
Sara slips her phone into her pocket, genuine guilt. Feels like a spoiled kid. "I didn't realise. I'm sorry."
Mom smiles, walks over and kisses her on the forehead. "It's OK honey. Don't feel bad. Just go. Just go sit in there with him and watch some TV. Please."
It's the second down on the Falcon's 60 yard line with 30 yards to cover, and the Lions need one touchdown to equalise. Sara and her Dad are sat in the front room, working their way through a family sized pack of Oreos, when the ad break starts.
Dawn. Red skies over the desert. A Chevrolet truck pulls up next to a large, trailer. Low shot next to the front tire, as a cowboy booted foot drops down from the door, disturbing dust.
Cut to: internal shot of the trailer, darkness split by morning light through the opening door. The figure enters, flicks on lights. The room is full of equipment, computers. The figure takes a seat, puts on a headset, thumbs on screens. Rests their hands on two large joysticks on the desk.
Cut to: airfield, the desert. The distinctive silhouette of a Predator drone taxis across the screen, rising heat shimmering the air around it.
Cut to: interior of the trailer. The faceless figure works controls, the joysticks, touch screens.
Voiceover: They say you need to get up pretty early to get past America's finest. But the truth is we never sleep.
Cut to: a uniformed guard on top of the border wall. He looks up and gives a salute to the drone as it soars above him, out and across the desert.
Cut to: drone footage. Grainy, monochrome. A group of figures move slowly through the desert. The camera tracks them. Zooms in. The pilot punches buttons. The figures become highlighted by a computer overlay, text appears next to them. ILLEGAL ENTRY ATTEMPT SUSPECTED. GROUND PATROLS ALERTED.
"Fuck this," says Sara, getting up from her seat.
"Sara!" says Mom.
"No I'm sorry, I can't. I can't sit here and watch this… this bullshit. This propaganda." She storms out of the room.
"Sara!" Mom makes to get up.
"No, just leave her," says Dad, gently, his eyes still fixed on the screen. "Just let her go."
Out in the kitchen Sara sits at the table and wants to scream. She's angry, mainly with herself. She should never have fucking come here. She should have known better. There was never any fucking way anything good was going to come from this. As much as Mom wants to romanticise things, to make them sound cute and adorable, the truth is shit with Dad has never been right since she was a teenager. Too much resentment, too much bad blood, too much control and rebellion. They hadn't agreed on anything - they hadn't managed to have a simple conversation that didn't descend into fighting - in 15 goddamn years, and no amount of eating cookies and watching fucking Super Bowl ads on the TV was going to fix that.
She sighs, wipes a tear from her cheek. On autopilot she takes her phone from her pocket, feels its reassuring warmth in her hand, and swipes open Twitter.
Everybody seems to be talking about the same thing.
omg im crying
holy shit that chevrolet ad /fire emoji
that was sooooo beautiful
who knew chevrolet were so woke
i can't believe they did that, so amazing
Hang on, are they taking about the same ad?
Hastily she opens her FB TV app, pulls up the game. The ad is just finishing. She hits the 10-second rewind icon a couple of times, then leans the phone on its side against a ketchup bottle.
Cut to: drone footage. Grainy, monochrome. A group of figures move slowly through the desert. The camera tracks them. Zooms in. The pilot punches buttons. The figures become highlighted by a computer overlay, text appears next to them. ILLEGAL ENTRY ATTEMPT SUSPECTED. GROUND PATROLS ALERTED.
Cut to: on the ground, in the desert. The group of figures are revealed to be a Mexican family, maybe two. Men, women, children. They look tired, hungry. They stop to rest, sipping the little water they have left from tattered plastic bottles.
A little way away from the main group sits a small child, a girl. Maybe 8 years old. She is drawing shapes in the dust with a stick. She's drawn quite a bit it looks like, but from our angle we can't see what.
Cut to: drone footage. The pilot is watching the group. As he tracks away from the main party to where the girl is sat, the camera reveals what she has drawn.
A large, child's rendition of the American flag.
Underneath it, it childlike handwriting, some words. 'I have a dream'
Text flashes across the screen. ALERT CANCELLED. ALL PATROLS: STAND DOWN
Cut to: the drone, banking and turning, flying away.
Cut to: exterior shot of the trailer. The still anonymous pilot exits, walks back towards his jeep.
Voiceover: Keeping America safe means never sleeping, but keeping America great means never forgetting who we are, and how we got here.
The jeep starts up, pulls away from the camera in a cloud of dust.
Fade to black. Chevrolet logo. White text against black.
'We know what really makes America great'
Sara finds herself in the front room, sobbing.
"Honey?"
Dad pauses the TV, looks up at her. It looks like he's been crying too. "Sara?"
"Did you - did you watch it?"
"The Chevrolet ad?"
"Yeah."
"Yeah, we did." Embarrassed, he wipes a tear from his cheek. "It was… it was very moving."
She falls on him, wrapping her arms around his neck, burying her face in his chest. "I'm sorry Dad. I'm so sorry. I didn't mean to be so mean-"
"It's OK, honey. It really is."
"No, no it's not. We always fight. And I know that's mainly my fault-"
'Well, now, c'mon-"
"No, it is. It's my fault. I got myself into thinking we can never agree on anything, that we can never see eye to eye. That we've got nothing in common anymore." She lifts her head to look up at him. "But I know that's wrong. That I shouldn't assume things about you. That there's still things that can bring us together."
He grins back at her. "Like Super Bowl ads?"
She laughs. "I guess. But you know what I mean, really."
"I know honey. And I'm sorry too. I didn't mean what I said earlier. I know you don't really hate this country." He gestures to the couch next to him. "Why don't you sit down, huh? We can watch the rest of the game together."
She straightens herself up, wipes her eyes. Suddenly feels a little self conscious. "Sure. Let me just go freshen up first."
"Of course honey."
Mom and Dad watch Sara leave the room, and then look at each other.
"Well."
"Well indeed."
"What did I tell you? You two just needed to spend some time together. Some quality time."
"I guess so. What did I ever do to deserve a woman as hot and as smart as you, huh Sheryl?"
Mom stands up and makes to leave the room, leaning down to kiss him as she passes. "I ask myself that question every day."
Alone, seen only by the TV, Dad smiles to himself. He picks up the remote, but instead of hitting play, he finds himself hitting rewind.
Cut to: drone footage. Grainy, monochrome. A group of figures move slowly through the desert. The camera tracks them. Zooms in. The pilot punches buttons. The figures become highlighted by a computer overlay, text appears next to them. ILLEGAL ENTRY ATTEMPT SUSPECTED. GROUND PATROLS ALERTED.
Cut to: on the ground, in the desert. The group of figures are all men. Dirty, scruffy, furtive. Like they mean business.They carry guns, pistols, and assault riffles. Bad hombres. One of them pulls open a bag, looks inside.
Cut to: close up of the inside of the bag. Inside are packets of white powder.
Suddenly, one of the party looks up, shouts something in Spanish. They all go to grab their guns.
But it's too late.
From three different directions, three different Chevrolet jeeps appear, screeching to a halt, kicking up dust. From them jump Border Patrol agents and Minutemen militia, guns drawn and ready.
The gang of men don't even put up a fight. They know they're surrounded, they drop their weapons and pathetically raise their hands.
All except one. The guy with the bag full of drugs. He's got nothing to lose. He reaches for his rifle.
Cut to: Border Patrol agents, opening fire.
Text flashes across the screen. ALERT CANCELLED. THREAT NEUTRALISED.
Cut to: the drone, banking and turning, flying away.
Cut to: exterior shot of the trailer. The still anonymous pilot exits, walks back towards his jeep.
Voiceover: Keeping America safe means never sleeping, but keeping America great means never forgetting who we are, and what keeps us strong.
The jeep starts up, pulls away from the camera in a cloud of dust.
Fade to black. Chevrolet logo. White text against black.
'We know what really makes America great'
Dad wipes another team from his eye. "I think we're going to be OK," he says to himself. "I think we're going to be just fine."
This article was originally published on TheLong+Short. Read the original article. | Their realities both stem from limited, biased media spheres. | They both take Sara's mother for granted. | They both claim to support job generation, but invest in companies and entities that eliminate jobs. | The advertisements they watch are driving them apart, versus bringing them together. | 0 |
99902_1IHVLLLA_7 | In Sara's version of the Chevrolet ad, what is implied as the thing that makes America great? | Divided we stand
Sara lets the Lyft park itself in the drive, lets out a sigh, and tweets
wish me luck
plus some emojis before slipping her phone into a hoody pocket. Curtains twitch, and before she can get her bag out of the back Mom is there, right there next to her, their hands touching on the handle as they compete for control.
"It's OK Mom, I got it."
"You should have let us come pick you up."
"It's fine, there was no need. I didn't want to put any-"
"But you shouldn't be wasting money, not with how much rent you pay and-"
Jesus. Not this already. "Mom. I can afford a cab ride. I'm not
that
much of a failure."
Mom sighs, shoulders falling, looks at Sara directly. "I'm sorry honey." She looks old, Sara thinks, watching a resigned tiredness flicker across her face in a way she'd not noticed before. Like she's exhausted by conflict, surrendered to it. "Now, don't I get a hug?"
Sara smiles. They hold each other for a few long seconds, rubbing and squeezing each other as the Lyft silently backs itself out of the driveway. When they part it's Mom's hand that's on the bag's handle.
Inside she unwraps herself from scarves and layers, the heat in the house almost a shock after the cold air. Michigan in February. Mom is already halfway up the stairs, bag in tow, headed for her room.
"Mom, just leave that and I'll…"
"Your father's in the front room," she says, just before she disappears from view. "Go say hi."
For a few seconds Sara is alone in the hallway, the smell of cooking meat coming from one doorway, the sound of rolling news from another. She shakes her head, kicks off shoes, tucks hair behind her ears. Braces herself.
He's sat in the living room, reclining in the Lazy Boy. He doesn't hear her enter - her socked feet silent on the pile carpet floor, his attention lost in the screen that fills most of the wall. Fox News. She braces herself again.
"Hey Dad."
His head jerks to look at her. "Hey! When did you get here?" He starts to push himself up.
"Don't get up Dad, it's fine. Really." She takes a seat on the couch. "I just got here, like two minutes ago."
"Good flight?"
"Yeah. Fine. Y'know. Same as always."
He smiles back at her, nods knowingly.
Their first words in nearly a year. Fine. So far. She relaxes. Of course it is. How bad could it be?
"I thought I was gonna come pick you up from the airport?"
"Ah, no. I got a cab. I didn't want to bother you."
"Bother me? You think I'm too old and infirm to pick my own daughter up from the airport?"
"No Dad, of course not."
The war spills out of Fox News, casualty figures scrolling across monochrome drone footage, attack helicopters circling over Caracas apartment blocks, pundits with bronzed skin and immaculate blond hair smiling from four-way split screens.
"So you just got a cab?"
"Yeah."
"How much did that cost?"
"Not much. Really. I can afford-"
"Cabs are expensive. You shouldn't be wasting your money."
"It wasn't expensive. It wasn't a cab, it was a Lyft."
"One of those driverless things?"
"Yeah."
Ad break. An elderly couple ride a tandem bicycle through a park, laughing and smiling in Instagram-perfect sunshine, as a calm, relaxing voice lists the potentially lethal side effects of a diabetes drug.
Dad shakes his head. "I don't know how you can use those things. I don't trust them."
"Dad, they're perfectly safe."
"That's not what I mean. They're stealing people's jobs."
There's a brief second, a fleeting moment, where Sara can bite her lip, let it go. She misses it. "But I thought it was immigrants that are stealing people's jobs?"
"You might think it's funny little lady, but let me tell you - you remember Kyle and Max, Bill Cooper's boys? Live up off Lafayette, past the Checkers?"
"Nope."
"Well let me tell you," He shifts in the recliner, with some obvious pain and effort, to face her. "Both of 'em lost their jobs just this last year. Both of 'em were truckers. Both of 'em been driving trucks since high school. Now the damn trucks are driving themselves and they're both out of work. And they got families to support. Kids."
"Well I'm sure they'll be fine." She regrets the sarcasm as soon as she hears it in her own voice, but she still can't stop herself, like it's expected, like it's part of the routine. Part of their schtick. "They just got to get themselves out there, huh Dad? Pull themselves up by their bootstraps. That's the American way, right?"
"I'm glad you think this is funny, I really do. But what you New York types need to realise is-"
"Ed!" Mom had appeared in the doorway. "Please! Both of you. No fighting today, please."
"Sheryl-"
"No. I don't want to hear you two as much as disagreeing about anything today, unless it's about the game. And even then you'd better keep it civil. Otherwise you can both go hungry. Understand?"
Awkward pause.
"Fine."
"Sorry Mom."
Sara turns back to the TV, to watching the war, to trying to work out which one it is.
It had always been this way, ever since she was about thirteen. Up until then it just seemed like constant warmth, as though she didn't have any childhood concept of Dad apart from him getting home from work, then her sitting on his knee, eating cookies and watching football highlights until Mom came in and scolded them both for ruining their appetites before dinner.
And then everything changed. Suddenly there was rap music and nose rings, sneaking out of the house to see her friends and not wanting to go to church. Suddenly he was no longer this lovable bear-man that ruffled her hair and gave her candy and explained defensive plays to her, but this huge obelisk of injustice that just wanted to crush her high school life into dust. It was constant warfare; every opinion she had became a battle, every decision she made a conflict. Getting away to college gave her escape, but bred resentment too; he hated that she went to New York, even though NYU was a good school, and her decision to stay there after she finished made things even worse. And then politics got all crazy, weirder then ever, and it became impossible for them to talk without it erupting into fights almost instantly. It was bad enough when the smart, young guy she liked was president and Dad constantly spewed his hate for him at her, but somehow it got even worse when the old, racist, women hating war-starter he liked won. Twice.
So they didn't talk much now, barely online, never on the phone. Since her second year of school he'd never been to NYC to visit her. She came back when she could face it; sometimes for birthdays, sometimes for Thanksgiving. Maybe for Christmas. But somehow always, like now, for the Super Bowl. Like football was the one thing they still had, that one thing they could still sit in the same room together for. Shouting at players, screaming at the ref, laughing at the ads.
Dad is in the bathroom, and Sara has had enough of Fox and whichever war this is. She reaches over and grabs the remote from the arm of his chair, and tries to find something else to watch. The government had scrapped all the rules about how the internet worked, and for most people like her parents it had suddenly gotten a lot cheaper to get their TV through Facebook, so all she can find is
Fox, Breitbart News, Family Values TV, Info Wars, The Rebel, Glenn Beck, The Voice of America, America First, The Bible Today
and lots of hunting and sports channels she doesn't even recognise. It's signed in to her Dad's FB account, and the last thing she wants is to try and log in on hers before he gets back from the john. Yeah. There was no way that would end up with them keeping it civil.
In her pocket her phone vibrates, purrs against her skin, reminding her it's there, making sure she's not forgotten where her real friends are, that there's a world outside, beyond Dad and his TV. She takes it out and cradles it in her hands, the dark screen fleetingly reflecting back her face before it jumps awake at her very touch, opening up to bathe her in blue light, in comfort and warmth and the familiar. For the first time since she got home she feels herself relax.
Dinner is Mom's meatloaf, with gravy and mashed potatoes. Cornbread and broccoli. Every mouthful tastes like nostalgia, and Sara can feel herself being encompassed by a bubble, this barrier of warm air and long forgotten simplicity enveloping her body, protecting her from the confusion of the world outside.
"How's work, honey?" Mom asks.
"Yeah, going OK." Sara works for a non-profit in Brooklyn that helps big organisations to transition to renewable energy. The pay is lousy but it feels important. "We just got the last few schools in the city to agree to put solar panels on their roofs. Big deal for us. I've been working on them for the last two years."
Mom says nothing, just looks down at her plate.
Dad finishes chewing his mouthful, swallows, wipes his beard with a napkin. Sighs, barely controlled anger simmering behind his face. "Solar panels cause cancer."
Sara laughs, covering her mouth as she nearly chokes on chewed food. "What? No they don't Dad."
"They do. The material they use to coat them reacts to sunlight, and produces an airborne carcinogen. It's based on a particular kind of rare earth. It's a bit like teflon. The Chinese have known about this for decades but have kept it covered up, because they-"
"Dad, no. Just no. Trust me."
"-because they are the world's largest manufacturers of solar panels. But the research has been done. The scientific evidence is out there. Look it up."
"Look it up?" Sara shakes her head, not knowing where to even start. "Dad, who is telling you this stuff?"
"No one is telling me it, Sara. I read it. It's in the news. I mean, really, I'm surprised you've not seen it. It was all over Facebook."
"Maybe on yours, but it's not all over my Facebook." She doesn't have the heart to tell him she muted him six months ago.
"Well, I don't read the news and I don't know any science," says Mom, "But I do know this: after they opened that solar farm up near Mary, within just a few years her and two of her neighbours had cancer. I mean I don't know anything for sure honey, but given the risk are you sure it's safe to be putting these panels on top of schools?"
"There's no risk, Mom. None at all. Dad, I wish you'd stop believing everything you see on Facebook."
"Well, maybe you should read things yourself before passing judgement on them." He pushes himself up from his seat, steps away from the table. Sara sighs, thinking she's upset him that much that he's actually abandoning his dinner, but he stops to grab something off a nearby shelf. His iPad. He heads back and takes his seat again.
Oh, here we fucking go
she thinks to herself.
He stabs at the screen, looks for a while, stabs again. Flips it over and hands it to her. "Here. Read."
Reluctantly, she takes it. His Facebook feed. Somewhere in the middle of it is the article, a very to the point CHINESE SOLAR PANELS CAUSE CANCER headline. But she can't even focus on it, because the rest of the screen is filled with distractions, looping videos and animated gifs, all adverts, and all for guns. Or security systems. Panic rooms. Back up power generators. Emergency rations. More guns.
"Jesus Christ Dad, these ads!"
"No blasphemy at the dinner table, please honey" says Mom.
"What about them?"
"Just… just look at them. They're terrifying. They're like… like adverts for the end of the world! You know they show you this stuff just to make you scared, right? Just to keep you paranoid."
"They show me this stuff because they've got products to sell. That's how the economy works. That's how we create jobs. Godammit Sara, are you telling me you hate
advertising
now? Do you just hate everything about America?"
Sara looks over to Mom, who looks like she's on the brink of tears. Suddenly she finds she's also lost the will to fight. Gently she closes the iPad and puts it down on the table, next to her plate.
"No, of course not Dad. Maybe I'll read this later, after the game."
After dinner she helps Mom clean-up, the two of them loading the dishwasher in near silence. She's leaning against the counter, scrolling through Twitter on her phone, when Mom finally speaks.
"You should go easy on your father, you know. He's worried about a lot of things."
"What things? Solar panel cancer?"
"Don't joke Sara, I'm serious. There's a lot that bothers him. The state of the world. The future. All these damn wars."
"We're all worried about all that, Mom."
"He's worried about his health.
I'm
worried about his health. Probably more than he is."
Sara looks up from her phone, genuine concern. "Is he OK?"
"I don't know. He won't go to the doctor. Hasn't been in months. He's worried about his insurance."
"I had no idea-"
"Yeah, well you know your father. Doesn't like to talk about it. Doesn't want to burden other people with his problems. Hates pity." She pauses, looks out the window into the yard. When she turns back to Sara her eyes are damp. "This is why I was so excited about you coming back. Why he was so excited! I thought it'd take his mind of all this. He was so excited to see you. You know he loves watching the game with you, Sara."
"I know. I'm sorry I-"
"And the ads! The Super Bowl ads! You know how much he loves watching the new ads with you. It's a stupid thing, sure, but he loves it. Talks about it all the time. It's like a tradition to him. That's why he got so upset over dinner when you got angry at his ads. It's something special he has with you, he doesn't want to lose it."
Sara slips her phone into her pocket, genuine guilt. Feels like a spoiled kid. "I didn't realise. I'm sorry."
Mom smiles, walks over and kisses her on the forehead. "It's OK honey. Don't feel bad. Just go. Just go sit in there with him and watch some TV. Please."
It's the second down on the Falcon's 60 yard line with 30 yards to cover, and the Lions need one touchdown to equalise. Sara and her Dad are sat in the front room, working their way through a family sized pack of Oreos, when the ad break starts.
Dawn. Red skies over the desert. A Chevrolet truck pulls up next to a large, trailer. Low shot next to the front tire, as a cowboy booted foot drops down from the door, disturbing dust.
Cut to: internal shot of the trailer, darkness split by morning light through the opening door. The figure enters, flicks on lights. The room is full of equipment, computers. The figure takes a seat, puts on a headset, thumbs on screens. Rests their hands on two large joysticks on the desk.
Cut to: airfield, the desert. The distinctive silhouette of a Predator drone taxis across the screen, rising heat shimmering the air around it.
Cut to: interior of the trailer. The faceless figure works controls, the joysticks, touch screens.
Voiceover: They say you need to get up pretty early to get past America's finest. But the truth is we never sleep.
Cut to: a uniformed guard on top of the border wall. He looks up and gives a salute to the drone as it soars above him, out and across the desert.
Cut to: drone footage. Grainy, monochrome. A group of figures move slowly through the desert. The camera tracks them. Zooms in. The pilot punches buttons. The figures become highlighted by a computer overlay, text appears next to them. ILLEGAL ENTRY ATTEMPT SUSPECTED. GROUND PATROLS ALERTED.
"Fuck this," says Sara, getting up from her seat.
"Sara!" says Mom.
"No I'm sorry, I can't. I can't sit here and watch this… this bullshit. This propaganda." She storms out of the room.
"Sara!" Mom makes to get up.
"No, just leave her," says Dad, gently, his eyes still fixed on the screen. "Just let her go."
Out in the kitchen Sara sits at the table and wants to scream. She's angry, mainly with herself. She should never have fucking come here. She should have known better. There was never any fucking way anything good was going to come from this. As much as Mom wants to romanticise things, to make them sound cute and adorable, the truth is shit with Dad has never been right since she was a teenager. Too much resentment, too much bad blood, too much control and rebellion. They hadn't agreed on anything - they hadn't managed to have a simple conversation that didn't descend into fighting - in 15 goddamn years, and no amount of eating cookies and watching fucking Super Bowl ads on the TV was going to fix that.
She sighs, wipes a tear from her cheek. On autopilot she takes her phone from her pocket, feels its reassuring warmth in her hand, and swipes open Twitter.
Everybody seems to be talking about the same thing.
omg im crying
holy shit that chevrolet ad /fire emoji
that was sooooo beautiful
who knew chevrolet were so woke
i can't believe they did that, so amazing
Hang on, are they taking about the same ad?
Hastily she opens her FB TV app, pulls up the game. The ad is just finishing. She hits the 10-second rewind icon a couple of times, then leans the phone on its side against a ketchup bottle.
Cut to: drone footage. Grainy, monochrome. A group of figures move slowly through the desert. The camera tracks them. Zooms in. The pilot punches buttons. The figures become highlighted by a computer overlay, text appears next to them. ILLEGAL ENTRY ATTEMPT SUSPECTED. GROUND PATROLS ALERTED.
Cut to: on the ground, in the desert. The group of figures are revealed to be a Mexican family, maybe two. Men, women, children. They look tired, hungry. They stop to rest, sipping the little water they have left from tattered plastic bottles.
A little way away from the main group sits a small child, a girl. Maybe 8 years old. She is drawing shapes in the dust with a stick. She's drawn quite a bit it looks like, but from our angle we can't see what.
Cut to: drone footage. The pilot is watching the group. As he tracks away from the main party to where the girl is sat, the camera reveals what she has drawn.
A large, child's rendition of the American flag.
Underneath it, it childlike handwriting, some words. 'I have a dream'
Text flashes across the screen. ALERT CANCELLED. ALL PATROLS: STAND DOWN
Cut to: the drone, banking and turning, flying away.
Cut to: exterior shot of the trailer. The still anonymous pilot exits, walks back towards his jeep.
Voiceover: Keeping America safe means never sleeping, but keeping America great means never forgetting who we are, and how we got here.
The jeep starts up, pulls away from the camera in a cloud of dust.
Fade to black. Chevrolet logo. White text against black.
'We know what really makes America great'
Sara finds herself in the front room, sobbing.
"Honey?"
Dad pauses the TV, looks up at her. It looks like he's been crying too. "Sara?"
"Did you - did you watch it?"
"The Chevrolet ad?"
"Yeah."
"Yeah, we did." Embarrassed, he wipes a tear from his cheek. "It was… it was very moving."
She falls on him, wrapping her arms around his neck, burying her face in his chest. "I'm sorry Dad. I'm so sorry. I didn't mean to be so mean-"
"It's OK, honey. It really is."
"No, no it's not. We always fight. And I know that's mainly my fault-"
'Well, now, c'mon-"
"No, it is. It's my fault. I got myself into thinking we can never agree on anything, that we can never see eye to eye. That we've got nothing in common anymore." She lifts her head to look up at him. "But I know that's wrong. That I shouldn't assume things about you. That there's still things that can bring us together."
He grins back at her. "Like Super Bowl ads?"
She laughs. "I guess. But you know what I mean, really."
"I know honey. And I'm sorry too. I didn't mean what I said earlier. I know you don't really hate this country." He gestures to the couch next to him. "Why don't you sit down, huh? We can watch the rest of the game together."
She straightens herself up, wipes her eyes. Suddenly feels a little self conscious. "Sure. Let me just go freshen up first."
"Of course honey."
Mom and Dad watch Sara leave the room, and then look at each other.
"Well."
"Well indeed."
"What did I tell you? You two just needed to spend some time together. Some quality time."
"I guess so. What did I ever do to deserve a woman as hot and as smart as you, huh Sheryl?"
Mom stands up and makes to leave the room, leaning down to kiss him as she passes. "I ask myself that question every day."
Alone, seen only by the TV, Dad smiles to himself. He picks up the remote, but instead of hitting play, he finds himself hitting rewind.
Cut to: drone footage. Grainy, monochrome. A group of figures move slowly through the desert. The camera tracks them. Zooms in. The pilot punches buttons. The figures become highlighted by a computer overlay, text appears next to them. ILLEGAL ENTRY ATTEMPT SUSPECTED. GROUND PATROLS ALERTED.
Cut to: on the ground, in the desert. The group of figures are all men. Dirty, scruffy, furtive. Like they mean business.They carry guns, pistols, and assault riffles. Bad hombres. One of them pulls open a bag, looks inside.
Cut to: close up of the inside of the bag. Inside are packets of white powder.
Suddenly, one of the party looks up, shouts something in Spanish. They all go to grab their guns.
But it's too late.
From three different directions, three different Chevrolet jeeps appear, screeching to a halt, kicking up dust. From them jump Border Patrol agents and Minutemen militia, guns drawn and ready.
The gang of men don't even put up a fight. They know they're surrounded, they drop their weapons and pathetically raise their hands.
All except one. The guy with the bag full of drugs. He's got nothing to lose. He reaches for his rifle.
Cut to: Border Patrol agents, opening fire.
Text flashes across the screen. ALERT CANCELLED. THREAT NEUTRALISED.
Cut to: the drone, banking and turning, flying away.
Cut to: exterior shot of the trailer. The still anonymous pilot exits, walks back towards his jeep.
Voiceover: Keeping America safe means never sleeping, but keeping America great means never forgetting who we are, and what keeps us strong.
The jeep starts up, pulls away from the camera in a cloud of dust.
Fade to black. Chevrolet logo. White text against black.
'We know what really makes America great'
Dad wipes another team from his eye. "I think we're going to be OK," he says to himself. "I think we're going to be just fine."
This article was originally published on TheLong+Short. Read the original article. | freedom of speech | freedom of religion | diverse inhabitants | affordable vehicles | 2 |
99902_1IHVLLLA_8 | Which statement best represents the central theme of the text? | Divided we stand
Sara lets the Lyft park itself in the drive, lets out a sigh, and tweets
wish me luck
plus some emojis before slipping her phone into a hoody pocket. Curtains twitch, and before she can get her bag out of the back Mom is there, right there next to her, their hands touching on the handle as they compete for control.
"It's OK Mom, I got it."
"You should have let us come pick you up."
"It's fine, there was no need. I didn't want to put any-"
"But you shouldn't be wasting money, not with how much rent you pay and-"
Jesus. Not this already. "Mom. I can afford a cab ride. I'm not
that
much of a failure."
Mom sighs, shoulders falling, looks at Sara directly. "I'm sorry honey." She looks old, Sara thinks, watching a resigned tiredness flicker across her face in a way she'd not noticed before. Like she's exhausted by conflict, surrendered to it. "Now, don't I get a hug?"
Sara smiles. They hold each other for a few long seconds, rubbing and squeezing each other as the Lyft silently backs itself out of the driveway. When they part it's Mom's hand that's on the bag's handle.
Inside she unwraps herself from scarves and layers, the heat in the house almost a shock after the cold air. Michigan in February. Mom is already halfway up the stairs, bag in tow, headed for her room.
"Mom, just leave that and I'll…"
"Your father's in the front room," she says, just before she disappears from view. "Go say hi."
For a few seconds Sara is alone in the hallway, the smell of cooking meat coming from one doorway, the sound of rolling news from another. She shakes her head, kicks off shoes, tucks hair behind her ears. Braces herself.
He's sat in the living room, reclining in the Lazy Boy. He doesn't hear her enter - her socked feet silent on the pile carpet floor, his attention lost in the screen that fills most of the wall. Fox News. She braces herself again.
"Hey Dad."
His head jerks to look at her. "Hey! When did you get here?" He starts to push himself up.
"Don't get up Dad, it's fine. Really." She takes a seat on the couch. "I just got here, like two minutes ago."
"Good flight?"
"Yeah. Fine. Y'know. Same as always."
He smiles back at her, nods knowingly.
Their first words in nearly a year. Fine. So far. She relaxes. Of course it is. How bad could it be?
"I thought I was gonna come pick you up from the airport?"
"Ah, no. I got a cab. I didn't want to bother you."
"Bother me? You think I'm too old and infirm to pick my own daughter up from the airport?"
"No Dad, of course not."
The war spills out of Fox News, casualty figures scrolling across monochrome drone footage, attack helicopters circling over Caracas apartment blocks, pundits with bronzed skin and immaculate blond hair smiling from four-way split screens.
"So you just got a cab?"
"Yeah."
"How much did that cost?"
"Not much. Really. I can afford-"
"Cabs are expensive. You shouldn't be wasting your money."
"It wasn't expensive. It wasn't a cab, it was a Lyft."
"One of those driverless things?"
"Yeah."
Ad break. An elderly couple ride a tandem bicycle through a park, laughing and smiling in Instagram-perfect sunshine, as a calm, relaxing voice lists the potentially lethal side effects of a diabetes drug.
Dad shakes his head. "I don't know how you can use those things. I don't trust them."
"Dad, they're perfectly safe."
"That's not what I mean. They're stealing people's jobs."
There's a brief second, a fleeting moment, where Sara can bite her lip, let it go. She misses it. "But I thought it was immigrants that are stealing people's jobs?"
"You might think it's funny little lady, but let me tell you - you remember Kyle and Max, Bill Cooper's boys? Live up off Lafayette, past the Checkers?"
"Nope."
"Well let me tell you," He shifts in the recliner, with some obvious pain and effort, to face her. "Both of 'em lost their jobs just this last year. Both of 'em were truckers. Both of 'em been driving trucks since high school. Now the damn trucks are driving themselves and they're both out of work. And they got families to support. Kids."
"Well I'm sure they'll be fine." She regrets the sarcasm as soon as she hears it in her own voice, but she still can't stop herself, like it's expected, like it's part of the routine. Part of their schtick. "They just got to get themselves out there, huh Dad? Pull themselves up by their bootstraps. That's the American way, right?"
"I'm glad you think this is funny, I really do. But what you New York types need to realise is-"
"Ed!" Mom had appeared in the doorway. "Please! Both of you. No fighting today, please."
"Sheryl-"
"No. I don't want to hear you two as much as disagreeing about anything today, unless it's about the game. And even then you'd better keep it civil. Otherwise you can both go hungry. Understand?"
Awkward pause.
"Fine."
"Sorry Mom."
Sara turns back to the TV, to watching the war, to trying to work out which one it is.
It had always been this way, ever since she was about thirteen. Up until then it just seemed like constant warmth, as though she didn't have any childhood concept of Dad apart from him getting home from work, then her sitting on his knee, eating cookies and watching football highlights until Mom came in and scolded them both for ruining their appetites before dinner.
And then everything changed. Suddenly there was rap music and nose rings, sneaking out of the house to see her friends and not wanting to go to church. Suddenly he was no longer this lovable bear-man that ruffled her hair and gave her candy and explained defensive plays to her, but this huge obelisk of injustice that just wanted to crush her high school life into dust. It was constant warfare; every opinion she had became a battle, every decision she made a conflict. Getting away to college gave her escape, but bred resentment too; he hated that she went to New York, even though NYU was a good school, and her decision to stay there after she finished made things even worse. And then politics got all crazy, weirder then ever, and it became impossible for them to talk without it erupting into fights almost instantly. It was bad enough when the smart, young guy she liked was president and Dad constantly spewed his hate for him at her, but somehow it got even worse when the old, racist, women hating war-starter he liked won. Twice.
So they didn't talk much now, barely online, never on the phone. Since her second year of school he'd never been to NYC to visit her. She came back when she could face it; sometimes for birthdays, sometimes for Thanksgiving. Maybe for Christmas. But somehow always, like now, for the Super Bowl. Like football was the one thing they still had, that one thing they could still sit in the same room together for. Shouting at players, screaming at the ref, laughing at the ads.
Dad is in the bathroom, and Sara has had enough of Fox and whichever war this is. She reaches over and grabs the remote from the arm of his chair, and tries to find something else to watch. The government had scrapped all the rules about how the internet worked, and for most people like her parents it had suddenly gotten a lot cheaper to get their TV through Facebook, so all she can find is
Fox, Breitbart News, Family Values TV, Info Wars, The Rebel, Glenn Beck, The Voice of America, America First, The Bible Today
and lots of hunting and sports channels she doesn't even recognise. It's signed in to her Dad's FB account, and the last thing she wants is to try and log in on hers before he gets back from the john. Yeah. There was no way that would end up with them keeping it civil.
In her pocket her phone vibrates, purrs against her skin, reminding her it's there, making sure she's not forgotten where her real friends are, that there's a world outside, beyond Dad and his TV. She takes it out and cradles it in her hands, the dark screen fleetingly reflecting back her face before it jumps awake at her very touch, opening up to bathe her in blue light, in comfort and warmth and the familiar. For the first time since she got home she feels herself relax.
Dinner is Mom's meatloaf, with gravy and mashed potatoes. Cornbread and broccoli. Every mouthful tastes like nostalgia, and Sara can feel herself being encompassed by a bubble, this barrier of warm air and long forgotten simplicity enveloping her body, protecting her from the confusion of the world outside.
"How's work, honey?" Mom asks.
"Yeah, going OK." Sara works for a non-profit in Brooklyn that helps big organisations to transition to renewable energy. The pay is lousy but it feels important. "We just got the last few schools in the city to agree to put solar panels on their roofs. Big deal for us. I've been working on them for the last two years."
Mom says nothing, just looks down at her plate.
Dad finishes chewing his mouthful, swallows, wipes his beard with a napkin. Sighs, barely controlled anger simmering behind his face. "Solar panels cause cancer."
Sara laughs, covering her mouth as she nearly chokes on chewed food. "What? No they don't Dad."
"They do. The material they use to coat them reacts to sunlight, and produces an airborne carcinogen. It's based on a particular kind of rare earth. It's a bit like teflon. The Chinese have known about this for decades but have kept it covered up, because they-"
"Dad, no. Just no. Trust me."
"-because they are the world's largest manufacturers of solar panels. But the research has been done. The scientific evidence is out there. Look it up."
"Look it up?" Sara shakes her head, not knowing where to even start. "Dad, who is telling you this stuff?"
"No one is telling me it, Sara. I read it. It's in the news. I mean, really, I'm surprised you've not seen it. It was all over Facebook."
"Maybe on yours, but it's not all over my Facebook." She doesn't have the heart to tell him she muted him six months ago.
"Well, I don't read the news and I don't know any science," says Mom, "But I do know this: after they opened that solar farm up near Mary, within just a few years her and two of her neighbours had cancer. I mean I don't know anything for sure honey, but given the risk are you sure it's safe to be putting these panels on top of schools?"
"There's no risk, Mom. None at all. Dad, I wish you'd stop believing everything you see on Facebook."
"Well, maybe you should read things yourself before passing judgement on them." He pushes himself up from his seat, steps away from the table. Sara sighs, thinking she's upset him that much that he's actually abandoning his dinner, but he stops to grab something off a nearby shelf. His iPad. He heads back and takes his seat again.
Oh, here we fucking go
she thinks to herself.
He stabs at the screen, looks for a while, stabs again. Flips it over and hands it to her. "Here. Read."
Reluctantly, she takes it. His Facebook feed. Somewhere in the middle of it is the article, a very to the point CHINESE SOLAR PANELS CAUSE CANCER headline. But she can't even focus on it, because the rest of the screen is filled with distractions, looping videos and animated gifs, all adverts, and all for guns. Or security systems. Panic rooms. Back up power generators. Emergency rations. More guns.
"Jesus Christ Dad, these ads!"
"No blasphemy at the dinner table, please honey" says Mom.
"What about them?"
"Just… just look at them. They're terrifying. They're like… like adverts for the end of the world! You know they show you this stuff just to make you scared, right? Just to keep you paranoid."
"They show me this stuff because they've got products to sell. That's how the economy works. That's how we create jobs. Godammit Sara, are you telling me you hate
advertising
now? Do you just hate everything about America?"
Sara looks over to Mom, who looks like she's on the brink of tears. Suddenly she finds she's also lost the will to fight. Gently she closes the iPad and puts it down on the table, next to her plate.
"No, of course not Dad. Maybe I'll read this later, after the game."
After dinner she helps Mom clean-up, the two of them loading the dishwasher in near silence. She's leaning against the counter, scrolling through Twitter on her phone, when Mom finally speaks.
"You should go easy on your father, you know. He's worried about a lot of things."
"What things? Solar panel cancer?"
"Don't joke Sara, I'm serious. There's a lot that bothers him. The state of the world. The future. All these damn wars."
"We're all worried about all that, Mom."
"He's worried about his health.
I'm
worried about his health. Probably more than he is."
Sara looks up from her phone, genuine concern. "Is he OK?"
"I don't know. He won't go to the doctor. Hasn't been in months. He's worried about his insurance."
"I had no idea-"
"Yeah, well you know your father. Doesn't like to talk about it. Doesn't want to burden other people with his problems. Hates pity." She pauses, looks out the window into the yard. When she turns back to Sara her eyes are damp. "This is why I was so excited about you coming back. Why he was so excited! I thought it'd take his mind of all this. He was so excited to see you. You know he loves watching the game with you, Sara."
"I know. I'm sorry I-"
"And the ads! The Super Bowl ads! You know how much he loves watching the new ads with you. It's a stupid thing, sure, but he loves it. Talks about it all the time. It's like a tradition to him. That's why he got so upset over dinner when you got angry at his ads. It's something special he has with you, he doesn't want to lose it."
Sara slips her phone into her pocket, genuine guilt. Feels like a spoiled kid. "I didn't realise. I'm sorry."
Mom smiles, walks over and kisses her on the forehead. "It's OK honey. Don't feel bad. Just go. Just go sit in there with him and watch some TV. Please."
It's the second down on the Falcon's 60 yard line with 30 yards to cover, and the Lions need one touchdown to equalise. Sara and her Dad are sat in the front room, working their way through a family sized pack of Oreos, when the ad break starts.
Dawn. Red skies over the desert. A Chevrolet truck pulls up next to a large, trailer. Low shot next to the front tire, as a cowboy booted foot drops down from the door, disturbing dust.
Cut to: internal shot of the trailer, darkness split by morning light through the opening door. The figure enters, flicks on lights. The room is full of equipment, computers. The figure takes a seat, puts on a headset, thumbs on screens. Rests their hands on two large joysticks on the desk.
Cut to: airfield, the desert. The distinctive silhouette of a Predator drone taxis across the screen, rising heat shimmering the air around it.
Cut to: interior of the trailer. The faceless figure works controls, the joysticks, touch screens.
Voiceover: They say you need to get up pretty early to get past America's finest. But the truth is we never sleep.
Cut to: a uniformed guard on top of the border wall. He looks up and gives a salute to the drone as it soars above him, out and across the desert.
Cut to: drone footage. Grainy, monochrome. A group of figures move slowly through the desert. The camera tracks them. Zooms in. The pilot punches buttons. The figures become highlighted by a computer overlay, text appears next to them. ILLEGAL ENTRY ATTEMPT SUSPECTED. GROUND PATROLS ALERTED.
"Fuck this," says Sara, getting up from her seat.
"Sara!" says Mom.
"No I'm sorry, I can't. I can't sit here and watch this… this bullshit. This propaganda." She storms out of the room.
"Sara!" Mom makes to get up.
"No, just leave her," says Dad, gently, his eyes still fixed on the screen. "Just let her go."
Out in the kitchen Sara sits at the table and wants to scream. She's angry, mainly with herself. She should never have fucking come here. She should have known better. There was never any fucking way anything good was going to come from this. As much as Mom wants to romanticise things, to make them sound cute and adorable, the truth is shit with Dad has never been right since she was a teenager. Too much resentment, too much bad blood, too much control and rebellion. They hadn't agreed on anything - they hadn't managed to have a simple conversation that didn't descend into fighting - in 15 goddamn years, and no amount of eating cookies and watching fucking Super Bowl ads on the TV was going to fix that.
She sighs, wipes a tear from her cheek. On autopilot she takes her phone from her pocket, feels its reassuring warmth in her hand, and swipes open Twitter.
Everybody seems to be talking about the same thing.
omg im crying
holy shit that chevrolet ad /fire emoji
that was sooooo beautiful
who knew chevrolet were so woke
i can't believe they did that, so amazing
Hang on, are they taking about the same ad?
Hastily she opens her FB TV app, pulls up the game. The ad is just finishing. She hits the 10-second rewind icon a couple of times, then leans the phone on its side against a ketchup bottle.
Cut to: drone footage. Grainy, monochrome. A group of figures move slowly through the desert. The camera tracks them. Zooms in. The pilot punches buttons. The figures become highlighted by a computer overlay, text appears next to them. ILLEGAL ENTRY ATTEMPT SUSPECTED. GROUND PATROLS ALERTED.
Cut to: on the ground, in the desert. The group of figures are revealed to be a Mexican family, maybe two. Men, women, children. They look tired, hungry. They stop to rest, sipping the little water they have left from tattered plastic bottles.
A little way away from the main group sits a small child, a girl. Maybe 8 years old. She is drawing shapes in the dust with a stick. She's drawn quite a bit it looks like, but from our angle we can't see what.
Cut to: drone footage. The pilot is watching the group. As he tracks away from the main party to where the girl is sat, the camera reveals what she has drawn.
A large, child's rendition of the American flag.
Underneath it, it childlike handwriting, some words. 'I have a dream'
Text flashes across the screen. ALERT CANCELLED. ALL PATROLS: STAND DOWN
Cut to: the drone, banking and turning, flying away.
Cut to: exterior shot of the trailer. The still anonymous pilot exits, walks back towards his jeep.
Voiceover: Keeping America safe means never sleeping, but keeping America great means never forgetting who we are, and how we got here.
The jeep starts up, pulls away from the camera in a cloud of dust.
Fade to black. Chevrolet logo. White text against black.
'We know what really makes America great'
Sara finds herself in the front room, sobbing.
"Honey?"
Dad pauses the TV, looks up at her. It looks like he's been crying too. "Sara?"
"Did you - did you watch it?"
"The Chevrolet ad?"
"Yeah."
"Yeah, we did." Embarrassed, he wipes a tear from his cheek. "It was… it was very moving."
She falls on him, wrapping her arms around his neck, burying her face in his chest. "I'm sorry Dad. I'm so sorry. I didn't mean to be so mean-"
"It's OK, honey. It really is."
"No, no it's not. We always fight. And I know that's mainly my fault-"
'Well, now, c'mon-"
"No, it is. It's my fault. I got myself into thinking we can never agree on anything, that we can never see eye to eye. That we've got nothing in common anymore." She lifts her head to look up at him. "But I know that's wrong. That I shouldn't assume things about you. That there's still things that can bring us together."
He grins back at her. "Like Super Bowl ads?"
She laughs. "I guess. But you know what I mean, really."
"I know honey. And I'm sorry too. I didn't mean what I said earlier. I know you don't really hate this country." He gestures to the couch next to him. "Why don't you sit down, huh? We can watch the rest of the game together."
She straightens herself up, wipes her eyes. Suddenly feels a little self conscious. "Sure. Let me just go freshen up first."
"Of course honey."
Mom and Dad watch Sara leave the room, and then look at each other.
"Well."
"Well indeed."
"What did I tell you? You two just needed to spend some time together. Some quality time."
"I guess so. What did I ever do to deserve a woman as hot and as smart as you, huh Sheryl?"
Mom stands up and makes to leave the room, leaning down to kiss him as she passes. "I ask myself that question every day."
Alone, seen only by the TV, Dad smiles to himself. He picks up the remote, but instead of hitting play, he finds himself hitting rewind.
Cut to: drone footage. Grainy, monochrome. A group of figures move slowly through the desert. The camera tracks them. Zooms in. The pilot punches buttons. The figures become highlighted by a computer overlay, text appears next to them. ILLEGAL ENTRY ATTEMPT SUSPECTED. GROUND PATROLS ALERTED.
Cut to: on the ground, in the desert. The group of figures are all men. Dirty, scruffy, furtive. Like they mean business.They carry guns, pistols, and assault riffles. Bad hombres. One of them pulls open a bag, looks inside.
Cut to: close up of the inside of the bag. Inside are packets of white powder.
Suddenly, one of the party looks up, shouts something in Spanish. They all go to grab their guns.
But it's too late.
From three different directions, three different Chevrolet jeeps appear, screeching to a halt, kicking up dust. From them jump Border Patrol agents and Minutemen militia, guns drawn and ready.
The gang of men don't even put up a fight. They know they're surrounded, they drop their weapons and pathetically raise their hands.
All except one. The guy with the bag full of drugs. He's got nothing to lose. He reaches for his rifle.
Cut to: Border Patrol agents, opening fire.
Text flashes across the screen. ALERT CANCELLED. THREAT NEUTRALISED.
Cut to: the drone, banking and turning, flying away.
Cut to: exterior shot of the trailer. The still anonymous pilot exits, walks back towards his jeep.
Voiceover: Keeping America safe means never sleeping, but keeping America great means never forgetting who we are, and what keeps us strong.
The jeep starts up, pulls away from the camera in a cloud of dust.
Fade to black. Chevrolet logo. White text against black.
'We know what really makes America great'
Dad wipes another team from his eye. "I think we're going to be OK," he says to himself. "I think we're going to be just fine."
This article was originally published on TheLong+Short. Read the original article. | The media is ultimately responsible for the breakdown of the American family. | People will be happy as long as the status quo is maintained. | Humans have much more in common than they have in difference. | While social media purports to bring us together, it more often drives us apart. | 3 |
31357_T9I0O70O_1 | Why did Nancy allow the man claiming to be her brother to take her child? | Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from Space Science Fiction May 1952. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.
THE ULTROOM ERROR
by
JERRY SOHL
Smith admitted he had made an error involving a few
murders—and a few thousand years. He was entitled to a
sense of humor, though, even in the Ultroom!
HB73782. Ultroom error. Tendal 13. Arvid 6. Kanad transfer
out of 1609 complete, intact, but too near limit of 1,000
days. Next Kanad transfer ready. 1951. Reginald, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Martin Laughton, 3495 Orland Drive, Marionville,
Illinois, U. S. A. Arrive his 378th day. TB73782.
Nancy Laughton sat on the blanket she had spread on the lawn in her
front yard, knitting a pair of booties for the PTA bazaar.
Occasionally she glanced at her son in the play pen, who was getting
his daily dose of sunshine. He was gurgling happily, examining a ball,
a cheese grater and a linen baby book, all with perfunctory interest.
When she looked up again she noticed a man walking by—except he
turned up the walk and crossed the lawn to her.
He was a little taller than her husband, had piercing blue eyes and a
rather amused set to his lips.
"Hello, Nancy," he said.
"Hello, Joe," she answered. It was her brother who lived in Kankakee.
"I'm going to take the baby for a while," he said.
"All right, Joe."
He reached into the pen, picked up the baby. As he did so the baby's
knees hit the side of the play pen and young Laughton let out a
scream—half from hurt and half from sudden lack of confidence in his
new handler. But this did not deter Joe. He started off with the
child.
Around the corner and after the man came a snarling mongrel dog, eyes
bright, teeth glinting in the sunlight. The man did not turn as the
dog threw himself at him, burying his teeth in his leg. Surprised, the
man dropped the screaming child on the lawn and turned to the dog. Joe
seemed off balance and he backed up confusedly in the face of the
snapping jaws. Then he suddenly turned and walked away, the dog at his
heels.
"I tell you, the man said he was my brother and he made me think he
was," Nancy told her husband for the tenth time. "I don't even have a
brother."
Martin Laughton sighed. "I can't understand why you believed him. It's
just—just plain nuts, Nancy!"
"Don't you think I know it?" Nancy said tearfully. "I feel like I'm
going crazy. I can't say I dreamt it because there was Reggie with his
bleeding knees, squalling for all he was worth on the grass—Oh, I
don't even want to think about it."
"We haven't lost Reggie, Nancy, remember that. Now why don't you try
to get some rest?"
"You—you don't believe me at all, do you, Martin?"
When her husband did not answer, her head sank to her arms on the
table and she sobbed.
"Nancy, for heaven's sake, of course I believe you. I'm trying to
think it out, that's all. We should have called the police."
Nancy shook her head in her arms. "They'd—never—believe me either,"
she moaned.
"I'd better go and make sure Reggie's all right." Martin got up out of
his chair and went to the stairs.
"I'm going with you," Nancy said, hurriedly rising and coming over to
him.
"We'll go up and look at him together."
They found Reggie peacefully asleep in his crib in his room upstairs.
They checked the windows and tucked in the blankets. They paused in
the room for a moment and then Martin stole his arm around his wife
and led her to the door.
"As I've said, sergeant, this fellow hypnotized my wife. He made her
think he was her brother. She doesn't even have a brother. Then he
tried to get away with the baby." Martin leaned down and patted the
dog. "It was Tiger here who scared him off."
The police sergeant looked at the father, at Nancy and then at the
dog. He scribbled notes in his book.
"Are you a rich man, Mr. Laughton?" he asked.
"Not at all. The bank still owns most of the house. I have a few
hundred dollars, that's all."
"What do you do?"
"Office work, mostly. I'm a junior executive in an insurance company."
"Any enemies?"
"No ... Oh, I suppose I have a few people I don't get along with, like
anybody else. Nobody who'd do anything like this, though."
The sergeant flipped his notebook closed. "You'd better keep your dog
inside and around the kid as much as possible. Keep your doors and
windows locked. I'll see that the prowl car keeps an eye on the house.
Call us if anything seems unusual or out of the way."
Nancy had taken a sedative and was asleep by the time Martin finished
cleaning the .30-.30 rifle he used for deer hunting. He put it by the
stairs, ready for use, fully loaded, leaning it against the wall next
to the telephone stand.
The front door bell rang. He answered it. It was Dr. Stuart and
another man.
"I came as soon as I could, Martin," the young doctor said, stepping
inside with the other man. "This is my new assistant, Dr. Tompkins."
Martin and Tompkins shook hands.
"The baby—?" Dr. Stuart asked.
"Upstairs," Martin said.
"You'd better get him, Dr. Tompkins, if we're to take him to the
hospital. I'll stay here with Mr. Laughton. How've you been, Martin?"
"Fine."
"How's everything at the office?"
"Fine."
"And your wife?"
"She's fine, too."
"Glad to hear it, Martin. Mighty glad. Say, by the way, there's that
bill you owe me. I think it's $32, isn't that right?"
"Yes, I'd almost forgotten about it."
"Why don't you be a good fellow and write a check for it? It's been
over a year, you know."
"That's right. I'll get right at it." Martin went over to his desk,
opened it and started looking for his checkbook. Dr. Stuart stood by
him, making idle comment until Dr. Tompkins came down the stairs with
the sleeping baby cuddled against his shoulder.
"Never mind the check, now, Martin. I see we're ready to go." He went
over to his assistant and took the baby. Together they walked out the
front door.
"Good-bye," Martin said, going to the door.
Then he was nearly bowled over by the discharge of the .30-.30. Dr.
Stuart crumpled to the ground, the baby falling to the lawn. Dr.
Tompkins whirled and there was a second shot. Dr. Tompkins pitched
forward on his face.
The figure of a woman ran from the house, retrieved the now squalling
infant and ran back into the house. Once inside, Nancy slammed the
door, gave the baby to the stunned Martin and headed for the
telephone.
"One of them was the same man!" she cried.
Martin gasped, sinking into a chair with the baby. "I believed them,"
he said slowly and uncomprehendingly. "They made me believe them!"
"Those bodies," the sergeant said. "Would you mind pointing them out
to me, please?"
"Aren't they—aren't they on the walk?" Mrs. Laughton asked.
"There is nothing on the walk, Mrs. Laughton."
"But there
must
be! I tell you I shot these men who posed as
doctors. One of them was the same man who tried to take the baby this
afternoon. They hypnotized my husband—"
"Yes, I know, Mrs. Laughton. We've been through that." The sergeant
went to the door and opened it. "Say, Homer, take another look around
the walk and the bushes. There's supposed to be two of them. Shot with
a .30-.30."
He turned and picked up the gun and examined it again. "Ever shoot a
gun before, Mrs. Laughton?"
"Many times. Martin and I used to go hunting together before we had
Reggie."
The sergeant nodded. "You were taking an awful chance, shooting at a
guy carrying your baby, don't you think?"
"I shot him in the legs. The other—the other turned and I shot him in
the chest. I could even see his eyes when he turned around. If I
hadn't pulled the trigger then ... I don't want to remember it."
The patrolman pushed the door open. "There's no bodies out here but
there's some blood. Quite a lot of blood. A little to one side of the
walk."
The policemen went out.
"Thank God you woke up, Nancy," Martin said. "I'd have let them have
the baby." He reached over and smoothed the sleeping Reggie's hair.
Nancy, who was rocking the boy, narrowed her eyes.
"I wonder why they want our baby? He's just like any other baby. We
don't have any money. We couldn't pay a ransom."
"Reggie's pretty cute, though," Martin said. "You will have to admit
that."
Nancy smiled. Then she suddenly stopped rocking.
"Martin!"
He sat up quickly.
"Where's Tiger?"
Together they rose and walked around the room. They found him in a
corner, eyes open, tongue protruding. He was dead.
If we keep Reggie in the house much longer he'll turn out to be a
hermit," Martin said at breakfast a month later. "He needs fresh air
and sunshine."
"I'm not going to sit on the lawn alone with him, Martin. I just
can't, that's all. I'd be able to think of nothing but that day."
"Still thinking about it? I think we'd have heard from them again if
they were coming back. They probably got somebody else's baby by this
time." Martin finished his coffee and rose to kiss her good-bye. "But
for safety's sake I guess you'd better keep that gun handy."
The morning turned into a brilliant, sunshiny day. Puffs of clouds
moved slowly across the summer sky and a warm breeze rustled the
trees. It would be a crime to keep Reggie inside on a day like this,
Nancy thought.
So she called Mrs. MacDougal, the next door neighbor. Mrs. MacDougal
was familiar with what had happened to the Laughtons and she agreed to
keep an eye on Nancy and Reggie and to call the police at the first
sign of trouble.
With a fearful but determined heart Nancy moved the play pen and set
it up in the front yard. She spread a blanket for herself and put
Reggie in the pen. Her heart pounded all the while and she watched the
street for any strangers, ready to flee inside if need be. Reggie just
gurgled with delight at the change in environment.
This peaceful scene was disturbed by a speeding car in which two men
were riding. The car roared up the street, swerved toward the parkway,
tires screaming, bounced over the curb and sidewalk, straight toward
the child and mother. Reggie, attracted by the sudden noise, looked up
to see the approaching vehicle. His mother stood up, set her palms
against her cheeks and shrieked.
The car came on, crunched over the play pen, killing the child. The
mother was hit and instantly killed, force of the blow snapping her
spine and tossing her against the house. The car plunged on into a
tree, hitting it a terrible blow, crumbling the car's forward end so
it looked like an accordion. The men were thrown from the machine.
"We'll never be able to prosecute in this case," the states attorney
said. "At least not on a drunken driving basis."
"I can't get over it," the chief of police said. "I've got at least
six men who will swear the man was drunk. He staggered, reeled and
gave the usual drunk talk. He reeked of whiskey."
The prosecutor handed the report over the desk. "Here's the analysis.
Not a trace of alcohol. He couldn't have even had a smell of near
beer. Here's another report. This is his physical exam made not long
afterwards. The man was in perfect health. Only variations are he had
a scar on his leg where something, probably a dog, bit him once. And
then a scar on his chest. It looked like an old gunshot wound, they
said. Must have happened years ago."
"That's odd. The man who accosted Mrs. Laughton in the afternoon was
bitten by their dog. Later that night she said she shot the same man
in the chest. Since the scars are healed it obviously couldn't be the
same man. But there's a real coincidence for you. And speaking of the
dogbite, the Laughton dog died that night. His menu evidently didn't
agree with him. Never did figure what killed him, actually."
"Any record of treatment on the man she shot?"
"The
men
. You'll remember, there were two. No, we never found a
trace of either. No doctor ever made a report of a gunshot wound that
night. No hospital had a case either—at least not within several
hundred miles—that night or several nights afterwards. Ever been shot
with .30-.30?"
The state attorney shook his head. "I wouldn't be here if I had."
"I'll say you wouldn't. The pair must have crawled away to die God
knows where."
"Getting back to the man who ran over the child and killed Mrs.
Laughton. Why did he pretend to be drunk?"
It was the chief's turn to shake his head. "Your guess is as good as
mine. There are a lot of angles to this case none of us understand. It
looks deliberate, but where's the motive?"
"What does the man have to say?"
"I was afraid you'd get to him," the chief said, his neck reddening.
"It's all been rather embarrassing to the department." He coughed
self-consciously. "He's proved a strange one, all right. He says his
name is John Smith and he's got cards to prove it, too—for example, a
social security card. It looks authentic, yet there's no such number
on file in Washington, so we've discovered. We've had him in jail for
a week and we've all taken turns questioning him. He laughs and admits
his guilt—in fact, he seems amused by most everything. Sometimes all
alone in his cell he'll start laughing for no apparent reason. It
gives you the creeps."
The states attorney leaned back in his chair. "Maybe it's a case for
an alienist."
"One jump ahead of you. Dr. Stone thinks he's normal, but won't put
down any I.Q. Actually, he can't figure him out himself. Smith seems
to take delight in answering questions—sort of anticipates them and
has the answer ready before you're half through asking."
"Well, if Dr. Stone says he's normal, that's enough for me." The
prosecutor was silent for a moment. Then, "How about the husband?"
"Laughton? We're afraid to let him see him. All broken up. No telling
what kind of a rumpus he'd start—especially if Smith started his
funny business."
"Guess you're right. Well, Mr. Smith won't think it's so funny when we
hang criminal negligence or manslaughter on him. By the way, you've
checked possible family connections?"
"Nobody ever saw John Smith before. Even at the address on his
driver's license. And there's no duplicate of that in Springfield, in
case you're interested."
The man who had laughingly told police his name was John Smith lay on
his cot in the county jail, his eyes closed, his arms folded across
his chest. This gave him the appearance of being alert despite
reclining. Even as he lay, his mouth held a hint of a smile.
Arvid 6—for John Smith
was
Arvid 6—had lain in that position for
more than four hours, when suddenly he snapped his eyes open and
appeared to be listening. For a moment a look of concern crossed his
face and he swung his legs to the floor and sat there expectantly.
Arvid 6 knew Tendal 13 had materialized and was somewhere in the
building.
Eventually there were some sounds from beyond the steel cell and
doorway. There was a clang when the outer doorway was opened and Arvid
6 rose from his cot.
"Your lawyer's here to see you," the jailer said, indicating the man
with the brief case. "Ring the buzzer when you're through." The jailer
let the man in, locked the cell door and walked away.
The man threw the brief case on the jail cot and stood glaring.
"Your damned foolishness has gone far enough. I'm sick and tired of
it," he declared. "If you carry on any more we'll never get back to
the Ultroom!"
"I'm sorry, Tendal," the man on the cot said. "I didn't think—"
"You're absolutely right. You didn't think. Crashing that car into
that tree and killing that woman—that was the last straw. You don't
even deserve to get back to our era. You ought to be made to rot
here."
"I'm
really
sorry about that," Arvid 6 said.
You know the instructions. Just because you work in the Ultroom don't
get to thinking human life doesn't have any value. We wouldn't be here
if it hadn't. But to unnecessarily kill—" The older man shook his
head. "You could have killed yourself as well and we'd never get the
job done. As it is, you almost totally obliterated me." Tendal 13
paced the length of the cell and back again, gesturing as he talked.
"It was only with the greatest effort I pulled myself back together
again. I doubt that you could have done it. And then all the while
you've been sitting here, probably enjoying yourself with your special
brand of humor I have grown to despise."
"You didn't have to come along at all, you know," Arvid 6 said.
"How well I know! How sorry I am that I ever did! It was only because
I was sorry for you, because someone older and more experienced than
you was needed. I volunteered. Imagine that! I volunteered! Tendal 13
reaches the height of stupidity and volunteers to help Arvid 6 go back
6,000 years to bring Kanad back, to correct a mistake Arvid 6 made!"
He snorted. "I still can't believe I was ever that stupid. I only
prove it when I pinch myself and here I am.
"Oh, you've been a joy to be with! First it was that hunt in ancient
Mycenae when you let the lion escape the hunters' quaint spears and we
were partly eaten by the lion in the bargain, although you dazzled the
hunters, deflecting their spears. And then your zest for drink when we
were with Octavian in Alexandria that led to everybody's amusement but
ours when we were ambushed by Anthony's men. And worst of all, that
English barmaid you became engrossed with at our last stop in 1609,
when her husband mistook me for you and you let him take me apart
piece by piece—"
"All right, all right," Arvid 6 said. "I'll admit I've made some
mistakes. You're just not adventurous, that's all."
"Shut up! For once you're going to listen to me. Our instructions
specifically stated we were to have as little as possible to do with
these people. But at every turn you've got us more and more enmeshed
with them. If that's adventure, you can have it." Tendal 13 sat down
wearily and sank his head in his hands. "It was you who conceived the
idea of taking Reggie right out of his play pen. 'Watch me take that
child right out from under its mother's nose' were your exact words.
And before I could stop you, you did. Only you forgot an important
factor in the equation—the dog, Tiger. And you nursed a dogbite most
of the afternoon before it healed. And then you took your spite out on
the poor thing by suggesting suffocation to it that night.
"And speaking of that night, you remember we agreed I was to do the
talking. But no, you pulled a switch and captured Martin Laughton's
attention. 'I came as soon as I could, Martin,' you said. And suddenly
I played a very minor role. 'This is my new assistant, Dr. Tompkins,'
you said. And then what happened? I get shot in the legs and you get a
hole in your back. We were both nearly obliterated that time and we
didn't even come close to getting the child.
"Still you wanted to run the whole show. 'I'm younger than you,' you
said. 'I'll take the wheel.' And the next thing I know I'm floating in
space halfway to nowhere with two broken legs, a spinal injury,
concussion and some of the finest bruises you ever saw."
These twentieth century machines aren't what they ought to be," Arvid
6 said.
"You never run out of excuses, do you, Arvid? Remember what you said
in the Ultroom when you pushed the lever clear over and transferred
Kanad back 6,000 years? 'My hand slipped.' As simple as that. 'My hand
slipped.' It was so simple everyone believed you. You were given no
real punishment. In a way it was a reward—at least to you—getting to
go back and rescue the life germ of Kanad out of each era he'd be born
in."
Tendal 13 turned and looked steadily and directly at Arvid 6. "Do you
know what I think? I think you deliberately pushed the lever over as
far as it would go
just to see what would happen
. That's how simple
I think it was."
Arvid 6 flushed, turned away and looked at the floor.
"What crazy things have you been doing since I've been gone?" Tendal
13 asked.
Arvid 6 sighed. "After what you just said I guess it wouldn't amuse
you, although it has me. They got to me right after the accident
before I had a chance to collect my wits, dematerialize or
anything—you said we shouldn't dematerialize in front of anybody."
"That's right."
"Well, I didn't know what to do. I could see they thought I was drunk,
so I was. But they had a blood sample before I could manufacture any
alcohol in my blood, although I implanted a memory in them that I
reeked of it." He laughed. "I fancy they're thoroughly confused."
"And you're thoroughly amused, no doubt. Have they questioned you?"
"At great length. They had a psychiatrist in to see me. He was a queer
fellow with the most stupid set of questions and tests I ever saw."
"And you amused yourself with him."
"I suppose you'd think so."
"Who do you tell them you are?"
"John Smith. A rather prevalent name here, I understand. I
manufactured a pasteboard called a social security card and a driver's
license—"
"Never mind. It's easy to see you've been your own inimitable self.
Believe me, if I ever get back to the Ultroom I hope I never see you
again. And I hope I'll never leave there again though I'm rejuvenated
through a million years."
"Was Kanad's life germ transferred all right this time?"
Tendal 13 shook his head. "I haven't heard. The transfers are getting
more difficult all the time. In 1609, you'll remember, it was a case
of pneumonia for the two-year-old. A simple procedure. It wouldn't
work here. Medicine's too far along." He produced a notebook. "The
last jump was 342 years, a little more than average. The next ought to
be around 2250. Things will be more difficult than ever there,
probably."
"Do you think Kanad will be angry about all this?"
"How would you like to have to go through all those birth processes,
to have your life germ knocked from one era to the next?"
"Frankly, I didn't think he'd go back so far."
"If it had been anybody but Kanad nobody'd ever have thought of going
back after it. The life germ of the head of the whole galactic system
who came to the Ultroom to be transplanted to a younger body—and then
sending him back beyond his original birth date—" Tendal 13 got up
and commenced his pacing again. "Oh, I suppose Kanad's partly to
blame, wanting rejuvenating at only 300 years. Some have waited a
thousand or more or until their bones are like paper."
"I just wonder how angry Kanad will be," Arvid muttered.
HB92167. Ultroom Error. Tendal 13. Arvid 6. Kanad transfer
out of 1951 complete. Next Kanad transfer ready. 2267.
Phullam 19, son of Orla 39 and Rhoda R, 22H Level M,
Hemisphere B, Quadrant 3, Sector I. Arrive his 329th Day.
TB92167
Arvid 6 rose from the cot and the two men faced each other.
"Before we leave, Arvid," Tendal 13 started to say.
"I know, I know. You want me to let you handle everything."
"Exactly. Is that too much to ask after all you've done?"
"I guess I have made mistakes. From now on you be the boss. I'll do
whatever you say."
"I hope I can count on that." Tendal 13 rang the jail buzzer.
The jailer unlocked the cell door.
"You remember the chief said it's all right to take him with me,
Matthews," Tendal 13 told the jailer.
"Yes, I remember," the jailer said mechanically, letting them both out
of the cell.
They walked together down the jail corridor. When they came to another
barred door the jailer fumbled with the keys and clumsily tried
several with no luck.
Arvid 6, an amused set to his mouth and devilment in his eyes, watched
the jailer's expression as he walked through the bars of the door. He
laughed as he saw the jailer's eyes bulge.
"Arvid!"
Tendal 13 walked briskly through the door, snatched Arvid 6 by the
shoulders and shook him.
The jailer watched stupified as the two men vanished in the middle of
a violent argument. | She believes that she can trust her brother with Reggie. | She knows that Reggie is actually Kanad, and feels no attachment toward him. | She is hypnotized by Arvid 6, who is posing as her nonexistent brother. | She is being bribed by Tendal 13 and Arvid 6 to give Reggie away. | 2 |
31357_T9I0O70O_2 | Why are Arvid 6 and Tendal 13 attempting to steal Reggie? | Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from Space Science Fiction May 1952. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.
THE ULTROOM ERROR
by
JERRY SOHL
Smith admitted he had made an error involving a few
murders—and a few thousand years. He was entitled to a
sense of humor, though, even in the Ultroom!
HB73782. Ultroom error. Tendal 13. Arvid 6. Kanad transfer
out of 1609 complete, intact, but too near limit of 1,000
days. Next Kanad transfer ready. 1951. Reginald, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Martin Laughton, 3495 Orland Drive, Marionville,
Illinois, U. S. A. Arrive his 378th day. TB73782.
Nancy Laughton sat on the blanket she had spread on the lawn in her
front yard, knitting a pair of booties for the PTA bazaar.
Occasionally she glanced at her son in the play pen, who was getting
his daily dose of sunshine. He was gurgling happily, examining a ball,
a cheese grater and a linen baby book, all with perfunctory interest.
When she looked up again she noticed a man walking by—except he
turned up the walk and crossed the lawn to her.
He was a little taller than her husband, had piercing blue eyes and a
rather amused set to his lips.
"Hello, Nancy," he said.
"Hello, Joe," she answered. It was her brother who lived in Kankakee.
"I'm going to take the baby for a while," he said.
"All right, Joe."
He reached into the pen, picked up the baby. As he did so the baby's
knees hit the side of the play pen and young Laughton let out a
scream—half from hurt and half from sudden lack of confidence in his
new handler. But this did not deter Joe. He started off with the
child.
Around the corner and after the man came a snarling mongrel dog, eyes
bright, teeth glinting in the sunlight. The man did not turn as the
dog threw himself at him, burying his teeth in his leg. Surprised, the
man dropped the screaming child on the lawn and turned to the dog. Joe
seemed off balance and he backed up confusedly in the face of the
snapping jaws. Then he suddenly turned and walked away, the dog at his
heels.
"I tell you, the man said he was my brother and he made me think he
was," Nancy told her husband for the tenth time. "I don't even have a
brother."
Martin Laughton sighed. "I can't understand why you believed him. It's
just—just plain nuts, Nancy!"
"Don't you think I know it?" Nancy said tearfully. "I feel like I'm
going crazy. I can't say I dreamt it because there was Reggie with his
bleeding knees, squalling for all he was worth on the grass—Oh, I
don't even want to think about it."
"We haven't lost Reggie, Nancy, remember that. Now why don't you try
to get some rest?"
"You—you don't believe me at all, do you, Martin?"
When her husband did not answer, her head sank to her arms on the
table and she sobbed.
"Nancy, for heaven's sake, of course I believe you. I'm trying to
think it out, that's all. We should have called the police."
Nancy shook her head in her arms. "They'd—never—believe me either,"
she moaned.
"I'd better go and make sure Reggie's all right." Martin got up out of
his chair and went to the stairs.
"I'm going with you," Nancy said, hurriedly rising and coming over to
him.
"We'll go up and look at him together."
They found Reggie peacefully asleep in his crib in his room upstairs.
They checked the windows and tucked in the blankets. They paused in
the room for a moment and then Martin stole his arm around his wife
and led her to the door.
"As I've said, sergeant, this fellow hypnotized my wife. He made her
think he was her brother. She doesn't even have a brother. Then he
tried to get away with the baby." Martin leaned down and patted the
dog. "It was Tiger here who scared him off."
The police sergeant looked at the father, at Nancy and then at the
dog. He scribbled notes in his book.
"Are you a rich man, Mr. Laughton?" he asked.
"Not at all. The bank still owns most of the house. I have a few
hundred dollars, that's all."
"What do you do?"
"Office work, mostly. I'm a junior executive in an insurance company."
"Any enemies?"
"No ... Oh, I suppose I have a few people I don't get along with, like
anybody else. Nobody who'd do anything like this, though."
The sergeant flipped his notebook closed. "You'd better keep your dog
inside and around the kid as much as possible. Keep your doors and
windows locked. I'll see that the prowl car keeps an eye on the house.
Call us if anything seems unusual or out of the way."
Nancy had taken a sedative and was asleep by the time Martin finished
cleaning the .30-.30 rifle he used for deer hunting. He put it by the
stairs, ready for use, fully loaded, leaning it against the wall next
to the telephone stand.
The front door bell rang. He answered it. It was Dr. Stuart and
another man.
"I came as soon as I could, Martin," the young doctor said, stepping
inside with the other man. "This is my new assistant, Dr. Tompkins."
Martin and Tompkins shook hands.
"The baby—?" Dr. Stuart asked.
"Upstairs," Martin said.
"You'd better get him, Dr. Tompkins, if we're to take him to the
hospital. I'll stay here with Mr. Laughton. How've you been, Martin?"
"Fine."
"How's everything at the office?"
"Fine."
"And your wife?"
"She's fine, too."
"Glad to hear it, Martin. Mighty glad. Say, by the way, there's that
bill you owe me. I think it's $32, isn't that right?"
"Yes, I'd almost forgotten about it."
"Why don't you be a good fellow and write a check for it? It's been
over a year, you know."
"That's right. I'll get right at it." Martin went over to his desk,
opened it and started looking for his checkbook. Dr. Stuart stood by
him, making idle comment until Dr. Tompkins came down the stairs with
the sleeping baby cuddled against his shoulder.
"Never mind the check, now, Martin. I see we're ready to go." He went
over to his assistant and took the baby. Together they walked out the
front door.
"Good-bye," Martin said, going to the door.
Then he was nearly bowled over by the discharge of the .30-.30. Dr.
Stuart crumpled to the ground, the baby falling to the lawn. Dr.
Tompkins whirled and there was a second shot. Dr. Tompkins pitched
forward on his face.
The figure of a woman ran from the house, retrieved the now squalling
infant and ran back into the house. Once inside, Nancy slammed the
door, gave the baby to the stunned Martin and headed for the
telephone.
"One of them was the same man!" she cried.
Martin gasped, sinking into a chair with the baby. "I believed them,"
he said slowly and uncomprehendingly. "They made me believe them!"
"Those bodies," the sergeant said. "Would you mind pointing them out
to me, please?"
"Aren't they—aren't they on the walk?" Mrs. Laughton asked.
"There is nothing on the walk, Mrs. Laughton."
"But there
must
be! I tell you I shot these men who posed as
doctors. One of them was the same man who tried to take the baby this
afternoon. They hypnotized my husband—"
"Yes, I know, Mrs. Laughton. We've been through that." The sergeant
went to the door and opened it. "Say, Homer, take another look around
the walk and the bushes. There's supposed to be two of them. Shot with
a .30-.30."
He turned and picked up the gun and examined it again. "Ever shoot a
gun before, Mrs. Laughton?"
"Many times. Martin and I used to go hunting together before we had
Reggie."
The sergeant nodded. "You were taking an awful chance, shooting at a
guy carrying your baby, don't you think?"
"I shot him in the legs. The other—the other turned and I shot him in
the chest. I could even see his eyes when he turned around. If I
hadn't pulled the trigger then ... I don't want to remember it."
The patrolman pushed the door open. "There's no bodies out here but
there's some blood. Quite a lot of blood. A little to one side of the
walk."
The policemen went out.
"Thank God you woke up, Nancy," Martin said. "I'd have let them have
the baby." He reached over and smoothed the sleeping Reggie's hair.
Nancy, who was rocking the boy, narrowed her eyes.
"I wonder why they want our baby? He's just like any other baby. We
don't have any money. We couldn't pay a ransom."
"Reggie's pretty cute, though," Martin said. "You will have to admit
that."
Nancy smiled. Then she suddenly stopped rocking.
"Martin!"
He sat up quickly.
"Where's Tiger?"
Together they rose and walked around the room. They found him in a
corner, eyes open, tongue protruding. He was dead.
If we keep Reggie in the house much longer he'll turn out to be a
hermit," Martin said at breakfast a month later. "He needs fresh air
and sunshine."
"I'm not going to sit on the lawn alone with him, Martin. I just
can't, that's all. I'd be able to think of nothing but that day."
"Still thinking about it? I think we'd have heard from them again if
they were coming back. They probably got somebody else's baby by this
time." Martin finished his coffee and rose to kiss her good-bye. "But
for safety's sake I guess you'd better keep that gun handy."
The morning turned into a brilliant, sunshiny day. Puffs of clouds
moved slowly across the summer sky and a warm breeze rustled the
trees. It would be a crime to keep Reggie inside on a day like this,
Nancy thought.
So she called Mrs. MacDougal, the next door neighbor. Mrs. MacDougal
was familiar with what had happened to the Laughtons and she agreed to
keep an eye on Nancy and Reggie and to call the police at the first
sign of trouble.
With a fearful but determined heart Nancy moved the play pen and set
it up in the front yard. She spread a blanket for herself and put
Reggie in the pen. Her heart pounded all the while and she watched the
street for any strangers, ready to flee inside if need be. Reggie just
gurgled with delight at the change in environment.
This peaceful scene was disturbed by a speeding car in which two men
were riding. The car roared up the street, swerved toward the parkway,
tires screaming, bounced over the curb and sidewalk, straight toward
the child and mother. Reggie, attracted by the sudden noise, looked up
to see the approaching vehicle. His mother stood up, set her palms
against her cheeks and shrieked.
The car came on, crunched over the play pen, killing the child. The
mother was hit and instantly killed, force of the blow snapping her
spine and tossing her against the house. The car plunged on into a
tree, hitting it a terrible blow, crumbling the car's forward end so
it looked like an accordion. The men were thrown from the machine.
"We'll never be able to prosecute in this case," the states attorney
said. "At least not on a drunken driving basis."
"I can't get over it," the chief of police said. "I've got at least
six men who will swear the man was drunk. He staggered, reeled and
gave the usual drunk talk. He reeked of whiskey."
The prosecutor handed the report over the desk. "Here's the analysis.
Not a trace of alcohol. He couldn't have even had a smell of near
beer. Here's another report. This is his physical exam made not long
afterwards. The man was in perfect health. Only variations are he had
a scar on his leg where something, probably a dog, bit him once. And
then a scar on his chest. It looked like an old gunshot wound, they
said. Must have happened years ago."
"That's odd. The man who accosted Mrs. Laughton in the afternoon was
bitten by their dog. Later that night she said she shot the same man
in the chest. Since the scars are healed it obviously couldn't be the
same man. But there's a real coincidence for you. And speaking of the
dogbite, the Laughton dog died that night. His menu evidently didn't
agree with him. Never did figure what killed him, actually."
"Any record of treatment on the man she shot?"
"The
men
. You'll remember, there were two. No, we never found a
trace of either. No doctor ever made a report of a gunshot wound that
night. No hospital had a case either—at least not within several
hundred miles—that night or several nights afterwards. Ever been shot
with .30-.30?"
The state attorney shook his head. "I wouldn't be here if I had."
"I'll say you wouldn't. The pair must have crawled away to die God
knows where."
"Getting back to the man who ran over the child and killed Mrs.
Laughton. Why did he pretend to be drunk?"
It was the chief's turn to shake his head. "Your guess is as good as
mine. There are a lot of angles to this case none of us understand. It
looks deliberate, but where's the motive?"
"What does the man have to say?"
"I was afraid you'd get to him," the chief said, his neck reddening.
"It's all been rather embarrassing to the department." He coughed
self-consciously. "He's proved a strange one, all right. He says his
name is John Smith and he's got cards to prove it, too—for example, a
social security card. It looks authentic, yet there's no such number
on file in Washington, so we've discovered. We've had him in jail for
a week and we've all taken turns questioning him. He laughs and admits
his guilt—in fact, he seems amused by most everything. Sometimes all
alone in his cell he'll start laughing for no apparent reason. It
gives you the creeps."
The states attorney leaned back in his chair. "Maybe it's a case for
an alienist."
"One jump ahead of you. Dr. Stone thinks he's normal, but won't put
down any I.Q. Actually, he can't figure him out himself. Smith seems
to take delight in answering questions—sort of anticipates them and
has the answer ready before you're half through asking."
"Well, if Dr. Stone says he's normal, that's enough for me." The
prosecutor was silent for a moment. Then, "How about the husband?"
"Laughton? We're afraid to let him see him. All broken up. No telling
what kind of a rumpus he'd start—especially if Smith started his
funny business."
"Guess you're right. Well, Mr. Smith won't think it's so funny when we
hang criminal negligence or manslaughter on him. By the way, you've
checked possible family connections?"
"Nobody ever saw John Smith before. Even at the address on his
driver's license. And there's no duplicate of that in Springfield, in
case you're interested."
The man who had laughingly told police his name was John Smith lay on
his cot in the county jail, his eyes closed, his arms folded across
his chest. This gave him the appearance of being alert despite
reclining. Even as he lay, his mouth held a hint of a smile.
Arvid 6—for John Smith
was
Arvid 6—had lain in that position for
more than four hours, when suddenly he snapped his eyes open and
appeared to be listening. For a moment a look of concern crossed his
face and he swung his legs to the floor and sat there expectantly.
Arvid 6 knew Tendal 13 had materialized and was somewhere in the
building.
Eventually there were some sounds from beyond the steel cell and
doorway. There was a clang when the outer doorway was opened and Arvid
6 rose from his cot.
"Your lawyer's here to see you," the jailer said, indicating the man
with the brief case. "Ring the buzzer when you're through." The jailer
let the man in, locked the cell door and walked away.
The man threw the brief case on the jail cot and stood glaring.
"Your damned foolishness has gone far enough. I'm sick and tired of
it," he declared. "If you carry on any more we'll never get back to
the Ultroom!"
"I'm sorry, Tendal," the man on the cot said. "I didn't think—"
"You're absolutely right. You didn't think. Crashing that car into
that tree and killing that woman—that was the last straw. You don't
even deserve to get back to our era. You ought to be made to rot
here."
"I'm
really
sorry about that," Arvid 6 said.
You know the instructions. Just because you work in the Ultroom don't
get to thinking human life doesn't have any value. We wouldn't be here
if it hadn't. But to unnecessarily kill—" The older man shook his
head. "You could have killed yourself as well and we'd never get the
job done. As it is, you almost totally obliterated me." Tendal 13
paced the length of the cell and back again, gesturing as he talked.
"It was only with the greatest effort I pulled myself back together
again. I doubt that you could have done it. And then all the while
you've been sitting here, probably enjoying yourself with your special
brand of humor I have grown to despise."
"You didn't have to come along at all, you know," Arvid 6 said.
"How well I know! How sorry I am that I ever did! It was only because
I was sorry for you, because someone older and more experienced than
you was needed. I volunteered. Imagine that! I volunteered! Tendal 13
reaches the height of stupidity and volunteers to help Arvid 6 go back
6,000 years to bring Kanad back, to correct a mistake Arvid 6 made!"
He snorted. "I still can't believe I was ever that stupid. I only
prove it when I pinch myself and here I am.
"Oh, you've been a joy to be with! First it was that hunt in ancient
Mycenae when you let the lion escape the hunters' quaint spears and we
were partly eaten by the lion in the bargain, although you dazzled the
hunters, deflecting their spears. And then your zest for drink when we
were with Octavian in Alexandria that led to everybody's amusement but
ours when we were ambushed by Anthony's men. And worst of all, that
English barmaid you became engrossed with at our last stop in 1609,
when her husband mistook me for you and you let him take me apart
piece by piece—"
"All right, all right," Arvid 6 said. "I'll admit I've made some
mistakes. You're just not adventurous, that's all."
"Shut up! For once you're going to listen to me. Our instructions
specifically stated we were to have as little as possible to do with
these people. But at every turn you've got us more and more enmeshed
with them. If that's adventure, you can have it." Tendal 13 sat down
wearily and sank his head in his hands. "It was you who conceived the
idea of taking Reggie right out of his play pen. 'Watch me take that
child right out from under its mother's nose' were your exact words.
And before I could stop you, you did. Only you forgot an important
factor in the equation—the dog, Tiger. And you nursed a dogbite most
of the afternoon before it healed. And then you took your spite out on
the poor thing by suggesting suffocation to it that night.
"And speaking of that night, you remember we agreed I was to do the
talking. But no, you pulled a switch and captured Martin Laughton's
attention. 'I came as soon as I could, Martin,' you said. And suddenly
I played a very minor role. 'This is my new assistant, Dr. Tompkins,'
you said. And then what happened? I get shot in the legs and you get a
hole in your back. We were both nearly obliterated that time and we
didn't even come close to getting the child.
"Still you wanted to run the whole show. 'I'm younger than you,' you
said. 'I'll take the wheel.' And the next thing I know I'm floating in
space halfway to nowhere with two broken legs, a spinal injury,
concussion and some of the finest bruises you ever saw."
These twentieth century machines aren't what they ought to be," Arvid
6 said.
"You never run out of excuses, do you, Arvid? Remember what you said
in the Ultroom when you pushed the lever clear over and transferred
Kanad back 6,000 years? 'My hand slipped.' As simple as that. 'My hand
slipped.' It was so simple everyone believed you. You were given no
real punishment. In a way it was a reward—at least to you—getting to
go back and rescue the life germ of Kanad out of each era he'd be born
in."
Tendal 13 turned and looked steadily and directly at Arvid 6. "Do you
know what I think? I think you deliberately pushed the lever over as
far as it would go
just to see what would happen
. That's how simple
I think it was."
Arvid 6 flushed, turned away and looked at the floor.
"What crazy things have you been doing since I've been gone?" Tendal
13 asked.
Arvid 6 sighed. "After what you just said I guess it wouldn't amuse
you, although it has me. They got to me right after the accident
before I had a chance to collect my wits, dematerialize or
anything—you said we shouldn't dematerialize in front of anybody."
"That's right."
"Well, I didn't know what to do. I could see they thought I was drunk,
so I was. But they had a blood sample before I could manufacture any
alcohol in my blood, although I implanted a memory in them that I
reeked of it." He laughed. "I fancy they're thoroughly confused."
"And you're thoroughly amused, no doubt. Have they questioned you?"
"At great length. They had a psychiatrist in to see me. He was a queer
fellow with the most stupid set of questions and tests I ever saw."
"And you amused yourself with him."
"I suppose you'd think so."
"Who do you tell them you are?"
"John Smith. A rather prevalent name here, I understand. I
manufactured a pasteboard called a social security card and a driver's
license—"
"Never mind. It's easy to see you've been your own inimitable self.
Believe me, if I ever get back to the Ultroom I hope I never see you
again. And I hope I'll never leave there again though I'm rejuvenated
through a million years."
"Was Kanad's life germ transferred all right this time?"
Tendal 13 shook his head. "I haven't heard. The transfers are getting
more difficult all the time. In 1609, you'll remember, it was a case
of pneumonia for the two-year-old. A simple procedure. It wouldn't
work here. Medicine's too far along." He produced a notebook. "The
last jump was 342 years, a little more than average. The next ought to
be around 2250. Things will be more difficult than ever there,
probably."
"Do you think Kanad will be angry about all this?"
"How would you like to have to go through all those birth processes,
to have your life germ knocked from one era to the next?"
"Frankly, I didn't think he'd go back so far."
"If it had been anybody but Kanad nobody'd ever have thought of going
back after it. The life germ of the head of the whole galactic system
who came to the Ultroom to be transplanted to a younger body—and then
sending him back beyond his original birth date—" Tendal 13 got up
and commenced his pacing again. "Oh, I suppose Kanad's partly to
blame, wanting rejuvenating at only 300 years. Some have waited a
thousand or more or until their bones are like paper."
"I just wonder how angry Kanad will be," Arvid muttered.
HB92167. Ultroom Error. Tendal 13. Arvid 6. Kanad transfer
out of 1951 complete. Next Kanad transfer ready. 2267.
Phullam 19, son of Orla 39 and Rhoda R, 22H Level M,
Hemisphere B, Quadrant 3, Sector I. Arrive his 329th Day.
TB92167
Arvid 6 rose from the cot and the two men faced each other.
"Before we leave, Arvid," Tendal 13 started to say.
"I know, I know. You want me to let you handle everything."
"Exactly. Is that too much to ask after all you've done?"
"I guess I have made mistakes. From now on you be the boss. I'll do
whatever you say."
"I hope I can count on that." Tendal 13 rang the jail buzzer.
The jailer unlocked the cell door.
"You remember the chief said it's all right to take him with me,
Matthews," Tendal 13 told the jailer.
"Yes, I remember," the jailer said mechanically, letting them both out
of the cell.
They walked together down the jail corridor. When they came to another
barred door the jailer fumbled with the keys and clumsily tried
several with no luck.
Arvid 6, an amused set to his mouth and devilment in his eyes, watched
the jailer's expression as he walked through the bars of the door. He
laughed as he saw the jailer's eyes bulge.
"Arvid!"
Tendal 13 walked briskly through the door, snatched Arvid 6 by the
shoulders and shook him.
The jailer watched stupified as the two men vanished in the middle of
a violent argument. | Kanad was accidentally sent transformed to Reggie's body by mistake in the Ultroom. | They need infants for experiments they are conducting in the Ultroom. | They are competing to become the next heads of the galactic system. | There is a bounty for Reggie, who is actually a warlord in a future world. | 0 |
31357_T9I0O70O_3 | Why didn't the man posing as Dr. Tompkins die? | Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from Space Science Fiction May 1952. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.
THE ULTROOM ERROR
by
JERRY SOHL
Smith admitted he had made an error involving a few
murders—and a few thousand years. He was entitled to a
sense of humor, though, even in the Ultroom!
HB73782. Ultroom error. Tendal 13. Arvid 6. Kanad transfer
out of 1609 complete, intact, but too near limit of 1,000
days. Next Kanad transfer ready. 1951. Reginald, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Martin Laughton, 3495 Orland Drive, Marionville,
Illinois, U. S. A. Arrive his 378th day. TB73782.
Nancy Laughton sat on the blanket she had spread on the lawn in her
front yard, knitting a pair of booties for the PTA bazaar.
Occasionally she glanced at her son in the play pen, who was getting
his daily dose of sunshine. He was gurgling happily, examining a ball,
a cheese grater and a linen baby book, all with perfunctory interest.
When she looked up again she noticed a man walking by—except he
turned up the walk and crossed the lawn to her.
He was a little taller than her husband, had piercing blue eyes and a
rather amused set to his lips.
"Hello, Nancy," he said.
"Hello, Joe," she answered. It was her brother who lived in Kankakee.
"I'm going to take the baby for a while," he said.
"All right, Joe."
He reached into the pen, picked up the baby. As he did so the baby's
knees hit the side of the play pen and young Laughton let out a
scream—half from hurt and half from sudden lack of confidence in his
new handler. But this did not deter Joe. He started off with the
child.
Around the corner and after the man came a snarling mongrel dog, eyes
bright, teeth glinting in the sunlight. The man did not turn as the
dog threw himself at him, burying his teeth in his leg. Surprised, the
man dropped the screaming child on the lawn and turned to the dog. Joe
seemed off balance and he backed up confusedly in the face of the
snapping jaws. Then he suddenly turned and walked away, the dog at his
heels.
"I tell you, the man said he was my brother and he made me think he
was," Nancy told her husband for the tenth time. "I don't even have a
brother."
Martin Laughton sighed. "I can't understand why you believed him. It's
just—just plain nuts, Nancy!"
"Don't you think I know it?" Nancy said tearfully. "I feel like I'm
going crazy. I can't say I dreamt it because there was Reggie with his
bleeding knees, squalling for all he was worth on the grass—Oh, I
don't even want to think about it."
"We haven't lost Reggie, Nancy, remember that. Now why don't you try
to get some rest?"
"You—you don't believe me at all, do you, Martin?"
When her husband did not answer, her head sank to her arms on the
table and she sobbed.
"Nancy, for heaven's sake, of course I believe you. I'm trying to
think it out, that's all. We should have called the police."
Nancy shook her head in her arms. "They'd—never—believe me either,"
she moaned.
"I'd better go and make sure Reggie's all right." Martin got up out of
his chair and went to the stairs.
"I'm going with you," Nancy said, hurriedly rising and coming over to
him.
"We'll go up and look at him together."
They found Reggie peacefully asleep in his crib in his room upstairs.
They checked the windows and tucked in the blankets. They paused in
the room for a moment and then Martin stole his arm around his wife
and led her to the door.
"As I've said, sergeant, this fellow hypnotized my wife. He made her
think he was her brother. She doesn't even have a brother. Then he
tried to get away with the baby." Martin leaned down and patted the
dog. "It was Tiger here who scared him off."
The police sergeant looked at the father, at Nancy and then at the
dog. He scribbled notes in his book.
"Are you a rich man, Mr. Laughton?" he asked.
"Not at all. The bank still owns most of the house. I have a few
hundred dollars, that's all."
"What do you do?"
"Office work, mostly. I'm a junior executive in an insurance company."
"Any enemies?"
"No ... Oh, I suppose I have a few people I don't get along with, like
anybody else. Nobody who'd do anything like this, though."
The sergeant flipped his notebook closed. "You'd better keep your dog
inside and around the kid as much as possible. Keep your doors and
windows locked. I'll see that the prowl car keeps an eye on the house.
Call us if anything seems unusual or out of the way."
Nancy had taken a sedative and was asleep by the time Martin finished
cleaning the .30-.30 rifle he used for deer hunting. He put it by the
stairs, ready for use, fully loaded, leaning it against the wall next
to the telephone stand.
The front door bell rang. He answered it. It was Dr. Stuart and
another man.
"I came as soon as I could, Martin," the young doctor said, stepping
inside with the other man. "This is my new assistant, Dr. Tompkins."
Martin and Tompkins shook hands.
"The baby—?" Dr. Stuart asked.
"Upstairs," Martin said.
"You'd better get him, Dr. Tompkins, if we're to take him to the
hospital. I'll stay here with Mr. Laughton. How've you been, Martin?"
"Fine."
"How's everything at the office?"
"Fine."
"And your wife?"
"She's fine, too."
"Glad to hear it, Martin. Mighty glad. Say, by the way, there's that
bill you owe me. I think it's $32, isn't that right?"
"Yes, I'd almost forgotten about it."
"Why don't you be a good fellow and write a check for it? It's been
over a year, you know."
"That's right. I'll get right at it." Martin went over to his desk,
opened it and started looking for his checkbook. Dr. Stuart stood by
him, making idle comment until Dr. Tompkins came down the stairs with
the sleeping baby cuddled against his shoulder.
"Never mind the check, now, Martin. I see we're ready to go." He went
over to his assistant and took the baby. Together they walked out the
front door.
"Good-bye," Martin said, going to the door.
Then he was nearly bowled over by the discharge of the .30-.30. Dr.
Stuart crumpled to the ground, the baby falling to the lawn. Dr.
Tompkins whirled and there was a second shot. Dr. Tompkins pitched
forward on his face.
The figure of a woman ran from the house, retrieved the now squalling
infant and ran back into the house. Once inside, Nancy slammed the
door, gave the baby to the stunned Martin and headed for the
telephone.
"One of them was the same man!" she cried.
Martin gasped, sinking into a chair with the baby. "I believed them,"
he said slowly and uncomprehendingly. "They made me believe them!"
"Those bodies," the sergeant said. "Would you mind pointing them out
to me, please?"
"Aren't they—aren't they on the walk?" Mrs. Laughton asked.
"There is nothing on the walk, Mrs. Laughton."
"But there
must
be! I tell you I shot these men who posed as
doctors. One of them was the same man who tried to take the baby this
afternoon. They hypnotized my husband—"
"Yes, I know, Mrs. Laughton. We've been through that." The sergeant
went to the door and opened it. "Say, Homer, take another look around
the walk and the bushes. There's supposed to be two of them. Shot with
a .30-.30."
He turned and picked up the gun and examined it again. "Ever shoot a
gun before, Mrs. Laughton?"
"Many times. Martin and I used to go hunting together before we had
Reggie."
The sergeant nodded. "You were taking an awful chance, shooting at a
guy carrying your baby, don't you think?"
"I shot him in the legs. The other—the other turned and I shot him in
the chest. I could even see his eyes when he turned around. If I
hadn't pulled the trigger then ... I don't want to remember it."
The patrolman pushed the door open. "There's no bodies out here but
there's some blood. Quite a lot of blood. A little to one side of the
walk."
The policemen went out.
"Thank God you woke up, Nancy," Martin said. "I'd have let them have
the baby." He reached over and smoothed the sleeping Reggie's hair.
Nancy, who was rocking the boy, narrowed her eyes.
"I wonder why they want our baby? He's just like any other baby. We
don't have any money. We couldn't pay a ransom."
"Reggie's pretty cute, though," Martin said. "You will have to admit
that."
Nancy smiled. Then she suddenly stopped rocking.
"Martin!"
He sat up quickly.
"Where's Tiger?"
Together they rose and walked around the room. They found him in a
corner, eyes open, tongue protruding. He was dead.
If we keep Reggie in the house much longer he'll turn out to be a
hermit," Martin said at breakfast a month later. "He needs fresh air
and sunshine."
"I'm not going to sit on the lawn alone with him, Martin. I just
can't, that's all. I'd be able to think of nothing but that day."
"Still thinking about it? I think we'd have heard from them again if
they were coming back. They probably got somebody else's baby by this
time." Martin finished his coffee and rose to kiss her good-bye. "But
for safety's sake I guess you'd better keep that gun handy."
The morning turned into a brilliant, sunshiny day. Puffs of clouds
moved slowly across the summer sky and a warm breeze rustled the
trees. It would be a crime to keep Reggie inside on a day like this,
Nancy thought.
So she called Mrs. MacDougal, the next door neighbor. Mrs. MacDougal
was familiar with what had happened to the Laughtons and she agreed to
keep an eye on Nancy and Reggie and to call the police at the first
sign of trouble.
With a fearful but determined heart Nancy moved the play pen and set
it up in the front yard. She spread a blanket for herself and put
Reggie in the pen. Her heart pounded all the while and she watched the
street for any strangers, ready to flee inside if need be. Reggie just
gurgled with delight at the change in environment.
This peaceful scene was disturbed by a speeding car in which two men
were riding. The car roared up the street, swerved toward the parkway,
tires screaming, bounced over the curb and sidewalk, straight toward
the child and mother. Reggie, attracted by the sudden noise, looked up
to see the approaching vehicle. His mother stood up, set her palms
against her cheeks and shrieked.
The car came on, crunched over the play pen, killing the child. The
mother was hit and instantly killed, force of the blow snapping her
spine and tossing her against the house. The car plunged on into a
tree, hitting it a terrible blow, crumbling the car's forward end so
it looked like an accordion. The men were thrown from the machine.
"We'll never be able to prosecute in this case," the states attorney
said. "At least not on a drunken driving basis."
"I can't get over it," the chief of police said. "I've got at least
six men who will swear the man was drunk. He staggered, reeled and
gave the usual drunk talk. He reeked of whiskey."
The prosecutor handed the report over the desk. "Here's the analysis.
Not a trace of alcohol. He couldn't have even had a smell of near
beer. Here's another report. This is his physical exam made not long
afterwards. The man was in perfect health. Only variations are he had
a scar on his leg where something, probably a dog, bit him once. And
then a scar on his chest. It looked like an old gunshot wound, they
said. Must have happened years ago."
"That's odd. The man who accosted Mrs. Laughton in the afternoon was
bitten by their dog. Later that night she said she shot the same man
in the chest. Since the scars are healed it obviously couldn't be the
same man. But there's a real coincidence for you. And speaking of the
dogbite, the Laughton dog died that night. His menu evidently didn't
agree with him. Never did figure what killed him, actually."
"Any record of treatment on the man she shot?"
"The
men
. You'll remember, there were two. No, we never found a
trace of either. No doctor ever made a report of a gunshot wound that
night. No hospital had a case either—at least not within several
hundred miles—that night or several nights afterwards. Ever been shot
with .30-.30?"
The state attorney shook his head. "I wouldn't be here if I had."
"I'll say you wouldn't. The pair must have crawled away to die God
knows where."
"Getting back to the man who ran over the child and killed Mrs.
Laughton. Why did he pretend to be drunk?"
It was the chief's turn to shake his head. "Your guess is as good as
mine. There are a lot of angles to this case none of us understand. It
looks deliberate, but where's the motive?"
"What does the man have to say?"
"I was afraid you'd get to him," the chief said, his neck reddening.
"It's all been rather embarrassing to the department." He coughed
self-consciously. "He's proved a strange one, all right. He says his
name is John Smith and he's got cards to prove it, too—for example, a
social security card. It looks authentic, yet there's no such number
on file in Washington, so we've discovered. We've had him in jail for
a week and we've all taken turns questioning him. He laughs and admits
his guilt—in fact, he seems amused by most everything. Sometimes all
alone in his cell he'll start laughing for no apparent reason. It
gives you the creeps."
The states attorney leaned back in his chair. "Maybe it's a case for
an alienist."
"One jump ahead of you. Dr. Stone thinks he's normal, but won't put
down any I.Q. Actually, he can't figure him out himself. Smith seems
to take delight in answering questions—sort of anticipates them and
has the answer ready before you're half through asking."
"Well, if Dr. Stone says he's normal, that's enough for me." The
prosecutor was silent for a moment. Then, "How about the husband?"
"Laughton? We're afraid to let him see him. All broken up. No telling
what kind of a rumpus he'd start—especially if Smith started his
funny business."
"Guess you're right. Well, Mr. Smith won't think it's so funny when we
hang criminal negligence or manslaughter on him. By the way, you've
checked possible family connections?"
"Nobody ever saw John Smith before. Even at the address on his
driver's license. And there's no duplicate of that in Springfield, in
case you're interested."
The man who had laughingly told police his name was John Smith lay on
his cot in the county jail, his eyes closed, his arms folded across
his chest. This gave him the appearance of being alert despite
reclining. Even as he lay, his mouth held a hint of a smile.
Arvid 6—for John Smith
was
Arvid 6—had lain in that position for
more than four hours, when suddenly he snapped his eyes open and
appeared to be listening. For a moment a look of concern crossed his
face and he swung his legs to the floor and sat there expectantly.
Arvid 6 knew Tendal 13 had materialized and was somewhere in the
building.
Eventually there were some sounds from beyond the steel cell and
doorway. There was a clang when the outer doorway was opened and Arvid
6 rose from his cot.
"Your lawyer's here to see you," the jailer said, indicating the man
with the brief case. "Ring the buzzer when you're through." The jailer
let the man in, locked the cell door and walked away.
The man threw the brief case on the jail cot and stood glaring.
"Your damned foolishness has gone far enough. I'm sick and tired of
it," he declared. "If you carry on any more we'll never get back to
the Ultroom!"
"I'm sorry, Tendal," the man on the cot said. "I didn't think—"
"You're absolutely right. You didn't think. Crashing that car into
that tree and killing that woman—that was the last straw. You don't
even deserve to get back to our era. You ought to be made to rot
here."
"I'm
really
sorry about that," Arvid 6 said.
You know the instructions. Just because you work in the Ultroom don't
get to thinking human life doesn't have any value. We wouldn't be here
if it hadn't. But to unnecessarily kill—" The older man shook his
head. "You could have killed yourself as well and we'd never get the
job done. As it is, you almost totally obliterated me." Tendal 13
paced the length of the cell and back again, gesturing as he talked.
"It was only with the greatest effort I pulled myself back together
again. I doubt that you could have done it. And then all the while
you've been sitting here, probably enjoying yourself with your special
brand of humor I have grown to despise."
"You didn't have to come along at all, you know," Arvid 6 said.
"How well I know! How sorry I am that I ever did! It was only because
I was sorry for you, because someone older and more experienced than
you was needed. I volunteered. Imagine that! I volunteered! Tendal 13
reaches the height of stupidity and volunteers to help Arvid 6 go back
6,000 years to bring Kanad back, to correct a mistake Arvid 6 made!"
He snorted. "I still can't believe I was ever that stupid. I only
prove it when I pinch myself and here I am.
"Oh, you've been a joy to be with! First it was that hunt in ancient
Mycenae when you let the lion escape the hunters' quaint spears and we
were partly eaten by the lion in the bargain, although you dazzled the
hunters, deflecting their spears. And then your zest for drink when we
were with Octavian in Alexandria that led to everybody's amusement but
ours when we were ambushed by Anthony's men. And worst of all, that
English barmaid you became engrossed with at our last stop in 1609,
when her husband mistook me for you and you let him take me apart
piece by piece—"
"All right, all right," Arvid 6 said. "I'll admit I've made some
mistakes. You're just not adventurous, that's all."
"Shut up! For once you're going to listen to me. Our instructions
specifically stated we were to have as little as possible to do with
these people. But at every turn you've got us more and more enmeshed
with them. If that's adventure, you can have it." Tendal 13 sat down
wearily and sank his head in his hands. "It was you who conceived the
idea of taking Reggie right out of his play pen. 'Watch me take that
child right out from under its mother's nose' were your exact words.
And before I could stop you, you did. Only you forgot an important
factor in the equation—the dog, Tiger. And you nursed a dogbite most
of the afternoon before it healed. And then you took your spite out on
the poor thing by suggesting suffocation to it that night.
"And speaking of that night, you remember we agreed I was to do the
talking. But no, you pulled a switch and captured Martin Laughton's
attention. 'I came as soon as I could, Martin,' you said. And suddenly
I played a very minor role. 'This is my new assistant, Dr. Tompkins,'
you said. And then what happened? I get shot in the legs and you get a
hole in your back. We were both nearly obliterated that time and we
didn't even come close to getting the child.
"Still you wanted to run the whole show. 'I'm younger than you,' you
said. 'I'll take the wheel.' And the next thing I know I'm floating in
space halfway to nowhere with two broken legs, a spinal injury,
concussion and some of the finest bruises you ever saw."
These twentieth century machines aren't what they ought to be," Arvid
6 said.
"You never run out of excuses, do you, Arvid? Remember what you said
in the Ultroom when you pushed the lever clear over and transferred
Kanad back 6,000 years? 'My hand slipped.' As simple as that. 'My hand
slipped.' It was so simple everyone believed you. You were given no
real punishment. In a way it was a reward—at least to you—getting to
go back and rescue the life germ of Kanad out of each era he'd be born
in."
Tendal 13 turned and looked steadily and directly at Arvid 6. "Do you
know what I think? I think you deliberately pushed the lever over as
far as it would go
just to see what would happen
. That's how simple
I think it was."
Arvid 6 flushed, turned away and looked at the floor.
"What crazy things have you been doing since I've been gone?" Tendal
13 asked.
Arvid 6 sighed. "After what you just said I guess it wouldn't amuse
you, although it has me. They got to me right after the accident
before I had a chance to collect my wits, dematerialize or
anything—you said we shouldn't dematerialize in front of anybody."
"That's right."
"Well, I didn't know what to do. I could see they thought I was drunk,
so I was. But they had a blood sample before I could manufacture any
alcohol in my blood, although I implanted a memory in them that I
reeked of it." He laughed. "I fancy they're thoroughly confused."
"And you're thoroughly amused, no doubt. Have they questioned you?"
"At great length. They had a psychiatrist in to see me. He was a queer
fellow with the most stupid set of questions and tests I ever saw."
"And you amused yourself with him."
"I suppose you'd think so."
"Who do you tell them you are?"
"John Smith. A rather prevalent name here, I understand. I
manufactured a pasteboard called a social security card and a driver's
license—"
"Never mind. It's easy to see you've been your own inimitable self.
Believe me, if I ever get back to the Ultroom I hope I never see you
again. And I hope I'll never leave there again though I'm rejuvenated
through a million years."
"Was Kanad's life germ transferred all right this time?"
Tendal 13 shook his head. "I haven't heard. The transfers are getting
more difficult all the time. In 1609, you'll remember, it was a case
of pneumonia for the two-year-old. A simple procedure. It wouldn't
work here. Medicine's too far along." He produced a notebook. "The
last jump was 342 years, a little more than average. The next ought to
be around 2250. Things will be more difficult than ever there,
probably."
"Do you think Kanad will be angry about all this?"
"How would you like to have to go through all those birth processes,
to have your life germ knocked from one era to the next?"
"Frankly, I didn't think he'd go back so far."
"If it had been anybody but Kanad nobody'd ever have thought of going
back after it. The life germ of the head of the whole galactic system
who came to the Ultroom to be transplanted to a younger body—and then
sending him back beyond his original birth date—" Tendal 13 got up
and commenced his pacing again. "Oh, I suppose Kanad's partly to
blame, wanting rejuvenating at only 300 years. Some have waited a
thousand or more or until their bones are like paper."
"I just wonder how angry Kanad will be," Arvid muttered.
HB92167. Ultroom Error. Tendal 13. Arvid 6. Kanad transfer
out of 1951 complete. Next Kanad transfer ready. 2267.
Phullam 19, son of Orla 39 and Rhoda R, 22H Level M,
Hemisphere B, Quadrant 3, Sector I. Arrive his 329th Day.
TB92167
Arvid 6 rose from the cot and the two men faced each other.
"Before we leave, Arvid," Tendal 13 started to say.
"I know, I know. You want me to let you handle everything."
"Exactly. Is that too much to ask after all you've done?"
"I guess I have made mistakes. From now on you be the boss. I'll do
whatever you say."
"I hope I can count on that." Tendal 13 rang the jail buzzer.
The jailer unlocked the cell door.
"You remember the chief said it's all right to take him with me,
Matthews," Tendal 13 told the jailer.
"Yes, I remember," the jailer said mechanically, letting them both out
of the cell.
They walked together down the jail corridor. When they came to another
barred door the jailer fumbled with the keys and clumsily tried
several with no luck.
Arvid 6, an amused set to his mouth and devilment in his eyes, watched
the jailer's expression as he walked through the bars of the door. He
laughed as he saw the jailer's eyes bulge.
"Arvid!"
Tendal 13 walked briskly through the door, snatched Arvid 6 by the
shoulders and shook him.
The jailer watched stupified as the two men vanished in the middle of
a violent argument. | He was able to escape and heal back in his time period | He was wearing a bulletproof vest | There was never a man named Dr. Tompkins | The bullet in his leg caused a non-life-threatening injury | 0 |
31357_T9I0O70O_4 | Who murdered Nancy and Reggie? | Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from Space Science Fiction May 1952. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.
THE ULTROOM ERROR
by
JERRY SOHL
Smith admitted he had made an error involving a few
murders—and a few thousand years. He was entitled to a
sense of humor, though, even in the Ultroom!
HB73782. Ultroom error. Tendal 13. Arvid 6. Kanad transfer
out of 1609 complete, intact, but too near limit of 1,000
days. Next Kanad transfer ready. 1951. Reginald, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Martin Laughton, 3495 Orland Drive, Marionville,
Illinois, U. S. A. Arrive his 378th day. TB73782.
Nancy Laughton sat on the blanket she had spread on the lawn in her
front yard, knitting a pair of booties for the PTA bazaar.
Occasionally she glanced at her son in the play pen, who was getting
his daily dose of sunshine. He was gurgling happily, examining a ball,
a cheese grater and a linen baby book, all with perfunctory interest.
When she looked up again she noticed a man walking by—except he
turned up the walk and crossed the lawn to her.
He was a little taller than her husband, had piercing blue eyes and a
rather amused set to his lips.
"Hello, Nancy," he said.
"Hello, Joe," she answered. It was her brother who lived in Kankakee.
"I'm going to take the baby for a while," he said.
"All right, Joe."
He reached into the pen, picked up the baby. As he did so the baby's
knees hit the side of the play pen and young Laughton let out a
scream—half from hurt and half from sudden lack of confidence in his
new handler. But this did not deter Joe. He started off with the
child.
Around the corner and after the man came a snarling mongrel dog, eyes
bright, teeth glinting in the sunlight. The man did not turn as the
dog threw himself at him, burying his teeth in his leg. Surprised, the
man dropped the screaming child on the lawn and turned to the dog. Joe
seemed off balance and he backed up confusedly in the face of the
snapping jaws. Then he suddenly turned and walked away, the dog at his
heels.
"I tell you, the man said he was my brother and he made me think he
was," Nancy told her husband for the tenth time. "I don't even have a
brother."
Martin Laughton sighed. "I can't understand why you believed him. It's
just—just plain nuts, Nancy!"
"Don't you think I know it?" Nancy said tearfully. "I feel like I'm
going crazy. I can't say I dreamt it because there was Reggie with his
bleeding knees, squalling for all he was worth on the grass—Oh, I
don't even want to think about it."
"We haven't lost Reggie, Nancy, remember that. Now why don't you try
to get some rest?"
"You—you don't believe me at all, do you, Martin?"
When her husband did not answer, her head sank to her arms on the
table and she sobbed.
"Nancy, for heaven's sake, of course I believe you. I'm trying to
think it out, that's all. We should have called the police."
Nancy shook her head in her arms. "They'd—never—believe me either,"
she moaned.
"I'd better go and make sure Reggie's all right." Martin got up out of
his chair and went to the stairs.
"I'm going with you," Nancy said, hurriedly rising and coming over to
him.
"We'll go up and look at him together."
They found Reggie peacefully asleep in his crib in his room upstairs.
They checked the windows and tucked in the blankets. They paused in
the room for a moment and then Martin stole his arm around his wife
and led her to the door.
"As I've said, sergeant, this fellow hypnotized my wife. He made her
think he was her brother. She doesn't even have a brother. Then he
tried to get away with the baby." Martin leaned down and patted the
dog. "It was Tiger here who scared him off."
The police sergeant looked at the father, at Nancy and then at the
dog. He scribbled notes in his book.
"Are you a rich man, Mr. Laughton?" he asked.
"Not at all. The bank still owns most of the house. I have a few
hundred dollars, that's all."
"What do you do?"
"Office work, mostly. I'm a junior executive in an insurance company."
"Any enemies?"
"No ... Oh, I suppose I have a few people I don't get along with, like
anybody else. Nobody who'd do anything like this, though."
The sergeant flipped his notebook closed. "You'd better keep your dog
inside and around the kid as much as possible. Keep your doors and
windows locked. I'll see that the prowl car keeps an eye on the house.
Call us if anything seems unusual or out of the way."
Nancy had taken a sedative and was asleep by the time Martin finished
cleaning the .30-.30 rifle he used for deer hunting. He put it by the
stairs, ready for use, fully loaded, leaning it against the wall next
to the telephone stand.
The front door bell rang. He answered it. It was Dr. Stuart and
another man.
"I came as soon as I could, Martin," the young doctor said, stepping
inside with the other man. "This is my new assistant, Dr. Tompkins."
Martin and Tompkins shook hands.
"The baby—?" Dr. Stuart asked.
"Upstairs," Martin said.
"You'd better get him, Dr. Tompkins, if we're to take him to the
hospital. I'll stay here with Mr. Laughton. How've you been, Martin?"
"Fine."
"How's everything at the office?"
"Fine."
"And your wife?"
"She's fine, too."
"Glad to hear it, Martin. Mighty glad. Say, by the way, there's that
bill you owe me. I think it's $32, isn't that right?"
"Yes, I'd almost forgotten about it."
"Why don't you be a good fellow and write a check for it? It's been
over a year, you know."
"That's right. I'll get right at it." Martin went over to his desk,
opened it and started looking for his checkbook. Dr. Stuart stood by
him, making idle comment until Dr. Tompkins came down the stairs with
the sleeping baby cuddled against his shoulder.
"Never mind the check, now, Martin. I see we're ready to go." He went
over to his assistant and took the baby. Together they walked out the
front door.
"Good-bye," Martin said, going to the door.
Then he was nearly bowled over by the discharge of the .30-.30. Dr.
Stuart crumpled to the ground, the baby falling to the lawn. Dr.
Tompkins whirled and there was a second shot. Dr. Tompkins pitched
forward on his face.
The figure of a woman ran from the house, retrieved the now squalling
infant and ran back into the house. Once inside, Nancy slammed the
door, gave the baby to the stunned Martin and headed for the
telephone.
"One of them was the same man!" she cried.
Martin gasped, sinking into a chair with the baby. "I believed them,"
he said slowly and uncomprehendingly. "They made me believe them!"
"Those bodies," the sergeant said. "Would you mind pointing them out
to me, please?"
"Aren't they—aren't they on the walk?" Mrs. Laughton asked.
"There is nothing on the walk, Mrs. Laughton."
"But there
must
be! I tell you I shot these men who posed as
doctors. One of them was the same man who tried to take the baby this
afternoon. They hypnotized my husband—"
"Yes, I know, Mrs. Laughton. We've been through that." The sergeant
went to the door and opened it. "Say, Homer, take another look around
the walk and the bushes. There's supposed to be two of them. Shot with
a .30-.30."
He turned and picked up the gun and examined it again. "Ever shoot a
gun before, Mrs. Laughton?"
"Many times. Martin and I used to go hunting together before we had
Reggie."
The sergeant nodded. "You were taking an awful chance, shooting at a
guy carrying your baby, don't you think?"
"I shot him in the legs. The other—the other turned and I shot him in
the chest. I could even see his eyes when he turned around. If I
hadn't pulled the trigger then ... I don't want to remember it."
The patrolman pushed the door open. "There's no bodies out here but
there's some blood. Quite a lot of blood. A little to one side of the
walk."
The policemen went out.
"Thank God you woke up, Nancy," Martin said. "I'd have let them have
the baby." He reached over and smoothed the sleeping Reggie's hair.
Nancy, who was rocking the boy, narrowed her eyes.
"I wonder why they want our baby? He's just like any other baby. We
don't have any money. We couldn't pay a ransom."
"Reggie's pretty cute, though," Martin said. "You will have to admit
that."
Nancy smiled. Then she suddenly stopped rocking.
"Martin!"
He sat up quickly.
"Where's Tiger?"
Together they rose and walked around the room. They found him in a
corner, eyes open, tongue protruding. He was dead.
If we keep Reggie in the house much longer he'll turn out to be a
hermit," Martin said at breakfast a month later. "He needs fresh air
and sunshine."
"I'm not going to sit on the lawn alone with him, Martin. I just
can't, that's all. I'd be able to think of nothing but that day."
"Still thinking about it? I think we'd have heard from them again if
they were coming back. They probably got somebody else's baby by this
time." Martin finished his coffee and rose to kiss her good-bye. "But
for safety's sake I guess you'd better keep that gun handy."
The morning turned into a brilliant, sunshiny day. Puffs of clouds
moved slowly across the summer sky and a warm breeze rustled the
trees. It would be a crime to keep Reggie inside on a day like this,
Nancy thought.
So she called Mrs. MacDougal, the next door neighbor. Mrs. MacDougal
was familiar with what had happened to the Laughtons and she agreed to
keep an eye on Nancy and Reggie and to call the police at the first
sign of trouble.
With a fearful but determined heart Nancy moved the play pen and set
it up in the front yard. She spread a blanket for herself and put
Reggie in the pen. Her heart pounded all the while and she watched the
street for any strangers, ready to flee inside if need be. Reggie just
gurgled with delight at the change in environment.
This peaceful scene was disturbed by a speeding car in which two men
were riding. The car roared up the street, swerved toward the parkway,
tires screaming, bounced over the curb and sidewalk, straight toward
the child and mother. Reggie, attracted by the sudden noise, looked up
to see the approaching vehicle. His mother stood up, set her palms
against her cheeks and shrieked.
The car came on, crunched over the play pen, killing the child. The
mother was hit and instantly killed, force of the blow snapping her
spine and tossing her against the house. The car plunged on into a
tree, hitting it a terrible blow, crumbling the car's forward end so
it looked like an accordion. The men were thrown from the machine.
"We'll never be able to prosecute in this case," the states attorney
said. "At least not on a drunken driving basis."
"I can't get over it," the chief of police said. "I've got at least
six men who will swear the man was drunk. He staggered, reeled and
gave the usual drunk talk. He reeked of whiskey."
The prosecutor handed the report over the desk. "Here's the analysis.
Not a trace of alcohol. He couldn't have even had a smell of near
beer. Here's another report. This is his physical exam made not long
afterwards. The man was in perfect health. Only variations are he had
a scar on his leg where something, probably a dog, bit him once. And
then a scar on his chest. It looked like an old gunshot wound, they
said. Must have happened years ago."
"That's odd. The man who accosted Mrs. Laughton in the afternoon was
bitten by their dog. Later that night she said she shot the same man
in the chest. Since the scars are healed it obviously couldn't be the
same man. But there's a real coincidence for you. And speaking of the
dogbite, the Laughton dog died that night. His menu evidently didn't
agree with him. Never did figure what killed him, actually."
"Any record of treatment on the man she shot?"
"The
men
. You'll remember, there were two. No, we never found a
trace of either. No doctor ever made a report of a gunshot wound that
night. No hospital had a case either—at least not within several
hundred miles—that night or several nights afterwards. Ever been shot
with .30-.30?"
The state attorney shook his head. "I wouldn't be here if I had."
"I'll say you wouldn't. The pair must have crawled away to die God
knows where."
"Getting back to the man who ran over the child and killed Mrs.
Laughton. Why did he pretend to be drunk?"
It was the chief's turn to shake his head. "Your guess is as good as
mine. There are a lot of angles to this case none of us understand. It
looks deliberate, but where's the motive?"
"What does the man have to say?"
"I was afraid you'd get to him," the chief said, his neck reddening.
"It's all been rather embarrassing to the department." He coughed
self-consciously. "He's proved a strange one, all right. He says his
name is John Smith and he's got cards to prove it, too—for example, a
social security card. It looks authentic, yet there's no such number
on file in Washington, so we've discovered. We've had him in jail for
a week and we've all taken turns questioning him. He laughs and admits
his guilt—in fact, he seems amused by most everything. Sometimes all
alone in his cell he'll start laughing for no apparent reason. It
gives you the creeps."
The states attorney leaned back in his chair. "Maybe it's a case for
an alienist."
"One jump ahead of you. Dr. Stone thinks he's normal, but won't put
down any I.Q. Actually, he can't figure him out himself. Smith seems
to take delight in answering questions—sort of anticipates them and
has the answer ready before you're half through asking."
"Well, if Dr. Stone says he's normal, that's enough for me." The
prosecutor was silent for a moment. Then, "How about the husband?"
"Laughton? We're afraid to let him see him. All broken up. No telling
what kind of a rumpus he'd start—especially if Smith started his
funny business."
"Guess you're right. Well, Mr. Smith won't think it's so funny when we
hang criminal negligence or manslaughter on him. By the way, you've
checked possible family connections?"
"Nobody ever saw John Smith before. Even at the address on his
driver's license. And there's no duplicate of that in Springfield, in
case you're interested."
The man who had laughingly told police his name was John Smith lay on
his cot in the county jail, his eyes closed, his arms folded across
his chest. This gave him the appearance of being alert despite
reclining. Even as he lay, his mouth held a hint of a smile.
Arvid 6—for John Smith
was
Arvid 6—had lain in that position for
more than four hours, when suddenly he snapped his eyes open and
appeared to be listening. For a moment a look of concern crossed his
face and he swung his legs to the floor and sat there expectantly.
Arvid 6 knew Tendal 13 had materialized and was somewhere in the
building.
Eventually there were some sounds from beyond the steel cell and
doorway. There was a clang when the outer doorway was opened and Arvid
6 rose from his cot.
"Your lawyer's here to see you," the jailer said, indicating the man
with the brief case. "Ring the buzzer when you're through." The jailer
let the man in, locked the cell door and walked away.
The man threw the brief case on the jail cot and stood glaring.
"Your damned foolishness has gone far enough. I'm sick and tired of
it," he declared. "If you carry on any more we'll never get back to
the Ultroom!"
"I'm sorry, Tendal," the man on the cot said. "I didn't think—"
"You're absolutely right. You didn't think. Crashing that car into
that tree and killing that woman—that was the last straw. You don't
even deserve to get back to our era. You ought to be made to rot
here."
"I'm
really
sorry about that," Arvid 6 said.
You know the instructions. Just because you work in the Ultroom don't
get to thinking human life doesn't have any value. We wouldn't be here
if it hadn't. But to unnecessarily kill—" The older man shook his
head. "You could have killed yourself as well and we'd never get the
job done. As it is, you almost totally obliterated me." Tendal 13
paced the length of the cell and back again, gesturing as he talked.
"It was only with the greatest effort I pulled myself back together
again. I doubt that you could have done it. And then all the while
you've been sitting here, probably enjoying yourself with your special
brand of humor I have grown to despise."
"You didn't have to come along at all, you know," Arvid 6 said.
"How well I know! How sorry I am that I ever did! It was only because
I was sorry for you, because someone older and more experienced than
you was needed. I volunteered. Imagine that! I volunteered! Tendal 13
reaches the height of stupidity and volunteers to help Arvid 6 go back
6,000 years to bring Kanad back, to correct a mistake Arvid 6 made!"
He snorted. "I still can't believe I was ever that stupid. I only
prove it when I pinch myself and here I am.
"Oh, you've been a joy to be with! First it was that hunt in ancient
Mycenae when you let the lion escape the hunters' quaint spears and we
were partly eaten by the lion in the bargain, although you dazzled the
hunters, deflecting their spears. And then your zest for drink when we
were with Octavian in Alexandria that led to everybody's amusement but
ours when we were ambushed by Anthony's men. And worst of all, that
English barmaid you became engrossed with at our last stop in 1609,
when her husband mistook me for you and you let him take me apart
piece by piece—"
"All right, all right," Arvid 6 said. "I'll admit I've made some
mistakes. You're just not adventurous, that's all."
"Shut up! For once you're going to listen to me. Our instructions
specifically stated we were to have as little as possible to do with
these people. But at every turn you've got us more and more enmeshed
with them. If that's adventure, you can have it." Tendal 13 sat down
wearily and sank his head in his hands. "It was you who conceived the
idea of taking Reggie right out of his play pen. 'Watch me take that
child right out from under its mother's nose' were your exact words.
And before I could stop you, you did. Only you forgot an important
factor in the equation—the dog, Tiger. And you nursed a dogbite most
of the afternoon before it healed. And then you took your spite out on
the poor thing by suggesting suffocation to it that night.
"And speaking of that night, you remember we agreed I was to do the
talking. But no, you pulled a switch and captured Martin Laughton's
attention. 'I came as soon as I could, Martin,' you said. And suddenly
I played a very minor role. 'This is my new assistant, Dr. Tompkins,'
you said. And then what happened? I get shot in the legs and you get a
hole in your back. We were both nearly obliterated that time and we
didn't even come close to getting the child.
"Still you wanted to run the whole show. 'I'm younger than you,' you
said. 'I'll take the wheel.' And the next thing I know I'm floating in
space halfway to nowhere with two broken legs, a spinal injury,
concussion and some of the finest bruises you ever saw."
These twentieth century machines aren't what they ought to be," Arvid
6 said.
"You never run out of excuses, do you, Arvid? Remember what you said
in the Ultroom when you pushed the lever clear over and transferred
Kanad back 6,000 years? 'My hand slipped.' As simple as that. 'My hand
slipped.' It was so simple everyone believed you. You were given no
real punishment. In a way it was a reward—at least to you—getting to
go back and rescue the life germ of Kanad out of each era he'd be born
in."
Tendal 13 turned and looked steadily and directly at Arvid 6. "Do you
know what I think? I think you deliberately pushed the lever over as
far as it would go
just to see what would happen
. That's how simple
I think it was."
Arvid 6 flushed, turned away and looked at the floor.
"What crazy things have you been doing since I've been gone?" Tendal
13 asked.
Arvid 6 sighed. "After what you just said I guess it wouldn't amuse
you, although it has me. They got to me right after the accident
before I had a chance to collect my wits, dematerialize or
anything—you said we shouldn't dematerialize in front of anybody."
"That's right."
"Well, I didn't know what to do. I could see they thought I was drunk,
so I was. But they had a blood sample before I could manufacture any
alcohol in my blood, although I implanted a memory in them that I
reeked of it." He laughed. "I fancy they're thoroughly confused."
"And you're thoroughly amused, no doubt. Have they questioned you?"
"At great length. They had a psychiatrist in to see me. He was a queer
fellow with the most stupid set of questions and tests I ever saw."
"And you amused yourself with him."
"I suppose you'd think so."
"Who do you tell them you are?"
"John Smith. A rather prevalent name here, I understand. I
manufactured a pasteboard called a social security card and a driver's
license—"
"Never mind. It's easy to see you've been your own inimitable self.
Believe me, if I ever get back to the Ultroom I hope I never see you
again. And I hope I'll never leave there again though I'm rejuvenated
through a million years."
"Was Kanad's life germ transferred all right this time?"
Tendal 13 shook his head. "I haven't heard. The transfers are getting
more difficult all the time. In 1609, you'll remember, it was a case
of pneumonia for the two-year-old. A simple procedure. It wouldn't
work here. Medicine's too far along." He produced a notebook. "The
last jump was 342 years, a little more than average. The next ought to
be around 2250. Things will be more difficult than ever there,
probably."
"Do you think Kanad will be angry about all this?"
"How would you like to have to go through all those birth processes,
to have your life germ knocked from one era to the next?"
"Frankly, I didn't think he'd go back so far."
"If it had been anybody but Kanad nobody'd ever have thought of going
back after it. The life germ of the head of the whole galactic system
who came to the Ultroom to be transplanted to a younger body—and then
sending him back beyond his original birth date—" Tendal 13 got up
and commenced his pacing again. "Oh, I suppose Kanad's partly to
blame, wanting rejuvenating at only 300 years. Some have waited a
thousand or more or until their bones are like paper."
"I just wonder how angry Kanad will be," Arvid muttered.
HB92167. Ultroom Error. Tendal 13. Arvid 6. Kanad transfer
out of 1951 complete. Next Kanad transfer ready. 2267.
Phullam 19, son of Orla 39 and Rhoda R, 22H Level M,
Hemisphere B, Quadrant 3, Sector I. Arrive his 329th Day.
TB92167
Arvid 6 rose from the cot and the two men faced each other.
"Before we leave, Arvid," Tendal 13 started to say.
"I know, I know. You want me to let you handle everything."
"Exactly. Is that too much to ask after all you've done?"
"I guess I have made mistakes. From now on you be the boss. I'll do
whatever you say."
"I hope I can count on that." Tendal 13 rang the jail buzzer.
The jailer unlocked the cell door.
"You remember the chief said it's all right to take him with me,
Matthews," Tendal 13 told the jailer.
"Yes, I remember," the jailer said mechanically, letting them both out
of the cell.
They walked together down the jail corridor. When they came to another
barred door the jailer fumbled with the keys and clumsily tried
several with no luck.
Arvid 6, an amused set to his mouth and devilment in his eyes, watched
the jailer's expression as he walked through the bars of the door. He
laughed as he saw the jailer's eyes bulge.
"Arvid!"
Tendal 13 walked briskly through the door, snatched Arvid 6 by the
shoulders and shook him.
The jailer watched stupified as the two men vanished in the middle of
a violent argument. | Tendal 13 | Kanad | Martin Laughton | Arvid 6 | 3 |
31357_T9I0O70O_5 | Why did the driver who killed Nancy and Reggie Laughton pretend to be drunk? | Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from Space Science Fiction May 1952. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.
THE ULTROOM ERROR
by
JERRY SOHL
Smith admitted he had made an error involving a few
murders—and a few thousand years. He was entitled to a
sense of humor, though, even in the Ultroom!
HB73782. Ultroom error. Tendal 13. Arvid 6. Kanad transfer
out of 1609 complete, intact, but too near limit of 1,000
days. Next Kanad transfer ready. 1951. Reginald, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Martin Laughton, 3495 Orland Drive, Marionville,
Illinois, U. S. A. Arrive his 378th day. TB73782.
Nancy Laughton sat on the blanket she had spread on the lawn in her
front yard, knitting a pair of booties for the PTA bazaar.
Occasionally she glanced at her son in the play pen, who was getting
his daily dose of sunshine. He was gurgling happily, examining a ball,
a cheese grater and a linen baby book, all with perfunctory interest.
When she looked up again she noticed a man walking by—except he
turned up the walk and crossed the lawn to her.
He was a little taller than her husband, had piercing blue eyes and a
rather amused set to his lips.
"Hello, Nancy," he said.
"Hello, Joe," she answered. It was her brother who lived in Kankakee.
"I'm going to take the baby for a while," he said.
"All right, Joe."
He reached into the pen, picked up the baby. As he did so the baby's
knees hit the side of the play pen and young Laughton let out a
scream—half from hurt and half from sudden lack of confidence in his
new handler. But this did not deter Joe. He started off with the
child.
Around the corner and after the man came a snarling mongrel dog, eyes
bright, teeth glinting in the sunlight. The man did not turn as the
dog threw himself at him, burying his teeth in his leg. Surprised, the
man dropped the screaming child on the lawn and turned to the dog. Joe
seemed off balance and he backed up confusedly in the face of the
snapping jaws. Then he suddenly turned and walked away, the dog at his
heels.
"I tell you, the man said he was my brother and he made me think he
was," Nancy told her husband for the tenth time. "I don't even have a
brother."
Martin Laughton sighed. "I can't understand why you believed him. It's
just—just plain nuts, Nancy!"
"Don't you think I know it?" Nancy said tearfully. "I feel like I'm
going crazy. I can't say I dreamt it because there was Reggie with his
bleeding knees, squalling for all he was worth on the grass—Oh, I
don't even want to think about it."
"We haven't lost Reggie, Nancy, remember that. Now why don't you try
to get some rest?"
"You—you don't believe me at all, do you, Martin?"
When her husband did not answer, her head sank to her arms on the
table and she sobbed.
"Nancy, for heaven's sake, of course I believe you. I'm trying to
think it out, that's all. We should have called the police."
Nancy shook her head in her arms. "They'd—never—believe me either,"
she moaned.
"I'd better go and make sure Reggie's all right." Martin got up out of
his chair and went to the stairs.
"I'm going with you," Nancy said, hurriedly rising and coming over to
him.
"We'll go up and look at him together."
They found Reggie peacefully asleep in his crib in his room upstairs.
They checked the windows and tucked in the blankets. They paused in
the room for a moment and then Martin stole his arm around his wife
and led her to the door.
"As I've said, sergeant, this fellow hypnotized my wife. He made her
think he was her brother. She doesn't even have a brother. Then he
tried to get away with the baby." Martin leaned down and patted the
dog. "It was Tiger here who scared him off."
The police sergeant looked at the father, at Nancy and then at the
dog. He scribbled notes in his book.
"Are you a rich man, Mr. Laughton?" he asked.
"Not at all. The bank still owns most of the house. I have a few
hundred dollars, that's all."
"What do you do?"
"Office work, mostly. I'm a junior executive in an insurance company."
"Any enemies?"
"No ... Oh, I suppose I have a few people I don't get along with, like
anybody else. Nobody who'd do anything like this, though."
The sergeant flipped his notebook closed. "You'd better keep your dog
inside and around the kid as much as possible. Keep your doors and
windows locked. I'll see that the prowl car keeps an eye on the house.
Call us if anything seems unusual or out of the way."
Nancy had taken a sedative and was asleep by the time Martin finished
cleaning the .30-.30 rifle he used for deer hunting. He put it by the
stairs, ready for use, fully loaded, leaning it against the wall next
to the telephone stand.
The front door bell rang. He answered it. It was Dr. Stuart and
another man.
"I came as soon as I could, Martin," the young doctor said, stepping
inside with the other man. "This is my new assistant, Dr. Tompkins."
Martin and Tompkins shook hands.
"The baby—?" Dr. Stuart asked.
"Upstairs," Martin said.
"You'd better get him, Dr. Tompkins, if we're to take him to the
hospital. I'll stay here with Mr. Laughton. How've you been, Martin?"
"Fine."
"How's everything at the office?"
"Fine."
"And your wife?"
"She's fine, too."
"Glad to hear it, Martin. Mighty glad. Say, by the way, there's that
bill you owe me. I think it's $32, isn't that right?"
"Yes, I'd almost forgotten about it."
"Why don't you be a good fellow and write a check for it? It's been
over a year, you know."
"That's right. I'll get right at it." Martin went over to his desk,
opened it and started looking for his checkbook. Dr. Stuart stood by
him, making idle comment until Dr. Tompkins came down the stairs with
the sleeping baby cuddled against his shoulder.
"Never mind the check, now, Martin. I see we're ready to go." He went
over to his assistant and took the baby. Together they walked out the
front door.
"Good-bye," Martin said, going to the door.
Then he was nearly bowled over by the discharge of the .30-.30. Dr.
Stuart crumpled to the ground, the baby falling to the lawn. Dr.
Tompkins whirled and there was a second shot. Dr. Tompkins pitched
forward on his face.
The figure of a woman ran from the house, retrieved the now squalling
infant and ran back into the house. Once inside, Nancy slammed the
door, gave the baby to the stunned Martin and headed for the
telephone.
"One of them was the same man!" she cried.
Martin gasped, sinking into a chair with the baby. "I believed them,"
he said slowly and uncomprehendingly. "They made me believe them!"
"Those bodies," the sergeant said. "Would you mind pointing them out
to me, please?"
"Aren't they—aren't they on the walk?" Mrs. Laughton asked.
"There is nothing on the walk, Mrs. Laughton."
"But there
must
be! I tell you I shot these men who posed as
doctors. One of them was the same man who tried to take the baby this
afternoon. They hypnotized my husband—"
"Yes, I know, Mrs. Laughton. We've been through that." The sergeant
went to the door and opened it. "Say, Homer, take another look around
the walk and the bushes. There's supposed to be two of them. Shot with
a .30-.30."
He turned and picked up the gun and examined it again. "Ever shoot a
gun before, Mrs. Laughton?"
"Many times. Martin and I used to go hunting together before we had
Reggie."
The sergeant nodded. "You were taking an awful chance, shooting at a
guy carrying your baby, don't you think?"
"I shot him in the legs. The other—the other turned and I shot him in
the chest. I could even see his eyes when he turned around. If I
hadn't pulled the trigger then ... I don't want to remember it."
The patrolman pushed the door open. "There's no bodies out here but
there's some blood. Quite a lot of blood. A little to one side of the
walk."
The policemen went out.
"Thank God you woke up, Nancy," Martin said. "I'd have let them have
the baby." He reached over and smoothed the sleeping Reggie's hair.
Nancy, who was rocking the boy, narrowed her eyes.
"I wonder why they want our baby? He's just like any other baby. We
don't have any money. We couldn't pay a ransom."
"Reggie's pretty cute, though," Martin said. "You will have to admit
that."
Nancy smiled. Then she suddenly stopped rocking.
"Martin!"
He sat up quickly.
"Where's Tiger?"
Together they rose and walked around the room. They found him in a
corner, eyes open, tongue protruding. He was dead.
If we keep Reggie in the house much longer he'll turn out to be a
hermit," Martin said at breakfast a month later. "He needs fresh air
and sunshine."
"I'm not going to sit on the lawn alone with him, Martin. I just
can't, that's all. I'd be able to think of nothing but that day."
"Still thinking about it? I think we'd have heard from them again if
they were coming back. They probably got somebody else's baby by this
time." Martin finished his coffee and rose to kiss her good-bye. "But
for safety's sake I guess you'd better keep that gun handy."
The morning turned into a brilliant, sunshiny day. Puffs of clouds
moved slowly across the summer sky and a warm breeze rustled the
trees. It would be a crime to keep Reggie inside on a day like this,
Nancy thought.
So she called Mrs. MacDougal, the next door neighbor. Mrs. MacDougal
was familiar with what had happened to the Laughtons and she agreed to
keep an eye on Nancy and Reggie and to call the police at the first
sign of trouble.
With a fearful but determined heart Nancy moved the play pen and set
it up in the front yard. She spread a blanket for herself and put
Reggie in the pen. Her heart pounded all the while and she watched the
street for any strangers, ready to flee inside if need be. Reggie just
gurgled with delight at the change in environment.
This peaceful scene was disturbed by a speeding car in which two men
were riding. The car roared up the street, swerved toward the parkway,
tires screaming, bounced over the curb and sidewalk, straight toward
the child and mother. Reggie, attracted by the sudden noise, looked up
to see the approaching vehicle. His mother stood up, set her palms
against her cheeks and shrieked.
The car came on, crunched over the play pen, killing the child. The
mother was hit and instantly killed, force of the blow snapping her
spine and tossing her against the house. The car plunged on into a
tree, hitting it a terrible blow, crumbling the car's forward end so
it looked like an accordion. The men were thrown from the machine.
"We'll never be able to prosecute in this case," the states attorney
said. "At least not on a drunken driving basis."
"I can't get over it," the chief of police said. "I've got at least
six men who will swear the man was drunk. He staggered, reeled and
gave the usual drunk talk. He reeked of whiskey."
The prosecutor handed the report over the desk. "Here's the analysis.
Not a trace of alcohol. He couldn't have even had a smell of near
beer. Here's another report. This is his physical exam made not long
afterwards. The man was in perfect health. Only variations are he had
a scar on his leg where something, probably a dog, bit him once. And
then a scar on his chest. It looked like an old gunshot wound, they
said. Must have happened years ago."
"That's odd. The man who accosted Mrs. Laughton in the afternoon was
bitten by their dog. Later that night she said she shot the same man
in the chest. Since the scars are healed it obviously couldn't be the
same man. But there's a real coincidence for you. And speaking of the
dogbite, the Laughton dog died that night. His menu evidently didn't
agree with him. Never did figure what killed him, actually."
"Any record of treatment on the man she shot?"
"The
men
. You'll remember, there were two. No, we never found a
trace of either. No doctor ever made a report of a gunshot wound that
night. No hospital had a case either—at least not within several
hundred miles—that night or several nights afterwards. Ever been shot
with .30-.30?"
The state attorney shook his head. "I wouldn't be here if I had."
"I'll say you wouldn't. The pair must have crawled away to die God
knows where."
"Getting back to the man who ran over the child and killed Mrs.
Laughton. Why did he pretend to be drunk?"
It was the chief's turn to shake his head. "Your guess is as good as
mine. There are a lot of angles to this case none of us understand. It
looks deliberate, but where's the motive?"
"What does the man have to say?"
"I was afraid you'd get to him," the chief said, his neck reddening.
"It's all been rather embarrassing to the department." He coughed
self-consciously. "He's proved a strange one, all right. He says his
name is John Smith and he's got cards to prove it, too—for example, a
social security card. It looks authentic, yet there's no such number
on file in Washington, so we've discovered. We've had him in jail for
a week and we've all taken turns questioning him. He laughs and admits
his guilt—in fact, he seems amused by most everything. Sometimes all
alone in his cell he'll start laughing for no apparent reason. It
gives you the creeps."
The states attorney leaned back in his chair. "Maybe it's a case for
an alienist."
"One jump ahead of you. Dr. Stone thinks he's normal, but won't put
down any I.Q. Actually, he can't figure him out himself. Smith seems
to take delight in answering questions—sort of anticipates them and
has the answer ready before you're half through asking."
"Well, if Dr. Stone says he's normal, that's enough for me." The
prosecutor was silent for a moment. Then, "How about the husband?"
"Laughton? We're afraid to let him see him. All broken up. No telling
what kind of a rumpus he'd start—especially if Smith started his
funny business."
"Guess you're right. Well, Mr. Smith won't think it's so funny when we
hang criminal negligence or manslaughter on him. By the way, you've
checked possible family connections?"
"Nobody ever saw John Smith before. Even at the address on his
driver's license. And there's no duplicate of that in Springfield, in
case you're interested."
The man who had laughingly told police his name was John Smith lay on
his cot in the county jail, his eyes closed, his arms folded across
his chest. This gave him the appearance of being alert despite
reclining. Even as he lay, his mouth held a hint of a smile.
Arvid 6—for John Smith
was
Arvid 6—had lain in that position for
more than four hours, when suddenly he snapped his eyes open and
appeared to be listening. For a moment a look of concern crossed his
face and he swung his legs to the floor and sat there expectantly.
Arvid 6 knew Tendal 13 had materialized and was somewhere in the
building.
Eventually there were some sounds from beyond the steel cell and
doorway. There was a clang when the outer doorway was opened and Arvid
6 rose from his cot.
"Your lawyer's here to see you," the jailer said, indicating the man
with the brief case. "Ring the buzzer when you're through." The jailer
let the man in, locked the cell door and walked away.
The man threw the brief case on the jail cot and stood glaring.
"Your damned foolishness has gone far enough. I'm sick and tired of
it," he declared. "If you carry on any more we'll never get back to
the Ultroom!"
"I'm sorry, Tendal," the man on the cot said. "I didn't think—"
"You're absolutely right. You didn't think. Crashing that car into
that tree and killing that woman—that was the last straw. You don't
even deserve to get back to our era. You ought to be made to rot
here."
"I'm
really
sorry about that," Arvid 6 said.
You know the instructions. Just because you work in the Ultroom don't
get to thinking human life doesn't have any value. We wouldn't be here
if it hadn't. But to unnecessarily kill—" The older man shook his
head. "You could have killed yourself as well and we'd never get the
job done. As it is, you almost totally obliterated me." Tendal 13
paced the length of the cell and back again, gesturing as he talked.
"It was only with the greatest effort I pulled myself back together
again. I doubt that you could have done it. And then all the while
you've been sitting here, probably enjoying yourself with your special
brand of humor I have grown to despise."
"You didn't have to come along at all, you know," Arvid 6 said.
"How well I know! How sorry I am that I ever did! It was only because
I was sorry for you, because someone older and more experienced than
you was needed. I volunteered. Imagine that! I volunteered! Tendal 13
reaches the height of stupidity and volunteers to help Arvid 6 go back
6,000 years to bring Kanad back, to correct a mistake Arvid 6 made!"
He snorted. "I still can't believe I was ever that stupid. I only
prove it when I pinch myself and here I am.
"Oh, you've been a joy to be with! First it was that hunt in ancient
Mycenae when you let the lion escape the hunters' quaint spears and we
were partly eaten by the lion in the bargain, although you dazzled the
hunters, deflecting their spears. And then your zest for drink when we
were with Octavian in Alexandria that led to everybody's amusement but
ours when we were ambushed by Anthony's men. And worst of all, that
English barmaid you became engrossed with at our last stop in 1609,
when her husband mistook me for you and you let him take me apart
piece by piece—"
"All right, all right," Arvid 6 said. "I'll admit I've made some
mistakes. You're just not adventurous, that's all."
"Shut up! For once you're going to listen to me. Our instructions
specifically stated we were to have as little as possible to do with
these people. But at every turn you've got us more and more enmeshed
with them. If that's adventure, you can have it." Tendal 13 sat down
wearily and sank his head in his hands. "It was you who conceived the
idea of taking Reggie right out of his play pen. 'Watch me take that
child right out from under its mother's nose' were your exact words.
And before I could stop you, you did. Only you forgot an important
factor in the equation—the dog, Tiger. And you nursed a dogbite most
of the afternoon before it healed. And then you took your spite out on
the poor thing by suggesting suffocation to it that night.
"And speaking of that night, you remember we agreed I was to do the
talking. But no, you pulled a switch and captured Martin Laughton's
attention. 'I came as soon as I could, Martin,' you said. And suddenly
I played a very minor role. 'This is my new assistant, Dr. Tompkins,'
you said. And then what happened? I get shot in the legs and you get a
hole in your back. We were both nearly obliterated that time and we
didn't even come close to getting the child.
"Still you wanted to run the whole show. 'I'm younger than you,' you
said. 'I'll take the wheel.' And the next thing I know I'm floating in
space halfway to nowhere with two broken legs, a spinal injury,
concussion and some of the finest bruises you ever saw."
These twentieth century machines aren't what they ought to be," Arvid
6 said.
"You never run out of excuses, do you, Arvid? Remember what you said
in the Ultroom when you pushed the lever clear over and transferred
Kanad back 6,000 years? 'My hand slipped.' As simple as that. 'My hand
slipped.' It was so simple everyone believed you. You were given no
real punishment. In a way it was a reward—at least to you—getting to
go back and rescue the life germ of Kanad out of each era he'd be born
in."
Tendal 13 turned and looked steadily and directly at Arvid 6. "Do you
know what I think? I think you deliberately pushed the lever over as
far as it would go
just to see what would happen
. That's how simple
I think it was."
Arvid 6 flushed, turned away and looked at the floor.
"What crazy things have you been doing since I've been gone?" Tendal
13 asked.
Arvid 6 sighed. "After what you just said I guess it wouldn't amuse
you, although it has me. They got to me right after the accident
before I had a chance to collect my wits, dematerialize or
anything—you said we shouldn't dematerialize in front of anybody."
"That's right."
"Well, I didn't know what to do. I could see they thought I was drunk,
so I was. But they had a blood sample before I could manufacture any
alcohol in my blood, although I implanted a memory in them that I
reeked of it." He laughed. "I fancy they're thoroughly confused."
"And you're thoroughly amused, no doubt. Have they questioned you?"
"At great length. They had a psychiatrist in to see me. He was a queer
fellow with the most stupid set of questions and tests I ever saw."
"And you amused yourself with him."
"I suppose you'd think so."
"Who do you tell them you are?"
"John Smith. A rather prevalent name here, I understand. I
manufactured a pasteboard called a social security card and a driver's
license—"
"Never mind. It's easy to see you've been your own inimitable self.
Believe me, if I ever get back to the Ultroom I hope I never see you
again. And I hope I'll never leave there again though I'm rejuvenated
through a million years."
"Was Kanad's life germ transferred all right this time?"
Tendal 13 shook his head. "I haven't heard. The transfers are getting
more difficult all the time. In 1609, you'll remember, it was a case
of pneumonia for the two-year-old. A simple procedure. It wouldn't
work here. Medicine's too far along." He produced a notebook. "The
last jump was 342 years, a little more than average. The next ought to
be around 2250. Things will be more difficult than ever there,
probably."
"Do you think Kanad will be angry about all this?"
"How would you like to have to go through all those birth processes,
to have your life germ knocked from one era to the next?"
"Frankly, I didn't think he'd go back so far."
"If it had been anybody but Kanad nobody'd ever have thought of going
back after it. The life germ of the head of the whole galactic system
who came to the Ultroom to be transplanted to a younger body—and then
sending him back beyond his original birth date—" Tendal 13 got up
and commenced his pacing again. "Oh, I suppose Kanad's partly to
blame, wanting rejuvenating at only 300 years. Some have waited a
thousand or more or until their bones are like paper."
"I just wonder how angry Kanad will be," Arvid muttered.
HB92167. Ultroom Error. Tendal 13. Arvid 6. Kanad transfer
out of 1951 complete. Next Kanad transfer ready. 2267.
Phullam 19, son of Orla 39 and Rhoda R, 22H Level M,
Hemisphere B, Quadrant 3, Sector I. Arrive his 329th Day.
TB92167
Arvid 6 rose from the cot and the two men faced each other.
"Before we leave, Arvid," Tendal 13 started to say.
"I know, I know. You want me to let you handle everything."
"Exactly. Is that too much to ask after all you've done?"
"I guess I have made mistakes. From now on you be the boss. I'll do
whatever you say."
"I hope I can count on that." Tendal 13 rang the jail buzzer.
The jailer unlocked the cell door.
"You remember the chief said it's all right to take him with me,
Matthews," Tendal 13 told the jailer.
"Yes, I remember," the jailer said mechanically, letting them both out
of the cell.
They walked together down the jail corridor. When they came to another
barred door the jailer fumbled with the keys and clumsily tried
several with no luck.
Arvid 6, an amused set to his mouth and devilment in his eyes, watched
the jailer's expression as he walked through the bars of the door. He
laughed as he saw the jailer's eyes bulge.
"Arvid!"
Tendal 13 walked briskly through the door, snatched Arvid 6 by the
shoulders and shook him.
The jailer watched stupified as the two men vanished in the middle of
a violent argument. | The driver did not have enough time to make up a more convincing story | To confuse the authorities so it would take longer for them to figure out his identity | To get a manslaughter charge instead of a murder charge | The driver was not pretending -- he was actually intoxicated | 0 |
31357_T9I0O70O_6 | Where will Arvid 6 and Tendal 13 go after the end of the text? | Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from Space Science Fiction May 1952. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.
THE ULTROOM ERROR
by
JERRY SOHL
Smith admitted he had made an error involving a few
murders—and a few thousand years. He was entitled to a
sense of humor, though, even in the Ultroom!
HB73782. Ultroom error. Tendal 13. Arvid 6. Kanad transfer
out of 1609 complete, intact, but too near limit of 1,000
days. Next Kanad transfer ready. 1951. Reginald, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Martin Laughton, 3495 Orland Drive, Marionville,
Illinois, U. S. A. Arrive his 378th day. TB73782.
Nancy Laughton sat on the blanket she had spread on the lawn in her
front yard, knitting a pair of booties for the PTA bazaar.
Occasionally she glanced at her son in the play pen, who was getting
his daily dose of sunshine. He was gurgling happily, examining a ball,
a cheese grater and a linen baby book, all with perfunctory interest.
When she looked up again she noticed a man walking by—except he
turned up the walk and crossed the lawn to her.
He was a little taller than her husband, had piercing blue eyes and a
rather amused set to his lips.
"Hello, Nancy," he said.
"Hello, Joe," she answered. It was her brother who lived in Kankakee.
"I'm going to take the baby for a while," he said.
"All right, Joe."
He reached into the pen, picked up the baby. As he did so the baby's
knees hit the side of the play pen and young Laughton let out a
scream—half from hurt and half from sudden lack of confidence in his
new handler. But this did not deter Joe. He started off with the
child.
Around the corner and after the man came a snarling mongrel dog, eyes
bright, teeth glinting in the sunlight. The man did not turn as the
dog threw himself at him, burying his teeth in his leg. Surprised, the
man dropped the screaming child on the lawn and turned to the dog. Joe
seemed off balance and he backed up confusedly in the face of the
snapping jaws. Then he suddenly turned and walked away, the dog at his
heels.
"I tell you, the man said he was my brother and he made me think he
was," Nancy told her husband for the tenth time. "I don't even have a
brother."
Martin Laughton sighed. "I can't understand why you believed him. It's
just—just plain nuts, Nancy!"
"Don't you think I know it?" Nancy said tearfully. "I feel like I'm
going crazy. I can't say I dreamt it because there was Reggie with his
bleeding knees, squalling for all he was worth on the grass—Oh, I
don't even want to think about it."
"We haven't lost Reggie, Nancy, remember that. Now why don't you try
to get some rest?"
"You—you don't believe me at all, do you, Martin?"
When her husband did not answer, her head sank to her arms on the
table and she sobbed.
"Nancy, for heaven's sake, of course I believe you. I'm trying to
think it out, that's all. We should have called the police."
Nancy shook her head in her arms. "They'd—never—believe me either,"
she moaned.
"I'd better go and make sure Reggie's all right." Martin got up out of
his chair and went to the stairs.
"I'm going with you," Nancy said, hurriedly rising and coming over to
him.
"We'll go up and look at him together."
They found Reggie peacefully asleep in his crib in his room upstairs.
They checked the windows and tucked in the blankets. They paused in
the room for a moment and then Martin stole his arm around his wife
and led her to the door.
"As I've said, sergeant, this fellow hypnotized my wife. He made her
think he was her brother. She doesn't even have a brother. Then he
tried to get away with the baby." Martin leaned down and patted the
dog. "It was Tiger here who scared him off."
The police sergeant looked at the father, at Nancy and then at the
dog. He scribbled notes in his book.
"Are you a rich man, Mr. Laughton?" he asked.
"Not at all. The bank still owns most of the house. I have a few
hundred dollars, that's all."
"What do you do?"
"Office work, mostly. I'm a junior executive in an insurance company."
"Any enemies?"
"No ... Oh, I suppose I have a few people I don't get along with, like
anybody else. Nobody who'd do anything like this, though."
The sergeant flipped his notebook closed. "You'd better keep your dog
inside and around the kid as much as possible. Keep your doors and
windows locked. I'll see that the prowl car keeps an eye on the house.
Call us if anything seems unusual or out of the way."
Nancy had taken a sedative and was asleep by the time Martin finished
cleaning the .30-.30 rifle he used for deer hunting. He put it by the
stairs, ready for use, fully loaded, leaning it against the wall next
to the telephone stand.
The front door bell rang. He answered it. It was Dr. Stuart and
another man.
"I came as soon as I could, Martin," the young doctor said, stepping
inside with the other man. "This is my new assistant, Dr. Tompkins."
Martin and Tompkins shook hands.
"The baby—?" Dr. Stuart asked.
"Upstairs," Martin said.
"You'd better get him, Dr. Tompkins, if we're to take him to the
hospital. I'll stay here with Mr. Laughton. How've you been, Martin?"
"Fine."
"How's everything at the office?"
"Fine."
"And your wife?"
"She's fine, too."
"Glad to hear it, Martin. Mighty glad. Say, by the way, there's that
bill you owe me. I think it's $32, isn't that right?"
"Yes, I'd almost forgotten about it."
"Why don't you be a good fellow and write a check for it? It's been
over a year, you know."
"That's right. I'll get right at it." Martin went over to his desk,
opened it and started looking for his checkbook. Dr. Stuart stood by
him, making idle comment until Dr. Tompkins came down the stairs with
the sleeping baby cuddled against his shoulder.
"Never mind the check, now, Martin. I see we're ready to go." He went
over to his assistant and took the baby. Together they walked out the
front door.
"Good-bye," Martin said, going to the door.
Then he was nearly bowled over by the discharge of the .30-.30. Dr.
Stuart crumpled to the ground, the baby falling to the lawn. Dr.
Tompkins whirled and there was a second shot. Dr. Tompkins pitched
forward on his face.
The figure of a woman ran from the house, retrieved the now squalling
infant and ran back into the house. Once inside, Nancy slammed the
door, gave the baby to the stunned Martin and headed for the
telephone.
"One of them was the same man!" she cried.
Martin gasped, sinking into a chair with the baby. "I believed them,"
he said slowly and uncomprehendingly. "They made me believe them!"
"Those bodies," the sergeant said. "Would you mind pointing them out
to me, please?"
"Aren't they—aren't they on the walk?" Mrs. Laughton asked.
"There is nothing on the walk, Mrs. Laughton."
"But there
must
be! I tell you I shot these men who posed as
doctors. One of them was the same man who tried to take the baby this
afternoon. They hypnotized my husband—"
"Yes, I know, Mrs. Laughton. We've been through that." The sergeant
went to the door and opened it. "Say, Homer, take another look around
the walk and the bushes. There's supposed to be two of them. Shot with
a .30-.30."
He turned and picked up the gun and examined it again. "Ever shoot a
gun before, Mrs. Laughton?"
"Many times. Martin and I used to go hunting together before we had
Reggie."
The sergeant nodded. "You were taking an awful chance, shooting at a
guy carrying your baby, don't you think?"
"I shot him in the legs. The other—the other turned and I shot him in
the chest. I could even see his eyes when he turned around. If I
hadn't pulled the trigger then ... I don't want to remember it."
The patrolman pushed the door open. "There's no bodies out here but
there's some blood. Quite a lot of blood. A little to one side of the
walk."
The policemen went out.
"Thank God you woke up, Nancy," Martin said. "I'd have let them have
the baby." He reached over and smoothed the sleeping Reggie's hair.
Nancy, who was rocking the boy, narrowed her eyes.
"I wonder why they want our baby? He's just like any other baby. We
don't have any money. We couldn't pay a ransom."
"Reggie's pretty cute, though," Martin said. "You will have to admit
that."
Nancy smiled. Then she suddenly stopped rocking.
"Martin!"
He sat up quickly.
"Where's Tiger?"
Together they rose and walked around the room. They found him in a
corner, eyes open, tongue protruding. He was dead.
If we keep Reggie in the house much longer he'll turn out to be a
hermit," Martin said at breakfast a month later. "He needs fresh air
and sunshine."
"I'm not going to sit on the lawn alone with him, Martin. I just
can't, that's all. I'd be able to think of nothing but that day."
"Still thinking about it? I think we'd have heard from them again if
they were coming back. They probably got somebody else's baby by this
time." Martin finished his coffee and rose to kiss her good-bye. "But
for safety's sake I guess you'd better keep that gun handy."
The morning turned into a brilliant, sunshiny day. Puffs of clouds
moved slowly across the summer sky and a warm breeze rustled the
trees. It would be a crime to keep Reggie inside on a day like this,
Nancy thought.
So she called Mrs. MacDougal, the next door neighbor. Mrs. MacDougal
was familiar with what had happened to the Laughtons and she agreed to
keep an eye on Nancy and Reggie and to call the police at the first
sign of trouble.
With a fearful but determined heart Nancy moved the play pen and set
it up in the front yard. She spread a blanket for herself and put
Reggie in the pen. Her heart pounded all the while and she watched the
street for any strangers, ready to flee inside if need be. Reggie just
gurgled with delight at the change in environment.
This peaceful scene was disturbed by a speeding car in which two men
were riding. The car roared up the street, swerved toward the parkway,
tires screaming, bounced over the curb and sidewalk, straight toward
the child and mother. Reggie, attracted by the sudden noise, looked up
to see the approaching vehicle. His mother stood up, set her palms
against her cheeks and shrieked.
The car came on, crunched over the play pen, killing the child. The
mother was hit and instantly killed, force of the blow snapping her
spine and tossing her against the house. The car plunged on into a
tree, hitting it a terrible blow, crumbling the car's forward end so
it looked like an accordion. The men were thrown from the machine.
"We'll never be able to prosecute in this case," the states attorney
said. "At least not on a drunken driving basis."
"I can't get over it," the chief of police said. "I've got at least
six men who will swear the man was drunk. He staggered, reeled and
gave the usual drunk talk. He reeked of whiskey."
The prosecutor handed the report over the desk. "Here's the analysis.
Not a trace of alcohol. He couldn't have even had a smell of near
beer. Here's another report. This is his physical exam made not long
afterwards. The man was in perfect health. Only variations are he had
a scar on his leg where something, probably a dog, bit him once. And
then a scar on his chest. It looked like an old gunshot wound, they
said. Must have happened years ago."
"That's odd. The man who accosted Mrs. Laughton in the afternoon was
bitten by their dog. Later that night she said she shot the same man
in the chest. Since the scars are healed it obviously couldn't be the
same man. But there's a real coincidence for you. And speaking of the
dogbite, the Laughton dog died that night. His menu evidently didn't
agree with him. Never did figure what killed him, actually."
"Any record of treatment on the man she shot?"
"The
men
. You'll remember, there were two. No, we never found a
trace of either. No doctor ever made a report of a gunshot wound that
night. No hospital had a case either—at least not within several
hundred miles—that night or several nights afterwards. Ever been shot
with .30-.30?"
The state attorney shook his head. "I wouldn't be here if I had."
"I'll say you wouldn't. The pair must have crawled away to die God
knows where."
"Getting back to the man who ran over the child and killed Mrs.
Laughton. Why did he pretend to be drunk?"
It was the chief's turn to shake his head. "Your guess is as good as
mine. There are a lot of angles to this case none of us understand. It
looks deliberate, but where's the motive?"
"What does the man have to say?"
"I was afraid you'd get to him," the chief said, his neck reddening.
"It's all been rather embarrassing to the department." He coughed
self-consciously. "He's proved a strange one, all right. He says his
name is John Smith and he's got cards to prove it, too—for example, a
social security card. It looks authentic, yet there's no such number
on file in Washington, so we've discovered. We've had him in jail for
a week and we've all taken turns questioning him. He laughs and admits
his guilt—in fact, he seems amused by most everything. Sometimes all
alone in his cell he'll start laughing for no apparent reason. It
gives you the creeps."
The states attorney leaned back in his chair. "Maybe it's a case for
an alienist."
"One jump ahead of you. Dr. Stone thinks he's normal, but won't put
down any I.Q. Actually, he can't figure him out himself. Smith seems
to take delight in answering questions—sort of anticipates them and
has the answer ready before you're half through asking."
"Well, if Dr. Stone says he's normal, that's enough for me." The
prosecutor was silent for a moment. Then, "How about the husband?"
"Laughton? We're afraid to let him see him. All broken up. No telling
what kind of a rumpus he'd start—especially if Smith started his
funny business."
"Guess you're right. Well, Mr. Smith won't think it's so funny when we
hang criminal negligence or manslaughter on him. By the way, you've
checked possible family connections?"
"Nobody ever saw John Smith before. Even at the address on his
driver's license. And there's no duplicate of that in Springfield, in
case you're interested."
The man who had laughingly told police his name was John Smith lay on
his cot in the county jail, his eyes closed, his arms folded across
his chest. This gave him the appearance of being alert despite
reclining. Even as he lay, his mouth held a hint of a smile.
Arvid 6—for John Smith
was
Arvid 6—had lain in that position for
more than four hours, when suddenly he snapped his eyes open and
appeared to be listening. For a moment a look of concern crossed his
face and he swung his legs to the floor and sat there expectantly.
Arvid 6 knew Tendal 13 had materialized and was somewhere in the
building.
Eventually there were some sounds from beyond the steel cell and
doorway. There was a clang when the outer doorway was opened and Arvid
6 rose from his cot.
"Your lawyer's here to see you," the jailer said, indicating the man
with the brief case. "Ring the buzzer when you're through." The jailer
let the man in, locked the cell door and walked away.
The man threw the brief case on the jail cot and stood glaring.
"Your damned foolishness has gone far enough. I'm sick and tired of
it," he declared. "If you carry on any more we'll never get back to
the Ultroom!"
"I'm sorry, Tendal," the man on the cot said. "I didn't think—"
"You're absolutely right. You didn't think. Crashing that car into
that tree and killing that woman—that was the last straw. You don't
even deserve to get back to our era. You ought to be made to rot
here."
"I'm
really
sorry about that," Arvid 6 said.
You know the instructions. Just because you work in the Ultroom don't
get to thinking human life doesn't have any value. We wouldn't be here
if it hadn't. But to unnecessarily kill—" The older man shook his
head. "You could have killed yourself as well and we'd never get the
job done. As it is, you almost totally obliterated me." Tendal 13
paced the length of the cell and back again, gesturing as he talked.
"It was only with the greatest effort I pulled myself back together
again. I doubt that you could have done it. And then all the while
you've been sitting here, probably enjoying yourself with your special
brand of humor I have grown to despise."
"You didn't have to come along at all, you know," Arvid 6 said.
"How well I know! How sorry I am that I ever did! It was only because
I was sorry for you, because someone older and more experienced than
you was needed. I volunteered. Imagine that! I volunteered! Tendal 13
reaches the height of stupidity and volunteers to help Arvid 6 go back
6,000 years to bring Kanad back, to correct a mistake Arvid 6 made!"
He snorted. "I still can't believe I was ever that stupid. I only
prove it when I pinch myself and here I am.
"Oh, you've been a joy to be with! First it was that hunt in ancient
Mycenae when you let the lion escape the hunters' quaint spears and we
were partly eaten by the lion in the bargain, although you dazzled the
hunters, deflecting their spears. And then your zest for drink when we
were with Octavian in Alexandria that led to everybody's amusement but
ours when we were ambushed by Anthony's men. And worst of all, that
English barmaid you became engrossed with at our last stop in 1609,
when her husband mistook me for you and you let him take me apart
piece by piece—"
"All right, all right," Arvid 6 said. "I'll admit I've made some
mistakes. You're just not adventurous, that's all."
"Shut up! For once you're going to listen to me. Our instructions
specifically stated we were to have as little as possible to do with
these people. But at every turn you've got us more and more enmeshed
with them. If that's adventure, you can have it." Tendal 13 sat down
wearily and sank his head in his hands. "It was you who conceived the
idea of taking Reggie right out of his play pen. 'Watch me take that
child right out from under its mother's nose' were your exact words.
And before I could stop you, you did. Only you forgot an important
factor in the equation—the dog, Tiger. And you nursed a dogbite most
of the afternoon before it healed. And then you took your spite out on
the poor thing by suggesting suffocation to it that night.
"And speaking of that night, you remember we agreed I was to do the
talking. But no, you pulled a switch and captured Martin Laughton's
attention. 'I came as soon as I could, Martin,' you said. And suddenly
I played a very minor role. 'This is my new assistant, Dr. Tompkins,'
you said. And then what happened? I get shot in the legs and you get a
hole in your back. We were both nearly obliterated that time and we
didn't even come close to getting the child.
"Still you wanted to run the whole show. 'I'm younger than you,' you
said. 'I'll take the wheel.' And the next thing I know I'm floating in
space halfway to nowhere with two broken legs, a spinal injury,
concussion and some of the finest bruises you ever saw."
These twentieth century machines aren't what they ought to be," Arvid
6 said.
"You never run out of excuses, do you, Arvid? Remember what you said
in the Ultroom when you pushed the lever clear over and transferred
Kanad back 6,000 years? 'My hand slipped.' As simple as that. 'My hand
slipped.' It was so simple everyone believed you. You were given no
real punishment. In a way it was a reward—at least to you—getting to
go back and rescue the life germ of Kanad out of each era he'd be born
in."
Tendal 13 turned and looked steadily and directly at Arvid 6. "Do you
know what I think? I think you deliberately pushed the lever over as
far as it would go
just to see what would happen
. That's how simple
I think it was."
Arvid 6 flushed, turned away and looked at the floor.
"What crazy things have you been doing since I've been gone?" Tendal
13 asked.
Arvid 6 sighed. "After what you just said I guess it wouldn't amuse
you, although it has me. They got to me right after the accident
before I had a chance to collect my wits, dematerialize or
anything—you said we shouldn't dematerialize in front of anybody."
"That's right."
"Well, I didn't know what to do. I could see they thought I was drunk,
so I was. But they had a blood sample before I could manufacture any
alcohol in my blood, although I implanted a memory in them that I
reeked of it." He laughed. "I fancy they're thoroughly confused."
"And you're thoroughly amused, no doubt. Have they questioned you?"
"At great length. They had a psychiatrist in to see me. He was a queer
fellow with the most stupid set of questions and tests I ever saw."
"And you amused yourself with him."
"I suppose you'd think so."
"Who do you tell them you are?"
"John Smith. A rather prevalent name here, I understand. I
manufactured a pasteboard called a social security card and a driver's
license—"
"Never mind. It's easy to see you've been your own inimitable self.
Believe me, if I ever get back to the Ultroom I hope I never see you
again. And I hope I'll never leave there again though I'm rejuvenated
through a million years."
"Was Kanad's life germ transferred all right this time?"
Tendal 13 shook his head. "I haven't heard. The transfers are getting
more difficult all the time. In 1609, you'll remember, it was a case
of pneumonia for the two-year-old. A simple procedure. It wouldn't
work here. Medicine's too far along." He produced a notebook. "The
last jump was 342 years, a little more than average. The next ought to
be around 2250. Things will be more difficult than ever there,
probably."
"Do you think Kanad will be angry about all this?"
"How would you like to have to go through all those birth processes,
to have your life germ knocked from one era to the next?"
"Frankly, I didn't think he'd go back so far."
"If it had been anybody but Kanad nobody'd ever have thought of going
back after it. The life germ of the head of the whole galactic system
who came to the Ultroom to be transplanted to a younger body—and then
sending him back beyond his original birth date—" Tendal 13 got up
and commenced his pacing again. "Oh, I suppose Kanad's partly to
blame, wanting rejuvenating at only 300 years. Some have waited a
thousand or more or until their bones are like paper."
"I just wonder how angry Kanad will be," Arvid muttered.
HB92167. Ultroom Error. Tendal 13. Arvid 6. Kanad transfer
out of 1951 complete. Next Kanad transfer ready. 2267.
Phullam 19, son of Orla 39 and Rhoda R, 22H Level M,
Hemisphere B, Quadrant 3, Sector I. Arrive his 329th Day.
TB92167
Arvid 6 rose from the cot and the two men faced each other.
"Before we leave, Arvid," Tendal 13 started to say.
"I know, I know. You want me to let you handle everything."
"Exactly. Is that too much to ask after all you've done?"
"I guess I have made mistakes. From now on you be the boss. I'll do
whatever you say."
"I hope I can count on that." Tendal 13 rang the jail buzzer.
The jailer unlocked the cell door.
"You remember the chief said it's all right to take him with me,
Matthews," Tendal 13 told the jailer.
"Yes, I remember," the jailer said mechanically, letting them both out
of the cell.
They walked together down the jail corridor. When they came to another
barred door the jailer fumbled with the keys and clumsily tried
several with no luck.
Arvid 6, an amused set to his mouth and devilment in his eyes, watched
the jailer's expression as he walked through the bars of the door. He
laughed as he saw the jailer's eyes bulge.
"Arvid!"
Tendal 13 walked briskly through the door, snatched Arvid 6 by the
shoulders and shook him.
The jailer watched stupified as the two men vanished in the middle of
a violent argument. | To go back 6,000 years to re-attempt a Kanad recovery mission | To return to the Laughton's home in order to alter the crime scene | To travel to the Ultroom for Arvid 6 to face his consequences | To steal Phullam from his parents and get closer to recovering Kanad. | 3 |
31357_T9I0O70O_7 | Which term best describes the relationship between Arvid 6 and Tendal 13? | Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from Space Science Fiction May 1952. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.
THE ULTROOM ERROR
by
JERRY SOHL
Smith admitted he had made an error involving a few
murders—and a few thousand years. He was entitled to a
sense of humor, though, even in the Ultroom!
HB73782. Ultroom error. Tendal 13. Arvid 6. Kanad transfer
out of 1609 complete, intact, but too near limit of 1,000
days. Next Kanad transfer ready. 1951. Reginald, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Martin Laughton, 3495 Orland Drive, Marionville,
Illinois, U. S. A. Arrive his 378th day. TB73782.
Nancy Laughton sat on the blanket she had spread on the lawn in her
front yard, knitting a pair of booties for the PTA bazaar.
Occasionally she glanced at her son in the play pen, who was getting
his daily dose of sunshine. He was gurgling happily, examining a ball,
a cheese grater and a linen baby book, all with perfunctory interest.
When she looked up again she noticed a man walking by—except he
turned up the walk and crossed the lawn to her.
He was a little taller than her husband, had piercing blue eyes and a
rather amused set to his lips.
"Hello, Nancy," he said.
"Hello, Joe," she answered. It was her brother who lived in Kankakee.
"I'm going to take the baby for a while," he said.
"All right, Joe."
He reached into the pen, picked up the baby. As he did so the baby's
knees hit the side of the play pen and young Laughton let out a
scream—half from hurt and half from sudden lack of confidence in his
new handler. But this did not deter Joe. He started off with the
child.
Around the corner and after the man came a snarling mongrel dog, eyes
bright, teeth glinting in the sunlight. The man did not turn as the
dog threw himself at him, burying his teeth in his leg. Surprised, the
man dropped the screaming child on the lawn and turned to the dog. Joe
seemed off balance and he backed up confusedly in the face of the
snapping jaws. Then he suddenly turned and walked away, the dog at his
heels.
"I tell you, the man said he was my brother and he made me think he
was," Nancy told her husband for the tenth time. "I don't even have a
brother."
Martin Laughton sighed. "I can't understand why you believed him. It's
just—just plain nuts, Nancy!"
"Don't you think I know it?" Nancy said tearfully. "I feel like I'm
going crazy. I can't say I dreamt it because there was Reggie with his
bleeding knees, squalling for all he was worth on the grass—Oh, I
don't even want to think about it."
"We haven't lost Reggie, Nancy, remember that. Now why don't you try
to get some rest?"
"You—you don't believe me at all, do you, Martin?"
When her husband did not answer, her head sank to her arms on the
table and she sobbed.
"Nancy, for heaven's sake, of course I believe you. I'm trying to
think it out, that's all. We should have called the police."
Nancy shook her head in her arms. "They'd—never—believe me either,"
she moaned.
"I'd better go and make sure Reggie's all right." Martin got up out of
his chair and went to the stairs.
"I'm going with you," Nancy said, hurriedly rising and coming over to
him.
"We'll go up and look at him together."
They found Reggie peacefully asleep in his crib in his room upstairs.
They checked the windows and tucked in the blankets. They paused in
the room for a moment and then Martin stole his arm around his wife
and led her to the door.
"As I've said, sergeant, this fellow hypnotized my wife. He made her
think he was her brother. She doesn't even have a brother. Then he
tried to get away with the baby." Martin leaned down and patted the
dog. "It was Tiger here who scared him off."
The police sergeant looked at the father, at Nancy and then at the
dog. He scribbled notes in his book.
"Are you a rich man, Mr. Laughton?" he asked.
"Not at all. The bank still owns most of the house. I have a few
hundred dollars, that's all."
"What do you do?"
"Office work, mostly. I'm a junior executive in an insurance company."
"Any enemies?"
"No ... Oh, I suppose I have a few people I don't get along with, like
anybody else. Nobody who'd do anything like this, though."
The sergeant flipped his notebook closed. "You'd better keep your dog
inside and around the kid as much as possible. Keep your doors and
windows locked. I'll see that the prowl car keeps an eye on the house.
Call us if anything seems unusual or out of the way."
Nancy had taken a sedative and was asleep by the time Martin finished
cleaning the .30-.30 rifle he used for deer hunting. He put it by the
stairs, ready for use, fully loaded, leaning it against the wall next
to the telephone stand.
The front door bell rang. He answered it. It was Dr. Stuart and
another man.
"I came as soon as I could, Martin," the young doctor said, stepping
inside with the other man. "This is my new assistant, Dr. Tompkins."
Martin and Tompkins shook hands.
"The baby—?" Dr. Stuart asked.
"Upstairs," Martin said.
"You'd better get him, Dr. Tompkins, if we're to take him to the
hospital. I'll stay here with Mr. Laughton. How've you been, Martin?"
"Fine."
"How's everything at the office?"
"Fine."
"And your wife?"
"She's fine, too."
"Glad to hear it, Martin. Mighty glad. Say, by the way, there's that
bill you owe me. I think it's $32, isn't that right?"
"Yes, I'd almost forgotten about it."
"Why don't you be a good fellow and write a check for it? It's been
over a year, you know."
"That's right. I'll get right at it." Martin went over to his desk,
opened it and started looking for his checkbook. Dr. Stuart stood by
him, making idle comment until Dr. Tompkins came down the stairs with
the sleeping baby cuddled against his shoulder.
"Never mind the check, now, Martin. I see we're ready to go." He went
over to his assistant and took the baby. Together they walked out the
front door.
"Good-bye," Martin said, going to the door.
Then he was nearly bowled over by the discharge of the .30-.30. Dr.
Stuart crumpled to the ground, the baby falling to the lawn. Dr.
Tompkins whirled and there was a second shot. Dr. Tompkins pitched
forward on his face.
The figure of a woman ran from the house, retrieved the now squalling
infant and ran back into the house. Once inside, Nancy slammed the
door, gave the baby to the stunned Martin and headed for the
telephone.
"One of them was the same man!" she cried.
Martin gasped, sinking into a chair with the baby. "I believed them,"
he said slowly and uncomprehendingly. "They made me believe them!"
"Those bodies," the sergeant said. "Would you mind pointing them out
to me, please?"
"Aren't they—aren't they on the walk?" Mrs. Laughton asked.
"There is nothing on the walk, Mrs. Laughton."
"But there
must
be! I tell you I shot these men who posed as
doctors. One of them was the same man who tried to take the baby this
afternoon. They hypnotized my husband—"
"Yes, I know, Mrs. Laughton. We've been through that." The sergeant
went to the door and opened it. "Say, Homer, take another look around
the walk and the bushes. There's supposed to be two of them. Shot with
a .30-.30."
He turned and picked up the gun and examined it again. "Ever shoot a
gun before, Mrs. Laughton?"
"Many times. Martin and I used to go hunting together before we had
Reggie."
The sergeant nodded. "You were taking an awful chance, shooting at a
guy carrying your baby, don't you think?"
"I shot him in the legs. The other—the other turned and I shot him in
the chest. I could even see his eyes when he turned around. If I
hadn't pulled the trigger then ... I don't want to remember it."
The patrolman pushed the door open. "There's no bodies out here but
there's some blood. Quite a lot of blood. A little to one side of the
walk."
The policemen went out.
"Thank God you woke up, Nancy," Martin said. "I'd have let them have
the baby." He reached over and smoothed the sleeping Reggie's hair.
Nancy, who was rocking the boy, narrowed her eyes.
"I wonder why they want our baby? He's just like any other baby. We
don't have any money. We couldn't pay a ransom."
"Reggie's pretty cute, though," Martin said. "You will have to admit
that."
Nancy smiled. Then she suddenly stopped rocking.
"Martin!"
He sat up quickly.
"Where's Tiger?"
Together they rose and walked around the room. They found him in a
corner, eyes open, tongue protruding. He was dead.
If we keep Reggie in the house much longer he'll turn out to be a
hermit," Martin said at breakfast a month later. "He needs fresh air
and sunshine."
"I'm not going to sit on the lawn alone with him, Martin. I just
can't, that's all. I'd be able to think of nothing but that day."
"Still thinking about it? I think we'd have heard from them again if
they were coming back. They probably got somebody else's baby by this
time." Martin finished his coffee and rose to kiss her good-bye. "But
for safety's sake I guess you'd better keep that gun handy."
The morning turned into a brilliant, sunshiny day. Puffs of clouds
moved slowly across the summer sky and a warm breeze rustled the
trees. It would be a crime to keep Reggie inside on a day like this,
Nancy thought.
So she called Mrs. MacDougal, the next door neighbor. Mrs. MacDougal
was familiar with what had happened to the Laughtons and she agreed to
keep an eye on Nancy and Reggie and to call the police at the first
sign of trouble.
With a fearful but determined heart Nancy moved the play pen and set
it up in the front yard. She spread a blanket for herself and put
Reggie in the pen. Her heart pounded all the while and she watched the
street for any strangers, ready to flee inside if need be. Reggie just
gurgled with delight at the change in environment.
This peaceful scene was disturbed by a speeding car in which two men
were riding. The car roared up the street, swerved toward the parkway,
tires screaming, bounced over the curb and sidewalk, straight toward
the child and mother. Reggie, attracted by the sudden noise, looked up
to see the approaching vehicle. His mother stood up, set her palms
against her cheeks and shrieked.
The car came on, crunched over the play pen, killing the child. The
mother was hit and instantly killed, force of the blow snapping her
spine and tossing her against the house. The car plunged on into a
tree, hitting it a terrible blow, crumbling the car's forward end so
it looked like an accordion. The men were thrown from the machine.
"We'll never be able to prosecute in this case," the states attorney
said. "At least not on a drunken driving basis."
"I can't get over it," the chief of police said. "I've got at least
six men who will swear the man was drunk. He staggered, reeled and
gave the usual drunk talk. He reeked of whiskey."
The prosecutor handed the report over the desk. "Here's the analysis.
Not a trace of alcohol. He couldn't have even had a smell of near
beer. Here's another report. This is his physical exam made not long
afterwards. The man was in perfect health. Only variations are he had
a scar on his leg where something, probably a dog, bit him once. And
then a scar on his chest. It looked like an old gunshot wound, they
said. Must have happened years ago."
"That's odd. The man who accosted Mrs. Laughton in the afternoon was
bitten by their dog. Later that night she said she shot the same man
in the chest. Since the scars are healed it obviously couldn't be the
same man. But there's a real coincidence for you. And speaking of the
dogbite, the Laughton dog died that night. His menu evidently didn't
agree with him. Never did figure what killed him, actually."
"Any record of treatment on the man she shot?"
"The
men
. You'll remember, there were two. No, we never found a
trace of either. No doctor ever made a report of a gunshot wound that
night. No hospital had a case either—at least not within several
hundred miles—that night or several nights afterwards. Ever been shot
with .30-.30?"
The state attorney shook his head. "I wouldn't be here if I had."
"I'll say you wouldn't. The pair must have crawled away to die God
knows where."
"Getting back to the man who ran over the child and killed Mrs.
Laughton. Why did he pretend to be drunk?"
It was the chief's turn to shake his head. "Your guess is as good as
mine. There are a lot of angles to this case none of us understand. It
looks deliberate, but where's the motive?"
"What does the man have to say?"
"I was afraid you'd get to him," the chief said, his neck reddening.
"It's all been rather embarrassing to the department." He coughed
self-consciously. "He's proved a strange one, all right. He says his
name is John Smith and he's got cards to prove it, too—for example, a
social security card. It looks authentic, yet there's no such number
on file in Washington, so we've discovered. We've had him in jail for
a week and we've all taken turns questioning him. He laughs and admits
his guilt—in fact, he seems amused by most everything. Sometimes all
alone in his cell he'll start laughing for no apparent reason. It
gives you the creeps."
The states attorney leaned back in his chair. "Maybe it's a case for
an alienist."
"One jump ahead of you. Dr. Stone thinks he's normal, but won't put
down any I.Q. Actually, he can't figure him out himself. Smith seems
to take delight in answering questions—sort of anticipates them and
has the answer ready before you're half through asking."
"Well, if Dr. Stone says he's normal, that's enough for me." The
prosecutor was silent for a moment. Then, "How about the husband?"
"Laughton? We're afraid to let him see him. All broken up. No telling
what kind of a rumpus he'd start—especially if Smith started his
funny business."
"Guess you're right. Well, Mr. Smith won't think it's so funny when we
hang criminal negligence or manslaughter on him. By the way, you've
checked possible family connections?"
"Nobody ever saw John Smith before. Even at the address on his
driver's license. And there's no duplicate of that in Springfield, in
case you're interested."
The man who had laughingly told police his name was John Smith lay on
his cot in the county jail, his eyes closed, his arms folded across
his chest. This gave him the appearance of being alert despite
reclining. Even as he lay, his mouth held a hint of a smile.
Arvid 6—for John Smith
was
Arvid 6—had lain in that position for
more than four hours, when suddenly he snapped his eyes open and
appeared to be listening. For a moment a look of concern crossed his
face and he swung his legs to the floor and sat there expectantly.
Arvid 6 knew Tendal 13 had materialized and was somewhere in the
building.
Eventually there were some sounds from beyond the steel cell and
doorway. There was a clang when the outer doorway was opened and Arvid
6 rose from his cot.
"Your lawyer's here to see you," the jailer said, indicating the man
with the brief case. "Ring the buzzer when you're through." The jailer
let the man in, locked the cell door and walked away.
The man threw the brief case on the jail cot and stood glaring.
"Your damned foolishness has gone far enough. I'm sick and tired of
it," he declared. "If you carry on any more we'll never get back to
the Ultroom!"
"I'm sorry, Tendal," the man on the cot said. "I didn't think—"
"You're absolutely right. You didn't think. Crashing that car into
that tree and killing that woman—that was the last straw. You don't
even deserve to get back to our era. You ought to be made to rot
here."
"I'm
really
sorry about that," Arvid 6 said.
You know the instructions. Just because you work in the Ultroom don't
get to thinking human life doesn't have any value. We wouldn't be here
if it hadn't. But to unnecessarily kill—" The older man shook his
head. "You could have killed yourself as well and we'd never get the
job done. As it is, you almost totally obliterated me." Tendal 13
paced the length of the cell and back again, gesturing as he talked.
"It was only with the greatest effort I pulled myself back together
again. I doubt that you could have done it. And then all the while
you've been sitting here, probably enjoying yourself with your special
brand of humor I have grown to despise."
"You didn't have to come along at all, you know," Arvid 6 said.
"How well I know! How sorry I am that I ever did! It was only because
I was sorry for you, because someone older and more experienced than
you was needed. I volunteered. Imagine that! I volunteered! Tendal 13
reaches the height of stupidity and volunteers to help Arvid 6 go back
6,000 years to bring Kanad back, to correct a mistake Arvid 6 made!"
He snorted. "I still can't believe I was ever that stupid. I only
prove it when I pinch myself and here I am.
"Oh, you've been a joy to be with! First it was that hunt in ancient
Mycenae when you let the lion escape the hunters' quaint spears and we
were partly eaten by the lion in the bargain, although you dazzled the
hunters, deflecting their spears. And then your zest for drink when we
were with Octavian in Alexandria that led to everybody's amusement but
ours when we were ambushed by Anthony's men. And worst of all, that
English barmaid you became engrossed with at our last stop in 1609,
when her husband mistook me for you and you let him take me apart
piece by piece—"
"All right, all right," Arvid 6 said. "I'll admit I've made some
mistakes. You're just not adventurous, that's all."
"Shut up! For once you're going to listen to me. Our instructions
specifically stated we were to have as little as possible to do with
these people. But at every turn you've got us more and more enmeshed
with them. If that's adventure, you can have it." Tendal 13 sat down
wearily and sank his head in his hands. "It was you who conceived the
idea of taking Reggie right out of his play pen. 'Watch me take that
child right out from under its mother's nose' were your exact words.
And before I could stop you, you did. Only you forgot an important
factor in the equation—the dog, Tiger. And you nursed a dogbite most
of the afternoon before it healed. And then you took your spite out on
the poor thing by suggesting suffocation to it that night.
"And speaking of that night, you remember we agreed I was to do the
talking. But no, you pulled a switch and captured Martin Laughton's
attention. 'I came as soon as I could, Martin,' you said. And suddenly
I played a very minor role. 'This is my new assistant, Dr. Tompkins,'
you said. And then what happened? I get shot in the legs and you get a
hole in your back. We were both nearly obliterated that time and we
didn't even come close to getting the child.
"Still you wanted to run the whole show. 'I'm younger than you,' you
said. 'I'll take the wheel.' And the next thing I know I'm floating in
space halfway to nowhere with two broken legs, a spinal injury,
concussion and some of the finest bruises you ever saw."
These twentieth century machines aren't what they ought to be," Arvid
6 said.
"You never run out of excuses, do you, Arvid? Remember what you said
in the Ultroom when you pushed the lever clear over and transferred
Kanad back 6,000 years? 'My hand slipped.' As simple as that. 'My hand
slipped.' It was so simple everyone believed you. You were given no
real punishment. In a way it was a reward—at least to you—getting to
go back and rescue the life germ of Kanad out of each era he'd be born
in."
Tendal 13 turned and looked steadily and directly at Arvid 6. "Do you
know what I think? I think you deliberately pushed the lever over as
far as it would go
just to see what would happen
. That's how simple
I think it was."
Arvid 6 flushed, turned away and looked at the floor.
"What crazy things have you been doing since I've been gone?" Tendal
13 asked.
Arvid 6 sighed. "After what you just said I guess it wouldn't amuse
you, although it has me. They got to me right after the accident
before I had a chance to collect my wits, dematerialize or
anything—you said we shouldn't dematerialize in front of anybody."
"That's right."
"Well, I didn't know what to do. I could see they thought I was drunk,
so I was. But they had a blood sample before I could manufacture any
alcohol in my blood, although I implanted a memory in them that I
reeked of it." He laughed. "I fancy they're thoroughly confused."
"And you're thoroughly amused, no doubt. Have they questioned you?"
"At great length. They had a psychiatrist in to see me. He was a queer
fellow with the most stupid set of questions and tests I ever saw."
"And you amused yourself with him."
"I suppose you'd think so."
"Who do you tell them you are?"
"John Smith. A rather prevalent name here, I understand. I
manufactured a pasteboard called a social security card and a driver's
license—"
"Never mind. It's easy to see you've been your own inimitable self.
Believe me, if I ever get back to the Ultroom I hope I never see you
again. And I hope I'll never leave there again though I'm rejuvenated
through a million years."
"Was Kanad's life germ transferred all right this time?"
Tendal 13 shook his head. "I haven't heard. The transfers are getting
more difficult all the time. In 1609, you'll remember, it was a case
of pneumonia for the two-year-old. A simple procedure. It wouldn't
work here. Medicine's too far along." He produced a notebook. "The
last jump was 342 years, a little more than average. The next ought to
be around 2250. Things will be more difficult than ever there,
probably."
"Do you think Kanad will be angry about all this?"
"How would you like to have to go through all those birth processes,
to have your life germ knocked from one era to the next?"
"Frankly, I didn't think he'd go back so far."
"If it had been anybody but Kanad nobody'd ever have thought of going
back after it. The life germ of the head of the whole galactic system
who came to the Ultroom to be transplanted to a younger body—and then
sending him back beyond his original birth date—" Tendal 13 got up
and commenced his pacing again. "Oh, I suppose Kanad's partly to
blame, wanting rejuvenating at only 300 years. Some have waited a
thousand or more or until their bones are like paper."
"I just wonder how angry Kanad will be," Arvid muttered.
HB92167. Ultroom Error. Tendal 13. Arvid 6. Kanad transfer
out of 1951 complete. Next Kanad transfer ready. 2267.
Phullam 19, son of Orla 39 and Rhoda R, 22H Level M,
Hemisphere B, Quadrant 3, Sector I. Arrive his 329th Day.
TB92167
Arvid 6 rose from the cot and the two men faced each other.
"Before we leave, Arvid," Tendal 13 started to say.
"I know, I know. You want me to let you handle everything."
"Exactly. Is that too much to ask after all you've done?"
"I guess I have made mistakes. From now on you be the boss. I'll do
whatever you say."
"I hope I can count on that." Tendal 13 rang the jail buzzer.
The jailer unlocked the cell door.
"You remember the chief said it's all right to take him with me,
Matthews," Tendal 13 told the jailer.
"Yes, I remember," the jailer said mechanically, letting them both out
of the cell.
They walked together down the jail corridor. When they came to another
barred door the jailer fumbled with the keys and clumsily tried
several with no luck.
Arvid 6, an amused set to his mouth and devilment in his eyes, watched
the jailer's expression as he walked through the bars of the door. He
laughed as he saw the jailer's eyes bulge.
"Arvid!"
Tendal 13 walked briskly through the door, snatched Arvid 6 by the
shoulders and shook him.
The jailer watched stupified as the two men vanished in the middle of
a violent argument. | compulsory | symbiotic | complicated | predatory | 0 |
31357_T9I0O70O_8 | What is the purpose of the Ultroom? | Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from Space Science Fiction May 1952. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.
THE ULTROOM ERROR
by
JERRY SOHL
Smith admitted he had made an error involving a few
murders—and a few thousand years. He was entitled to a
sense of humor, though, even in the Ultroom!
HB73782. Ultroom error. Tendal 13. Arvid 6. Kanad transfer
out of 1609 complete, intact, but too near limit of 1,000
days. Next Kanad transfer ready. 1951. Reginald, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Martin Laughton, 3495 Orland Drive, Marionville,
Illinois, U. S. A. Arrive his 378th day. TB73782.
Nancy Laughton sat on the blanket she had spread on the lawn in her
front yard, knitting a pair of booties for the PTA bazaar.
Occasionally she glanced at her son in the play pen, who was getting
his daily dose of sunshine. He was gurgling happily, examining a ball,
a cheese grater and a linen baby book, all with perfunctory interest.
When she looked up again she noticed a man walking by—except he
turned up the walk and crossed the lawn to her.
He was a little taller than her husband, had piercing blue eyes and a
rather amused set to his lips.
"Hello, Nancy," he said.
"Hello, Joe," she answered. It was her brother who lived in Kankakee.
"I'm going to take the baby for a while," he said.
"All right, Joe."
He reached into the pen, picked up the baby. As he did so the baby's
knees hit the side of the play pen and young Laughton let out a
scream—half from hurt and half from sudden lack of confidence in his
new handler. But this did not deter Joe. He started off with the
child.
Around the corner and after the man came a snarling mongrel dog, eyes
bright, teeth glinting in the sunlight. The man did not turn as the
dog threw himself at him, burying his teeth in his leg. Surprised, the
man dropped the screaming child on the lawn and turned to the dog. Joe
seemed off balance and he backed up confusedly in the face of the
snapping jaws. Then he suddenly turned and walked away, the dog at his
heels.
"I tell you, the man said he was my brother and he made me think he
was," Nancy told her husband for the tenth time. "I don't even have a
brother."
Martin Laughton sighed. "I can't understand why you believed him. It's
just—just plain nuts, Nancy!"
"Don't you think I know it?" Nancy said tearfully. "I feel like I'm
going crazy. I can't say I dreamt it because there was Reggie with his
bleeding knees, squalling for all he was worth on the grass—Oh, I
don't even want to think about it."
"We haven't lost Reggie, Nancy, remember that. Now why don't you try
to get some rest?"
"You—you don't believe me at all, do you, Martin?"
When her husband did not answer, her head sank to her arms on the
table and she sobbed.
"Nancy, for heaven's sake, of course I believe you. I'm trying to
think it out, that's all. We should have called the police."
Nancy shook her head in her arms. "They'd—never—believe me either,"
she moaned.
"I'd better go and make sure Reggie's all right." Martin got up out of
his chair and went to the stairs.
"I'm going with you," Nancy said, hurriedly rising and coming over to
him.
"We'll go up and look at him together."
They found Reggie peacefully asleep in his crib in his room upstairs.
They checked the windows and tucked in the blankets. They paused in
the room for a moment and then Martin stole his arm around his wife
and led her to the door.
"As I've said, sergeant, this fellow hypnotized my wife. He made her
think he was her brother. She doesn't even have a brother. Then he
tried to get away with the baby." Martin leaned down and patted the
dog. "It was Tiger here who scared him off."
The police sergeant looked at the father, at Nancy and then at the
dog. He scribbled notes in his book.
"Are you a rich man, Mr. Laughton?" he asked.
"Not at all. The bank still owns most of the house. I have a few
hundred dollars, that's all."
"What do you do?"
"Office work, mostly. I'm a junior executive in an insurance company."
"Any enemies?"
"No ... Oh, I suppose I have a few people I don't get along with, like
anybody else. Nobody who'd do anything like this, though."
The sergeant flipped his notebook closed. "You'd better keep your dog
inside and around the kid as much as possible. Keep your doors and
windows locked. I'll see that the prowl car keeps an eye on the house.
Call us if anything seems unusual or out of the way."
Nancy had taken a sedative and was asleep by the time Martin finished
cleaning the .30-.30 rifle he used for deer hunting. He put it by the
stairs, ready for use, fully loaded, leaning it against the wall next
to the telephone stand.
The front door bell rang. He answered it. It was Dr. Stuart and
another man.
"I came as soon as I could, Martin," the young doctor said, stepping
inside with the other man. "This is my new assistant, Dr. Tompkins."
Martin and Tompkins shook hands.
"The baby—?" Dr. Stuart asked.
"Upstairs," Martin said.
"You'd better get him, Dr. Tompkins, if we're to take him to the
hospital. I'll stay here with Mr. Laughton. How've you been, Martin?"
"Fine."
"How's everything at the office?"
"Fine."
"And your wife?"
"She's fine, too."
"Glad to hear it, Martin. Mighty glad. Say, by the way, there's that
bill you owe me. I think it's $32, isn't that right?"
"Yes, I'd almost forgotten about it."
"Why don't you be a good fellow and write a check for it? It's been
over a year, you know."
"That's right. I'll get right at it." Martin went over to his desk,
opened it and started looking for his checkbook. Dr. Stuart stood by
him, making idle comment until Dr. Tompkins came down the stairs with
the sleeping baby cuddled against his shoulder.
"Never mind the check, now, Martin. I see we're ready to go." He went
over to his assistant and took the baby. Together they walked out the
front door.
"Good-bye," Martin said, going to the door.
Then he was nearly bowled over by the discharge of the .30-.30. Dr.
Stuart crumpled to the ground, the baby falling to the lawn. Dr.
Tompkins whirled and there was a second shot. Dr. Tompkins pitched
forward on his face.
The figure of a woman ran from the house, retrieved the now squalling
infant and ran back into the house. Once inside, Nancy slammed the
door, gave the baby to the stunned Martin and headed for the
telephone.
"One of them was the same man!" she cried.
Martin gasped, sinking into a chair with the baby. "I believed them,"
he said slowly and uncomprehendingly. "They made me believe them!"
"Those bodies," the sergeant said. "Would you mind pointing them out
to me, please?"
"Aren't they—aren't they on the walk?" Mrs. Laughton asked.
"There is nothing on the walk, Mrs. Laughton."
"But there
must
be! I tell you I shot these men who posed as
doctors. One of them was the same man who tried to take the baby this
afternoon. They hypnotized my husband—"
"Yes, I know, Mrs. Laughton. We've been through that." The sergeant
went to the door and opened it. "Say, Homer, take another look around
the walk and the bushes. There's supposed to be two of them. Shot with
a .30-.30."
He turned and picked up the gun and examined it again. "Ever shoot a
gun before, Mrs. Laughton?"
"Many times. Martin and I used to go hunting together before we had
Reggie."
The sergeant nodded. "You were taking an awful chance, shooting at a
guy carrying your baby, don't you think?"
"I shot him in the legs. The other—the other turned and I shot him in
the chest. I could even see his eyes when he turned around. If I
hadn't pulled the trigger then ... I don't want to remember it."
The patrolman pushed the door open. "There's no bodies out here but
there's some blood. Quite a lot of blood. A little to one side of the
walk."
The policemen went out.
"Thank God you woke up, Nancy," Martin said. "I'd have let them have
the baby." He reached over and smoothed the sleeping Reggie's hair.
Nancy, who was rocking the boy, narrowed her eyes.
"I wonder why they want our baby? He's just like any other baby. We
don't have any money. We couldn't pay a ransom."
"Reggie's pretty cute, though," Martin said. "You will have to admit
that."
Nancy smiled. Then she suddenly stopped rocking.
"Martin!"
He sat up quickly.
"Where's Tiger?"
Together they rose and walked around the room. They found him in a
corner, eyes open, tongue protruding. He was dead.
If we keep Reggie in the house much longer he'll turn out to be a
hermit," Martin said at breakfast a month later. "He needs fresh air
and sunshine."
"I'm not going to sit on the lawn alone with him, Martin. I just
can't, that's all. I'd be able to think of nothing but that day."
"Still thinking about it? I think we'd have heard from them again if
they were coming back. They probably got somebody else's baby by this
time." Martin finished his coffee and rose to kiss her good-bye. "But
for safety's sake I guess you'd better keep that gun handy."
The morning turned into a brilliant, sunshiny day. Puffs of clouds
moved slowly across the summer sky and a warm breeze rustled the
trees. It would be a crime to keep Reggie inside on a day like this,
Nancy thought.
So she called Mrs. MacDougal, the next door neighbor. Mrs. MacDougal
was familiar with what had happened to the Laughtons and she agreed to
keep an eye on Nancy and Reggie and to call the police at the first
sign of trouble.
With a fearful but determined heart Nancy moved the play pen and set
it up in the front yard. She spread a blanket for herself and put
Reggie in the pen. Her heart pounded all the while and she watched the
street for any strangers, ready to flee inside if need be. Reggie just
gurgled with delight at the change in environment.
This peaceful scene was disturbed by a speeding car in which two men
were riding. The car roared up the street, swerved toward the parkway,
tires screaming, bounced over the curb and sidewalk, straight toward
the child and mother. Reggie, attracted by the sudden noise, looked up
to see the approaching vehicle. His mother stood up, set her palms
against her cheeks and shrieked.
The car came on, crunched over the play pen, killing the child. The
mother was hit and instantly killed, force of the blow snapping her
spine and tossing her against the house. The car plunged on into a
tree, hitting it a terrible blow, crumbling the car's forward end so
it looked like an accordion. The men were thrown from the machine.
"We'll never be able to prosecute in this case," the states attorney
said. "At least not on a drunken driving basis."
"I can't get over it," the chief of police said. "I've got at least
six men who will swear the man was drunk. He staggered, reeled and
gave the usual drunk talk. He reeked of whiskey."
The prosecutor handed the report over the desk. "Here's the analysis.
Not a trace of alcohol. He couldn't have even had a smell of near
beer. Here's another report. This is his physical exam made not long
afterwards. The man was in perfect health. Only variations are he had
a scar on his leg where something, probably a dog, bit him once. And
then a scar on his chest. It looked like an old gunshot wound, they
said. Must have happened years ago."
"That's odd. The man who accosted Mrs. Laughton in the afternoon was
bitten by their dog. Later that night she said she shot the same man
in the chest. Since the scars are healed it obviously couldn't be the
same man. But there's a real coincidence for you. And speaking of the
dogbite, the Laughton dog died that night. His menu evidently didn't
agree with him. Never did figure what killed him, actually."
"Any record of treatment on the man she shot?"
"The
men
. You'll remember, there were two. No, we never found a
trace of either. No doctor ever made a report of a gunshot wound that
night. No hospital had a case either—at least not within several
hundred miles—that night or several nights afterwards. Ever been shot
with .30-.30?"
The state attorney shook his head. "I wouldn't be here if I had."
"I'll say you wouldn't. The pair must have crawled away to die God
knows where."
"Getting back to the man who ran over the child and killed Mrs.
Laughton. Why did he pretend to be drunk?"
It was the chief's turn to shake his head. "Your guess is as good as
mine. There are a lot of angles to this case none of us understand. It
looks deliberate, but where's the motive?"
"What does the man have to say?"
"I was afraid you'd get to him," the chief said, his neck reddening.
"It's all been rather embarrassing to the department." He coughed
self-consciously. "He's proved a strange one, all right. He says his
name is John Smith and he's got cards to prove it, too—for example, a
social security card. It looks authentic, yet there's no such number
on file in Washington, so we've discovered. We've had him in jail for
a week and we've all taken turns questioning him. He laughs and admits
his guilt—in fact, he seems amused by most everything. Sometimes all
alone in his cell he'll start laughing for no apparent reason. It
gives you the creeps."
The states attorney leaned back in his chair. "Maybe it's a case for
an alienist."
"One jump ahead of you. Dr. Stone thinks he's normal, but won't put
down any I.Q. Actually, he can't figure him out himself. Smith seems
to take delight in answering questions—sort of anticipates them and
has the answer ready before you're half through asking."
"Well, if Dr. Stone says he's normal, that's enough for me." The
prosecutor was silent for a moment. Then, "How about the husband?"
"Laughton? We're afraid to let him see him. All broken up. No telling
what kind of a rumpus he'd start—especially if Smith started his
funny business."
"Guess you're right. Well, Mr. Smith won't think it's so funny when we
hang criminal negligence or manslaughter on him. By the way, you've
checked possible family connections?"
"Nobody ever saw John Smith before. Even at the address on his
driver's license. And there's no duplicate of that in Springfield, in
case you're interested."
The man who had laughingly told police his name was John Smith lay on
his cot in the county jail, his eyes closed, his arms folded across
his chest. This gave him the appearance of being alert despite
reclining. Even as he lay, his mouth held a hint of a smile.
Arvid 6—for John Smith
was
Arvid 6—had lain in that position for
more than four hours, when suddenly he snapped his eyes open and
appeared to be listening. For a moment a look of concern crossed his
face and he swung his legs to the floor and sat there expectantly.
Arvid 6 knew Tendal 13 had materialized and was somewhere in the
building.
Eventually there were some sounds from beyond the steel cell and
doorway. There was a clang when the outer doorway was opened and Arvid
6 rose from his cot.
"Your lawyer's here to see you," the jailer said, indicating the man
with the brief case. "Ring the buzzer when you're through." The jailer
let the man in, locked the cell door and walked away.
The man threw the brief case on the jail cot and stood glaring.
"Your damned foolishness has gone far enough. I'm sick and tired of
it," he declared. "If you carry on any more we'll never get back to
the Ultroom!"
"I'm sorry, Tendal," the man on the cot said. "I didn't think—"
"You're absolutely right. You didn't think. Crashing that car into
that tree and killing that woman—that was the last straw. You don't
even deserve to get back to our era. You ought to be made to rot
here."
"I'm
really
sorry about that," Arvid 6 said.
You know the instructions. Just because you work in the Ultroom don't
get to thinking human life doesn't have any value. We wouldn't be here
if it hadn't. But to unnecessarily kill—" The older man shook his
head. "You could have killed yourself as well and we'd never get the
job done. As it is, you almost totally obliterated me." Tendal 13
paced the length of the cell and back again, gesturing as he talked.
"It was only with the greatest effort I pulled myself back together
again. I doubt that you could have done it. And then all the while
you've been sitting here, probably enjoying yourself with your special
brand of humor I have grown to despise."
"You didn't have to come along at all, you know," Arvid 6 said.
"How well I know! How sorry I am that I ever did! It was only because
I was sorry for you, because someone older and more experienced than
you was needed. I volunteered. Imagine that! I volunteered! Tendal 13
reaches the height of stupidity and volunteers to help Arvid 6 go back
6,000 years to bring Kanad back, to correct a mistake Arvid 6 made!"
He snorted. "I still can't believe I was ever that stupid. I only
prove it when I pinch myself and here I am.
"Oh, you've been a joy to be with! First it was that hunt in ancient
Mycenae when you let the lion escape the hunters' quaint spears and we
were partly eaten by the lion in the bargain, although you dazzled the
hunters, deflecting their spears. And then your zest for drink when we
were with Octavian in Alexandria that led to everybody's amusement but
ours when we were ambushed by Anthony's men. And worst of all, that
English barmaid you became engrossed with at our last stop in 1609,
when her husband mistook me for you and you let him take me apart
piece by piece—"
"All right, all right," Arvid 6 said. "I'll admit I've made some
mistakes. You're just not adventurous, that's all."
"Shut up! For once you're going to listen to me. Our instructions
specifically stated we were to have as little as possible to do with
these people. But at every turn you've got us more and more enmeshed
with them. If that's adventure, you can have it." Tendal 13 sat down
wearily and sank his head in his hands. "It was you who conceived the
idea of taking Reggie right out of his play pen. 'Watch me take that
child right out from under its mother's nose' were your exact words.
And before I could stop you, you did. Only you forgot an important
factor in the equation—the dog, Tiger. And you nursed a dogbite most
of the afternoon before it healed. And then you took your spite out on
the poor thing by suggesting suffocation to it that night.
"And speaking of that night, you remember we agreed I was to do the
talking. But no, you pulled a switch and captured Martin Laughton's
attention. 'I came as soon as I could, Martin,' you said. And suddenly
I played a very minor role. 'This is my new assistant, Dr. Tompkins,'
you said. And then what happened? I get shot in the legs and you get a
hole in your back. We were both nearly obliterated that time and we
didn't even come close to getting the child.
"Still you wanted to run the whole show. 'I'm younger than you,' you
said. 'I'll take the wheel.' And the next thing I know I'm floating in
space halfway to nowhere with two broken legs, a spinal injury,
concussion and some of the finest bruises you ever saw."
These twentieth century machines aren't what they ought to be," Arvid
6 said.
"You never run out of excuses, do you, Arvid? Remember what you said
in the Ultroom when you pushed the lever clear over and transferred
Kanad back 6,000 years? 'My hand slipped.' As simple as that. 'My hand
slipped.' It was so simple everyone believed you. You were given no
real punishment. In a way it was a reward—at least to you—getting to
go back and rescue the life germ of Kanad out of each era he'd be born
in."
Tendal 13 turned and looked steadily and directly at Arvid 6. "Do you
know what I think? I think you deliberately pushed the lever over as
far as it would go
just to see what would happen
. That's how simple
I think it was."
Arvid 6 flushed, turned away and looked at the floor.
"What crazy things have you been doing since I've been gone?" Tendal
13 asked.
Arvid 6 sighed. "After what you just said I guess it wouldn't amuse
you, although it has me. They got to me right after the accident
before I had a chance to collect my wits, dematerialize or
anything—you said we shouldn't dematerialize in front of anybody."
"That's right."
"Well, I didn't know what to do. I could see they thought I was drunk,
so I was. But they had a blood sample before I could manufacture any
alcohol in my blood, although I implanted a memory in them that I
reeked of it." He laughed. "I fancy they're thoroughly confused."
"And you're thoroughly amused, no doubt. Have they questioned you?"
"At great length. They had a psychiatrist in to see me. He was a queer
fellow with the most stupid set of questions and tests I ever saw."
"And you amused yourself with him."
"I suppose you'd think so."
"Who do you tell them you are?"
"John Smith. A rather prevalent name here, I understand. I
manufactured a pasteboard called a social security card and a driver's
license—"
"Never mind. It's easy to see you've been your own inimitable self.
Believe me, if I ever get back to the Ultroom I hope I never see you
again. And I hope I'll never leave there again though I'm rejuvenated
through a million years."
"Was Kanad's life germ transferred all right this time?"
Tendal 13 shook his head. "I haven't heard. The transfers are getting
more difficult all the time. In 1609, you'll remember, it was a case
of pneumonia for the two-year-old. A simple procedure. It wouldn't
work here. Medicine's too far along." He produced a notebook. "The
last jump was 342 years, a little more than average. The next ought to
be around 2250. Things will be more difficult than ever there,
probably."
"Do you think Kanad will be angry about all this?"
"How would you like to have to go through all those birth processes,
to have your life germ knocked from one era to the next?"
"Frankly, I didn't think he'd go back so far."
"If it had been anybody but Kanad nobody'd ever have thought of going
back after it. The life germ of the head of the whole galactic system
who came to the Ultroom to be transplanted to a younger body—and then
sending him back beyond his original birth date—" Tendal 13 got up
and commenced his pacing again. "Oh, I suppose Kanad's partly to
blame, wanting rejuvenating at only 300 years. Some have waited a
thousand or more or until their bones are like paper."
"I just wonder how angry Kanad will be," Arvid muttered.
HB92167. Ultroom Error. Tendal 13. Arvid 6. Kanad transfer
out of 1951 complete. Next Kanad transfer ready. 2267.
Phullam 19, son of Orla 39 and Rhoda R, 22H Level M,
Hemisphere B, Quadrant 3, Sector I. Arrive his 329th Day.
TB92167
Arvid 6 rose from the cot and the two men faced each other.
"Before we leave, Arvid," Tendal 13 started to say.
"I know, I know. You want me to let you handle everything."
"Exactly. Is that too much to ask after all you've done?"
"I guess I have made mistakes. From now on you be the boss. I'll do
whatever you say."
"I hope I can count on that." Tendal 13 rang the jail buzzer.
The jailer unlocked the cell door.
"You remember the chief said it's all right to take him with me,
Matthews," Tendal 13 told the jailer.
"Yes, I remember," the jailer said mechanically, letting them both out
of the cell.
They walked together down the jail corridor. When they came to another
barred door the jailer fumbled with the keys and clumsily tried
several with no luck.
Arvid 6, an amused set to his mouth and devilment in his eyes, watched
the jailer's expression as he walked through the bars of the door. He
laughed as he saw the jailer's eyes bulge.
"Arvid!"
Tendal 13 walked briskly through the door, snatched Arvid 6 by the
shoulders and shook him.
The jailer watched stupified as the two men vanished in the middle of
a violent argument. | It can alter someone's DNA to give them more desirable attributes | It can change someone's original birth date | It can relocate someone to a different body | It can disrupt catastrophic events before they occur | 2 |
31357_T9I0O70O_9 | Which term best describes Tendal 13's perception of Arvid 6's work ethic? | Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from Space Science Fiction May 1952. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.
THE ULTROOM ERROR
by
JERRY SOHL
Smith admitted he had made an error involving a few
murders—and a few thousand years. He was entitled to a
sense of humor, though, even in the Ultroom!
HB73782. Ultroom error. Tendal 13. Arvid 6. Kanad transfer
out of 1609 complete, intact, but too near limit of 1,000
days. Next Kanad transfer ready. 1951. Reginald, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Martin Laughton, 3495 Orland Drive, Marionville,
Illinois, U. S. A. Arrive his 378th day. TB73782.
Nancy Laughton sat on the blanket she had spread on the lawn in her
front yard, knitting a pair of booties for the PTA bazaar.
Occasionally she glanced at her son in the play pen, who was getting
his daily dose of sunshine. He was gurgling happily, examining a ball,
a cheese grater and a linen baby book, all with perfunctory interest.
When she looked up again she noticed a man walking by—except he
turned up the walk and crossed the lawn to her.
He was a little taller than her husband, had piercing blue eyes and a
rather amused set to his lips.
"Hello, Nancy," he said.
"Hello, Joe," she answered. It was her brother who lived in Kankakee.
"I'm going to take the baby for a while," he said.
"All right, Joe."
He reached into the pen, picked up the baby. As he did so the baby's
knees hit the side of the play pen and young Laughton let out a
scream—half from hurt and half from sudden lack of confidence in his
new handler. But this did not deter Joe. He started off with the
child.
Around the corner and after the man came a snarling mongrel dog, eyes
bright, teeth glinting in the sunlight. The man did not turn as the
dog threw himself at him, burying his teeth in his leg. Surprised, the
man dropped the screaming child on the lawn and turned to the dog. Joe
seemed off balance and he backed up confusedly in the face of the
snapping jaws. Then he suddenly turned and walked away, the dog at his
heels.
"I tell you, the man said he was my brother and he made me think he
was," Nancy told her husband for the tenth time. "I don't even have a
brother."
Martin Laughton sighed. "I can't understand why you believed him. It's
just—just plain nuts, Nancy!"
"Don't you think I know it?" Nancy said tearfully. "I feel like I'm
going crazy. I can't say I dreamt it because there was Reggie with his
bleeding knees, squalling for all he was worth on the grass—Oh, I
don't even want to think about it."
"We haven't lost Reggie, Nancy, remember that. Now why don't you try
to get some rest?"
"You—you don't believe me at all, do you, Martin?"
When her husband did not answer, her head sank to her arms on the
table and she sobbed.
"Nancy, for heaven's sake, of course I believe you. I'm trying to
think it out, that's all. We should have called the police."
Nancy shook her head in her arms. "They'd—never—believe me either,"
she moaned.
"I'd better go and make sure Reggie's all right." Martin got up out of
his chair and went to the stairs.
"I'm going with you," Nancy said, hurriedly rising and coming over to
him.
"We'll go up and look at him together."
They found Reggie peacefully asleep in his crib in his room upstairs.
They checked the windows and tucked in the blankets. They paused in
the room for a moment and then Martin stole his arm around his wife
and led her to the door.
"As I've said, sergeant, this fellow hypnotized my wife. He made her
think he was her brother. She doesn't even have a brother. Then he
tried to get away with the baby." Martin leaned down and patted the
dog. "It was Tiger here who scared him off."
The police sergeant looked at the father, at Nancy and then at the
dog. He scribbled notes in his book.
"Are you a rich man, Mr. Laughton?" he asked.
"Not at all. The bank still owns most of the house. I have a few
hundred dollars, that's all."
"What do you do?"
"Office work, mostly. I'm a junior executive in an insurance company."
"Any enemies?"
"No ... Oh, I suppose I have a few people I don't get along with, like
anybody else. Nobody who'd do anything like this, though."
The sergeant flipped his notebook closed. "You'd better keep your dog
inside and around the kid as much as possible. Keep your doors and
windows locked. I'll see that the prowl car keeps an eye on the house.
Call us if anything seems unusual or out of the way."
Nancy had taken a sedative and was asleep by the time Martin finished
cleaning the .30-.30 rifle he used for deer hunting. He put it by the
stairs, ready for use, fully loaded, leaning it against the wall next
to the telephone stand.
The front door bell rang. He answered it. It was Dr. Stuart and
another man.
"I came as soon as I could, Martin," the young doctor said, stepping
inside with the other man. "This is my new assistant, Dr. Tompkins."
Martin and Tompkins shook hands.
"The baby—?" Dr. Stuart asked.
"Upstairs," Martin said.
"You'd better get him, Dr. Tompkins, if we're to take him to the
hospital. I'll stay here with Mr. Laughton. How've you been, Martin?"
"Fine."
"How's everything at the office?"
"Fine."
"And your wife?"
"She's fine, too."
"Glad to hear it, Martin. Mighty glad. Say, by the way, there's that
bill you owe me. I think it's $32, isn't that right?"
"Yes, I'd almost forgotten about it."
"Why don't you be a good fellow and write a check for it? It's been
over a year, you know."
"That's right. I'll get right at it." Martin went over to his desk,
opened it and started looking for his checkbook. Dr. Stuart stood by
him, making idle comment until Dr. Tompkins came down the stairs with
the sleeping baby cuddled against his shoulder.
"Never mind the check, now, Martin. I see we're ready to go." He went
over to his assistant and took the baby. Together they walked out the
front door.
"Good-bye," Martin said, going to the door.
Then he was nearly bowled over by the discharge of the .30-.30. Dr.
Stuart crumpled to the ground, the baby falling to the lawn. Dr.
Tompkins whirled and there was a second shot. Dr. Tompkins pitched
forward on his face.
The figure of a woman ran from the house, retrieved the now squalling
infant and ran back into the house. Once inside, Nancy slammed the
door, gave the baby to the stunned Martin and headed for the
telephone.
"One of them was the same man!" she cried.
Martin gasped, sinking into a chair with the baby. "I believed them,"
he said slowly and uncomprehendingly. "They made me believe them!"
"Those bodies," the sergeant said. "Would you mind pointing them out
to me, please?"
"Aren't they—aren't they on the walk?" Mrs. Laughton asked.
"There is nothing on the walk, Mrs. Laughton."
"But there
must
be! I tell you I shot these men who posed as
doctors. One of them was the same man who tried to take the baby this
afternoon. They hypnotized my husband—"
"Yes, I know, Mrs. Laughton. We've been through that." The sergeant
went to the door and opened it. "Say, Homer, take another look around
the walk and the bushes. There's supposed to be two of them. Shot with
a .30-.30."
He turned and picked up the gun and examined it again. "Ever shoot a
gun before, Mrs. Laughton?"
"Many times. Martin and I used to go hunting together before we had
Reggie."
The sergeant nodded. "You were taking an awful chance, shooting at a
guy carrying your baby, don't you think?"
"I shot him in the legs. The other—the other turned and I shot him in
the chest. I could even see his eyes when he turned around. If I
hadn't pulled the trigger then ... I don't want to remember it."
The patrolman pushed the door open. "There's no bodies out here but
there's some blood. Quite a lot of blood. A little to one side of the
walk."
The policemen went out.
"Thank God you woke up, Nancy," Martin said. "I'd have let them have
the baby." He reached over and smoothed the sleeping Reggie's hair.
Nancy, who was rocking the boy, narrowed her eyes.
"I wonder why they want our baby? He's just like any other baby. We
don't have any money. We couldn't pay a ransom."
"Reggie's pretty cute, though," Martin said. "You will have to admit
that."
Nancy smiled. Then she suddenly stopped rocking.
"Martin!"
He sat up quickly.
"Where's Tiger?"
Together they rose and walked around the room. They found him in a
corner, eyes open, tongue protruding. He was dead.
If we keep Reggie in the house much longer he'll turn out to be a
hermit," Martin said at breakfast a month later. "He needs fresh air
and sunshine."
"I'm not going to sit on the lawn alone with him, Martin. I just
can't, that's all. I'd be able to think of nothing but that day."
"Still thinking about it? I think we'd have heard from them again if
they were coming back. They probably got somebody else's baby by this
time." Martin finished his coffee and rose to kiss her good-bye. "But
for safety's sake I guess you'd better keep that gun handy."
The morning turned into a brilliant, sunshiny day. Puffs of clouds
moved slowly across the summer sky and a warm breeze rustled the
trees. It would be a crime to keep Reggie inside on a day like this,
Nancy thought.
So she called Mrs. MacDougal, the next door neighbor. Mrs. MacDougal
was familiar with what had happened to the Laughtons and she agreed to
keep an eye on Nancy and Reggie and to call the police at the first
sign of trouble.
With a fearful but determined heart Nancy moved the play pen and set
it up in the front yard. She spread a blanket for herself and put
Reggie in the pen. Her heart pounded all the while and she watched the
street for any strangers, ready to flee inside if need be. Reggie just
gurgled with delight at the change in environment.
This peaceful scene was disturbed by a speeding car in which two men
were riding. The car roared up the street, swerved toward the parkway,
tires screaming, bounced over the curb and sidewalk, straight toward
the child and mother. Reggie, attracted by the sudden noise, looked up
to see the approaching vehicle. His mother stood up, set her palms
against her cheeks and shrieked.
The car came on, crunched over the play pen, killing the child. The
mother was hit and instantly killed, force of the blow snapping her
spine and tossing her against the house. The car plunged on into a
tree, hitting it a terrible blow, crumbling the car's forward end so
it looked like an accordion. The men were thrown from the machine.
"We'll never be able to prosecute in this case," the states attorney
said. "At least not on a drunken driving basis."
"I can't get over it," the chief of police said. "I've got at least
six men who will swear the man was drunk. He staggered, reeled and
gave the usual drunk talk. He reeked of whiskey."
The prosecutor handed the report over the desk. "Here's the analysis.
Not a trace of alcohol. He couldn't have even had a smell of near
beer. Here's another report. This is his physical exam made not long
afterwards. The man was in perfect health. Only variations are he had
a scar on his leg where something, probably a dog, bit him once. And
then a scar on his chest. It looked like an old gunshot wound, they
said. Must have happened years ago."
"That's odd. The man who accosted Mrs. Laughton in the afternoon was
bitten by their dog. Later that night she said she shot the same man
in the chest. Since the scars are healed it obviously couldn't be the
same man. But there's a real coincidence for you. And speaking of the
dogbite, the Laughton dog died that night. His menu evidently didn't
agree with him. Never did figure what killed him, actually."
"Any record of treatment on the man she shot?"
"The
men
. You'll remember, there were two. No, we never found a
trace of either. No doctor ever made a report of a gunshot wound that
night. No hospital had a case either—at least not within several
hundred miles—that night or several nights afterwards. Ever been shot
with .30-.30?"
The state attorney shook his head. "I wouldn't be here if I had."
"I'll say you wouldn't. The pair must have crawled away to die God
knows where."
"Getting back to the man who ran over the child and killed Mrs.
Laughton. Why did he pretend to be drunk?"
It was the chief's turn to shake his head. "Your guess is as good as
mine. There are a lot of angles to this case none of us understand. It
looks deliberate, but where's the motive?"
"What does the man have to say?"
"I was afraid you'd get to him," the chief said, his neck reddening.
"It's all been rather embarrassing to the department." He coughed
self-consciously. "He's proved a strange one, all right. He says his
name is John Smith and he's got cards to prove it, too—for example, a
social security card. It looks authentic, yet there's no such number
on file in Washington, so we've discovered. We've had him in jail for
a week and we've all taken turns questioning him. He laughs and admits
his guilt—in fact, he seems amused by most everything. Sometimes all
alone in his cell he'll start laughing for no apparent reason. It
gives you the creeps."
The states attorney leaned back in his chair. "Maybe it's a case for
an alienist."
"One jump ahead of you. Dr. Stone thinks he's normal, but won't put
down any I.Q. Actually, he can't figure him out himself. Smith seems
to take delight in answering questions—sort of anticipates them and
has the answer ready before you're half through asking."
"Well, if Dr. Stone says he's normal, that's enough for me." The
prosecutor was silent for a moment. Then, "How about the husband?"
"Laughton? We're afraid to let him see him. All broken up. No telling
what kind of a rumpus he'd start—especially if Smith started his
funny business."
"Guess you're right. Well, Mr. Smith won't think it's so funny when we
hang criminal negligence or manslaughter on him. By the way, you've
checked possible family connections?"
"Nobody ever saw John Smith before. Even at the address on his
driver's license. And there's no duplicate of that in Springfield, in
case you're interested."
The man who had laughingly told police his name was John Smith lay on
his cot in the county jail, his eyes closed, his arms folded across
his chest. This gave him the appearance of being alert despite
reclining. Even as he lay, his mouth held a hint of a smile.
Arvid 6—for John Smith
was
Arvid 6—had lain in that position for
more than four hours, when suddenly he snapped his eyes open and
appeared to be listening. For a moment a look of concern crossed his
face and he swung his legs to the floor and sat there expectantly.
Arvid 6 knew Tendal 13 had materialized and was somewhere in the
building.
Eventually there were some sounds from beyond the steel cell and
doorway. There was a clang when the outer doorway was opened and Arvid
6 rose from his cot.
"Your lawyer's here to see you," the jailer said, indicating the man
with the brief case. "Ring the buzzer when you're through." The jailer
let the man in, locked the cell door and walked away.
The man threw the brief case on the jail cot and stood glaring.
"Your damned foolishness has gone far enough. I'm sick and tired of
it," he declared. "If you carry on any more we'll never get back to
the Ultroom!"
"I'm sorry, Tendal," the man on the cot said. "I didn't think—"
"You're absolutely right. You didn't think. Crashing that car into
that tree and killing that woman—that was the last straw. You don't
even deserve to get back to our era. You ought to be made to rot
here."
"I'm
really
sorry about that," Arvid 6 said.
You know the instructions. Just because you work in the Ultroom don't
get to thinking human life doesn't have any value. We wouldn't be here
if it hadn't. But to unnecessarily kill—" The older man shook his
head. "You could have killed yourself as well and we'd never get the
job done. As it is, you almost totally obliterated me." Tendal 13
paced the length of the cell and back again, gesturing as he talked.
"It was only with the greatest effort I pulled myself back together
again. I doubt that you could have done it. And then all the while
you've been sitting here, probably enjoying yourself with your special
brand of humor I have grown to despise."
"You didn't have to come along at all, you know," Arvid 6 said.
"How well I know! How sorry I am that I ever did! It was only because
I was sorry for you, because someone older and more experienced than
you was needed. I volunteered. Imagine that! I volunteered! Tendal 13
reaches the height of stupidity and volunteers to help Arvid 6 go back
6,000 years to bring Kanad back, to correct a mistake Arvid 6 made!"
He snorted. "I still can't believe I was ever that stupid. I only
prove it when I pinch myself and here I am.
"Oh, you've been a joy to be with! First it was that hunt in ancient
Mycenae when you let the lion escape the hunters' quaint spears and we
were partly eaten by the lion in the bargain, although you dazzled the
hunters, deflecting their spears. And then your zest for drink when we
were with Octavian in Alexandria that led to everybody's amusement but
ours when we were ambushed by Anthony's men. And worst of all, that
English barmaid you became engrossed with at our last stop in 1609,
when her husband mistook me for you and you let him take me apart
piece by piece—"
"All right, all right," Arvid 6 said. "I'll admit I've made some
mistakes. You're just not adventurous, that's all."
"Shut up! For once you're going to listen to me. Our instructions
specifically stated we were to have as little as possible to do with
these people. But at every turn you've got us more and more enmeshed
with them. If that's adventure, you can have it." Tendal 13 sat down
wearily and sank his head in his hands. "It was you who conceived the
idea of taking Reggie right out of his play pen. 'Watch me take that
child right out from under its mother's nose' were your exact words.
And before I could stop you, you did. Only you forgot an important
factor in the equation—the dog, Tiger. And you nursed a dogbite most
of the afternoon before it healed. And then you took your spite out on
the poor thing by suggesting suffocation to it that night.
"And speaking of that night, you remember we agreed I was to do the
talking. But no, you pulled a switch and captured Martin Laughton's
attention. 'I came as soon as I could, Martin,' you said. And suddenly
I played a very minor role. 'This is my new assistant, Dr. Tompkins,'
you said. And then what happened? I get shot in the legs and you get a
hole in your back. We were both nearly obliterated that time and we
didn't even come close to getting the child.
"Still you wanted to run the whole show. 'I'm younger than you,' you
said. 'I'll take the wheel.' And the next thing I know I'm floating in
space halfway to nowhere with two broken legs, a spinal injury,
concussion and some of the finest bruises you ever saw."
These twentieth century machines aren't what they ought to be," Arvid
6 said.
"You never run out of excuses, do you, Arvid? Remember what you said
in the Ultroom when you pushed the lever clear over and transferred
Kanad back 6,000 years? 'My hand slipped.' As simple as that. 'My hand
slipped.' It was so simple everyone believed you. You were given no
real punishment. In a way it was a reward—at least to you—getting to
go back and rescue the life germ of Kanad out of each era he'd be born
in."
Tendal 13 turned and looked steadily and directly at Arvid 6. "Do you
know what I think? I think you deliberately pushed the lever over as
far as it would go
just to see what would happen
. That's how simple
I think it was."
Arvid 6 flushed, turned away and looked at the floor.
"What crazy things have you been doing since I've been gone?" Tendal
13 asked.
Arvid 6 sighed. "After what you just said I guess it wouldn't amuse
you, although it has me. They got to me right after the accident
before I had a chance to collect my wits, dematerialize or
anything—you said we shouldn't dematerialize in front of anybody."
"That's right."
"Well, I didn't know what to do. I could see they thought I was drunk,
so I was. But they had a blood sample before I could manufacture any
alcohol in my blood, although I implanted a memory in them that I
reeked of it." He laughed. "I fancy they're thoroughly confused."
"And you're thoroughly amused, no doubt. Have they questioned you?"
"At great length. They had a psychiatrist in to see me. He was a queer
fellow with the most stupid set of questions and tests I ever saw."
"And you amused yourself with him."
"I suppose you'd think so."
"Who do you tell them you are?"
"John Smith. A rather prevalent name here, I understand. I
manufactured a pasteboard called a social security card and a driver's
license—"
"Never mind. It's easy to see you've been your own inimitable self.
Believe me, if I ever get back to the Ultroom I hope I never see you
again. And I hope I'll never leave there again though I'm rejuvenated
through a million years."
"Was Kanad's life germ transferred all right this time?"
Tendal 13 shook his head. "I haven't heard. The transfers are getting
more difficult all the time. In 1609, you'll remember, it was a case
of pneumonia for the two-year-old. A simple procedure. It wouldn't
work here. Medicine's too far along." He produced a notebook. "The
last jump was 342 years, a little more than average. The next ought to
be around 2250. Things will be more difficult than ever there,
probably."
"Do you think Kanad will be angry about all this?"
"How would you like to have to go through all those birth processes,
to have your life germ knocked from one era to the next?"
"Frankly, I didn't think he'd go back so far."
"If it had been anybody but Kanad nobody'd ever have thought of going
back after it. The life germ of the head of the whole galactic system
who came to the Ultroom to be transplanted to a younger body—and then
sending him back beyond his original birth date—" Tendal 13 got up
and commenced his pacing again. "Oh, I suppose Kanad's partly to
blame, wanting rejuvenating at only 300 years. Some have waited a
thousand or more or until their bones are like paper."
"I just wonder how angry Kanad will be," Arvid muttered.
HB92167. Ultroom Error. Tendal 13. Arvid 6. Kanad transfer
out of 1951 complete. Next Kanad transfer ready. 2267.
Phullam 19, son of Orla 39 and Rhoda R, 22H Level M,
Hemisphere B, Quadrant 3, Sector I. Arrive his 329th Day.
TB92167
Arvid 6 rose from the cot and the two men faced each other.
"Before we leave, Arvid," Tendal 13 started to say.
"I know, I know. You want me to let you handle everything."
"Exactly. Is that too much to ask after all you've done?"
"I guess I have made mistakes. From now on you be the boss. I'll do
whatever you say."
"I hope I can count on that." Tendal 13 rang the jail buzzer.
The jailer unlocked the cell door.
"You remember the chief said it's all right to take him with me,
Matthews," Tendal 13 told the jailer.
"Yes, I remember," the jailer said mechanically, letting them both out
of the cell.
They walked together down the jail corridor. When they came to another
barred door the jailer fumbled with the keys and clumsily tried
several with no luck.
Arvid 6, an amused set to his mouth and devilment in his eyes, watched
the jailer's expression as he walked through the bars of the door. He
laughed as he saw the jailer's eyes bulge.
"Arvid!"
Tendal 13 walked briskly through the door, snatched Arvid 6 by the
shoulders and shook him.
The jailer watched stupified as the two men vanished in the middle of
a violent argument. | reckless | audacious | uninspiring | meritorious | 0 |
31357_T9I0O70O_10 | Arvid 6 and Tendal 13 can perform all of the following abilities EXCEPT: | Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from Space Science Fiction May 1952. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.
THE ULTROOM ERROR
by
JERRY SOHL
Smith admitted he had made an error involving a few
murders—and a few thousand years. He was entitled to a
sense of humor, though, even in the Ultroom!
HB73782. Ultroom error. Tendal 13. Arvid 6. Kanad transfer
out of 1609 complete, intact, but too near limit of 1,000
days. Next Kanad transfer ready. 1951. Reginald, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Martin Laughton, 3495 Orland Drive, Marionville,
Illinois, U. S. A. Arrive his 378th day. TB73782.
Nancy Laughton sat on the blanket she had spread on the lawn in her
front yard, knitting a pair of booties for the PTA bazaar.
Occasionally she glanced at her son in the play pen, who was getting
his daily dose of sunshine. He was gurgling happily, examining a ball,
a cheese grater and a linen baby book, all with perfunctory interest.
When she looked up again she noticed a man walking by—except he
turned up the walk and crossed the lawn to her.
He was a little taller than her husband, had piercing blue eyes and a
rather amused set to his lips.
"Hello, Nancy," he said.
"Hello, Joe," she answered. It was her brother who lived in Kankakee.
"I'm going to take the baby for a while," he said.
"All right, Joe."
He reached into the pen, picked up the baby. As he did so the baby's
knees hit the side of the play pen and young Laughton let out a
scream—half from hurt and half from sudden lack of confidence in his
new handler. But this did not deter Joe. He started off with the
child.
Around the corner and after the man came a snarling mongrel dog, eyes
bright, teeth glinting in the sunlight. The man did not turn as the
dog threw himself at him, burying his teeth in his leg. Surprised, the
man dropped the screaming child on the lawn and turned to the dog. Joe
seemed off balance and he backed up confusedly in the face of the
snapping jaws. Then he suddenly turned and walked away, the dog at his
heels.
"I tell you, the man said he was my brother and he made me think he
was," Nancy told her husband for the tenth time. "I don't even have a
brother."
Martin Laughton sighed. "I can't understand why you believed him. It's
just—just plain nuts, Nancy!"
"Don't you think I know it?" Nancy said tearfully. "I feel like I'm
going crazy. I can't say I dreamt it because there was Reggie with his
bleeding knees, squalling for all he was worth on the grass—Oh, I
don't even want to think about it."
"We haven't lost Reggie, Nancy, remember that. Now why don't you try
to get some rest?"
"You—you don't believe me at all, do you, Martin?"
When her husband did not answer, her head sank to her arms on the
table and she sobbed.
"Nancy, for heaven's sake, of course I believe you. I'm trying to
think it out, that's all. We should have called the police."
Nancy shook her head in her arms. "They'd—never—believe me either,"
she moaned.
"I'd better go and make sure Reggie's all right." Martin got up out of
his chair and went to the stairs.
"I'm going with you," Nancy said, hurriedly rising and coming over to
him.
"We'll go up and look at him together."
They found Reggie peacefully asleep in his crib in his room upstairs.
They checked the windows and tucked in the blankets. They paused in
the room for a moment and then Martin stole his arm around his wife
and led her to the door.
"As I've said, sergeant, this fellow hypnotized my wife. He made her
think he was her brother. She doesn't even have a brother. Then he
tried to get away with the baby." Martin leaned down and patted the
dog. "It was Tiger here who scared him off."
The police sergeant looked at the father, at Nancy and then at the
dog. He scribbled notes in his book.
"Are you a rich man, Mr. Laughton?" he asked.
"Not at all. The bank still owns most of the house. I have a few
hundred dollars, that's all."
"What do you do?"
"Office work, mostly. I'm a junior executive in an insurance company."
"Any enemies?"
"No ... Oh, I suppose I have a few people I don't get along with, like
anybody else. Nobody who'd do anything like this, though."
The sergeant flipped his notebook closed. "You'd better keep your dog
inside and around the kid as much as possible. Keep your doors and
windows locked. I'll see that the prowl car keeps an eye on the house.
Call us if anything seems unusual or out of the way."
Nancy had taken a sedative and was asleep by the time Martin finished
cleaning the .30-.30 rifle he used for deer hunting. He put it by the
stairs, ready for use, fully loaded, leaning it against the wall next
to the telephone stand.
The front door bell rang. He answered it. It was Dr. Stuart and
another man.
"I came as soon as I could, Martin," the young doctor said, stepping
inside with the other man. "This is my new assistant, Dr. Tompkins."
Martin and Tompkins shook hands.
"The baby—?" Dr. Stuart asked.
"Upstairs," Martin said.
"You'd better get him, Dr. Tompkins, if we're to take him to the
hospital. I'll stay here with Mr. Laughton. How've you been, Martin?"
"Fine."
"How's everything at the office?"
"Fine."
"And your wife?"
"She's fine, too."
"Glad to hear it, Martin. Mighty glad. Say, by the way, there's that
bill you owe me. I think it's $32, isn't that right?"
"Yes, I'd almost forgotten about it."
"Why don't you be a good fellow and write a check for it? It's been
over a year, you know."
"That's right. I'll get right at it." Martin went over to his desk,
opened it and started looking for his checkbook. Dr. Stuart stood by
him, making idle comment until Dr. Tompkins came down the stairs with
the sleeping baby cuddled against his shoulder.
"Never mind the check, now, Martin. I see we're ready to go." He went
over to his assistant and took the baby. Together they walked out the
front door.
"Good-bye," Martin said, going to the door.
Then he was nearly bowled over by the discharge of the .30-.30. Dr.
Stuart crumpled to the ground, the baby falling to the lawn. Dr.
Tompkins whirled and there was a second shot. Dr. Tompkins pitched
forward on his face.
The figure of a woman ran from the house, retrieved the now squalling
infant and ran back into the house. Once inside, Nancy slammed the
door, gave the baby to the stunned Martin and headed for the
telephone.
"One of them was the same man!" she cried.
Martin gasped, sinking into a chair with the baby. "I believed them,"
he said slowly and uncomprehendingly. "They made me believe them!"
"Those bodies," the sergeant said. "Would you mind pointing them out
to me, please?"
"Aren't they—aren't they on the walk?" Mrs. Laughton asked.
"There is nothing on the walk, Mrs. Laughton."
"But there
must
be! I tell you I shot these men who posed as
doctors. One of them was the same man who tried to take the baby this
afternoon. They hypnotized my husband—"
"Yes, I know, Mrs. Laughton. We've been through that." The sergeant
went to the door and opened it. "Say, Homer, take another look around
the walk and the bushes. There's supposed to be two of them. Shot with
a .30-.30."
He turned and picked up the gun and examined it again. "Ever shoot a
gun before, Mrs. Laughton?"
"Many times. Martin and I used to go hunting together before we had
Reggie."
The sergeant nodded. "You were taking an awful chance, shooting at a
guy carrying your baby, don't you think?"
"I shot him in the legs. The other—the other turned and I shot him in
the chest. I could even see his eyes when he turned around. If I
hadn't pulled the trigger then ... I don't want to remember it."
The patrolman pushed the door open. "There's no bodies out here but
there's some blood. Quite a lot of blood. A little to one side of the
walk."
The policemen went out.
"Thank God you woke up, Nancy," Martin said. "I'd have let them have
the baby." He reached over and smoothed the sleeping Reggie's hair.
Nancy, who was rocking the boy, narrowed her eyes.
"I wonder why they want our baby? He's just like any other baby. We
don't have any money. We couldn't pay a ransom."
"Reggie's pretty cute, though," Martin said. "You will have to admit
that."
Nancy smiled. Then she suddenly stopped rocking.
"Martin!"
He sat up quickly.
"Where's Tiger?"
Together they rose and walked around the room. They found him in a
corner, eyes open, tongue protruding. He was dead.
If we keep Reggie in the house much longer he'll turn out to be a
hermit," Martin said at breakfast a month later. "He needs fresh air
and sunshine."
"I'm not going to sit on the lawn alone with him, Martin. I just
can't, that's all. I'd be able to think of nothing but that day."
"Still thinking about it? I think we'd have heard from them again if
they were coming back. They probably got somebody else's baby by this
time." Martin finished his coffee and rose to kiss her good-bye. "But
for safety's sake I guess you'd better keep that gun handy."
The morning turned into a brilliant, sunshiny day. Puffs of clouds
moved slowly across the summer sky and a warm breeze rustled the
trees. It would be a crime to keep Reggie inside on a day like this,
Nancy thought.
So she called Mrs. MacDougal, the next door neighbor. Mrs. MacDougal
was familiar with what had happened to the Laughtons and she agreed to
keep an eye on Nancy and Reggie and to call the police at the first
sign of trouble.
With a fearful but determined heart Nancy moved the play pen and set
it up in the front yard. She spread a blanket for herself and put
Reggie in the pen. Her heart pounded all the while and she watched the
street for any strangers, ready to flee inside if need be. Reggie just
gurgled with delight at the change in environment.
This peaceful scene was disturbed by a speeding car in which two men
were riding. The car roared up the street, swerved toward the parkway,
tires screaming, bounced over the curb and sidewalk, straight toward
the child and mother. Reggie, attracted by the sudden noise, looked up
to see the approaching vehicle. His mother stood up, set her palms
against her cheeks and shrieked.
The car came on, crunched over the play pen, killing the child. The
mother was hit and instantly killed, force of the blow snapping her
spine and tossing her against the house. The car plunged on into a
tree, hitting it a terrible blow, crumbling the car's forward end so
it looked like an accordion. The men were thrown from the machine.
"We'll never be able to prosecute in this case," the states attorney
said. "At least not on a drunken driving basis."
"I can't get over it," the chief of police said. "I've got at least
six men who will swear the man was drunk. He staggered, reeled and
gave the usual drunk talk. He reeked of whiskey."
The prosecutor handed the report over the desk. "Here's the analysis.
Not a trace of alcohol. He couldn't have even had a smell of near
beer. Here's another report. This is his physical exam made not long
afterwards. The man was in perfect health. Only variations are he had
a scar on his leg where something, probably a dog, bit him once. And
then a scar on his chest. It looked like an old gunshot wound, they
said. Must have happened years ago."
"That's odd. The man who accosted Mrs. Laughton in the afternoon was
bitten by their dog. Later that night she said she shot the same man
in the chest. Since the scars are healed it obviously couldn't be the
same man. But there's a real coincidence for you. And speaking of the
dogbite, the Laughton dog died that night. His menu evidently didn't
agree with him. Never did figure what killed him, actually."
"Any record of treatment on the man she shot?"
"The
men
. You'll remember, there were two. No, we never found a
trace of either. No doctor ever made a report of a gunshot wound that
night. No hospital had a case either—at least not within several
hundred miles—that night or several nights afterwards. Ever been shot
with .30-.30?"
The state attorney shook his head. "I wouldn't be here if I had."
"I'll say you wouldn't. The pair must have crawled away to die God
knows where."
"Getting back to the man who ran over the child and killed Mrs.
Laughton. Why did he pretend to be drunk?"
It was the chief's turn to shake his head. "Your guess is as good as
mine. There are a lot of angles to this case none of us understand. It
looks deliberate, but where's the motive?"
"What does the man have to say?"
"I was afraid you'd get to him," the chief said, his neck reddening.
"It's all been rather embarrassing to the department." He coughed
self-consciously. "He's proved a strange one, all right. He says his
name is John Smith and he's got cards to prove it, too—for example, a
social security card. It looks authentic, yet there's no such number
on file in Washington, so we've discovered. We've had him in jail for
a week and we've all taken turns questioning him. He laughs and admits
his guilt—in fact, he seems amused by most everything. Sometimes all
alone in his cell he'll start laughing for no apparent reason. It
gives you the creeps."
The states attorney leaned back in his chair. "Maybe it's a case for
an alienist."
"One jump ahead of you. Dr. Stone thinks he's normal, but won't put
down any I.Q. Actually, he can't figure him out himself. Smith seems
to take delight in answering questions—sort of anticipates them and
has the answer ready before you're half through asking."
"Well, if Dr. Stone says he's normal, that's enough for me." The
prosecutor was silent for a moment. Then, "How about the husband?"
"Laughton? We're afraid to let him see him. All broken up. No telling
what kind of a rumpus he'd start—especially if Smith started his
funny business."
"Guess you're right. Well, Mr. Smith won't think it's so funny when we
hang criminal negligence or manslaughter on him. By the way, you've
checked possible family connections?"
"Nobody ever saw John Smith before. Even at the address on his
driver's license. And there's no duplicate of that in Springfield, in
case you're interested."
The man who had laughingly told police his name was John Smith lay on
his cot in the county jail, his eyes closed, his arms folded across
his chest. This gave him the appearance of being alert despite
reclining. Even as he lay, his mouth held a hint of a smile.
Arvid 6—for John Smith
was
Arvid 6—had lain in that position for
more than four hours, when suddenly he snapped his eyes open and
appeared to be listening. For a moment a look of concern crossed his
face and he swung his legs to the floor and sat there expectantly.
Arvid 6 knew Tendal 13 had materialized and was somewhere in the
building.
Eventually there were some sounds from beyond the steel cell and
doorway. There was a clang when the outer doorway was opened and Arvid
6 rose from his cot.
"Your lawyer's here to see you," the jailer said, indicating the man
with the brief case. "Ring the buzzer when you're through." The jailer
let the man in, locked the cell door and walked away.
The man threw the brief case on the jail cot and stood glaring.
"Your damned foolishness has gone far enough. I'm sick and tired of
it," he declared. "If you carry on any more we'll never get back to
the Ultroom!"
"I'm sorry, Tendal," the man on the cot said. "I didn't think—"
"You're absolutely right. You didn't think. Crashing that car into
that tree and killing that woman—that was the last straw. You don't
even deserve to get back to our era. You ought to be made to rot
here."
"I'm
really
sorry about that," Arvid 6 said.
You know the instructions. Just because you work in the Ultroom don't
get to thinking human life doesn't have any value. We wouldn't be here
if it hadn't. But to unnecessarily kill—" The older man shook his
head. "You could have killed yourself as well and we'd never get the
job done. As it is, you almost totally obliterated me." Tendal 13
paced the length of the cell and back again, gesturing as he talked.
"It was only with the greatest effort I pulled myself back together
again. I doubt that you could have done it. And then all the while
you've been sitting here, probably enjoying yourself with your special
brand of humor I have grown to despise."
"You didn't have to come along at all, you know," Arvid 6 said.
"How well I know! How sorry I am that I ever did! It was only because
I was sorry for you, because someone older and more experienced than
you was needed. I volunteered. Imagine that! I volunteered! Tendal 13
reaches the height of stupidity and volunteers to help Arvid 6 go back
6,000 years to bring Kanad back, to correct a mistake Arvid 6 made!"
He snorted. "I still can't believe I was ever that stupid. I only
prove it when I pinch myself and here I am.
"Oh, you've been a joy to be with! First it was that hunt in ancient
Mycenae when you let the lion escape the hunters' quaint spears and we
were partly eaten by the lion in the bargain, although you dazzled the
hunters, deflecting their spears. And then your zest for drink when we
were with Octavian in Alexandria that led to everybody's amusement but
ours when we were ambushed by Anthony's men. And worst of all, that
English barmaid you became engrossed with at our last stop in 1609,
when her husband mistook me for you and you let him take me apart
piece by piece—"
"All right, all right," Arvid 6 said. "I'll admit I've made some
mistakes. You're just not adventurous, that's all."
"Shut up! For once you're going to listen to me. Our instructions
specifically stated we were to have as little as possible to do with
these people. But at every turn you've got us more and more enmeshed
with them. If that's adventure, you can have it." Tendal 13 sat down
wearily and sank his head in his hands. "It was you who conceived the
idea of taking Reggie right out of his play pen. 'Watch me take that
child right out from under its mother's nose' were your exact words.
And before I could stop you, you did. Only you forgot an important
factor in the equation—the dog, Tiger. And you nursed a dogbite most
of the afternoon before it healed. And then you took your spite out on
the poor thing by suggesting suffocation to it that night.
"And speaking of that night, you remember we agreed I was to do the
talking. But no, you pulled a switch and captured Martin Laughton's
attention. 'I came as soon as I could, Martin,' you said. And suddenly
I played a very minor role. 'This is my new assistant, Dr. Tompkins,'
you said. And then what happened? I get shot in the legs and you get a
hole in your back. We were both nearly obliterated that time and we
didn't even come close to getting the child.
"Still you wanted to run the whole show. 'I'm younger than you,' you
said. 'I'll take the wheel.' And the next thing I know I'm floating in
space halfway to nowhere with two broken legs, a spinal injury,
concussion and some of the finest bruises you ever saw."
These twentieth century machines aren't what they ought to be," Arvid
6 said.
"You never run out of excuses, do you, Arvid? Remember what you said
in the Ultroom when you pushed the lever clear over and transferred
Kanad back 6,000 years? 'My hand slipped.' As simple as that. 'My hand
slipped.' It was so simple everyone believed you. You were given no
real punishment. In a way it was a reward—at least to you—getting to
go back and rescue the life germ of Kanad out of each era he'd be born
in."
Tendal 13 turned and looked steadily and directly at Arvid 6. "Do you
know what I think? I think you deliberately pushed the lever over as
far as it would go
just to see what would happen
. That's how simple
I think it was."
Arvid 6 flushed, turned away and looked at the floor.
"What crazy things have you been doing since I've been gone?" Tendal
13 asked.
Arvid 6 sighed. "After what you just said I guess it wouldn't amuse
you, although it has me. They got to me right after the accident
before I had a chance to collect my wits, dematerialize or
anything—you said we shouldn't dematerialize in front of anybody."
"That's right."
"Well, I didn't know what to do. I could see they thought I was drunk,
so I was. But they had a blood sample before I could manufacture any
alcohol in my blood, although I implanted a memory in them that I
reeked of it." He laughed. "I fancy they're thoroughly confused."
"And you're thoroughly amused, no doubt. Have they questioned you?"
"At great length. They had a psychiatrist in to see me. He was a queer
fellow with the most stupid set of questions and tests I ever saw."
"And you amused yourself with him."
"I suppose you'd think so."
"Who do you tell them you are?"
"John Smith. A rather prevalent name here, I understand. I
manufactured a pasteboard called a social security card and a driver's
license—"
"Never mind. It's easy to see you've been your own inimitable self.
Believe me, if I ever get back to the Ultroom I hope I never see you
again. And I hope I'll never leave there again though I'm rejuvenated
through a million years."
"Was Kanad's life germ transferred all right this time?"
Tendal 13 shook his head. "I haven't heard. The transfers are getting
more difficult all the time. In 1609, you'll remember, it was a case
of pneumonia for the two-year-old. A simple procedure. It wouldn't
work here. Medicine's too far along." He produced a notebook. "The
last jump was 342 years, a little more than average. The next ought to
be around 2250. Things will be more difficult than ever there,
probably."
"Do you think Kanad will be angry about all this?"
"How would you like to have to go through all those birth processes,
to have your life germ knocked from one era to the next?"
"Frankly, I didn't think he'd go back so far."
"If it had been anybody but Kanad nobody'd ever have thought of going
back after it. The life germ of the head of the whole galactic system
who came to the Ultroom to be transplanted to a younger body—and then
sending him back beyond his original birth date—" Tendal 13 got up
and commenced his pacing again. "Oh, I suppose Kanad's partly to
blame, wanting rejuvenating at only 300 years. Some have waited a
thousand or more or until their bones are like paper."
"I just wonder how angry Kanad will be," Arvid muttered.
HB92167. Ultroom Error. Tendal 13. Arvid 6. Kanad transfer
out of 1951 complete. Next Kanad transfer ready. 2267.
Phullam 19, son of Orla 39 and Rhoda R, 22H Level M,
Hemisphere B, Quadrant 3, Sector I. Arrive his 329th Day.
TB92167
Arvid 6 rose from the cot and the two men faced each other.
"Before we leave, Arvid," Tendal 13 started to say.
"I know, I know. You want me to let you handle everything."
"Exactly. Is that too much to ask after all you've done?"
"I guess I have made mistakes. From now on you be the boss. I'll do
whatever you say."
"I hope I can count on that." Tendal 13 rang the jail buzzer.
The jailer unlocked the cell door.
"You remember the chief said it's all right to take him with me,
Matthews," Tendal 13 told the jailer.
"Yes, I remember," the jailer said mechanically, letting them both out
of the cell.
They walked together down the jail corridor. When they came to another
barred door the jailer fumbled with the keys and clumsily tried
several with no luck.
Arvid 6, an amused set to his mouth and devilment in his eyes, watched
the jailer's expression as he walked through the bars of the door. He
laughed as he saw the jailer's eyes bulge.
"Arvid!"
Tendal 13 walked briskly through the door, snatched Arvid 6 by the
shoulders and shook him.
The jailer watched stupified as the two men vanished in the middle of
a violent argument. | hypnosis | dematerialization | time travel | mind-reading | 3 |
24275_U13YG5XY_1 | Relationship between Harry Zeckler and Paul Meyeroff? | Letter
of
the
Law
by Alan E. Nourse
The
place was dark and damp, and smelled like moldy leaves.
Meyerhoff followed the huge, bear-like Altairian guard
down the slippery flagstones of the corridor, sniffing the
dead, musty air with distaste. He drew his carefully tailored
Terran-styled jacket closer about his shoulders, shivering as his
eyes avoided the black, yawning cell-holes they were passing.
His foot slipped on the slimy flags from time to time, and
finally he paused to wipe the caked mud from his trouser leg.
"How much farther is it?" he shouted angrily.
The guard waved a heavy paw vaguely into the blackness
ahead. Quite suddenly the corridor took a sharp bend, and the
Altairian stopped, producing a huge key ring from some obscure
fold of his hairy hide. "I still don't see any reason for
all the fuss," he grumbled in a wounded tone. "We've treated
him like a brother."
One of the huge steel doors clicked open. Meyerhoff peered
into the blackness, catching a vaguely human outline against
the back wall. "Harry?" he called sharply.
There was a startled gasp from within, and a skinny, gnarled
little man suddenly appeared in the guard's light, like a grotesque,
twisted ghost out of the blackness. Wide blue eyes
regarded Meyerhoff from beneath uneven black eyebrows, and
then the little man's face broke into a crafty grin. "Paul! So
they sent
you
! I knew I could count on it!" He executed a
deep, awkward bow, motioning Meyerhoff into the dark
cubicle. "Not much to offer you," he said slyly, "but it's the
best I can do under the circumstances."
Meyerhoff scowled, and turned abruptly to the guard. "We'll
have some privacy now, if you please. Interplanetary ruling.
And leave us the light."
The guard grumbled, and started for the door. "It's about
time you showed up!" cried the little man in the cell. "Great
day! Lucky they sent you, pal. Why, I've been in here for
years—"
"Look, Zeckler, the name is Meyerhoff, and I'm not your
pal," Meyerhoff snapped. "And you've been here for two
weeks, three days, and approximately four hours. You're getting
as bad as your gentle guards when it comes to bandying
the truth around." He peered through the dim light at the
gaunt face of the prisoner. Zeckler's face was dark with a
week's beard, and his bloodshot eyes belied the cocky grin
on his lips. His clothes were smeared and sodden, streaked
with great splotches of mud and moss. Meyerhoff's face softened
a little. "So Harry Zeckler's in a jam again," he said.
"You
look
as if they'd treated you like a brother."
The little man snorted. "These overgrown teddy-bears don't
know what brotherhood means, nor humanity, either. Bread
and water I've been getting, nothing more, and then only if they
feel like bringing it down." He sank wearily down on the rock
bench along the wall. "I thought you'd never get here! I sent
an appeal to the Terran Consulate the first day I was arrested.
What happened? I mean, all they had to do was get a man
over here, get the extradition papers signed, and provide transportation
off the planet for me. Why so much time? I've been
sitting here rotting—" He broke off in mid-sentence and stared
at Meyerhoff. "You
brought
the papers, didn't you? I mean,
we can leave now?"
Meyerhoff stared at the little man with a mixture of pity and
disgust. "You are a prize fool," he said finally. "Did you know
that?"
Zeckler's eyes widened. "What do you mean, fool? So I
spend a couple of weeks in this pneumonia trap. The deal was
worth it! I've got three million credits sitting in the Terran
Consulate on Altair V, just waiting for me to walk in and pick
them up. Three million credits—do you hear? That's enough
to set me up for life!"
Meyerhoff nodded grimly. "
If
you live long enough to walk
in and pick them up, that is."
"What do you mean, if?"
Meyerhoff sank down beside the man, his voice a tense
whisper in the musty cell. "I mean that right now you are
practically dead. You may not know it, but you are. You walk
into a newly opened planet with your smart little bag of tricks,
walk in here with a shaky passport and no permit, with no
knowledge of the natives outside of two paragraphs of inaccuracies
in the Explorer's Guide, and even then you're not
content to come in and sell something legitimate, something
the natives might conceivably be able to use. No, nothing so
simple for you. You have to pull your usual high-pressure stuff.
And this time, buddy, you're paying the piper."
"
You mean I'm not being extradited?
"
Meyerhoff grinned unpleasantly. "I mean precisely that.
You've committed a crime here—a major crime. The Altairians
are sore about it. And the Terran Consulate isn't willing
to sell all the trading possibilities here down the river just to
get you out of a mess. You're going to stand trial—and these
natives are out to get you. Personally, I think they're
going
to get you."
Zeckler stood up shakily. "You can't believe anything the
natives say," he said uneasily. "They're pathological liars.
Why, you should see what they tried to sell
me
! You've never
seen such a pack of liars as these critters." He glanced up at
Meyerhoff. "They'll probably drop a little fine on me and let
me go."
"A little fine of one Terran neck." Meyerhoff grinned nastily.
"You've committed the most heinous crime these creatures can
imagine, and they're going to get you for it if it's the last thing
they do. I'm afraid, my friend, that your con-man days are
over."
Zeckler fished in the other man's pocket, extracted a cigarette,
and lighted it with trembling fingers. "It's bad, then,"
he said finally.
"It's bad, all right."
Some shadow of the sly, elfin grin crept over the little con-man's
face. "Well, at any rate, I'm glad they sent you over,"
he said weakly. "Nothing like a good lawyer to handle a trial."
"
Lawyer?
Not me! Oh, no. Sorry, but no thanks." Meyerhoff
chuckled. "I'm your advisor, old boy. Nothing else. I'm here
to keep you from botching things up still worse for the Trading
Commission, that's all. I wouldn't get tangled up in a mess
with those creatures for anything!" He shook his head. "You're
your own lawyer, Mr. Super-salesman. It's all your show. And
you'd better get your head out of the sand, or you're going to
lose a case like it's never been lost before!"
Meyerhoff watched the man's pale face, and shook his head.
In a way, he thought, it was a pity to see such a change in the
rosy-cheeked, dapper, cocksure little man who had talked his
way glibly in and out of more jams than Meyerhoff could
count. Trading brought scalpers; it was almost inevitable that
where rich and unexploited trading ground was uncovered, it
would first fall prey to the fast-trading boys. They spread out
from Terra with the first wave of exploration—the slick, fast-talking
con-men who could work new territories unfettered by
the legal restrictions that soon closed down the more established
planets. The first men in were the richest out, and
through some curious quirk of the Terrestrial mind, they knew
they could count on Terran protection, however crooked and
underhand their methods.
But occasionally a situation arose where the civilization and
social practices of the alien victims made it unwise to tamper
with them. Altair I had been recognized at once by the Trading
Commission as a commercial prize of tremendous value, but
early reports had warned of the danger of wildcat trading on
the little, musty, jungle-like planet with its shaggy, three-eyed
inhabitants—warned specifically against the confidence tactics
so frequently used—but there was always somebody, Meyerhoff
reflected sourly, who just didn't get the word.
Zeckler puffed nervously on his cigarette, his narrow face
a study in troubled concentration. "But I didn't
do
anything!"
he exploded finally. "So I pulled an old con game. So what?
Why should they get so excited? So I clipped a few thousand
credits, pulled a little fast business." He shrugged eloquently,
spreading his hands. "Everybody's doing it. They do it to each
other without batting an eye. You should
see
these critters
operate on each other. Why, my little scheme was peanuts by
comparison."
Meyerhoff pulled a pipe from his pocket, and began stuffing
the bowl with infinite patience. "And precisely what sort of
con game was it?" he asked quietly.
Zeckler shrugged again. "The simplest, tiredest, moldiest
old racket that ever made a quick nickel. Remember the old
Terran gag about the Brooklyn Bridge? The same thing. Only
these critters didn't want bridges. They wanted land—this
gooey, slimy swamp they call 'farm land.' So I gave them
what they wanted. I just sold them some land."
Meyerhoff nodded fiercely. "You sure did. A hundred square
kilos at a swipe. Only you sold the same hundred square kilos
to a dozen different natives." Suddenly he threw back his hands
and roared. "Of all the things you
shouldn't
have done—"
"But what's a chunk of land?"
Meyerhoff shook his head hopelessly. "If you hadn't been
so greedy, you'd have found out what a chunk of land was to
these natives before you started peddling it. You'd have found
out other things about them, too. You'd have learned that
in spite of all their bumbling and fussing and squabbling
they're not so dull. You'd have found out that they're marsupials,
and that two out of five of them get thrown out of
their mother's pouch before they're old enough to survive.
You'd have realized that they have to start fighting for individual
rights almost as soon as they're born. Anything goes,
as long as it benefits them as individuals."
Meyerhoff grinned at the little man's horrified face. "Never
heard of that, had you? And you've never heard of other things,
too. You've probably never heard that there are just too many
Altairians here for the food their planet can supply, and their
diet is so finicky that they just can't live on anything that
doesn't grow here. And consequently, land is the key factor
in their economy, not money; nothing but land. To get land,
it's every man for himself, and the loser starves, and their
entire legal and monetary system revolves on that principle.
They've built up the most confusing and impossible system of
barter and trade imaginable, aimed at individual survival, with
land as the value behind the credit. That explains the lying—of
course they're liars, with an economy like that. They've
completely missed the concept of truth. Pathological? You bet
they're pathological! Only a fool would tell the truth when his
life depended on his being a better liar than the next guy!
Lying is the time-honored tradition, with their entire legal
system built around it."
Zeckler snorted. "But how could they
possibly
have a legal
system? I mean, if they don't recognize the truth when it slaps
them in the face?"
Meyerhoff shrugged. "As we understand legal systems, I
suppose they don't have one. They have only the haziest idea
what truth represents, and they've shrugged off the idea as
impossible and useless." He chuckled maliciously. "So you
went out and found a chunk of ground in the uplands, and
sold it to a dozen separate, self-centered, half-starved natives!
Encroachment on private property is legal grounds for murder
on this planet, and twelve of them descended on the same
chunk of land at the same time, all armed with title-deeds."
Meyerhoff sighed. "You've got twelve mad Altairians in your
hair. You've got a mad planet in your hair. And in the meantime,
Terra's most valuable uranium source in five centuries
is threatening to cut off supply unless they see your blood
splattered liberally all the way from here to the equator."
Zeckler was visibly shaken. "Look," he said weakly, "so I
wasn't so smart. What am I going to do? I mean, are you
going to sit quietly by and let them butcher me? How could
I defend myself in a legal setup like
this
?"
Meyerhoff smiled coolly. "You're going to get your sly little
con-man brain to working, I think," he said softly. "By Interplanetary
Rules, they have to give you a trial in Terran legal
form—judge, jury, court procedure, all that folderol. They
think it's a big joke—after all, what could a judicial oath mean
to them?—but they agreed. Only thing is, they're going to
hang you, if they die trying. So you'd better get those stunted
little wits of yours clicking—and if you try to implicate
me
,
even a little bit, I'll be out of there so fast you won't know
what happened."
With that Meyerhoff walked to the door. He jerked it inward
sharply, and spilled two guards over on their faces.
"Privacy," he grunted, and started back up the slippery corridor.
It certainly
looked
like a courtroom, at any rate. In the front
of the long, damp stone room was a bench, with a seat behind
it, and a small straight chair to the right. To the left was a stand
with twelve chairs—larger chairs, with a railing running along
the front. The rest of the room was filled almost to the door
with seats facing the bench. Zeckler followed the shaggy-haired
guard into the room, nodding approvingly. "Not such a bad
arrangement," he said. "They must have gotten the idea fast."
Meyerhoff wiped the perspiration from his forehead, and
shot the little con-man a stony glance. "At least you've got
a courtroom, a judge, and a jury for this mess. Beyond that—"
He shrugged eloquently. "I can't make any promises."
In the back of the room a door burst open with a bang.
Loud, harsh voices were heard as half a dozen of the huge
Altairians attempted to push through the door at once. Zeckler
clamped on the headset to his translator unit, and watched the
hubbub in the anteroom with growing alarm. Finally the question
of precedent seemed to be settled, and a group of the
Altairians filed in, in order of stature, stalking across the room
in flowing black robes, pug-nosed faces glowering with self-importance.
They descended upon the jury box, grunting and
scrapping with each other for the first-row seats, and the judge
took his place with obvious satisfaction behind the heavy
wooden bench. Finally, the prosecuting attorney appeared,
flanked by two clerks, who took their places beside him. The
prosecutor eyed Zeckler with cold malevolence, then turned
and delivered a sly wink at the judge.
In a moment the room was a hubbub as it filled with the
huge, bumbling, bear-like creatures, jostling each other and
fighting for seats, growling and complaining. Two small fights
broke out in the rear, but were quickly subdued by the group
of gendarmes guarding the entrance. Finally the judge glared
down at Zeckler with all three eyes, and pounded the bench top
with a wooden mallet until the roar of activity subsided. The
jurymen wriggled uncomfortably in their seats, exchanging
winks, and finally turned their attention to the front of the
court.
"We are reading the case of the people of Altair I," the
judge's voice roared out, "against one Harry Zeckler—" he
paused for a long, impressive moment—"Terran." The courtroom
immediately burst into an angry growl, until the judge
pounded the bench five or six times more. "This—creature—is
hereby accused of the following crimes," the judge bellowed.
"Conspiracy to overthrow the government of Altair I. Brutal
murder of seventeen law-abiding citizens of the village of
Karzan at the third hour before dawn in the second period
after his arrival. Desecration of the Temple of our beloved
Goddess Zermat, Queen of the Harvest. Conspiracy with the
lesser gods to cause the unprecedented drought in the Dermatti
section of our fair globe. Obscene exposure of his pouch-marks
in a public square. Four separate and distinct charges of jail-break
and bribery—" The judge pounded the bench for order—"Espionage
with the accursed scum of Altair II in preparation
for interplanetary invasion."
The little con-man's jaw sagged lower and lower, the color
draining from his face. He turned, wide-eyed, to Meyerhoff,
then back to the judge.
"The Chairman of the Jury," said the Judge succinctly, "will
read the verdict."
The little native in the front of the jury-box popped up like
a puppet on a string. "Defendant found guilty on all counts,"
he said.
"Defendant is guilty! The court will pronounce sentence—"
"
Now wait a minute!
" Zeckler was on his feet, wild-eyed.
"What kind of railroad job—"
The judge blinked disappointedly at Paul Meyerhoff. "Not
yet?" he asked, unhappily.
"No." Meyerhoff's hands twitched nervously. "Not yet, Your
Honor. Later, Your Honor. The trial comes
first
."
The judge looked as if his candy had been stolen. "But you
said
I should call for the verdict."
"Later. You have to have the trial before you can have the
verdict."
The Altairian shrugged indifferently. "Now—later—" he
muttered.
"Have the prosecutor call his first witness," said Meyerhoff.
Zeckler leaned over, his face ashen. "These charges," he
whispered. "They're insane!"
"Of course they are," Meyerhoff whispered back.
"But what am I going to—"
"Sit tight. Let
them
set things up."
"But those
lies
. They're liars, the whole pack of them—" He
broke off as the prosecutor roared a name.
The shaggy brute who took the stand was wearing a bright
purple hat which sat rakishly over one ear. He grinned the
Altairian equivalent of a hungry grin at the prosecutor. Then
he cleared his throat and started. "This Terran riffraff—"
"The oath," muttered the judge. "We've got to have the
oath."
The prosecutor nodded, and four natives moved forward,
carrying huge inscribed marble slabs to the front of the court.
One by one the chunks were reverently piled in a heap at the
witness's feet. The witness placed a huge, hairy paw on the
cairn, and the prosecutor said, "Do you swear to tell the truth,
the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, so help you—" he
paused to squint at the paper in his hand, and finished on a
puzzled note, "—Goddess?"
The witness removed the paw from the rock pile long enough
to scratch his ear. Then he replaced it, and replied, "Of course,"
in an injured tone.
"Then tell this court what you have seen of the activities of
this abominable wretch."
The witness settled back into the chair, fixing one eye on
Zeckler's face, another on the prosecutor, and closing the third
as if in meditation. "I think it happened on the fourth night
of the seventh crossing of Altair II (may the Goddess cast
a drought upon it)—or was it the seventh night of the fourth
crossing?—" he grinned apologetically at the judge—"when I
was making my way back through town toward my blessed
land-plot, minding my own business, Your Honor, after weeks
of bargaining for the crop I was harvesting. Suddenly from the
shadow of the building, this creature—" he waved a paw at
Zeckler—"stopped me in my tracks with a vicious cry. He had
a weapon I'd never seen before, and before I could find my
voice he forced me back against the wall. I could see by the
cruel glint in his eyes that there was no warmth, no sympathy
in his heart, that I was—"
"Objection!" Zeckler squealed plaintively, jumping to his
feet. "This witness can't even remember what night he's talking
about!"
The judge looked startled. Then he pawed feverishly through
his bundle of notes. "Overruled," he said abruptly. "Continue,
please."
The witness glowered at Zeckler. "As I was saying before
this loutish interruption," he muttered, "I could see that I was
face to face with the most desperate of criminal types, even
for Terrans. Note the shape of his head, the flabbiness of his
ears. I was petrified with fear. And then, helpless as I was, this
two-legged abomination began to shower me with threats of
evil to my blessed home, dark threats of poisoning my land
unless I would tell him where he could find the resting place
of our blessed Goddess—"
"I never saw him before in my life," Zeckler moaned to
Meyerhoff. "Listen to him! Why should I care where their
Goddess—"
Meyerhoff gave him a stony look. "The Goddess runs things
around here. She makes it rain. If it doesn't rain, somebody's
insulted her. It's very simple."
"But how can I fight testimony like that?"
"I doubt if you
can
fight it."
"But they can't prove a word of it—" He looked at the jury,
who were listening enraptured to the second witness on the
stand. This one was testifying regarding the butcherous slaughter
of eighteen (or was it twenty-three? Oh, yes, twenty-three)
women and children in the suburban village of Karzan. The
pogrom, it seemed, had been accomplished by an energy
weapon which ate great, gaping holes in the sides of buildings.
A third witness took the stand, continuing the drone as the
room grew hotter and muggier. Zeckler grew paler and paler,
his eyes turning glassy as the testimony piled up. "But it's not
true
," he whispered to Meyerhoff.
"Of course it isn't! Can't you understand?
These people
have no regard for truth.
It's stupid, to them, silly, a mark of
low intelligence. The only thing in the world they have any
respect for is a liar bigger and more skillful than they are."
Zeckler jerked around abruptly as he heard his name bellowed
out. "Does the defendant have anything to say before
the jury delivers the verdict?"
"Do I have—" Zeckler was across the room in a flash, his
pale cheeks suddenly taking on a feverish glow. He sat down
gingerly on the witness chair, facing the judge, his eyes bright
with fear and excitement. "Your—Your Honor, I—I have a
statement to make which will have a most important bearing
on this case. You must listen with the greatest care." He
glanced quickly at Meyerhoff, and back to the judge. "Your
Honor," he said in a hushed voice. "You are in gravest of
danger. All of you. Your lives—your very land is at stake."
The judge blinked, and shuffled through his notes hurriedly
as a murmur arose in the court. "Our land?"
"Your lives, your land, everything you hold dear," Zeckler
said quickly, licking his lips nervously. "You must try to
understand me—" he glanced apprehensively over his shoulder
"now, because I may not live long enough to repeat what
I am about to tell you—"
The murmur quieted down, all ears straining in their headsets
to hear his words. "These charges," he continued, "all of
them—they're perfectly true. At least, they
seem
to be perfectly
true. But in every instance, I was working with heart and
soul, risking my life, for the welfare of your beautiful planet."
There was a loud hiss from the back of the court. Zeckler
frowned and rubbed his hands together. "It was my misfortune,"
he said, "to go to the wrong planet when I first came to
Altair from my homeland on Terra. I—I landed on Altair II,
a grave mistake, but as it turned out, a very fortunate error.
Because in attempting to arrange trading in that frightful place,
I made certain contacts." His voice trembled, and sank lower.
"I learned the horrible thing which is about to happen to this
planet, at the hands of those barbarians. The conspiracy is
theirs, not mine. They have bribed your Goddess, flattered her
and lied to her, coerced her all-powerful goodness to their own
evil interests, preparing for the day when they could persuade
her to cast your land into the fiery furnace of a ten-year-drought—"
Somebody in the middle of the court burst out laughing.
One by one the natives nudged one another, and booed, and
guffawed, until the rising tide of racket drowned out Zeckler's
words. "The defendant is obviously lying," roared the prosecutor
over the pandemonium. "Any fool knows that the Goddess
can't be bribed. How could she be a Goddess if she could?"
Zeckler grew paler. "But—perhaps they were very clever—"
"And how could they flatter her, when she knows, beyond
doubt, that she is the most exquisitely radiant creature in all
the Universe? And
you
dare to insult her, drag her name in
the dirt."
The hisses grew louder, more belligerent. Cries of "Butcher
him!" and "Scald his bowels!" rose from the courtroom. The
judge banged for silence, his eyes angry.
"Unless the defendant wishes to take up more of our precious
time with these ridiculous lies, the jury—"
"Wait! Your Honor, I request a short recess before I present
my final plea."
"Recess?"
"A few moments to collect my thoughts, to arrange my
case."
The judge settled back with a disgusted snarl. "Do I have
to?" he asked Meyerhoff.
Meyerhoff nodded. The judge shrugged, pointing over his
shoulder to the anteroom. "You can go in there," he said.
Somehow, Zeckler managed to stumble from the witness
stand, amid riotous boos and hisses, and tottered into the anteroom.
Zeckler puffed hungrily on a cigarette, and looked up at
Meyerhoff with haunted eyes. "It—it doesn't look so good,"
he muttered.
Meyerhoff's eyes were worried, too. For some reason, he
felt a surge of pity and admiration for the haggard con-man.
"It's worse than I'd anticipated," he admitted glumly. "That
was a good try, but you just don't know enough about them
and their Goddess." He sat down wearily. "I don't see what
you can do. They want your blood, and they're going to have
it. They just won't believe you, no matter
how
big a lie you
tell."
Zeckler sat in silence for a moment. "This lying business,"
he said finally, "exactly how does it work?"
"The biggest, most convincing liar wins. It's as simple as
that. It doesn't matter how outlandish a whopper you tell.
Unless, of course, they've made up their minds that you just
naturally aren't as big a liar as they are. And it looks like that's
just what they've done. It wouldn't make any difference to
them
what
you say—unless, somehow, you could
make
them
believe it."
Zeckler frowned. "And how do they regard the—the biggest
liar? I mean, how do they feel toward him?"
Meyerhoff shifted uneasily. "It's hard to say. It's been my
experience that they respect him highly—maybe even fear him
a little. After all, the most convincing liar always wins in any
transaction, so he gets more land, more food, more power.
Yes, I think the biggest liar could go where he pleased without
any interference."
Zeckler was on his feet, his eyes suddenly bright with excitement.
"Wait a minute," he said tensely. "To tell them a lie
that they'd have to believe—a lie they simply couldn't
help
but believe—" He turned on Meyerhoff, his hands trembling.
"Do they
think
the way we do? I mean, with logic, cause and
effect, examining evidence and drawing conclusions? Given
certain evidence, would they have to draw the same conclusions
that we have to draw?"
Meyerhoff blinked. "Well—yes. Oh, yes, they're perfectly
logical."
Zeckler's eyes flashed, and a huge grin broke out on his
sallow face. His thin body fairly shook. He started hopping
up and down on one foot, staring idiotically into space. "If I
could only think—" he muttered. "Somebody—somewhere—something
I read."
"Whatever are you talking about?"
"It was a Greek, I think—"
Meyerhoff stared at him. "Oh, come now. Have you gone
off your rocker completely? You've got a problem on your
hands, man."
"No, no, I've got a problem in the bag!" Zeckler's cheeks
flushed. "Let's go back in there—I think I've got an answer!"
The courtroom quieted the moment they opened the door,
and the judge banged the gavel for silence. As soon as Zeckler
had taken his seat on the witness stand, the judge turned to
the head juryman. "Now, then," he said with happy finality.
"The jury—"
"Hold on! Just one minute more."
The judge stared down at Zeckler as if he were a bug on a
rock. "Oh, yes. You had something else to say. Well, go ahead
and say it."
Zeckler looked sharply around the hushed room. "You want
to convict me," he said softly, "in the worst sort of way. Isn't
that right?"
Eyes swung toward him. The judge broke into an evil grin.
"That's right."
"But you can't really convict me until you've considered
carefully any statement I make in my own defense. Isn't that
right?"
The judge looked uncomfortable. "If you've got something
to say, go ahead and say it."
"I've got just one statement to make. Short and sweet. But
you'd better listen to it, and think it out carefully before you
decide that you really want to convict me." He paused, and
glanced slyly at the judge. "You don't think much of those
who tell the truth, it seems. Well, put
this
statement in your
record, then." His voice was loud and clear in the still room.
"
All Earthmen are absolutely incapable of telling the truth.
"
Puzzled frowns appeared on the jury's faces. One or two
exchanged startled glances, and the room was still as death.
The judge stared at him, and then at Meyerhoff, then back.
"But you"—he stammered. "You're"—He stopped in mid-sentence,
his jaw sagging.
One of the jurymen let out a little squeak, and fainted dead
away. It took, all in all, about ten seconds for the statement
to soak in.
And then pandemonium broke loose in the courtroom.
"Really," said Harry Zeckler loftily, "it was so obvious I'm
amazed that it didn't occur to me first thing." He settled himself
down comfortably in the control cabin of the Interplanetary
Rocket and grinned at the outline of Altair IV looming larger
in the view screen.
Paul Meyerhoff stared stonily at the controls, his lips compressed
angrily. "You might at least have told me what you
were planning."
"And take the chance of being overheard? Don't be silly.
It had to come as a bombshell. I had to establish myself as a
liar—the prize liar of them all, but I had to tell the sort of lie
that they simply could not cope with. Something that would
throw them into such utter confusion that they wouldn't
dare
convict me." He grinned impishly at Meyerhoff. "The paradox
of Epimenides the Cretan. It really stopped them cold. They
knew
I was an Earthmen, which meant that my statement that
Earthmen were liars was a lie, which meant that maybe I wasn't
a liar, in which case—oh, it was tailor-made."
"It sure was." Meyerhoff's voice was a snarl.
"Well, it made me out a liar in a class they couldn't approach,
didn't it?"
Meyerhoff's face was purple with anger. "Oh, indeed it did!
And it put
all
Earthmen in exactly the same class, too."
"So what's honor among thieves? I got off, didn't I?"
Meyerhoff turned on him fiercely. "Oh, you got off just fine.
You scared the living daylights out of them. And in an eon of
lying they never have run up against a short-circuit like that.
You've also completely botched any hope of ever setting up
a trading alliance with Altair I, and that includes uranium, too.
Smart people don't gamble with loaded dice. You scared them
so badly they don't want anything to do with us."
Zeckler's grin broadened, and he leaned back luxuriously.
"Ah, well. After all, the Trading Alliance was
your
outlook,
wasn't it? What a pity!" He clucked his tongue sadly. "Me,
I've got a fortune in credits sitting back at the consulate waiting
for me—enough to keep me on silk for quite a while, I
might say. I think I'll just take a nice, long vacation."
Meyerhoff turned to him, and a twinkle of malignant glee
appeared in his eyes. "Yes, I think you will. I'm quite sure of
it, in fact. Won't cost you a cent, either."
"Eh?"
Meyerhoff grinned unpleasantly. He brushed an imaginary
lint fleck from his lapel, and looked up at Zeckler slyly. "That—uh—jury
trial. The Altairians weren't any too happy to
oblige. They wanted to execute you outright. Thought a trial
was awfully silly—until they got their money back, of course.
Not too much—just three million credits."
Zeckler went white. "But that money was in banking custody!"
"Is that right? My goodness. You don't suppose they could
have lost those papers, do you?" Meyerhoff grinned at the
little con-man. "And incidentally, you're under arrest, you
know."
A choking sound came from Zeckler's throat. "
Arrest!
"
"Oh, yes. Didn't I tell you? Conspiring to undermine the
authority of the Terran Trading Commission. Serious charge,
you know. Yes, I think we'll take a nice long vacation together,
straight back to Terra. And there I think you'll face a jury
trial."
Zeckler spluttered. "There's no evidence—you've got nothing
on me! What kind of a frame are you trying to pull?"
"A
lovely
frame. Airtight. A frame from the bottom up, and
you're right square in the middle. And this time—" Meyerhoff
tapped a cigarette on his thumb with happy finality—"this time
I
don't
think you'll get off."
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from "Tiger by the Tail and Other Science Fiction
Stories by Alan E. Nourse" and was first published in
If Magazine
January 1954. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright
on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | Meyeroff is Zeckler's legal representation | Meyeroff is an official sent to extradite Zeckler | Zeckler is a con man for Meyeroff | Zeckler abetted in a crime that Meyeroff perpetrated | 1 |
24275_U13YG5XY_2 | What crime has Zeckler committed to warrant imprisonment? | Letter
of
the
Law
by Alan E. Nourse
The
place was dark and damp, and smelled like moldy leaves.
Meyerhoff followed the huge, bear-like Altairian guard
down the slippery flagstones of the corridor, sniffing the
dead, musty air with distaste. He drew his carefully tailored
Terran-styled jacket closer about his shoulders, shivering as his
eyes avoided the black, yawning cell-holes they were passing.
His foot slipped on the slimy flags from time to time, and
finally he paused to wipe the caked mud from his trouser leg.
"How much farther is it?" he shouted angrily.
The guard waved a heavy paw vaguely into the blackness
ahead. Quite suddenly the corridor took a sharp bend, and the
Altairian stopped, producing a huge key ring from some obscure
fold of his hairy hide. "I still don't see any reason for
all the fuss," he grumbled in a wounded tone. "We've treated
him like a brother."
One of the huge steel doors clicked open. Meyerhoff peered
into the blackness, catching a vaguely human outline against
the back wall. "Harry?" he called sharply.
There was a startled gasp from within, and a skinny, gnarled
little man suddenly appeared in the guard's light, like a grotesque,
twisted ghost out of the blackness. Wide blue eyes
regarded Meyerhoff from beneath uneven black eyebrows, and
then the little man's face broke into a crafty grin. "Paul! So
they sent
you
! I knew I could count on it!" He executed a
deep, awkward bow, motioning Meyerhoff into the dark
cubicle. "Not much to offer you," he said slyly, "but it's the
best I can do under the circumstances."
Meyerhoff scowled, and turned abruptly to the guard. "We'll
have some privacy now, if you please. Interplanetary ruling.
And leave us the light."
The guard grumbled, and started for the door. "It's about
time you showed up!" cried the little man in the cell. "Great
day! Lucky they sent you, pal. Why, I've been in here for
years—"
"Look, Zeckler, the name is Meyerhoff, and I'm not your
pal," Meyerhoff snapped. "And you've been here for two
weeks, three days, and approximately four hours. You're getting
as bad as your gentle guards when it comes to bandying
the truth around." He peered through the dim light at the
gaunt face of the prisoner. Zeckler's face was dark with a
week's beard, and his bloodshot eyes belied the cocky grin
on his lips. His clothes were smeared and sodden, streaked
with great splotches of mud and moss. Meyerhoff's face softened
a little. "So Harry Zeckler's in a jam again," he said.
"You
look
as if they'd treated you like a brother."
The little man snorted. "These overgrown teddy-bears don't
know what brotherhood means, nor humanity, either. Bread
and water I've been getting, nothing more, and then only if they
feel like bringing it down." He sank wearily down on the rock
bench along the wall. "I thought you'd never get here! I sent
an appeal to the Terran Consulate the first day I was arrested.
What happened? I mean, all they had to do was get a man
over here, get the extradition papers signed, and provide transportation
off the planet for me. Why so much time? I've been
sitting here rotting—" He broke off in mid-sentence and stared
at Meyerhoff. "You
brought
the papers, didn't you? I mean,
we can leave now?"
Meyerhoff stared at the little man with a mixture of pity and
disgust. "You are a prize fool," he said finally. "Did you know
that?"
Zeckler's eyes widened. "What do you mean, fool? So I
spend a couple of weeks in this pneumonia trap. The deal was
worth it! I've got three million credits sitting in the Terran
Consulate on Altair V, just waiting for me to walk in and pick
them up. Three million credits—do you hear? That's enough
to set me up for life!"
Meyerhoff nodded grimly. "
If
you live long enough to walk
in and pick them up, that is."
"What do you mean, if?"
Meyerhoff sank down beside the man, his voice a tense
whisper in the musty cell. "I mean that right now you are
practically dead. You may not know it, but you are. You walk
into a newly opened planet with your smart little bag of tricks,
walk in here with a shaky passport and no permit, with no
knowledge of the natives outside of two paragraphs of inaccuracies
in the Explorer's Guide, and even then you're not
content to come in and sell something legitimate, something
the natives might conceivably be able to use. No, nothing so
simple for you. You have to pull your usual high-pressure stuff.
And this time, buddy, you're paying the piper."
"
You mean I'm not being extradited?
"
Meyerhoff grinned unpleasantly. "I mean precisely that.
You've committed a crime here—a major crime. The Altairians
are sore about it. And the Terran Consulate isn't willing
to sell all the trading possibilities here down the river just to
get you out of a mess. You're going to stand trial—and these
natives are out to get you. Personally, I think they're
going
to get you."
Zeckler stood up shakily. "You can't believe anything the
natives say," he said uneasily. "They're pathological liars.
Why, you should see what they tried to sell
me
! You've never
seen such a pack of liars as these critters." He glanced up at
Meyerhoff. "They'll probably drop a little fine on me and let
me go."
"A little fine of one Terran neck." Meyerhoff grinned nastily.
"You've committed the most heinous crime these creatures can
imagine, and they're going to get you for it if it's the last thing
they do. I'm afraid, my friend, that your con-man days are
over."
Zeckler fished in the other man's pocket, extracted a cigarette,
and lighted it with trembling fingers. "It's bad, then,"
he said finally.
"It's bad, all right."
Some shadow of the sly, elfin grin crept over the little con-man's
face. "Well, at any rate, I'm glad they sent you over,"
he said weakly. "Nothing like a good lawyer to handle a trial."
"
Lawyer?
Not me! Oh, no. Sorry, but no thanks." Meyerhoff
chuckled. "I'm your advisor, old boy. Nothing else. I'm here
to keep you from botching things up still worse for the Trading
Commission, that's all. I wouldn't get tangled up in a mess
with those creatures for anything!" He shook his head. "You're
your own lawyer, Mr. Super-salesman. It's all your show. And
you'd better get your head out of the sand, or you're going to
lose a case like it's never been lost before!"
Meyerhoff watched the man's pale face, and shook his head.
In a way, he thought, it was a pity to see such a change in the
rosy-cheeked, dapper, cocksure little man who had talked his
way glibly in and out of more jams than Meyerhoff could
count. Trading brought scalpers; it was almost inevitable that
where rich and unexploited trading ground was uncovered, it
would first fall prey to the fast-trading boys. They spread out
from Terra with the first wave of exploration—the slick, fast-talking
con-men who could work new territories unfettered by
the legal restrictions that soon closed down the more established
planets. The first men in were the richest out, and
through some curious quirk of the Terrestrial mind, they knew
they could count on Terran protection, however crooked and
underhand their methods.
But occasionally a situation arose where the civilization and
social practices of the alien victims made it unwise to tamper
with them. Altair I had been recognized at once by the Trading
Commission as a commercial prize of tremendous value, but
early reports had warned of the danger of wildcat trading on
the little, musty, jungle-like planet with its shaggy, three-eyed
inhabitants—warned specifically against the confidence tactics
so frequently used—but there was always somebody, Meyerhoff
reflected sourly, who just didn't get the word.
Zeckler puffed nervously on his cigarette, his narrow face
a study in troubled concentration. "But I didn't
do
anything!"
he exploded finally. "So I pulled an old con game. So what?
Why should they get so excited? So I clipped a few thousand
credits, pulled a little fast business." He shrugged eloquently,
spreading his hands. "Everybody's doing it. They do it to each
other without batting an eye. You should
see
these critters
operate on each other. Why, my little scheme was peanuts by
comparison."
Meyerhoff pulled a pipe from his pocket, and began stuffing
the bowl with infinite patience. "And precisely what sort of
con game was it?" he asked quietly.
Zeckler shrugged again. "The simplest, tiredest, moldiest
old racket that ever made a quick nickel. Remember the old
Terran gag about the Brooklyn Bridge? The same thing. Only
these critters didn't want bridges. They wanted land—this
gooey, slimy swamp they call 'farm land.' So I gave them
what they wanted. I just sold them some land."
Meyerhoff nodded fiercely. "You sure did. A hundred square
kilos at a swipe. Only you sold the same hundred square kilos
to a dozen different natives." Suddenly he threw back his hands
and roared. "Of all the things you
shouldn't
have done—"
"But what's a chunk of land?"
Meyerhoff shook his head hopelessly. "If you hadn't been
so greedy, you'd have found out what a chunk of land was to
these natives before you started peddling it. You'd have found
out other things about them, too. You'd have learned that
in spite of all their bumbling and fussing and squabbling
they're not so dull. You'd have found out that they're marsupials,
and that two out of five of them get thrown out of
their mother's pouch before they're old enough to survive.
You'd have realized that they have to start fighting for individual
rights almost as soon as they're born. Anything goes,
as long as it benefits them as individuals."
Meyerhoff grinned at the little man's horrified face. "Never
heard of that, had you? And you've never heard of other things,
too. You've probably never heard that there are just too many
Altairians here for the food their planet can supply, and their
diet is so finicky that they just can't live on anything that
doesn't grow here. And consequently, land is the key factor
in their economy, not money; nothing but land. To get land,
it's every man for himself, and the loser starves, and their
entire legal and monetary system revolves on that principle.
They've built up the most confusing and impossible system of
barter and trade imaginable, aimed at individual survival, with
land as the value behind the credit. That explains the lying—of
course they're liars, with an economy like that. They've
completely missed the concept of truth. Pathological? You bet
they're pathological! Only a fool would tell the truth when his
life depended on his being a better liar than the next guy!
Lying is the time-honored tradition, with their entire legal
system built around it."
Zeckler snorted. "But how could they
possibly
have a legal
system? I mean, if they don't recognize the truth when it slaps
them in the face?"
Meyerhoff shrugged. "As we understand legal systems, I
suppose they don't have one. They have only the haziest idea
what truth represents, and they've shrugged off the idea as
impossible and useless." He chuckled maliciously. "So you
went out and found a chunk of ground in the uplands, and
sold it to a dozen separate, self-centered, half-starved natives!
Encroachment on private property is legal grounds for murder
on this planet, and twelve of them descended on the same
chunk of land at the same time, all armed with title-deeds."
Meyerhoff sighed. "You've got twelve mad Altairians in your
hair. You've got a mad planet in your hair. And in the meantime,
Terra's most valuable uranium source in five centuries
is threatening to cut off supply unless they see your blood
splattered liberally all the way from here to the equator."
Zeckler was visibly shaken. "Look," he said weakly, "so I
wasn't so smart. What am I going to do? I mean, are you
going to sit quietly by and let them butcher me? How could
I defend myself in a legal setup like
this
?"
Meyerhoff smiled coolly. "You're going to get your sly little
con-man brain to working, I think," he said softly. "By Interplanetary
Rules, they have to give you a trial in Terran legal
form—judge, jury, court procedure, all that folderol. They
think it's a big joke—after all, what could a judicial oath mean
to them?—but they agreed. Only thing is, they're going to
hang you, if they die trying. So you'd better get those stunted
little wits of yours clicking—and if you try to implicate
me
,
even a little bit, I'll be out of there so fast you won't know
what happened."
With that Meyerhoff walked to the door. He jerked it inward
sharply, and spilled two guards over on their faces.
"Privacy," he grunted, and started back up the slippery corridor.
It certainly
looked
like a courtroom, at any rate. In the front
of the long, damp stone room was a bench, with a seat behind
it, and a small straight chair to the right. To the left was a stand
with twelve chairs—larger chairs, with a railing running along
the front. The rest of the room was filled almost to the door
with seats facing the bench. Zeckler followed the shaggy-haired
guard into the room, nodding approvingly. "Not such a bad
arrangement," he said. "They must have gotten the idea fast."
Meyerhoff wiped the perspiration from his forehead, and
shot the little con-man a stony glance. "At least you've got
a courtroom, a judge, and a jury for this mess. Beyond that—"
He shrugged eloquently. "I can't make any promises."
In the back of the room a door burst open with a bang.
Loud, harsh voices were heard as half a dozen of the huge
Altairians attempted to push through the door at once. Zeckler
clamped on the headset to his translator unit, and watched the
hubbub in the anteroom with growing alarm. Finally the question
of precedent seemed to be settled, and a group of the
Altairians filed in, in order of stature, stalking across the room
in flowing black robes, pug-nosed faces glowering with self-importance.
They descended upon the jury box, grunting and
scrapping with each other for the first-row seats, and the judge
took his place with obvious satisfaction behind the heavy
wooden bench. Finally, the prosecuting attorney appeared,
flanked by two clerks, who took their places beside him. The
prosecutor eyed Zeckler with cold malevolence, then turned
and delivered a sly wink at the judge.
In a moment the room was a hubbub as it filled with the
huge, bumbling, bear-like creatures, jostling each other and
fighting for seats, growling and complaining. Two small fights
broke out in the rear, but were quickly subdued by the group
of gendarmes guarding the entrance. Finally the judge glared
down at Zeckler with all three eyes, and pounded the bench top
with a wooden mallet until the roar of activity subsided. The
jurymen wriggled uncomfortably in their seats, exchanging
winks, and finally turned their attention to the front of the
court.
"We are reading the case of the people of Altair I," the
judge's voice roared out, "against one Harry Zeckler—" he
paused for a long, impressive moment—"Terran." The courtroom
immediately burst into an angry growl, until the judge
pounded the bench five or six times more. "This—creature—is
hereby accused of the following crimes," the judge bellowed.
"Conspiracy to overthrow the government of Altair I. Brutal
murder of seventeen law-abiding citizens of the village of
Karzan at the third hour before dawn in the second period
after his arrival. Desecration of the Temple of our beloved
Goddess Zermat, Queen of the Harvest. Conspiracy with the
lesser gods to cause the unprecedented drought in the Dermatti
section of our fair globe. Obscene exposure of his pouch-marks
in a public square. Four separate and distinct charges of jail-break
and bribery—" The judge pounded the bench for order—"Espionage
with the accursed scum of Altair II in preparation
for interplanetary invasion."
The little con-man's jaw sagged lower and lower, the color
draining from his face. He turned, wide-eyed, to Meyerhoff,
then back to the judge.
"The Chairman of the Jury," said the Judge succinctly, "will
read the verdict."
The little native in the front of the jury-box popped up like
a puppet on a string. "Defendant found guilty on all counts,"
he said.
"Defendant is guilty! The court will pronounce sentence—"
"
Now wait a minute!
" Zeckler was on his feet, wild-eyed.
"What kind of railroad job—"
The judge blinked disappointedly at Paul Meyerhoff. "Not
yet?" he asked, unhappily.
"No." Meyerhoff's hands twitched nervously. "Not yet, Your
Honor. Later, Your Honor. The trial comes
first
."
The judge looked as if his candy had been stolen. "But you
said
I should call for the verdict."
"Later. You have to have the trial before you can have the
verdict."
The Altairian shrugged indifferently. "Now—later—" he
muttered.
"Have the prosecutor call his first witness," said Meyerhoff.
Zeckler leaned over, his face ashen. "These charges," he
whispered. "They're insane!"
"Of course they are," Meyerhoff whispered back.
"But what am I going to—"
"Sit tight. Let
them
set things up."
"But those
lies
. They're liars, the whole pack of them—" He
broke off as the prosecutor roared a name.
The shaggy brute who took the stand was wearing a bright
purple hat which sat rakishly over one ear. He grinned the
Altairian equivalent of a hungry grin at the prosecutor. Then
he cleared his throat and started. "This Terran riffraff—"
"The oath," muttered the judge. "We've got to have the
oath."
The prosecutor nodded, and four natives moved forward,
carrying huge inscribed marble slabs to the front of the court.
One by one the chunks were reverently piled in a heap at the
witness's feet. The witness placed a huge, hairy paw on the
cairn, and the prosecutor said, "Do you swear to tell the truth,
the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, so help you—" he
paused to squint at the paper in his hand, and finished on a
puzzled note, "—Goddess?"
The witness removed the paw from the rock pile long enough
to scratch his ear. Then he replaced it, and replied, "Of course,"
in an injured tone.
"Then tell this court what you have seen of the activities of
this abominable wretch."
The witness settled back into the chair, fixing one eye on
Zeckler's face, another on the prosecutor, and closing the third
as if in meditation. "I think it happened on the fourth night
of the seventh crossing of Altair II (may the Goddess cast
a drought upon it)—or was it the seventh night of the fourth
crossing?—" he grinned apologetically at the judge—"when I
was making my way back through town toward my blessed
land-plot, minding my own business, Your Honor, after weeks
of bargaining for the crop I was harvesting. Suddenly from the
shadow of the building, this creature—" he waved a paw at
Zeckler—"stopped me in my tracks with a vicious cry. He had
a weapon I'd never seen before, and before I could find my
voice he forced me back against the wall. I could see by the
cruel glint in his eyes that there was no warmth, no sympathy
in his heart, that I was—"
"Objection!" Zeckler squealed plaintively, jumping to his
feet. "This witness can't even remember what night he's talking
about!"
The judge looked startled. Then he pawed feverishly through
his bundle of notes. "Overruled," he said abruptly. "Continue,
please."
The witness glowered at Zeckler. "As I was saying before
this loutish interruption," he muttered, "I could see that I was
face to face with the most desperate of criminal types, even
for Terrans. Note the shape of his head, the flabbiness of his
ears. I was petrified with fear. And then, helpless as I was, this
two-legged abomination began to shower me with threats of
evil to my blessed home, dark threats of poisoning my land
unless I would tell him where he could find the resting place
of our blessed Goddess—"
"I never saw him before in my life," Zeckler moaned to
Meyerhoff. "Listen to him! Why should I care where their
Goddess—"
Meyerhoff gave him a stony look. "The Goddess runs things
around here. She makes it rain. If it doesn't rain, somebody's
insulted her. It's very simple."
"But how can I fight testimony like that?"
"I doubt if you
can
fight it."
"But they can't prove a word of it—" He looked at the jury,
who were listening enraptured to the second witness on the
stand. This one was testifying regarding the butcherous slaughter
of eighteen (or was it twenty-three? Oh, yes, twenty-three)
women and children in the suburban village of Karzan. The
pogrom, it seemed, had been accomplished by an energy
weapon which ate great, gaping holes in the sides of buildings.
A third witness took the stand, continuing the drone as the
room grew hotter and muggier. Zeckler grew paler and paler,
his eyes turning glassy as the testimony piled up. "But it's not
true
," he whispered to Meyerhoff.
"Of course it isn't! Can't you understand?
These people
have no regard for truth.
It's stupid, to them, silly, a mark of
low intelligence. The only thing in the world they have any
respect for is a liar bigger and more skillful than they are."
Zeckler jerked around abruptly as he heard his name bellowed
out. "Does the defendant have anything to say before
the jury delivers the verdict?"
"Do I have—" Zeckler was across the room in a flash, his
pale cheeks suddenly taking on a feverish glow. He sat down
gingerly on the witness chair, facing the judge, his eyes bright
with fear and excitement. "Your—Your Honor, I—I have a
statement to make which will have a most important bearing
on this case. You must listen with the greatest care." He
glanced quickly at Meyerhoff, and back to the judge. "Your
Honor," he said in a hushed voice. "You are in gravest of
danger. All of you. Your lives—your very land is at stake."
The judge blinked, and shuffled through his notes hurriedly
as a murmur arose in the court. "Our land?"
"Your lives, your land, everything you hold dear," Zeckler
said quickly, licking his lips nervously. "You must try to
understand me—" he glanced apprehensively over his shoulder
"now, because I may not live long enough to repeat what
I am about to tell you—"
The murmur quieted down, all ears straining in their headsets
to hear his words. "These charges," he continued, "all of
them—they're perfectly true. At least, they
seem
to be perfectly
true. But in every instance, I was working with heart and
soul, risking my life, for the welfare of your beautiful planet."
There was a loud hiss from the back of the court. Zeckler
frowned and rubbed his hands together. "It was my misfortune,"
he said, "to go to the wrong planet when I first came to
Altair from my homeland on Terra. I—I landed on Altair II,
a grave mistake, but as it turned out, a very fortunate error.
Because in attempting to arrange trading in that frightful place,
I made certain contacts." His voice trembled, and sank lower.
"I learned the horrible thing which is about to happen to this
planet, at the hands of those barbarians. The conspiracy is
theirs, not mine. They have bribed your Goddess, flattered her
and lied to her, coerced her all-powerful goodness to their own
evil interests, preparing for the day when they could persuade
her to cast your land into the fiery furnace of a ten-year-drought—"
Somebody in the middle of the court burst out laughing.
One by one the natives nudged one another, and booed, and
guffawed, until the rising tide of racket drowned out Zeckler's
words. "The defendant is obviously lying," roared the prosecutor
over the pandemonium. "Any fool knows that the Goddess
can't be bribed. How could she be a Goddess if she could?"
Zeckler grew paler. "But—perhaps they were very clever—"
"And how could they flatter her, when she knows, beyond
doubt, that she is the most exquisitely radiant creature in all
the Universe? And
you
dare to insult her, drag her name in
the dirt."
The hisses grew louder, more belligerent. Cries of "Butcher
him!" and "Scald his bowels!" rose from the courtroom. The
judge banged for silence, his eyes angry.
"Unless the defendant wishes to take up more of our precious
time with these ridiculous lies, the jury—"
"Wait! Your Honor, I request a short recess before I present
my final plea."
"Recess?"
"A few moments to collect my thoughts, to arrange my
case."
The judge settled back with a disgusted snarl. "Do I have
to?" he asked Meyerhoff.
Meyerhoff nodded. The judge shrugged, pointing over his
shoulder to the anteroom. "You can go in there," he said.
Somehow, Zeckler managed to stumble from the witness
stand, amid riotous boos and hisses, and tottered into the anteroom.
Zeckler puffed hungrily on a cigarette, and looked up at
Meyerhoff with haunted eyes. "It—it doesn't look so good,"
he muttered.
Meyerhoff's eyes were worried, too. For some reason, he
felt a surge of pity and admiration for the haggard con-man.
"It's worse than I'd anticipated," he admitted glumly. "That
was a good try, but you just don't know enough about them
and their Goddess." He sat down wearily. "I don't see what
you can do. They want your blood, and they're going to have
it. They just won't believe you, no matter
how
big a lie you
tell."
Zeckler sat in silence for a moment. "This lying business,"
he said finally, "exactly how does it work?"
"The biggest, most convincing liar wins. It's as simple as
that. It doesn't matter how outlandish a whopper you tell.
Unless, of course, they've made up their minds that you just
naturally aren't as big a liar as they are. And it looks like that's
just what they've done. It wouldn't make any difference to
them
what
you say—unless, somehow, you could
make
them
believe it."
Zeckler frowned. "And how do they regard the—the biggest
liar? I mean, how do they feel toward him?"
Meyerhoff shifted uneasily. "It's hard to say. It's been my
experience that they respect him highly—maybe even fear him
a little. After all, the most convincing liar always wins in any
transaction, so he gets more land, more food, more power.
Yes, I think the biggest liar could go where he pleased without
any interference."
Zeckler was on his feet, his eyes suddenly bright with excitement.
"Wait a minute," he said tensely. "To tell them a lie
that they'd have to believe—a lie they simply couldn't
help
but believe—" He turned on Meyerhoff, his hands trembling.
"Do they
think
the way we do? I mean, with logic, cause and
effect, examining evidence and drawing conclusions? Given
certain evidence, would they have to draw the same conclusions
that we have to draw?"
Meyerhoff blinked. "Well—yes. Oh, yes, they're perfectly
logical."
Zeckler's eyes flashed, and a huge grin broke out on his
sallow face. His thin body fairly shook. He started hopping
up and down on one foot, staring idiotically into space. "If I
could only think—" he muttered. "Somebody—somewhere—something
I read."
"Whatever are you talking about?"
"It was a Greek, I think—"
Meyerhoff stared at him. "Oh, come now. Have you gone
off your rocker completely? You've got a problem on your
hands, man."
"No, no, I've got a problem in the bag!" Zeckler's cheeks
flushed. "Let's go back in there—I think I've got an answer!"
The courtroom quieted the moment they opened the door,
and the judge banged the gavel for silence. As soon as Zeckler
had taken his seat on the witness stand, the judge turned to
the head juryman. "Now, then," he said with happy finality.
"The jury—"
"Hold on! Just one minute more."
The judge stared down at Zeckler as if he were a bug on a
rock. "Oh, yes. You had something else to say. Well, go ahead
and say it."
Zeckler looked sharply around the hushed room. "You want
to convict me," he said softly, "in the worst sort of way. Isn't
that right?"
Eyes swung toward him. The judge broke into an evil grin.
"That's right."
"But you can't really convict me until you've considered
carefully any statement I make in my own defense. Isn't that
right?"
The judge looked uncomfortable. "If you've got something
to say, go ahead and say it."
"I've got just one statement to make. Short and sweet. But
you'd better listen to it, and think it out carefully before you
decide that you really want to convict me." He paused, and
glanced slyly at the judge. "You don't think much of those
who tell the truth, it seems. Well, put
this
statement in your
record, then." His voice was loud and clear in the still room.
"
All Earthmen are absolutely incapable of telling the truth.
"
Puzzled frowns appeared on the jury's faces. One or two
exchanged startled glances, and the room was still as death.
The judge stared at him, and then at Meyerhoff, then back.
"But you"—he stammered. "You're"—He stopped in mid-sentence,
his jaw sagging.
One of the jurymen let out a little squeak, and fainted dead
away. It took, all in all, about ten seconds for the statement
to soak in.
And then pandemonium broke loose in the courtroom.
"Really," said Harry Zeckler loftily, "it was so obvious I'm
amazed that it didn't occur to me first thing." He settled himself
down comfortably in the control cabin of the Interplanetary
Rocket and grinned at the outline of Altair IV looming larger
in the view screen.
Paul Meyerhoff stared stonily at the controls, his lips compressed
angrily. "You might at least have told me what you
were planning."
"And take the chance of being overheard? Don't be silly.
It had to come as a bombshell. I had to establish myself as a
liar—the prize liar of them all, but I had to tell the sort of lie
that they simply could not cope with. Something that would
throw them into such utter confusion that they wouldn't
dare
convict me." He grinned impishly at Meyerhoff. "The paradox
of Epimenides the Cretan. It really stopped them cold. They
knew
I was an Earthmen, which meant that my statement that
Earthmen were liars was a lie, which meant that maybe I wasn't
a liar, in which case—oh, it was tailor-made."
"It sure was." Meyerhoff's voice was a snarl.
"Well, it made me out a liar in a class they couldn't approach,
didn't it?"
Meyerhoff's face was purple with anger. "Oh, indeed it did!
And it put
all
Earthmen in exactly the same class, too."
"So what's honor among thieves? I got off, didn't I?"
Meyerhoff turned on him fiercely. "Oh, you got off just fine.
You scared the living daylights out of them. And in an eon of
lying they never have run up against a short-circuit like that.
You've also completely botched any hope of ever setting up
a trading alliance with Altair I, and that includes uranium, too.
Smart people don't gamble with loaded dice. You scared them
so badly they don't want anything to do with us."
Zeckler's grin broadened, and he leaned back luxuriously.
"Ah, well. After all, the Trading Alliance was
your
outlook,
wasn't it? What a pity!" He clucked his tongue sadly. "Me,
I've got a fortune in credits sitting back at the consulate waiting
for me—enough to keep me on silk for quite a while, I
might say. I think I'll just take a nice, long vacation."
Meyerhoff turned to him, and a twinkle of malignant glee
appeared in his eyes. "Yes, I think you will. I'm quite sure of
it, in fact. Won't cost you a cent, either."
"Eh?"
Meyerhoff grinned unpleasantly. He brushed an imaginary
lint fleck from his lapel, and looked up at Zeckler slyly. "That—uh—jury
trial. The Altairians weren't any too happy to
oblige. They wanted to execute you outright. Thought a trial
was awfully silly—until they got their money back, of course.
Not too much—just three million credits."
Zeckler went white. "But that money was in banking custody!"
"Is that right? My goodness. You don't suppose they could
have lost those papers, do you?" Meyerhoff grinned at the
little con-man. "And incidentally, you're under arrest, you
know."
A choking sound came from Zeckler's throat. "
Arrest!
"
"Oh, yes. Didn't I tell you? Conspiring to undermine the
authority of the Terran Trading Commission. Serious charge,
you know. Yes, I think we'll take a nice long vacation together,
straight back to Terra. And there I think you'll face a jury
trial."
Zeckler spluttered. "There's no evidence—you've got nothing
on me! What kind of a frame are you trying to pull?"
"A
lovely
frame. Airtight. A frame from the bottom up, and
you're right square in the middle. And this time—" Meyerhoff
tapped a cigarette on his thumb with happy finality—"this time
I
don't
think you'll get off."
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from "Tiger by the Tail and Other Science Fiction
Stories by Alan E. Nourse" and was first published in
If Magazine
January 1954. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright
on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | embezzlement | fraud | encroachment | indecent exposure | 1 |
24275_U13YG5XY_3 | What motivates people like Zeckler to commit such crimes as he committed? | Letter
of
the
Law
by Alan E. Nourse
The
place was dark and damp, and smelled like moldy leaves.
Meyerhoff followed the huge, bear-like Altairian guard
down the slippery flagstones of the corridor, sniffing the
dead, musty air with distaste. He drew his carefully tailored
Terran-styled jacket closer about his shoulders, shivering as his
eyes avoided the black, yawning cell-holes they were passing.
His foot slipped on the slimy flags from time to time, and
finally he paused to wipe the caked mud from his trouser leg.
"How much farther is it?" he shouted angrily.
The guard waved a heavy paw vaguely into the blackness
ahead. Quite suddenly the corridor took a sharp bend, and the
Altairian stopped, producing a huge key ring from some obscure
fold of his hairy hide. "I still don't see any reason for
all the fuss," he grumbled in a wounded tone. "We've treated
him like a brother."
One of the huge steel doors clicked open. Meyerhoff peered
into the blackness, catching a vaguely human outline against
the back wall. "Harry?" he called sharply.
There was a startled gasp from within, and a skinny, gnarled
little man suddenly appeared in the guard's light, like a grotesque,
twisted ghost out of the blackness. Wide blue eyes
regarded Meyerhoff from beneath uneven black eyebrows, and
then the little man's face broke into a crafty grin. "Paul! So
they sent
you
! I knew I could count on it!" He executed a
deep, awkward bow, motioning Meyerhoff into the dark
cubicle. "Not much to offer you," he said slyly, "but it's the
best I can do under the circumstances."
Meyerhoff scowled, and turned abruptly to the guard. "We'll
have some privacy now, if you please. Interplanetary ruling.
And leave us the light."
The guard grumbled, and started for the door. "It's about
time you showed up!" cried the little man in the cell. "Great
day! Lucky they sent you, pal. Why, I've been in here for
years—"
"Look, Zeckler, the name is Meyerhoff, and I'm not your
pal," Meyerhoff snapped. "And you've been here for two
weeks, three days, and approximately four hours. You're getting
as bad as your gentle guards when it comes to bandying
the truth around." He peered through the dim light at the
gaunt face of the prisoner. Zeckler's face was dark with a
week's beard, and his bloodshot eyes belied the cocky grin
on his lips. His clothes were smeared and sodden, streaked
with great splotches of mud and moss. Meyerhoff's face softened
a little. "So Harry Zeckler's in a jam again," he said.
"You
look
as if they'd treated you like a brother."
The little man snorted. "These overgrown teddy-bears don't
know what brotherhood means, nor humanity, either. Bread
and water I've been getting, nothing more, and then only if they
feel like bringing it down." He sank wearily down on the rock
bench along the wall. "I thought you'd never get here! I sent
an appeal to the Terran Consulate the first day I was arrested.
What happened? I mean, all they had to do was get a man
over here, get the extradition papers signed, and provide transportation
off the planet for me. Why so much time? I've been
sitting here rotting—" He broke off in mid-sentence and stared
at Meyerhoff. "You
brought
the papers, didn't you? I mean,
we can leave now?"
Meyerhoff stared at the little man with a mixture of pity and
disgust. "You are a prize fool," he said finally. "Did you know
that?"
Zeckler's eyes widened. "What do you mean, fool? So I
spend a couple of weeks in this pneumonia trap. The deal was
worth it! I've got three million credits sitting in the Terran
Consulate on Altair V, just waiting for me to walk in and pick
them up. Three million credits—do you hear? That's enough
to set me up for life!"
Meyerhoff nodded grimly. "
If
you live long enough to walk
in and pick them up, that is."
"What do you mean, if?"
Meyerhoff sank down beside the man, his voice a tense
whisper in the musty cell. "I mean that right now you are
practically dead. You may not know it, but you are. You walk
into a newly opened planet with your smart little bag of tricks,
walk in here with a shaky passport and no permit, with no
knowledge of the natives outside of two paragraphs of inaccuracies
in the Explorer's Guide, and even then you're not
content to come in and sell something legitimate, something
the natives might conceivably be able to use. No, nothing so
simple for you. You have to pull your usual high-pressure stuff.
And this time, buddy, you're paying the piper."
"
You mean I'm not being extradited?
"
Meyerhoff grinned unpleasantly. "I mean precisely that.
You've committed a crime here—a major crime. The Altairians
are sore about it. And the Terran Consulate isn't willing
to sell all the trading possibilities here down the river just to
get you out of a mess. You're going to stand trial—and these
natives are out to get you. Personally, I think they're
going
to get you."
Zeckler stood up shakily. "You can't believe anything the
natives say," he said uneasily. "They're pathological liars.
Why, you should see what they tried to sell
me
! You've never
seen such a pack of liars as these critters." He glanced up at
Meyerhoff. "They'll probably drop a little fine on me and let
me go."
"A little fine of one Terran neck." Meyerhoff grinned nastily.
"You've committed the most heinous crime these creatures can
imagine, and they're going to get you for it if it's the last thing
they do. I'm afraid, my friend, that your con-man days are
over."
Zeckler fished in the other man's pocket, extracted a cigarette,
and lighted it with trembling fingers. "It's bad, then,"
he said finally.
"It's bad, all right."
Some shadow of the sly, elfin grin crept over the little con-man's
face. "Well, at any rate, I'm glad they sent you over,"
he said weakly. "Nothing like a good lawyer to handle a trial."
"
Lawyer?
Not me! Oh, no. Sorry, but no thanks." Meyerhoff
chuckled. "I'm your advisor, old boy. Nothing else. I'm here
to keep you from botching things up still worse for the Trading
Commission, that's all. I wouldn't get tangled up in a mess
with those creatures for anything!" He shook his head. "You're
your own lawyer, Mr. Super-salesman. It's all your show. And
you'd better get your head out of the sand, or you're going to
lose a case like it's never been lost before!"
Meyerhoff watched the man's pale face, and shook his head.
In a way, he thought, it was a pity to see such a change in the
rosy-cheeked, dapper, cocksure little man who had talked his
way glibly in and out of more jams than Meyerhoff could
count. Trading brought scalpers; it was almost inevitable that
where rich and unexploited trading ground was uncovered, it
would first fall prey to the fast-trading boys. They spread out
from Terra with the first wave of exploration—the slick, fast-talking
con-men who could work new territories unfettered by
the legal restrictions that soon closed down the more established
planets. The first men in were the richest out, and
through some curious quirk of the Terrestrial mind, they knew
they could count on Terran protection, however crooked and
underhand their methods.
But occasionally a situation arose where the civilization and
social practices of the alien victims made it unwise to tamper
with them. Altair I had been recognized at once by the Trading
Commission as a commercial prize of tremendous value, but
early reports had warned of the danger of wildcat trading on
the little, musty, jungle-like planet with its shaggy, three-eyed
inhabitants—warned specifically against the confidence tactics
so frequently used—but there was always somebody, Meyerhoff
reflected sourly, who just didn't get the word.
Zeckler puffed nervously on his cigarette, his narrow face
a study in troubled concentration. "But I didn't
do
anything!"
he exploded finally. "So I pulled an old con game. So what?
Why should they get so excited? So I clipped a few thousand
credits, pulled a little fast business." He shrugged eloquently,
spreading his hands. "Everybody's doing it. They do it to each
other without batting an eye. You should
see
these critters
operate on each other. Why, my little scheme was peanuts by
comparison."
Meyerhoff pulled a pipe from his pocket, and began stuffing
the bowl with infinite patience. "And precisely what sort of
con game was it?" he asked quietly.
Zeckler shrugged again. "The simplest, tiredest, moldiest
old racket that ever made a quick nickel. Remember the old
Terran gag about the Brooklyn Bridge? The same thing. Only
these critters didn't want bridges. They wanted land—this
gooey, slimy swamp they call 'farm land.' So I gave them
what they wanted. I just sold them some land."
Meyerhoff nodded fiercely. "You sure did. A hundred square
kilos at a swipe. Only you sold the same hundred square kilos
to a dozen different natives." Suddenly he threw back his hands
and roared. "Of all the things you
shouldn't
have done—"
"But what's a chunk of land?"
Meyerhoff shook his head hopelessly. "If you hadn't been
so greedy, you'd have found out what a chunk of land was to
these natives before you started peddling it. You'd have found
out other things about them, too. You'd have learned that
in spite of all their bumbling and fussing and squabbling
they're not so dull. You'd have found out that they're marsupials,
and that two out of five of them get thrown out of
their mother's pouch before they're old enough to survive.
You'd have realized that they have to start fighting for individual
rights almost as soon as they're born. Anything goes,
as long as it benefits them as individuals."
Meyerhoff grinned at the little man's horrified face. "Never
heard of that, had you? And you've never heard of other things,
too. You've probably never heard that there are just too many
Altairians here for the food their planet can supply, and their
diet is so finicky that they just can't live on anything that
doesn't grow here. And consequently, land is the key factor
in their economy, not money; nothing but land. To get land,
it's every man for himself, and the loser starves, and their
entire legal and monetary system revolves on that principle.
They've built up the most confusing and impossible system of
barter and trade imaginable, aimed at individual survival, with
land as the value behind the credit. That explains the lying—of
course they're liars, with an economy like that. They've
completely missed the concept of truth. Pathological? You bet
they're pathological! Only a fool would tell the truth when his
life depended on his being a better liar than the next guy!
Lying is the time-honored tradition, with their entire legal
system built around it."
Zeckler snorted. "But how could they
possibly
have a legal
system? I mean, if they don't recognize the truth when it slaps
them in the face?"
Meyerhoff shrugged. "As we understand legal systems, I
suppose they don't have one. They have only the haziest idea
what truth represents, and they've shrugged off the idea as
impossible and useless." He chuckled maliciously. "So you
went out and found a chunk of ground in the uplands, and
sold it to a dozen separate, self-centered, half-starved natives!
Encroachment on private property is legal grounds for murder
on this planet, and twelve of them descended on the same
chunk of land at the same time, all armed with title-deeds."
Meyerhoff sighed. "You've got twelve mad Altairians in your
hair. You've got a mad planet in your hair. And in the meantime,
Terra's most valuable uranium source in five centuries
is threatening to cut off supply unless they see your blood
splattered liberally all the way from here to the equator."
Zeckler was visibly shaken. "Look," he said weakly, "so I
wasn't so smart. What am I going to do? I mean, are you
going to sit quietly by and let them butcher me? How could
I defend myself in a legal setup like
this
?"
Meyerhoff smiled coolly. "You're going to get your sly little
con-man brain to working, I think," he said softly. "By Interplanetary
Rules, they have to give you a trial in Terran legal
form—judge, jury, court procedure, all that folderol. They
think it's a big joke—after all, what could a judicial oath mean
to them?—but they agreed. Only thing is, they're going to
hang you, if they die trying. So you'd better get those stunted
little wits of yours clicking—and if you try to implicate
me
,
even a little bit, I'll be out of there so fast you won't know
what happened."
With that Meyerhoff walked to the door. He jerked it inward
sharply, and spilled two guards over on their faces.
"Privacy," he grunted, and started back up the slippery corridor.
It certainly
looked
like a courtroom, at any rate. In the front
of the long, damp stone room was a bench, with a seat behind
it, and a small straight chair to the right. To the left was a stand
with twelve chairs—larger chairs, with a railing running along
the front. The rest of the room was filled almost to the door
with seats facing the bench. Zeckler followed the shaggy-haired
guard into the room, nodding approvingly. "Not such a bad
arrangement," he said. "They must have gotten the idea fast."
Meyerhoff wiped the perspiration from his forehead, and
shot the little con-man a stony glance. "At least you've got
a courtroom, a judge, and a jury for this mess. Beyond that—"
He shrugged eloquently. "I can't make any promises."
In the back of the room a door burst open with a bang.
Loud, harsh voices were heard as half a dozen of the huge
Altairians attempted to push through the door at once. Zeckler
clamped on the headset to his translator unit, and watched the
hubbub in the anteroom with growing alarm. Finally the question
of precedent seemed to be settled, and a group of the
Altairians filed in, in order of stature, stalking across the room
in flowing black robes, pug-nosed faces glowering with self-importance.
They descended upon the jury box, grunting and
scrapping with each other for the first-row seats, and the judge
took his place with obvious satisfaction behind the heavy
wooden bench. Finally, the prosecuting attorney appeared,
flanked by two clerks, who took their places beside him. The
prosecutor eyed Zeckler with cold malevolence, then turned
and delivered a sly wink at the judge.
In a moment the room was a hubbub as it filled with the
huge, bumbling, bear-like creatures, jostling each other and
fighting for seats, growling and complaining. Two small fights
broke out in the rear, but were quickly subdued by the group
of gendarmes guarding the entrance. Finally the judge glared
down at Zeckler with all three eyes, and pounded the bench top
with a wooden mallet until the roar of activity subsided. The
jurymen wriggled uncomfortably in their seats, exchanging
winks, and finally turned their attention to the front of the
court.
"We are reading the case of the people of Altair I," the
judge's voice roared out, "against one Harry Zeckler—" he
paused for a long, impressive moment—"Terran." The courtroom
immediately burst into an angry growl, until the judge
pounded the bench five or six times more. "This—creature—is
hereby accused of the following crimes," the judge bellowed.
"Conspiracy to overthrow the government of Altair I. Brutal
murder of seventeen law-abiding citizens of the village of
Karzan at the third hour before dawn in the second period
after his arrival. Desecration of the Temple of our beloved
Goddess Zermat, Queen of the Harvest. Conspiracy with the
lesser gods to cause the unprecedented drought in the Dermatti
section of our fair globe. Obscene exposure of his pouch-marks
in a public square. Four separate and distinct charges of jail-break
and bribery—" The judge pounded the bench for order—"Espionage
with the accursed scum of Altair II in preparation
for interplanetary invasion."
The little con-man's jaw sagged lower and lower, the color
draining from his face. He turned, wide-eyed, to Meyerhoff,
then back to the judge.
"The Chairman of the Jury," said the Judge succinctly, "will
read the verdict."
The little native in the front of the jury-box popped up like
a puppet on a string. "Defendant found guilty on all counts,"
he said.
"Defendant is guilty! The court will pronounce sentence—"
"
Now wait a minute!
" Zeckler was on his feet, wild-eyed.
"What kind of railroad job—"
The judge blinked disappointedly at Paul Meyerhoff. "Not
yet?" he asked, unhappily.
"No." Meyerhoff's hands twitched nervously. "Not yet, Your
Honor. Later, Your Honor. The trial comes
first
."
The judge looked as if his candy had been stolen. "But you
said
I should call for the verdict."
"Later. You have to have the trial before you can have the
verdict."
The Altairian shrugged indifferently. "Now—later—" he
muttered.
"Have the prosecutor call his first witness," said Meyerhoff.
Zeckler leaned over, his face ashen. "These charges," he
whispered. "They're insane!"
"Of course they are," Meyerhoff whispered back.
"But what am I going to—"
"Sit tight. Let
them
set things up."
"But those
lies
. They're liars, the whole pack of them—" He
broke off as the prosecutor roared a name.
The shaggy brute who took the stand was wearing a bright
purple hat which sat rakishly over one ear. He grinned the
Altairian equivalent of a hungry grin at the prosecutor. Then
he cleared his throat and started. "This Terran riffraff—"
"The oath," muttered the judge. "We've got to have the
oath."
The prosecutor nodded, and four natives moved forward,
carrying huge inscribed marble slabs to the front of the court.
One by one the chunks were reverently piled in a heap at the
witness's feet. The witness placed a huge, hairy paw on the
cairn, and the prosecutor said, "Do you swear to tell the truth,
the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, so help you—" he
paused to squint at the paper in his hand, and finished on a
puzzled note, "—Goddess?"
The witness removed the paw from the rock pile long enough
to scratch his ear. Then he replaced it, and replied, "Of course,"
in an injured tone.
"Then tell this court what you have seen of the activities of
this abominable wretch."
The witness settled back into the chair, fixing one eye on
Zeckler's face, another on the prosecutor, and closing the third
as if in meditation. "I think it happened on the fourth night
of the seventh crossing of Altair II (may the Goddess cast
a drought upon it)—or was it the seventh night of the fourth
crossing?—" he grinned apologetically at the judge—"when I
was making my way back through town toward my blessed
land-plot, minding my own business, Your Honor, after weeks
of bargaining for the crop I was harvesting. Suddenly from the
shadow of the building, this creature—" he waved a paw at
Zeckler—"stopped me in my tracks with a vicious cry. He had
a weapon I'd never seen before, and before I could find my
voice he forced me back against the wall. I could see by the
cruel glint in his eyes that there was no warmth, no sympathy
in his heart, that I was—"
"Objection!" Zeckler squealed plaintively, jumping to his
feet. "This witness can't even remember what night he's talking
about!"
The judge looked startled. Then he pawed feverishly through
his bundle of notes. "Overruled," he said abruptly. "Continue,
please."
The witness glowered at Zeckler. "As I was saying before
this loutish interruption," he muttered, "I could see that I was
face to face with the most desperate of criminal types, even
for Terrans. Note the shape of his head, the flabbiness of his
ears. I was petrified with fear. And then, helpless as I was, this
two-legged abomination began to shower me with threats of
evil to my blessed home, dark threats of poisoning my land
unless I would tell him where he could find the resting place
of our blessed Goddess—"
"I never saw him before in my life," Zeckler moaned to
Meyerhoff. "Listen to him! Why should I care where their
Goddess—"
Meyerhoff gave him a stony look. "The Goddess runs things
around here. She makes it rain. If it doesn't rain, somebody's
insulted her. It's very simple."
"But how can I fight testimony like that?"
"I doubt if you
can
fight it."
"But they can't prove a word of it—" He looked at the jury,
who were listening enraptured to the second witness on the
stand. This one was testifying regarding the butcherous slaughter
of eighteen (or was it twenty-three? Oh, yes, twenty-three)
women and children in the suburban village of Karzan. The
pogrom, it seemed, had been accomplished by an energy
weapon which ate great, gaping holes in the sides of buildings.
A third witness took the stand, continuing the drone as the
room grew hotter and muggier. Zeckler grew paler and paler,
his eyes turning glassy as the testimony piled up. "But it's not
true
," he whispered to Meyerhoff.
"Of course it isn't! Can't you understand?
These people
have no regard for truth.
It's stupid, to them, silly, a mark of
low intelligence. The only thing in the world they have any
respect for is a liar bigger and more skillful than they are."
Zeckler jerked around abruptly as he heard his name bellowed
out. "Does the defendant have anything to say before
the jury delivers the verdict?"
"Do I have—" Zeckler was across the room in a flash, his
pale cheeks suddenly taking on a feverish glow. He sat down
gingerly on the witness chair, facing the judge, his eyes bright
with fear and excitement. "Your—Your Honor, I—I have a
statement to make which will have a most important bearing
on this case. You must listen with the greatest care." He
glanced quickly at Meyerhoff, and back to the judge. "Your
Honor," he said in a hushed voice. "You are in gravest of
danger. All of you. Your lives—your very land is at stake."
The judge blinked, and shuffled through his notes hurriedly
as a murmur arose in the court. "Our land?"
"Your lives, your land, everything you hold dear," Zeckler
said quickly, licking his lips nervously. "You must try to
understand me—" he glanced apprehensively over his shoulder
"now, because I may not live long enough to repeat what
I am about to tell you—"
The murmur quieted down, all ears straining in their headsets
to hear his words. "These charges," he continued, "all of
them—they're perfectly true. At least, they
seem
to be perfectly
true. But in every instance, I was working with heart and
soul, risking my life, for the welfare of your beautiful planet."
There was a loud hiss from the back of the court. Zeckler
frowned and rubbed his hands together. "It was my misfortune,"
he said, "to go to the wrong planet when I first came to
Altair from my homeland on Terra. I—I landed on Altair II,
a grave mistake, but as it turned out, a very fortunate error.
Because in attempting to arrange trading in that frightful place,
I made certain contacts." His voice trembled, and sank lower.
"I learned the horrible thing which is about to happen to this
planet, at the hands of those barbarians. The conspiracy is
theirs, not mine. They have bribed your Goddess, flattered her
and lied to her, coerced her all-powerful goodness to their own
evil interests, preparing for the day when they could persuade
her to cast your land into the fiery furnace of a ten-year-drought—"
Somebody in the middle of the court burst out laughing.
One by one the natives nudged one another, and booed, and
guffawed, until the rising tide of racket drowned out Zeckler's
words. "The defendant is obviously lying," roared the prosecutor
over the pandemonium. "Any fool knows that the Goddess
can't be bribed. How could she be a Goddess if she could?"
Zeckler grew paler. "But—perhaps they were very clever—"
"And how could they flatter her, when she knows, beyond
doubt, that she is the most exquisitely radiant creature in all
the Universe? And
you
dare to insult her, drag her name in
the dirt."
The hisses grew louder, more belligerent. Cries of "Butcher
him!" and "Scald his bowels!" rose from the courtroom. The
judge banged for silence, his eyes angry.
"Unless the defendant wishes to take up more of our precious
time with these ridiculous lies, the jury—"
"Wait! Your Honor, I request a short recess before I present
my final plea."
"Recess?"
"A few moments to collect my thoughts, to arrange my
case."
The judge settled back with a disgusted snarl. "Do I have
to?" he asked Meyerhoff.
Meyerhoff nodded. The judge shrugged, pointing over his
shoulder to the anteroom. "You can go in there," he said.
Somehow, Zeckler managed to stumble from the witness
stand, amid riotous boos and hisses, and tottered into the anteroom.
Zeckler puffed hungrily on a cigarette, and looked up at
Meyerhoff with haunted eyes. "It—it doesn't look so good,"
he muttered.
Meyerhoff's eyes were worried, too. For some reason, he
felt a surge of pity and admiration for the haggard con-man.
"It's worse than I'd anticipated," he admitted glumly. "That
was a good try, but you just don't know enough about them
and their Goddess." He sat down wearily. "I don't see what
you can do. They want your blood, and they're going to have
it. They just won't believe you, no matter
how
big a lie you
tell."
Zeckler sat in silence for a moment. "This lying business,"
he said finally, "exactly how does it work?"
"The biggest, most convincing liar wins. It's as simple as
that. It doesn't matter how outlandish a whopper you tell.
Unless, of course, they've made up their minds that you just
naturally aren't as big a liar as they are. And it looks like that's
just what they've done. It wouldn't make any difference to
them
what
you say—unless, somehow, you could
make
them
believe it."
Zeckler frowned. "And how do they regard the—the biggest
liar? I mean, how do they feel toward him?"
Meyerhoff shifted uneasily. "It's hard to say. It's been my
experience that they respect him highly—maybe even fear him
a little. After all, the most convincing liar always wins in any
transaction, so he gets more land, more food, more power.
Yes, I think the biggest liar could go where he pleased without
any interference."
Zeckler was on his feet, his eyes suddenly bright with excitement.
"Wait a minute," he said tensely. "To tell them a lie
that they'd have to believe—a lie they simply couldn't
help
but believe—" He turned on Meyerhoff, his hands trembling.
"Do they
think
the way we do? I mean, with logic, cause and
effect, examining evidence and drawing conclusions? Given
certain evidence, would they have to draw the same conclusions
that we have to draw?"
Meyerhoff blinked. "Well—yes. Oh, yes, they're perfectly
logical."
Zeckler's eyes flashed, and a huge grin broke out on his
sallow face. His thin body fairly shook. He started hopping
up and down on one foot, staring idiotically into space. "If I
could only think—" he muttered. "Somebody—somewhere—something
I read."
"Whatever are you talking about?"
"It was a Greek, I think—"
Meyerhoff stared at him. "Oh, come now. Have you gone
off your rocker completely? You've got a problem on your
hands, man."
"No, no, I've got a problem in the bag!" Zeckler's cheeks
flushed. "Let's go back in there—I think I've got an answer!"
The courtroom quieted the moment they opened the door,
and the judge banged the gavel for silence. As soon as Zeckler
had taken his seat on the witness stand, the judge turned to
the head juryman. "Now, then," he said with happy finality.
"The jury—"
"Hold on! Just one minute more."
The judge stared down at Zeckler as if he were a bug on a
rock. "Oh, yes. You had something else to say. Well, go ahead
and say it."
Zeckler looked sharply around the hushed room. "You want
to convict me," he said softly, "in the worst sort of way. Isn't
that right?"
Eyes swung toward him. The judge broke into an evil grin.
"That's right."
"But you can't really convict me until you've considered
carefully any statement I make in my own defense. Isn't that
right?"
The judge looked uncomfortable. "If you've got something
to say, go ahead and say it."
"I've got just one statement to make. Short and sweet. But
you'd better listen to it, and think it out carefully before you
decide that you really want to convict me." He paused, and
glanced slyly at the judge. "You don't think much of those
who tell the truth, it seems. Well, put
this
statement in your
record, then." His voice was loud and clear in the still room.
"
All Earthmen are absolutely incapable of telling the truth.
"
Puzzled frowns appeared on the jury's faces. One or two
exchanged startled glances, and the room was still as death.
The judge stared at him, and then at Meyerhoff, then back.
"But you"—he stammered. "You're"—He stopped in mid-sentence,
his jaw sagging.
One of the jurymen let out a little squeak, and fainted dead
away. It took, all in all, about ten seconds for the statement
to soak in.
And then pandemonium broke loose in the courtroom.
"Really," said Harry Zeckler loftily, "it was so obvious I'm
amazed that it didn't occur to me first thing." He settled himself
down comfortably in the control cabin of the Interplanetary
Rocket and grinned at the outline of Altair IV looming larger
in the view screen.
Paul Meyerhoff stared stonily at the controls, his lips compressed
angrily. "You might at least have told me what you
were planning."
"And take the chance of being overheard? Don't be silly.
It had to come as a bombshell. I had to establish myself as a
liar—the prize liar of them all, but I had to tell the sort of lie
that they simply could not cope with. Something that would
throw them into such utter confusion that they wouldn't
dare
convict me." He grinned impishly at Meyerhoff. "The paradox
of Epimenides the Cretan. It really stopped them cold. They
knew
I was an Earthmen, which meant that my statement that
Earthmen were liars was a lie, which meant that maybe I wasn't
a liar, in which case—oh, it was tailor-made."
"It sure was." Meyerhoff's voice was a snarl.
"Well, it made me out a liar in a class they couldn't approach,
didn't it?"
Meyerhoff's face was purple with anger. "Oh, indeed it did!
And it put
all
Earthmen in exactly the same class, too."
"So what's honor among thieves? I got off, didn't I?"
Meyerhoff turned on him fiercely. "Oh, you got off just fine.
You scared the living daylights out of them. And in an eon of
lying they never have run up against a short-circuit like that.
You've also completely botched any hope of ever setting up
a trading alliance with Altair I, and that includes uranium, too.
Smart people don't gamble with loaded dice. You scared them
so badly they don't want anything to do with us."
Zeckler's grin broadened, and he leaned back luxuriously.
"Ah, well. After all, the Trading Alliance was
your
outlook,
wasn't it? What a pity!" He clucked his tongue sadly. "Me,
I've got a fortune in credits sitting back at the consulate waiting
for me—enough to keep me on silk for quite a while, I
might say. I think I'll just take a nice, long vacation."
Meyerhoff turned to him, and a twinkle of malignant glee
appeared in his eyes. "Yes, I think you will. I'm quite sure of
it, in fact. Won't cost you a cent, either."
"Eh?"
Meyerhoff grinned unpleasantly. He brushed an imaginary
lint fleck from his lapel, and looked up at Zeckler slyly. "That—uh—jury
trial. The Altairians weren't any too happy to
oblige. They wanted to execute you outright. Thought a trial
was awfully silly—until they got their money back, of course.
Not too much—just three million credits."
Zeckler went white. "But that money was in banking custody!"
"Is that right? My goodness. You don't suppose they could
have lost those papers, do you?" Meyerhoff grinned at the
little con-man. "And incidentally, you're under arrest, you
know."
A choking sound came from Zeckler's throat. "
Arrest!
"
"Oh, yes. Didn't I tell you? Conspiring to undermine the
authority of the Terran Trading Commission. Serious charge,
you know. Yes, I think we'll take a nice long vacation together,
straight back to Terra. And there I think you'll face a jury
trial."
Zeckler spluttered. "There's no evidence—you've got nothing
on me! What kind of a frame are you trying to pull?"
"A
lovely
frame. Airtight. A frame from the bottom up, and
you're right square in the middle. And this time—" Meyerhoff
tapped a cigarette on his thumb with happy finality—"this time
I
don't
think you'll get off."
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from "Tiger by the Tail and Other Science Fiction
Stories by Alan E. Nourse" and was first published in
If Magazine
January 1954. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright
on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | New interplanetary laws created more incentive to commit crimes in vulnerable areas than they offered protection from such crimes. | Representatives from the Trading Commission set up an operation to hire and arrest con men in order to secure resources without being indicted. | The interplanetary laws made it easy for wealthy corporations and entities to prey upon those they considered less civilized and intelligent. | The Trading Commission offered monetary compensation for whoever was willing to secure unexploited trading ground on neighboring planets. | 0 |
24275_U13YG5XY_4 | Why was Altair regarded at once by the Trading Commission as a commercial prize of tremendous value? | Letter
of
the
Law
by Alan E. Nourse
The
place was dark and damp, and smelled like moldy leaves.
Meyerhoff followed the huge, bear-like Altairian guard
down the slippery flagstones of the corridor, sniffing the
dead, musty air with distaste. He drew his carefully tailored
Terran-styled jacket closer about his shoulders, shivering as his
eyes avoided the black, yawning cell-holes they were passing.
His foot slipped on the slimy flags from time to time, and
finally he paused to wipe the caked mud from his trouser leg.
"How much farther is it?" he shouted angrily.
The guard waved a heavy paw vaguely into the blackness
ahead. Quite suddenly the corridor took a sharp bend, and the
Altairian stopped, producing a huge key ring from some obscure
fold of his hairy hide. "I still don't see any reason for
all the fuss," he grumbled in a wounded tone. "We've treated
him like a brother."
One of the huge steel doors clicked open. Meyerhoff peered
into the blackness, catching a vaguely human outline against
the back wall. "Harry?" he called sharply.
There was a startled gasp from within, and a skinny, gnarled
little man suddenly appeared in the guard's light, like a grotesque,
twisted ghost out of the blackness. Wide blue eyes
regarded Meyerhoff from beneath uneven black eyebrows, and
then the little man's face broke into a crafty grin. "Paul! So
they sent
you
! I knew I could count on it!" He executed a
deep, awkward bow, motioning Meyerhoff into the dark
cubicle. "Not much to offer you," he said slyly, "but it's the
best I can do under the circumstances."
Meyerhoff scowled, and turned abruptly to the guard. "We'll
have some privacy now, if you please. Interplanetary ruling.
And leave us the light."
The guard grumbled, and started for the door. "It's about
time you showed up!" cried the little man in the cell. "Great
day! Lucky they sent you, pal. Why, I've been in here for
years—"
"Look, Zeckler, the name is Meyerhoff, and I'm not your
pal," Meyerhoff snapped. "And you've been here for two
weeks, three days, and approximately four hours. You're getting
as bad as your gentle guards when it comes to bandying
the truth around." He peered through the dim light at the
gaunt face of the prisoner. Zeckler's face was dark with a
week's beard, and his bloodshot eyes belied the cocky grin
on his lips. His clothes were smeared and sodden, streaked
with great splotches of mud and moss. Meyerhoff's face softened
a little. "So Harry Zeckler's in a jam again," he said.
"You
look
as if they'd treated you like a brother."
The little man snorted. "These overgrown teddy-bears don't
know what brotherhood means, nor humanity, either. Bread
and water I've been getting, nothing more, and then only if they
feel like bringing it down." He sank wearily down on the rock
bench along the wall. "I thought you'd never get here! I sent
an appeal to the Terran Consulate the first day I was arrested.
What happened? I mean, all they had to do was get a man
over here, get the extradition papers signed, and provide transportation
off the planet for me. Why so much time? I've been
sitting here rotting—" He broke off in mid-sentence and stared
at Meyerhoff. "You
brought
the papers, didn't you? I mean,
we can leave now?"
Meyerhoff stared at the little man with a mixture of pity and
disgust. "You are a prize fool," he said finally. "Did you know
that?"
Zeckler's eyes widened. "What do you mean, fool? So I
spend a couple of weeks in this pneumonia trap. The deal was
worth it! I've got three million credits sitting in the Terran
Consulate on Altair V, just waiting for me to walk in and pick
them up. Three million credits—do you hear? That's enough
to set me up for life!"
Meyerhoff nodded grimly. "
If
you live long enough to walk
in and pick them up, that is."
"What do you mean, if?"
Meyerhoff sank down beside the man, his voice a tense
whisper in the musty cell. "I mean that right now you are
practically dead. You may not know it, but you are. You walk
into a newly opened planet with your smart little bag of tricks,
walk in here with a shaky passport and no permit, with no
knowledge of the natives outside of two paragraphs of inaccuracies
in the Explorer's Guide, and even then you're not
content to come in and sell something legitimate, something
the natives might conceivably be able to use. No, nothing so
simple for you. You have to pull your usual high-pressure stuff.
And this time, buddy, you're paying the piper."
"
You mean I'm not being extradited?
"
Meyerhoff grinned unpleasantly. "I mean precisely that.
You've committed a crime here—a major crime. The Altairians
are sore about it. And the Terran Consulate isn't willing
to sell all the trading possibilities here down the river just to
get you out of a mess. You're going to stand trial—and these
natives are out to get you. Personally, I think they're
going
to get you."
Zeckler stood up shakily. "You can't believe anything the
natives say," he said uneasily. "They're pathological liars.
Why, you should see what they tried to sell
me
! You've never
seen such a pack of liars as these critters." He glanced up at
Meyerhoff. "They'll probably drop a little fine on me and let
me go."
"A little fine of one Terran neck." Meyerhoff grinned nastily.
"You've committed the most heinous crime these creatures can
imagine, and they're going to get you for it if it's the last thing
they do. I'm afraid, my friend, that your con-man days are
over."
Zeckler fished in the other man's pocket, extracted a cigarette,
and lighted it with trembling fingers. "It's bad, then,"
he said finally.
"It's bad, all right."
Some shadow of the sly, elfin grin crept over the little con-man's
face. "Well, at any rate, I'm glad they sent you over,"
he said weakly. "Nothing like a good lawyer to handle a trial."
"
Lawyer?
Not me! Oh, no. Sorry, but no thanks." Meyerhoff
chuckled. "I'm your advisor, old boy. Nothing else. I'm here
to keep you from botching things up still worse for the Trading
Commission, that's all. I wouldn't get tangled up in a mess
with those creatures for anything!" He shook his head. "You're
your own lawyer, Mr. Super-salesman. It's all your show. And
you'd better get your head out of the sand, or you're going to
lose a case like it's never been lost before!"
Meyerhoff watched the man's pale face, and shook his head.
In a way, he thought, it was a pity to see such a change in the
rosy-cheeked, dapper, cocksure little man who had talked his
way glibly in and out of more jams than Meyerhoff could
count. Trading brought scalpers; it was almost inevitable that
where rich and unexploited trading ground was uncovered, it
would first fall prey to the fast-trading boys. They spread out
from Terra with the first wave of exploration—the slick, fast-talking
con-men who could work new territories unfettered by
the legal restrictions that soon closed down the more established
planets. The first men in were the richest out, and
through some curious quirk of the Terrestrial mind, they knew
they could count on Terran protection, however crooked and
underhand their methods.
But occasionally a situation arose where the civilization and
social practices of the alien victims made it unwise to tamper
with them. Altair I had been recognized at once by the Trading
Commission as a commercial prize of tremendous value, but
early reports had warned of the danger of wildcat trading on
the little, musty, jungle-like planet with its shaggy, three-eyed
inhabitants—warned specifically against the confidence tactics
so frequently used—but there was always somebody, Meyerhoff
reflected sourly, who just didn't get the word.
Zeckler puffed nervously on his cigarette, his narrow face
a study in troubled concentration. "But I didn't
do
anything!"
he exploded finally. "So I pulled an old con game. So what?
Why should they get so excited? So I clipped a few thousand
credits, pulled a little fast business." He shrugged eloquently,
spreading his hands. "Everybody's doing it. They do it to each
other without batting an eye. You should
see
these critters
operate on each other. Why, my little scheme was peanuts by
comparison."
Meyerhoff pulled a pipe from his pocket, and began stuffing
the bowl with infinite patience. "And precisely what sort of
con game was it?" he asked quietly.
Zeckler shrugged again. "The simplest, tiredest, moldiest
old racket that ever made a quick nickel. Remember the old
Terran gag about the Brooklyn Bridge? The same thing. Only
these critters didn't want bridges. They wanted land—this
gooey, slimy swamp they call 'farm land.' So I gave them
what they wanted. I just sold them some land."
Meyerhoff nodded fiercely. "You sure did. A hundred square
kilos at a swipe. Only you sold the same hundred square kilos
to a dozen different natives." Suddenly he threw back his hands
and roared. "Of all the things you
shouldn't
have done—"
"But what's a chunk of land?"
Meyerhoff shook his head hopelessly. "If you hadn't been
so greedy, you'd have found out what a chunk of land was to
these natives before you started peddling it. You'd have found
out other things about them, too. You'd have learned that
in spite of all their bumbling and fussing and squabbling
they're not so dull. You'd have found out that they're marsupials,
and that two out of five of them get thrown out of
their mother's pouch before they're old enough to survive.
You'd have realized that they have to start fighting for individual
rights almost as soon as they're born. Anything goes,
as long as it benefits them as individuals."
Meyerhoff grinned at the little man's horrified face. "Never
heard of that, had you? And you've never heard of other things,
too. You've probably never heard that there are just too many
Altairians here for the food their planet can supply, and their
diet is so finicky that they just can't live on anything that
doesn't grow here. And consequently, land is the key factor
in their economy, not money; nothing but land. To get land,
it's every man for himself, and the loser starves, and their
entire legal and monetary system revolves on that principle.
They've built up the most confusing and impossible system of
barter and trade imaginable, aimed at individual survival, with
land as the value behind the credit. That explains the lying—of
course they're liars, with an economy like that. They've
completely missed the concept of truth. Pathological? You bet
they're pathological! Only a fool would tell the truth when his
life depended on his being a better liar than the next guy!
Lying is the time-honored tradition, with their entire legal
system built around it."
Zeckler snorted. "But how could they
possibly
have a legal
system? I mean, if they don't recognize the truth when it slaps
them in the face?"
Meyerhoff shrugged. "As we understand legal systems, I
suppose they don't have one. They have only the haziest idea
what truth represents, and they've shrugged off the idea as
impossible and useless." He chuckled maliciously. "So you
went out and found a chunk of ground in the uplands, and
sold it to a dozen separate, self-centered, half-starved natives!
Encroachment on private property is legal grounds for murder
on this planet, and twelve of them descended on the same
chunk of land at the same time, all armed with title-deeds."
Meyerhoff sighed. "You've got twelve mad Altairians in your
hair. You've got a mad planet in your hair. And in the meantime,
Terra's most valuable uranium source in five centuries
is threatening to cut off supply unless they see your blood
splattered liberally all the way from here to the equator."
Zeckler was visibly shaken. "Look," he said weakly, "so I
wasn't so smart. What am I going to do? I mean, are you
going to sit quietly by and let them butcher me? How could
I defend myself in a legal setup like
this
?"
Meyerhoff smiled coolly. "You're going to get your sly little
con-man brain to working, I think," he said softly. "By Interplanetary
Rules, they have to give you a trial in Terran legal
form—judge, jury, court procedure, all that folderol. They
think it's a big joke—after all, what could a judicial oath mean
to them?—but they agreed. Only thing is, they're going to
hang you, if they die trying. So you'd better get those stunted
little wits of yours clicking—and if you try to implicate
me
,
even a little bit, I'll be out of there so fast you won't know
what happened."
With that Meyerhoff walked to the door. He jerked it inward
sharply, and spilled two guards over on their faces.
"Privacy," he grunted, and started back up the slippery corridor.
It certainly
looked
like a courtroom, at any rate. In the front
of the long, damp stone room was a bench, with a seat behind
it, and a small straight chair to the right. To the left was a stand
with twelve chairs—larger chairs, with a railing running along
the front. The rest of the room was filled almost to the door
with seats facing the bench. Zeckler followed the shaggy-haired
guard into the room, nodding approvingly. "Not such a bad
arrangement," he said. "They must have gotten the idea fast."
Meyerhoff wiped the perspiration from his forehead, and
shot the little con-man a stony glance. "At least you've got
a courtroom, a judge, and a jury for this mess. Beyond that—"
He shrugged eloquently. "I can't make any promises."
In the back of the room a door burst open with a bang.
Loud, harsh voices were heard as half a dozen of the huge
Altairians attempted to push through the door at once. Zeckler
clamped on the headset to his translator unit, and watched the
hubbub in the anteroom with growing alarm. Finally the question
of precedent seemed to be settled, and a group of the
Altairians filed in, in order of stature, stalking across the room
in flowing black robes, pug-nosed faces glowering with self-importance.
They descended upon the jury box, grunting and
scrapping with each other for the first-row seats, and the judge
took his place with obvious satisfaction behind the heavy
wooden bench. Finally, the prosecuting attorney appeared,
flanked by two clerks, who took their places beside him. The
prosecutor eyed Zeckler with cold malevolence, then turned
and delivered a sly wink at the judge.
In a moment the room was a hubbub as it filled with the
huge, bumbling, bear-like creatures, jostling each other and
fighting for seats, growling and complaining. Two small fights
broke out in the rear, but were quickly subdued by the group
of gendarmes guarding the entrance. Finally the judge glared
down at Zeckler with all three eyes, and pounded the bench top
with a wooden mallet until the roar of activity subsided. The
jurymen wriggled uncomfortably in their seats, exchanging
winks, and finally turned their attention to the front of the
court.
"We are reading the case of the people of Altair I," the
judge's voice roared out, "against one Harry Zeckler—" he
paused for a long, impressive moment—"Terran." The courtroom
immediately burst into an angry growl, until the judge
pounded the bench five or six times more. "This—creature—is
hereby accused of the following crimes," the judge bellowed.
"Conspiracy to overthrow the government of Altair I. Brutal
murder of seventeen law-abiding citizens of the village of
Karzan at the third hour before dawn in the second period
after his arrival. Desecration of the Temple of our beloved
Goddess Zermat, Queen of the Harvest. Conspiracy with the
lesser gods to cause the unprecedented drought in the Dermatti
section of our fair globe. Obscene exposure of his pouch-marks
in a public square. Four separate and distinct charges of jail-break
and bribery—" The judge pounded the bench for order—"Espionage
with the accursed scum of Altair II in preparation
for interplanetary invasion."
The little con-man's jaw sagged lower and lower, the color
draining from his face. He turned, wide-eyed, to Meyerhoff,
then back to the judge.
"The Chairman of the Jury," said the Judge succinctly, "will
read the verdict."
The little native in the front of the jury-box popped up like
a puppet on a string. "Defendant found guilty on all counts,"
he said.
"Defendant is guilty! The court will pronounce sentence—"
"
Now wait a minute!
" Zeckler was on his feet, wild-eyed.
"What kind of railroad job—"
The judge blinked disappointedly at Paul Meyerhoff. "Not
yet?" he asked, unhappily.
"No." Meyerhoff's hands twitched nervously. "Not yet, Your
Honor. Later, Your Honor. The trial comes
first
."
The judge looked as if his candy had been stolen. "But you
said
I should call for the verdict."
"Later. You have to have the trial before you can have the
verdict."
The Altairian shrugged indifferently. "Now—later—" he
muttered.
"Have the prosecutor call his first witness," said Meyerhoff.
Zeckler leaned over, his face ashen. "These charges," he
whispered. "They're insane!"
"Of course they are," Meyerhoff whispered back.
"But what am I going to—"
"Sit tight. Let
them
set things up."
"But those
lies
. They're liars, the whole pack of them—" He
broke off as the prosecutor roared a name.
The shaggy brute who took the stand was wearing a bright
purple hat which sat rakishly over one ear. He grinned the
Altairian equivalent of a hungry grin at the prosecutor. Then
he cleared his throat and started. "This Terran riffraff—"
"The oath," muttered the judge. "We've got to have the
oath."
The prosecutor nodded, and four natives moved forward,
carrying huge inscribed marble slabs to the front of the court.
One by one the chunks were reverently piled in a heap at the
witness's feet. The witness placed a huge, hairy paw on the
cairn, and the prosecutor said, "Do you swear to tell the truth,
the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, so help you—" he
paused to squint at the paper in his hand, and finished on a
puzzled note, "—Goddess?"
The witness removed the paw from the rock pile long enough
to scratch his ear. Then he replaced it, and replied, "Of course,"
in an injured tone.
"Then tell this court what you have seen of the activities of
this abominable wretch."
The witness settled back into the chair, fixing one eye on
Zeckler's face, another on the prosecutor, and closing the third
as if in meditation. "I think it happened on the fourth night
of the seventh crossing of Altair II (may the Goddess cast
a drought upon it)—or was it the seventh night of the fourth
crossing?—" he grinned apologetically at the judge—"when I
was making my way back through town toward my blessed
land-plot, minding my own business, Your Honor, after weeks
of bargaining for the crop I was harvesting. Suddenly from the
shadow of the building, this creature—" he waved a paw at
Zeckler—"stopped me in my tracks with a vicious cry. He had
a weapon I'd never seen before, and before I could find my
voice he forced me back against the wall. I could see by the
cruel glint in his eyes that there was no warmth, no sympathy
in his heart, that I was—"
"Objection!" Zeckler squealed plaintively, jumping to his
feet. "This witness can't even remember what night he's talking
about!"
The judge looked startled. Then he pawed feverishly through
his bundle of notes. "Overruled," he said abruptly. "Continue,
please."
The witness glowered at Zeckler. "As I was saying before
this loutish interruption," he muttered, "I could see that I was
face to face with the most desperate of criminal types, even
for Terrans. Note the shape of his head, the flabbiness of his
ears. I was petrified with fear. And then, helpless as I was, this
two-legged abomination began to shower me with threats of
evil to my blessed home, dark threats of poisoning my land
unless I would tell him where he could find the resting place
of our blessed Goddess—"
"I never saw him before in my life," Zeckler moaned to
Meyerhoff. "Listen to him! Why should I care where their
Goddess—"
Meyerhoff gave him a stony look. "The Goddess runs things
around here. She makes it rain. If it doesn't rain, somebody's
insulted her. It's very simple."
"But how can I fight testimony like that?"
"I doubt if you
can
fight it."
"But they can't prove a word of it—" He looked at the jury,
who were listening enraptured to the second witness on the
stand. This one was testifying regarding the butcherous slaughter
of eighteen (or was it twenty-three? Oh, yes, twenty-three)
women and children in the suburban village of Karzan. The
pogrom, it seemed, had been accomplished by an energy
weapon which ate great, gaping holes in the sides of buildings.
A third witness took the stand, continuing the drone as the
room grew hotter and muggier. Zeckler grew paler and paler,
his eyes turning glassy as the testimony piled up. "But it's not
true
," he whispered to Meyerhoff.
"Of course it isn't! Can't you understand?
These people
have no regard for truth.
It's stupid, to them, silly, a mark of
low intelligence. The only thing in the world they have any
respect for is a liar bigger and more skillful than they are."
Zeckler jerked around abruptly as he heard his name bellowed
out. "Does the defendant have anything to say before
the jury delivers the verdict?"
"Do I have—" Zeckler was across the room in a flash, his
pale cheeks suddenly taking on a feverish glow. He sat down
gingerly on the witness chair, facing the judge, his eyes bright
with fear and excitement. "Your—Your Honor, I—I have a
statement to make which will have a most important bearing
on this case. You must listen with the greatest care." He
glanced quickly at Meyerhoff, and back to the judge. "Your
Honor," he said in a hushed voice. "You are in gravest of
danger. All of you. Your lives—your very land is at stake."
The judge blinked, and shuffled through his notes hurriedly
as a murmur arose in the court. "Our land?"
"Your lives, your land, everything you hold dear," Zeckler
said quickly, licking his lips nervously. "You must try to
understand me—" he glanced apprehensively over his shoulder
"now, because I may not live long enough to repeat what
I am about to tell you—"
The murmur quieted down, all ears straining in their headsets
to hear his words. "These charges," he continued, "all of
them—they're perfectly true. At least, they
seem
to be perfectly
true. But in every instance, I was working with heart and
soul, risking my life, for the welfare of your beautiful planet."
There was a loud hiss from the back of the court. Zeckler
frowned and rubbed his hands together. "It was my misfortune,"
he said, "to go to the wrong planet when I first came to
Altair from my homeland on Terra. I—I landed on Altair II,
a grave mistake, but as it turned out, a very fortunate error.
Because in attempting to arrange trading in that frightful place,
I made certain contacts." His voice trembled, and sank lower.
"I learned the horrible thing which is about to happen to this
planet, at the hands of those barbarians. The conspiracy is
theirs, not mine. They have bribed your Goddess, flattered her
and lied to her, coerced her all-powerful goodness to their own
evil interests, preparing for the day when they could persuade
her to cast your land into the fiery furnace of a ten-year-drought—"
Somebody in the middle of the court burst out laughing.
One by one the natives nudged one another, and booed, and
guffawed, until the rising tide of racket drowned out Zeckler's
words. "The defendant is obviously lying," roared the prosecutor
over the pandemonium. "Any fool knows that the Goddess
can't be bribed. How could she be a Goddess if she could?"
Zeckler grew paler. "But—perhaps they were very clever—"
"And how could they flatter her, when she knows, beyond
doubt, that she is the most exquisitely radiant creature in all
the Universe? And
you
dare to insult her, drag her name in
the dirt."
The hisses grew louder, more belligerent. Cries of "Butcher
him!" and "Scald his bowels!" rose from the courtroom. The
judge banged for silence, his eyes angry.
"Unless the defendant wishes to take up more of our precious
time with these ridiculous lies, the jury—"
"Wait! Your Honor, I request a short recess before I present
my final plea."
"Recess?"
"A few moments to collect my thoughts, to arrange my
case."
The judge settled back with a disgusted snarl. "Do I have
to?" he asked Meyerhoff.
Meyerhoff nodded. The judge shrugged, pointing over his
shoulder to the anteroom. "You can go in there," he said.
Somehow, Zeckler managed to stumble from the witness
stand, amid riotous boos and hisses, and tottered into the anteroom.
Zeckler puffed hungrily on a cigarette, and looked up at
Meyerhoff with haunted eyes. "It—it doesn't look so good,"
he muttered.
Meyerhoff's eyes were worried, too. For some reason, he
felt a surge of pity and admiration for the haggard con-man.
"It's worse than I'd anticipated," he admitted glumly. "That
was a good try, but you just don't know enough about them
and their Goddess." He sat down wearily. "I don't see what
you can do. They want your blood, and they're going to have
it. They just won't believe you, no matter
how
big a lie you
tell."
Zeckler sat in silence for a moment. "This lying business,"
he said finally, "exactly how does it work?"
"The biggest, most convincing liar wins. It's as simple as
that. It doesn't matter how outlandish a whopper you tell.
Unless, of course, they've made up their minds that you just
naturally aren't as big a liar as they are. And it looks like that's
just what they've done. It wouldn't make any difference to
them
what
you say—unless, somehow, you could
make
them
believe it."
Zeckler frowned. "And how do they regard the—the biggest
liar? I mean, how do they feel toward him?"
Meyerhoff shifted uneasily. "It's hard to say. It's been my
experience that they respect him highly—maybe even fear him
a little. After all, the most convincing liar always wins in any
transaction, so he gets more land, more food, more power.
Yes, I think the biggest liar could go where he pleased without
any interference."
Zeckler was on his feet, his eyes suddenly bright with excitement.
"Wait a minute," he said tensely. "To tell them a lie
that they'd have to believe—a lie they simply couldn't
help
but believe—" He turned on Meyerhoff, his hands trembling.
"Do they
think
the way we do? I mean, with logic, cause and
effect, examining evidence and drawing conclusions? Given
certain evidence, would they have to draw the same conclusions
that we have to draw?"
Meyerhoff blinked. "Well—yes. Oh, yes, they're perfectly
logical."
Zeckler's eyes flashed, and a huge grin broke out on his
sallow face. His thin body fairly shook. He started hopping
up and down on one foot, staring idiotically into space. "If I
could only think—" he muttered. "Somebody—somewhere—something
I read."
"Whatever are you talking about?"
"It was a Greek, I think—"
Meyerhoff stared at him. "Oh, come now. Have you gone
off your rocker completely? You've got a problem on your
hands, man."
"No, no, I've got a problem in the bag!" Zeckler's cheeks
flushed. "Let's go back in there—I think I've got an answer!"
The courtroom quieted the moment they opened the door,
and the judge banged the gavel for silence. As soon as Zeckler
had taken his seat on the witness stand, the judge turned to
the head juryman. "Now, then," he said with happy finality.
"The jury—"
"Hold on! Just one minute more."
The judge stared down at Zeckler as if he were a bug on a
rock. "Oh, yes. You had something else to say. Well, go ahead
and say it."
Zeckler looked sharply around the hushed room. "You want
to convict me," he said softly, "in the worst sort of way. Isn't
that right?"
Eyes swung toward him. The judge broke into an evil grin.
"That's right."
"But you can't really convict me until you've considered
carefully any statement I make in my own defense. Isn't that
right?"
The judge looked uncomfortable. "If you've got something
to say, go ahead and say it."
"I've got just one statement to make. Short and sweet. But
you'd better listen to it, and think it out carefully before you
decide that you really want to convict me." He paused, and
glanced slyly at the judge. "You don't think much of those
who tell the truth, it seems. Well, put
this
statement in your
record, then." His voice was loud and clear in the still room.
"
All Earthmen are absolutely incapable of telling the truth.
"
Puzzled frowns appeared on the jury's faces. One or two
exchanged startled glances, and the room was still as death.
The judge stared at him, and then at Meyerhoff, then back.
"But you"—he stammered. "You're"—He stopped in mid-sentence,
his jaw sagging.
One of the jurymen let out a little squeak, and fainted dead
away. It took, all in all, about ten seconds for the statement
to soak in.
And then pandemonium broke loose in the courtroom.
"Really," said Harry Zeckler loftily, "it was so obvious I'm
amazed that it didn't occur to me first thing." He settled himself
down comfortably in the control cabin of the Interplanetary
Rocket and grinned at the outline of Altair IV looming larger
in the view screen.
Paul Meyerhoff stared stonily at the controls, his lips compressed
angrily. "You might at least have told me what you
were planning."
"And take the chance of being overheard? Don't be silly.
It had to come as a bombshell. I had to establish myself as a
liar—the prize liar of them all, but I had to tell the sort of lie
that they simply could not cope with. Something that would
throw them into such utter confusion that they wouldn't
dare
convict me." He grinned impishly at Meyerhoff. "The paradox
of Epimenides the Cretan. It really stopped them cold. They
knew
I was an Earthmen, which meant that my statement that
Earthmen were liars was a lie, which meant that maybe I wasn't
a liar, in which case—oh, it was tailor-made."
"It sure was." Meyerhoff's voice was a snarl.
"Well, it made me out a liar in a class they couldn't approach,
didn't it?"
Meyerhoff's face was purple with anger. "Oh, indeed it did!
And it put
all
Earthmen in exactly the same class, too."
"So what's honor among thieves? I got off, didn't I?"
Meyerhoff turned on him fiercely. "Oh, you got off just fine.
You scared the living daylights out of them. And in an eon of
lying they never have run up against a short-circuit like that.
You've also completely botched any hope of ever setting up
a trading alliance with Altair I, and that includes uranium, too.
Smart people don't gamble with loaded dice. You scared them
so badly they don't want anything to do with us."
Zeckler's grin broadened, and he leaned back luxuriously.
"Ah, well. After all, the Trading Alliance was
your
outlook,
wasn't it? What a pity!" He clucked his tongue sadly. "Me,
I've got a fortune in credits sitting back at the consulate waiting
for me—enough to keep me on silk for quite a while, I
might say. I think I'll just take a nice, long vacation."
Meyerhoff turned to him, and a twinkle of malignant glee
appeared in his eyes. "Yes, I think you will. I'm quite sure of
it, in fact. Won't cost you a cent, either."
"Eh?"
Meyerhoff grinned unpleasantly. He brushed an imaginary
lint fleck from his lapel, and looked up at Zeckler slyly. "That—uh—jury
trial. The Altairians weren't any too happy to
oblige. They wanted to execute you outright. Thought a trial
was awfully silly—until they got their money back, of course.
Not too much—just three million credits."
Zeckler went white. "But that money was in banking custody!"
"Is that right? My goodness. You don't suppose they could
have lost those papers, do you?" Meyerhoff grinned at the
little con-man. "And incidentally, you're under arrest, you
know."
A choking sound came from Zeckler's throat. "
Arrest!
"
"Oh, yes. Didn't I tell you? Conspiring to undermine the
authority of the Terran Trading Commission. Serious charge,
you know. Yes, I think we'll take a nice long vacation together,
straight back to Terra. And there I think you'll face a jury
trial."
Zeckler spluttered. "There's no evidence—you've got nothing
on me! What kind of a frame are you trying to pull?"
"A
lovely
frame. Airtight. A frame from the bottom up, and
you're right square in the middle. And this time—" Meyerhoff
tapped a cigarette on his thumb with happy finality—"this time
I
don't
think you'll get off."
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from "Tiger by the Tail and Other Science Fiction
Stories by Alan E. Nourse" and was first published in
If Magazine
January 1954. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright
on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | They do not understand the loopholes in the trading laws | They have a large amount of 'unclaimed' land | They were an ideal location for an interplanetary prison system | They have a large reservoir of 'unclaimed' uranium | 3 |
24275_U13YG5XY_5 | The proceedings of Altairian trial defy which tenet of the modern western legal system? | Letter
of
the
Law
by Alan E. Nourse
The
place was dark and damp, and smelled like moldy leaves.
Meyerhoff followed the huge, bear-like Altairian guard
down the slippery flagstones of the corridor, sniffing the
dead, musty air with distaste. He drew his carefully tailored
Terran-styled jacket closer about his shoulders, shivering as his
eyes avoided the black, yawning cell-holes they were passing.
His foot slipped on the slimy flags from time to time, and
finally he paused to wipe the caked mud from his trouser leg.
"How much farther is it?" he shouted angrily.
The guard waved a heavy paw vaguely into the blackness
ahead. Quite suddenly the corridor took a sharp bend, and the
Altairian stopped, producing a huge key ring from some obscure
fold of his hairy hide. "I still don't see any reason for
all the fuss," he grumbled in a wounded tone. "We've treated
him like a brother."
One of the huge steel doors clicked open. Meyerhoff peered
into the blackness, catching a vaguely human outline against
the back wall. "Harry?" he called sharply.
There was a startled gasp from within, and a skinny, gnarled
little man suddenly appeared in the guard's light, like a grotesque,
twisted ghost out of the blackness. Wide blue eyes
regarded Meyerhoff from beneath uneven black eyebrows, and
then the little man's face broke into a crafty grin. "Paul! So
they sent
you
! I knew I could count on it!" He executed a
deep, awkward bow, motioning Meyerhoff into the dark
cubicle. "Not much to offer you," he said slyly, "but it's the
best I can do under the circumstances."
Meyerhoff scowled, and turned abruptly to the guard. "We'll
have some privacy now, if you please. Interplanetary ruling.
And leave us the light."
The guard grumbled, and started for the door. "It's about
time you showed up!" cried the little man in the cell. "Great
day! Lucky they sent you, pal. Why, I've been in here for
years—"
"Look, Zeckler, the name is Meyerhoff, and I'm not your
pal," Meyerhoff snapped. "And you've been here for two
weeks, three days, and approximately four hours. You're getting
as bad as your gentle guards when it comes to bandying
the truth around." He peered through the dim light at the
gaunt face of the prisoner. Zeckler's face was dark with a
week's beard, and his bloodshot eyes belied the cocky grin
on his lips. His clothes were smeared and sodden, streaked
with great splotches of mud and moss. Meyerhoff's face softened
a little. "So Harry Zeckler's in a jam again," he said.
"You
look
as if they'd treated you like a brother."
The little man snorted. "These overgrown teddy-bears don't
know what brotherhood means, nor humanity, either. Bread
and water I've been getting, nothing more, and then only if they
feel like bringing it down." He sank wearily down on the rock
bench along the wall. "I thought you'd never get here! I sent
an appeal to the Terran Consulate the first day I was arrested.
What happened? I mean, all they had to do was get a man
over here, get the extradition papers signed, and provide transportation
off the planet for me. Why so much time? I've been
sitting here rotting—" He broke off in mid-sentence and stared
at Meyerhoff. "You
brought
the papers, didn't you? I mean,
we can leave now?"
Meyerhoff stared at the little man with a mixture of pity and
disgust. "You are a prize fool," he said finally. "Did you know
that?"
Zeckler's eyes widened. "What do you mean, fool? So I
spend a couple of weeks in this pneumonia trap. The deal was
worth it! I've got three million credits sitting in the Terran
Consulate on Altair V, just waiting for me to walk in and pick
them up. Three million credits—do you hear? That's enough
to set me up for life!"
Meyerhoff nodded grimly. "
If
you live long enough to walk
in and pick them up, that is."
"What do you mean, if?"
Meyerhoff sank down beside the man, his voice a tense
whisper in the musty cell. "I mean that right now you are
practically dead. You may not know it, but you are. You walk
into a newly opened planet with your smart little bag of tricks,
walk in here with a shaky passport and no permit, with no
knowledge of the natives outside of two paragraphs of inaccuracies
in the Explorer's Guide, and even then you're not
content to come in and sell something legitimate, something
the natives might conceivably be able to use. No, nothing so
simple for you. You have to pull your usual high-pressure stuff.
And this time, buddy, you're paying the piper."
"
You mean I'm not being extradited?
"
Meyerhoff grinned unpleasantly. "I mean precisely that.
You've committed a crime here—a major crime. The Altairians
are sore about it. And the Terran Consulate isn't willing
to sell all the trading possibilities here down the river just to
get you out of a mess. You're going to stand trial—and these
natives are out to get you. Personally, I think they're
going
to get you."
Zeckler stood up shakily. "You can't believe anything the
natives say," he said uneasily. "They're pathological liars.
Why, you should see what they tried to sell
me
! You've never
seen such a pack of liars as these critters." He glanced up at
Meyerhoff. "They'll probably drop a little fine on me and let
me go."
"A little fine of one Terran neck." Meyerhoff grinned nastily.
"You've committed the most heinous crime these creatures can
imagine, and they're going to get you for it if it's the last thing
they do. I'm afraid, my friend, that your con-man days are
over."
Zeckler fished in the other man's pocket, extracted a cigarette,
and lighted it with trembling fingers. "It's bad, then,"
he said finally.
"It's bad, all right."
Some shadow of the sly, elfin grin crept over the little con-man's
face. "Well, at any rate, I'm glad they sent you over,"
he said weakly. "Nothing like a good lawyer to handle a trial."
"
Lawyer?
Not me! Oh, no. Sorry, but no thanks." Meyerhoff
chuckled. "I'm your advisor, old boy. Nothing else. I'm here
to keep you from botching things up still worse for the Trading
Commission, that's all. I wouldn't get tangled up in a mess
with those creatures for anything!" He shook his head. "You're
your own lawyer, Mr. Super-salesman. It's all your show. And
you'd better get your head out of the sand, or you're going to
lose a case like it's never been lost before!"
Meyerhoff watched the man's pale face, and shook his head.
In a way, he thought, it was a pity to see such a change in the
rosy-cheeked, dapper, cocksure little man who had talked his
way glibly in and out of more jams than Meyerhoff could
count. Trading brought scalpers; it was almost inevitable that
where rich and unexploited trading ground was uncovered, it
would first fall prey to the fast-trading boys. They spread out
from Terra with the first wave of exploration—the slick, fast-talking
con-men who could work new territories unfettered by
the legal restrictions that soon closed down the more established
planets. The first men in were the richest out, and
through some curious quirk of the Terrestrial mind, they knew
they could count on Terran protection, however crooked and
underhand their methods.
But occasionally a situation arose where the civilization and
social practices of the alien victims made it unwise to tamper
with them. Altair I had been recognized at once by the Trading
Commission as a commercial prize of tremendous value, but
early reports had warned of the danger of wildcat trading on
the little, musty, jungle-like planet with its shaggy, three-eyed
inhabitants—warned specifically against the confidence tactics
so frequently used—but there was always somebody, Meyerhoff
reflected sourly, who just didn't get the word.
Zeckler puffed nervously on his cigarette, his narrow face
a study in troubled concentration. "But I didn't
do
anything!"
he exploded finally. "So I pulled an old con game. So what?
Why should they get so excited? So I clipped a few thousand
credits, pulled a little fast business." He shrugged eloquently,
spreading his hands. "Everybody's doing it. They do it to each
other without batting an eye. You should
see
these critters
operate on each other. Why, my little scheme was peanuts by
comparison."
Meyerhoff pulled a pipe from his pocket, and began stuffing
the bowl with infinite patience. "And precisely what sort of
con game was it?" he asked quietly.
Zeckler shrugged again. "The simplest, tiredest, moldiest
old racket that ever made a quick nickel. Remember the old
Terran gag about the Brooklyn Bridge? The same thing. Only
these critters didn't want bridges. They wanted land—this
gooey, slimy swamp they call 'farm land.' So I gave them
what they wanted. I just sold them some land."
Meyerhoff nodded fiercely. "You sure did. A hundred square
kilos at a swipe. Only you sold the same hundred square kilos
to a dozen different natives." Suddenly he threw back his hands
and roared. "Of all the things you
shouldn't
have done—"
"But what's a chunk of land?"
Meyerhoff shook his head hopelessly. "If you hadn't been
so greedy, you'd have found out what a chunk of land was to
these natives before you started peddling it. You'd have found
out other things about them, too. You'd have learned that
in spite of all their bumbling and fussing and squabbling
they're not so dull. You'd have found out that they're marsupials,
and that two out of five of them get thrown out of
their mother's pouch before they're old enough to survive.
You'd have realized that they have to start fighting for individual
rights almost as soon as they're born. Anything goes,
as long as it benefits them as individuals."
Meyerhoff grinned at the little man's horrified face. "Never
heard of that, had you? And you've never heard of other things,
too. You've probably never heard that there are just too many
Altairians here for the food their planet can supply, and their
diet is so finicky that they just can't live on anything that
doesn't grow here. And consequently, land is the key factor
in their economy, not money; nothing but land. To get land,
it's every man for himself, and the loser starves, and their
entire legal and monetary system revolves on that principle.
They've built up the most confusing and impossible system of
barter and trade imaginable, aimed at individual survival, with
land as the value behind the credit. That explains the lying—of
course they're liars, with an economy like that. They've
completely missed the concept of truth. Pathological? You bet
they're pathological! Only a fool would tell the truth when his
life depended on his being a better liar than the next guy!
Lying is the time-honored tradition, with their entire legal
system built around it."
Zeckler snorted. "But how could they
possibly
have a legal
system? I mean, if they don't recognize the truth when it slaps
them in the face?"
Meyerhoff shrugged. "As we understand legal systems, I
suppose they don't have one. They have only the haziest idea
what truth represents, and they've shrugged off the idea as
impossible and useless." He chuckled maliciously. "So you
went out and found a chunk of ground in the uplands, and
sold it to a dozen separate, self-centered, half-starved natives!
Encroachment on private property is legal grounds for murder
on this planet, and twelve of them descended on the same
chunk of land at the same time, all armed with title-deeds."
Meyerhoff sighed. "You've got twelve mad Altairians in your
hair. You've got a mad planet in your hair. And in the meantime,
Terra's most valuable uranium source in five centuries
is threatening to cut off supply unless they see your blood
splattered liberally all the way from here to the equator."
Zeckler was visibly shaken. "Look," he said weakly, "so I
wasn't so smart. What am I going to do? I mean, are you
going to sit quietly by and let them butcher me? How could
I defend myself in a legal setup like
this
?"
Meyerhoff smiled coolly. "You're going to get your sly little
con-man brain to working, I think," he said softly. "By Interplanetary
Rules, they have to give you a trial in Terran legal
form—judge, jury, court procedure, all that folderol. They
think it's a big joke—after all, what could a judicial oath mean
to them?—but they agreed. Only thing is, they're going to
hang you, if they die trying. So you'd better get those stunted
little wits of yours clicking—and if you try to implicate
me
,
even a little bit, I'll be out of there so fast you won't know
what happened."
With that Meyerhoff walked to the door. He jerked it inward
sharply, and spilled two guards over on their faces.
"Privacy," he grunted, and started back up the slippery corridor.
It certainly
looked
like a courtroom, at any rate. In the front
of the long, damp stone room was a bench, with a seat behind
it, and a small straight chair to the right. To the left was a stand
with twelve chairs—larger chairs, with a railing running along
the front. The rest of the room was filled almost to the door
with seats facing the bench. Zeckler followed the shaggy-haired
guard into the room, nodding approvingly. "Not such a bad
arrangement," he said. "They must have gotten the idea fast."
Meyerhoff wiped the perspiration from his forehead, and
shot the little con-man a stony glance. "At least you've got
a courtroom, a judge, and a jury for this mess. Beyond that—"
He shrugged eloquently. "I can't make any promises."
In the back of the room a door burst open with a bang.
Loud, harsh voices were heard as half a dozen of the huge
Altairians attempted to push through the door at once. Zeckler
clamped on the headset to his translator unit, and watched the
hubbub in the anteroom with growing alarm. Finally the question
of precedent seemed to be settled, and a group of the
Altairians filed in, in order of stature, stalking across the room
in flowing black robes, pug-nosed faces glowering with self-importance.
They descended upon the jury box, grunting and
scrapping with each other for the first-row seats, and the judge
took his place with obvious satisfaction behind the heavy
wooden bench. Finally, the prosecuting attorney appeared,
flanked by two clerks, who took their places beside him. The
prosecutor eyed Zeckler with cold malevolence, then turned
and delivered a sly wink at the judge.
In a moment the room was a hubbub as it filled with the
huge, bumbling, bear-like creatures, jostling each other and
fighting for seats, growling and complaining. Two small fights
broke out in the rear, but were quickly subdued by the group
of gendarmes guarding the entrance. Finally the judge glared
down at Zeckler with all three eyes, and pounded the bench top
with a wooden mallet until the roar of activity subsided. The
jurymen wriggled uncomfortably in their seats, exchanging
winks, and finally turned their attention to the front of the
court.
"We are reading the case of the people of Altair I," the
judge's voice roared out, "against one Harry Zeckler—" he
paused for a long, impressive moment—"Terran." The courtroom
immediately burst into an angry growl, until the judge
pounded the bench five or six times more. "This—creature—is
hereby accused of the following crimes," the judge bellowed.
"Conspiracy to overthrow the government of Altair I. Brutal
murder of seventeen law-abiding citizens of the village of
Karzan at the third hour before dawn in the second period
after his arrival. Desecration of the Temple of our beloved
Goddess Zermat, Queen of the Harvest. Conspiracy with the
lesser gods to cause the unprecedented drought in the Dermatti
section of our fair globe. Obscene exposure of his pouch-marks
in a public square. Four separate and distinct charges of jail-break
and bribery—" The judge pounded the bench for order—"Espionage
with the accursed scum of Altair II in preparation
for interplanetary invasion."
The little con-man's jaw sagged lower and lower, the color
draining from his face. He turned, wide-eyed, to Meyerhoff,
then back to the judge.
"The Chairman of the Jury," said the Judge succinctly, "will
read the verdict."
The little native in the front of the jury-box popped up like
a puppet on a string. "Defendant found guilty on all counts,"
he said.
"Defendant is guilty! The court will pronounce sentence—"
"
Now wait a minute!
" Zeckler was on his feet, wild-eyed.
"What kind of railroad job—"
The judge blinked disappointedly at Paul Meyerhoff. "Not
yet?" he asked, unhappily.
"No." Meyerhoff's hands twitched nervously. "Not yet, Your
Honor. Later, Your Honor. The trial comes
first
."
The judge looked as if his candy had been stolen. "But you
said
I should call for the verdict."
"Later. You have to have the trial before you can have the
verdict."
The Altairian shrugged indifferently. "Now—later—" he
muttered.
"Have the prosecutor call his first witness," said Meyerhoff.
Zeckler leaned over, his face ashen. "These charges," he
whispered. "They're insane!"
"Of course they are," Meyerhoff whispered back.
"But what am I going to—"
"Sit tight. Let
them
set things up."
"But those
lies
. They're liars, the whole pack of them—" He
broke off as the prosecutor roared a name.
The shaggy brute who took the stand was wearing a bright
purple hat which sat rakishly over one ear. He grinned the
Altairian equivalent of a hungry grin at the prosecutor. Then
he cleared his throat and started. "This Terran riffraff—"
"The oath," muttered the judge. "We've got to have the
oath."
The prosecutor nodded, and four natives moved forward,
carrying huge inscribed marble slabs to the front of the court.
One by one the chunks were reverently piled in a heap at the
witness's feet. The witness placed a huge, hairy paw on the
cairn, and the prosecutor said, "Do you swear to tell the truth,
the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, so help you—" he
paused to squint at the paper in his hand, and finished on a
puzzled note, "—Goddess?"
The witness removed the paw from the rock pile long enough
to scratch his ear. Then he replaced it, and replied, "Of course,"
in an injured tone.
"Then tell this court what you have seen of the activities of
this abominable wretch."
The witness settled back into the chair, fixing one eye on
Zeckler's face, another on the prosecutor, and closing the third
as if in meditation. "I think it happened on the fourth night
of the seventh crossing of Altair II (may the Goddess cast
a drought upon it)—or was it the seventh night of the fourth
crossing?—" he grinned apologetically at the judge—"when I
was making my way back through town toward my blessed
land-plot, minding my own business, Your Honor, after weeks
of bargaining for the crop I was harvesting. Suddenly from the
shadow of the building, this creature—" he waved a paw at
Zeckler—"stopped me in my tracks with a vicious cry. He had
a weapon I'd never seen before, and before I could find my
voice he forced me back against the wall. I could see by the
cruel glint in his eyes that there was no warmth, no sympathy
in his heart, that I was—"
"Objection!" Zeckler squealed plaintively, jumping to his
feet. "This witness can't even remember what night he's talking
about!"
The judge looked startled. Then he pawed feverishly through
his bundle of notes. "Overruled," he said abruptly. "Continue,
please."
The witness glowered at Zeckler. "As I was saying before
this loutish interruption," he muttered, "I could see that I was
face to face with the most desperate of criminal types, even
for Terrans. Note the shape of his head, the flabbiness of his
ears. I was petrified with fear. And then, helpless as I was, this
two-legged abomination began to shower me with threats of
evil to my blessed home, dark threats of poisoning my land
unless I would tell him where he could find the resting place
of our blessed Goddess—"
"I never saw him before in my life," Zeckler moaned to
Meyerhoff. "Listen to him! Why should I care where their
Goddess—"
Meyerhoff gave him a stony look. "The Goddess runs things
around here. She makes it rain. If it doesn't rain, somebody's
insulted her. It's very simple."
"But how can I fight testimony like that?"
"I doubt if you
can
fight it."
"But they can't prove a word of it—" He looked at the jury,
who were listening enraptured to the second witness on the
stand. This one was testifying regarding the butcherous slaughter
of eighteen (or was it twenty-three? Oh, yes, twenty-three)
women and children in the suburban village of Karzan. The
pogrom, it seemed, had been accomplished by an energy
weapon which ate great, gaping holes in the sides of buildings.
A third witness took the stand, continuing the drone as the
room grew hotter and muggier. Zeckler grew paler and paler,
his eyes turning glassy as the testimony piled up. "But it's not
true
," he whispered to Meyerhoff.
"Of course it isn't! Can't you understand?
These people
have no regard for truth.
It's stupid, to them, silly, a mark of
low intelligence. The only thing in the world they have any
respect for is a liar bigger and more skillful than they are."
Zeckler jerked around abruptly as he heard his name bellowed
out. "Does the defendant have anything to say before
the jury delivers the verdict?"
"Do I have—" Zeckler was across the room in a flash, his
pale cheeks suddenly taking on a feverish glow. He sat down
gingerly on the witness chair, facing the judge, his eyes bright
with fear and excitement. "Your—Your Honor, I—I have a
statement to make which will have a most important bearing
on this case. You must listen with the greatest care." He
glanced quickly at Meyerhoff, and back to the judge. "Your
Honor," he said in a hushed voice. "You are in gravest of
danger. All of you. Your lives—your very land is at stake."
The judge blinked, and shuffled through his notes hurriedly
as a murmur arose in the court. "Our land?"
"Your lives, your land, everything you hold dear," Zeckler
said quickly, licking his lips nervously. "You must try to
understand me—" he glanced apprehensively over his shoulder
"now, because I may not live long enough to repeat what
I am about to tell you—"
The murmur quieted down, all ears straining in their headsets
to hear his words. "These charges," he continued, "all of
them—they're perfectly true. At least, they
seem
to be perfectly
true. But in every instance, I was working with heart and
soul, risking my life, for the welfare of your beautiful planet."
There was a loud hiss from the back of the court. Zeckler
frowned and rubbed his hands together. "It was my misfortune,"
he said, "to go to the wrong planet when I first came to
Altair from my homeland on Terra. I—I landed on Altair II,
a grave mistake, but as it turned out, a very fortunate error.
Because in attempting to arrange trading in that frightful place,
I made certain contacts." His voice trembled, and sank lower.
"I learned the horrible thing which is about to happen to this
planet, at the hands of those barbarians. The conspiracy is
theirs, not mine. They have bribed your Goddess, flattered her
and lied to her, coerced her all-powerful goodness to their own
evil interests, preparing for the day when they could persuade
her to cast your land into the fiery furnace of a ten-year-drought—"
Somebody in the middle of the court burst out laughing.
One by one the natives nudged one another, and booed, and
guffawed, until the rising tide of racket drowned out Zeckler's
words. "The defendant is obviously lying," roared the prosecutor
over the pandemonium. "Any fool knows that the Goddess
can't be bribed. How could she be a Goddess if she could?"
Zeckler grew paler. "But—perhaps they were very clever—"
"And how could they flatter her, when she knows, beyond
doubt, that she is the most exquisitely radiant creature in all
the Universe? And
you
dare to insult her, drag her name in
the dirt."
The hisses grew louder, more belligerent. Cries of "Butcher
him!" and "Scald his bowels!" rose from the courtroom. The
judge banged for silence, his eyes angry.
"Unless the defendant wishes to take up more of our precious
time with these ridiculous lies, the jury—"
"Wait! Your Honor, I request a short recess before I present
my final plea."
"Recess?"
"A few moments to collect my thoughts, to arrange my
case."
The judge settled back with a disgusted snarl. "Do I have
to?" he asked Meyerhoff.
Meyerhoff nodded. The judge shrugged, pointing over his
shoulder to the anteroom. "You can go in there," he said.
Somehow, Zeckler managed to stumble from the witness
stand, amid riotous boos and hisses, and tottered into the anteroom.
Zeckler puffed hungrily on a cigarette, and looked up at
Meyerhoff with haunted eyes. "It—it doesn't look so good,"
he muttered.
Meyerhoff's eyes were worried, too. For some reason, he
felt a surge of pity and admiration for the haggard con-man.
"It's worse than I'd anticipated," he admitted glumly. "That
was a good try, but you just don't know enough about them
and their Goddess." He sat down wearily. "I don't see what
you can do. They want your blood, and they're going to have
it. They just won't believe you, no matter
how
big a lie you
tell."
Zeckler sat in silence for a moment. "This lying business,"
he said finally, "exactly how does it work?"
"The biggest, most convincing liar wins. It's as simple as
that. It doesn't matter how outlandish a whopper you tell.
Unless, of course, they've made up their minds that you just
naturally aren't as big a liar as they are. And it looks like that's
just what they've done. It wouldn't make any difference to
them
what
you say—unless, somehow, you could
make
them
believe it."
Zeckler frowned. "And how do they regard the—the biggest
liar? I mean, how do they feel toward him?"
Meyerhoff shifted uneasily. "It's hard to say. It's been my
experience that they respect him highly—maybe even fear him
a little. After all, the most convincing liar always wins in any
transaction, so he gets more land, more food, more power.
Yes, I think the biggest liar could go where he pleased without
any interference."
Zeckler was on his feet, his eyes suddenly bright with excitement.
"Wait a minute," he said tensely. "To tell them a lie
that they'd have to believe—a lie they simply couldn't
help
but believe—" He turned on Meyerhoff, his hands trembling.
"Do they
think
the way we do? I mean, with logic, cause and
effect, examining evidence and drawing conclusions? Given
certain evidence, would they have to draw the same conclusions
that we have to draw?"
Meyerhoff blinked. "Well—yes. Oh, yes, they're perfectly
logical."
Zeckler's eyes flashed, and a huge grin broke out on his
sallow face. His thin body fairly shook. He started hopping
up and down on one foot, staring idiotically into space. "If I
could only think—" he muttered. "Somebody—somewhere—something
I read."
"Whatever are you talking about?"
"It was a Greek, I think—"
Meyerhoff stared at him. "Oh, come now. Have you gone
off your rocker completely? You've got a problem on your
hands, man."
"No, no, I've got a problem in the bag!" Zeckler's cheeks
flushed. "Let's go back in there—I think I've got an answer!"
The courtroom quieted the moment they opened the door,
and the judge banged the gavel for silence. As soon as Zeckler
had taken his seat on the witness stand, the judge turned to
the head juryman. "Now, then," he said with happy finality.
"The jury—"
"Hold on! Just one minute more."
The judge stared down at Zeckler as if he were a bug on a
rock. "Oh, yes. You had something else to say. Well, go ahead
and say it."
Zeckler looked sharply around the hushed room. "You want
to convict me," he said softly, "in the worst sort of way. Isn't
that right?"
Eyes swung toward him. The judge broke into an evil grin.
"That's right."
"But you can't really convict me until you've considered
carefully any statement I make in my own defense. Isn't that
right?"
The judge looked uncomfortable. "If you've got something
to say, go ahead and say it."
"I've got just one statement to make. Short and sweet. But
you'd better listen to it, and think it out carefully before you
decide that you really want to convict me." He paused, and
glanced slyly at the judge. "You don't think much of those
who tell the truth, it seems. Well, put
this
statement in your
record, then." His voice was loud and clear in the still room.
"
All Earthmen are absolutely incapable of telling the truth.
"
Puzzled frowns appeared on the jury's faces. One or two
exchanged startled glances, and the room was still as death.
The judge stared at him, and then at Meyerhoff, then back.
"But you"—he stammered. "You're"—He stopped in mid-sentence,
his jaw sagging.
One of the jurymen let out a little squeak, and fainted dead
away. It took, all in all, about ten seconds for the statement
to soak in.
And then pandemonium broke loose in the courtroom.
"Really," said Harry Zeckler loftily, "it was so obvious I'm
amazed that it didn't occur to me first thing." He settled himself
down comfortably in the control cabin of the Interplanetary
Rocket and grinned at the outline of Altair IV looming larger
in the view screen.
Paul Meyerhoff stared stonily at the controls, his lips compressed
angrily. "You might at least have told me what you
were planning."
"And take the chance of being overheard? Don't be silly.
It had to come as a bombshell. I had to establish myself as a
liar—the prize liar of them all, but I had to tell the sort of lie
that they simply could not cope with. Something that would
throw them into such utter confusion that they wouldn't
dare
convict me." He grinned impishly at Meyerhoff. "The paradox
of Epimenides the Cretan. It really stopped them cold. They
knew
I was an Earthmen, which meant that my statement that
Earthmen were liars was a lie, which meant that maybe I wasn't
a liar, in which case—oh, it was tailor-made."
"It sure was." Meyerhoff's voice was a snarl.
"Well, it made me out a liar in a class they couldn't approach,
didn't it?"
Meyerhoff's face was purple with anger. "Oh, indeed it did!
And it put
all
Earthmen in exactly the same class, too."
"So what's honor among thieves? I got off, didn't I?"
Meyerhoff turned on him fiercely. "Oh, you got off just fine.
You scared the living daylights out of them. And in an eon of
lying they never have run up against a short-circuit like that.
You've also completely botched any hope of ever setting up
a trading alliance with Altair I, and that includes uranium, too.
Smart people don't gamble with loaded dice. You scared them
so badly they don't want anything to do with us."
Zeckler's grin broadened, and he leaned back luxuriously.
"Ah, well. After all, the Trading Alliance was
your
outlook,
wasn't it? What a pity!" He clucked his tongue sadly. "Me,
I've got a fortune in credits sitting back at the consulate waiting
for me—enough to keep me on silk for quite a while, I
might say. I think I'll just take a nice, long vacation."
Meyerhoff turned to him, and a twinkle of malignant glee
appeared in his eyes. "Yes, I think you will. I'm quite sure of
it, in fact. Won't cost you a cent, either."
"Eh?"
Meyerhoff grinned unpleasantly. He brushed an imaginary
lint fleck from his lapel, and looked up at Zeckler slyly. "That—uh—jury
trial. The Altairians weren't any too happy to
oblige. They wanted to execute you outright. Thought a trial
was awfully silly—until they got their money back, of course.
Not too much—just three million credits."
Zeckler went white. "But that money was in banking custody!"
"Is that right? My goodness. You don't suppose they could
have lost those papers, do you?" Meyerhoff grinned at the
little con-man. "And incidentally, you're under arrest, you
know."
A choking sound came from Zeckler's throat. "
Arrest!
"
"Oh, yes. Didn't I tell you? Conspiring to undermine the
authority of the Terran Trading Commission. Serious charge,
you know. Yes, I think we'll take a nice long vacation together,
straight back to Terra. And there I think you'll face a jury
trial."
Zeckler spluttered. "There's no evidence—you've got nothing
on me! What kind of a frame are you trying to pull?"
"A
lovely
frame. Airtight. A frame from the bottom up, and
you're right square in the middle. And this time—" Meyerhoff
tapped a cigarette on his thumb with happy finality—"this time
I
don't
think you'll get off."
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from "Tiger by the Tail and Other Science Fiction
Stories by Alan E. Nourse" and was first published in
If Magazine
January 1954. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright
on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | a defendant is innocent until proven guilty | a defendant has a right to due process | no warrant shall be issued without just cause | no one shall be subject to self-incrimination | 0 |
24275_U13YG5XY_6 | Altairian's economy is most likely representative of which system: | Letter
of
the
Law
by Alan E. Nourse
The
place was dark and damp, and smelled like moldy leaves.
Meyerhoff followed the huge, bear-like Altairian guard
down the slippery flagstones of the corridor, sniffing the
dead, musty air with distaste. He drew his carefully tailored
Terran-styled jacket closer about his shoulders, shivering as his
eyes avoided the black, yawning cell-holes they were passing.
His foot slipped on the slimy flags from time to time, and
finally he paused to wipe the caked mud from his trouser leg.
"How much farther is it?" he shouted angrily.
The guard waved a heavy paw vaguely into the blackness
ahead. Quite suddenly the corridor took a sharp bend, and the
Altairian stopped, producing a huge key ring from some obscure
fold of his hairy hide. "I still don't see any reason for
all the fuss," he grumbled in a wounded tone. "We've treated
him like a brother."
One of the huge steel doors clicked open. Meyerhoff peered
into the blackness, catching a vaguely human outline against
the back wall. "Harry?" he called sharply.
There was a startled gasp from within, and a skinny, gnarled
little man suddenly appeared in the guard's light, like a grotesque,
twisted ghost out of the blackness. Wide blue eyes
regarded Meyerhoff from beneath uneven black eyebrows, and
then the little man's face broke into a crafty grin. "Paul! So
they sent
you
! I knew I could count on it!" He executed a
deep, awkward bow, motioning Meyerhoff into the dark
cubicle. "Not much to offer you," he said slyly, "but it's the
best I can do under the circumstances."
Meyerhoff scowled, and turned abruptly to the guard. "We'll
have some privacy now, if you please. Interplanetary ruling.
And leave us the light."
The guard grumbled, and started for the door. "It's about
time you showed up!" cried the little man in the cell. "Great
day! Lucky they sent you, pal. Why, I've been in here for
years—"
"Look, Zeckler, the name is Meyerhoff, and I'm not your
pal," Meyerhoff snapped. "And you've been here for two
weeks, three days, and approximately four hours. You're getting
as bad as your gentle guards when it comes to bandying
the truth around." He peered through the dim light at the
gaunt face of the prisoner. Zeckler's face was dark with a
week's beard, and his bloodshot eyes belied the cocky grin
on his lips. His clothes were smeared and sodden, streaked
with great splotches of mud and moss. Meyerhoff's face softened
a little. "So Harry Zeckler's in a jam again," he said.
"You
look
as if they'd treated you like a brother."
The little man snorted. "These overgrown teddy-bears don't
know what brotherhood means, nor humanity, either. Bread
and water I've been getting, nothing more, and then only if they
feel like bringing it down." He sank wearily down on the rock
bench along the wall. "I thought you'd never get here! I sent
an appeal to the Terran Consulate the first day I was arrested.
What happened? I mean, all they had to do was get a man
over here, get the extradition papers signed, and provide transportation
off the planet for me. Why so much time? I've been
sitting here rotting—" He broke off in mid-sentence and stared
at Meyerhoff. "You
brought
the papers, didn't you? I mean,
we can leave now?"
Meyerhoff stared at the little man with a mixture of pity and
disgust. "You are a prize fool," he said finally. "Did you know
that?"
Zeckler's eyes widened. "What do you mean, fool? So I
spend a couple of weeks in this pneumonia trap. The deal was
worth it! I've got three million credits sitting in the Terran
Consulate on Altair V, just waiting for me to walk in and pick
them up. Three million credits—do you hear? That's enough
to set me up for life!"
Meyerhoff nodded grimly. "
If
you live long enough to walk
in and pick them up, that is."
"What do you mean, if?"
Meyerhoff sank down beside the man, his voice a tense
whisper in the musty cell. "I mean that right now you are
practically dead. You may not know it, but you are. You walk
into a newly opened planet with your smart little bag of tricks,
walk in here with a shaky passport and no permit, with no
knowledge of the natives outside of two paragraphs of inaccuracies
in the Explorer's Guide, and even then you're not
content to come in and sell something legitimate, something
the natives might conceivably be able to use. No, nothing so
simple for you. You have to pull your usual high-pressure stuff.
And this time, buddy, you're paying the piper."
"
You mean I'm not being extradited?
"
Meyerhoff grinned unpleasantly. "I mean precisely that.
You've committed a crime here—a major crime. The Altairians
are sore about it. And the Terran Consulate isn't willing
to sell all the trading possibilities here down the river just to
get you out of a mess. You're going to stand trial—and these
natives are out to get you. Personally, I think they're
going
to get you."
Zeckler stood up shakily. "You can't believe anything the
natives say," he said uneasily. "They're pathological liars.
Why, you should see what they tried to sell
me
! You've never
seen such a pack of liars as these critters." He glanced up at
Meyerhoff. "They'll probably drop a little fine on me and let
me go."
"A little fine of one Terran neck." Meyerhoff grinned nastily.
"You've committed the most heinous crime these creatures can
imagine, and they're going to get you for it if it's the last thing
they do. I'm afraid, my friend, that your con-man days are
over."
Zeckler fished in the other man's pocket, extracted a cigarette,
and lighted it with trembling fingers. "It's bad, then,"
he said finally.
"It's bad, all right."
Some shadow of the sly, elfin grin crept over the little con-man's
face. "Well, at any rate, I'm glad they sent you over,"
he said weakly. "Nothing like a good lawyer to handle a trial."
"
Lawyer?
Not me! Oh, no. Sorry, but no thanks." Meyerhoff
chuckled. "I'm your advisor, old boy. Nothing else. I'm here
to keep you from botching things up still worse for the Trading
Commission, that's all. I wouldn't get tangled up in a mess
with those creatures for anything!" He shook his head. "You're
your own lawyer, Mr. Super-salesman. It's all your show. And
you'd better get your head out of the sand, or you're going to
lose a case like it's never been lost before!"
Meyerhoff watched the man's pale face, and shook his head.
In a way, he thought, it was a pity to see such a change in the
rosy-cheeked, dapper, cocksure little man who had talked his
way glibly in and out of more jams than Meyerhoff could
count. Trading brought scalpers; it was almost inevitable that
where rich and unexploited trading ground was uncovered, it
would first fall prey to the fast-trading boys. They spread out
from Terra with the first wave of exploration—the slick, fast-talking
con-men who could work new territories unfettered by
the legal restrictions that soon closed down the more established
planets. The first men in were the richest out, and
through some curious quirk of the Terrestrial mind, they knew
they could count on Terran protection, however crooked and
underhand their methods.
But occasionally a situation arose where the civilization and
social practices of the alien victims made it unwise to tamper
with them. Altair I had been recognized at once by the Trading
Commission as a commercial prize of tremendous value, but
early reports had warned of the danger of wildcat trading on
the little, musty, jungle-like planet with its shaggy, three-eyed
inhabitants—warned specifically against the confidence tactics
so frequently used—but there was always somebody, Meyerhoff
reflected sourly, who just didn't get the word.
Zeckler puffed nervously on his cigarette, his narrow face
a study in troubled concentration. "But I didn't
do
anything!"
he exploded finally. "So I pulled an old con game. So what?
Why should they get so excited? So I clipped a few thousand
credits, pulled a little fast business." He shrugged eloquently,
spreading his hands. "Everybody's doing it. They do it to each
other without batting an eye. You should
see
these critters
operate on each other. Why, my little scheme was peanuts by
comparison."
Meyerhoff pulled a pipe from his pocket, and began stuffing
the bowl with infinite patience. "And precisely what sort of
con game was it?" he asked quietly.
Zeckler shrugged again. "The simplest, tiredest, moldiest
old racket that ever made a quick nickel. Remember the old
Terran gag about the Brooklyn Bridge? The same thing. Only
these critters didn't want bridges. They wanted land—this
gooey, slimy swamp they call 'farm land.' So I gave them
what they wanted. I just sold them some land."
Meyerhoff nodded fiercely. "You sure did. A hundred square
kilos at a swipe. Only you sold the same hundred square kilos
to a dozen different natives." Suddenly he threw back his hands
and roared. "Of all the things you
shouldn't
have done—"
"But what's a chunk of land?"
Meyerhoff shook his head hopelessly. "If you hadn't been
so greedy, you'd have found out what a chunk of land was to
these natives before you started peddling it. You'd have found
out other things about them, too. You'd have learned that
in spite of all their bumbling and fussing and squabbling
they're not so dull. You'd have found out that they're marsupials,
and that two out of five of them get thrown out of
their mother's pouch before they're old enough to survive.
You'd have realized that they have to start fighting for individual
rights almost as soon as they're born. Anything goes,
as long as it benefits them as individuals."
Meyerhoff grinned at the little man's horrified face. "Never
heard of that, had you? And you've never heard of other things,
too. You've probably never heard that there are just too many
Altairians here for the food their planet can supply, and their
diet is so finicky that they just can't live on anything that
doesn't grow here. And consequently, land is the key factor
in their economy, not money; nothing but land. To get land,
it's every man for himself, and the loser starves, and their
entire legal and monetary system revolves on that principle.
They've built up the most confusing and impossible system of
barter and trade imaginable, aimed at individual survival, with
land as the value behind the credit. That explains the lying—of
course they're liars, with an economy like that. They've
completely missed the concept of truth. Pathological? You bet
they're pathological! Only a fool would tell the truth when his
life depended on his being a better liar than the next guy!
Lying is the time-honored tradition, with their entire legal
system built around it."
Zeckler snorted. "But how could they
possibly
have a legal
system? I mean, if they don't recognize the truth when it slaps
them in the face?"
Meyerhoff shrugged. "As we understand legal systems, I
suppose they don't have one. They have only the haziest idea
what truth represents, and they've shrugged off the idea as
impossible and useless." He chuckled maliciously. "So you
went out and found a chunk of ground in the uplands, and
sold it to a dozen separate, self-centered, half-starved natives!
Encroachment on private property is legal grounds for murder
on this planet, and twelve of them descended on the same
chunk of land at the same time, all armed with title-deeds."
Meyerhoff sighed. "You've got twelve mad Altairians in your
hair. You've got a mad planet in your hair. And in the meantime,
Terra's most valuable uranium source in five centuries
is threatening to cut off supply unless they see your blood
splattered liberally all the way from here to the equator."
Zeckler was visibly shaken. "Look," he said weakly, "so I
wasn't so smart. What am I going to do? I mean, are you
going to sit quietly by and let them butcher me? How could
I defend myself in a legal setup like
this
?"
Meyerhoff smiled coolly. "You're going to get your sly little
con-man brain to working, I think," he said softly. "By Interplanetary
Rules, they have to give you a trial in Terran legal
form—judge, jury, court procedure, all that folderol. They
think it's a big joke—after all, what could a judicial oath mean
to them?—but they agreed. Only thing is, they're going to
hang you, if they die trying. So you'd better get those stunted
little wits of yours clicking—and if you try to implicate
me
,
even a little bit, I'll be out of there so fast you won't know
what happened."
With that Meyerhoff walked to the door. He jerked it inward
sharply, and spilled two guards over on their faces.
"Privacy," he grunted, and started back up the slippery corridor.
It certainly
looked
like a courtroom, at any rate. In the front
of the long, damp stone room was a bench, with a seat behind
it, and a small straight chair to the right. To the left was a stand
with twelve chairs—larger chairs, with a railing running along
the front. The rest of the room was filled almost to the door
with seats facing the bench. Zeckler followed the shaggy-haired
guard into the room, nodding approvingly. "Not such a bad
arrangement," he said. "They must have gotten the idea fast."
Meyerhoff wiped the perspiration from his forehead, and
shot the little con-man a stony glance. "At least you've got
a courtroom, a judge, and a jury for this mess. Beyond that—"
He shrugged eloquently. "I can't make any promises."
In the back of the room a door burst open with a bang.
Loud, harsh voices were heard as half a dozen of the huge
Altairians attempted to push through the door at once. Zeckler
clamped on the headset to his translator unit, and watched the
hubbub in the anteroom with growing alarm. Finally the question
of precedent seemed to be settled, and a group of the
Altairians filed in, in order of stature, stalking across the room
in flowing black robes, pug-nosed faces glowering with self-importance.
They descended upon the jury box, grunting and
scrapping with each other for the first-row seats, and the judge
took his place with obvious satisfaction behind the heavy
wooden bench. Finally, the prosecuting attorney appeared,
flanked by two clerks, who took their places beside him. The
prosecutor eyed Zeckler with cold malevolence, then turned
and delivered a sly wink at the judge.
In a moment the room was a hubbub as it filled with the
huge, bumbling, bear-like creatures, jostling each other and
fighting for seats, growling and complaining. Two small fights
broke out in the rear, but were quickly subdued by the group
of gendarmes guarding the entrance. Finally the judge glared
down at Zeckler with all three eyes, and pounded the bench top
with a wooden mallet until the roar of activity subsided. The
jurymen wriggled uncomfortably in their seats, exchanging
winks, and finally turned their attention to the front of the
court.
"We are reading the case of the people of Altair I," the
judge's voice roared out, "against one Harry Zeckler—" he
paused for a long, impressive moment—"Terran." The courtroom
immediately burst into an angry growl, until the judge
pounded the bench five or six times more. "This—creature—is
hereby accused of the following crimes," the judge bellowed.
"Conspiracy to overthrow the government of Altair I. Brutal
murder of seventeen law-abiding citizens of the village of
Karzan at the third hour before dawn in the second period
after his arrival. Desecration of the Temple of our beloved
Goddess Zermat, Queen of the Harvest. Conspiracy with the
lesser gods to cause the unprecedented drought in the Dermatti
section of our fair globe. Obscene exposure of his pouch-marks
in a public square. Four separate and distinct charges of jail-break
and bribery—" The judge pounded the bench for order—"Espionage
with the accursed scum of Altair II in preparation
for interplanetary invasion."
The little con-man's jaw sagged lower and lower, the color
draining from his face. He turned, wide-eyed, to Meyerhoff,
then back to the judge.
"The Chairman of the Jury," said the Judge succinctly, "will
read the verdict."
The little native in the front of the jury-box popped up like
a puppet on a string. "Defendant found guilty on all counts,"
he said.
"Defendant is guilty! The court will pronounce sentence—"
"
Now wait a minute!
" Zeckler was on his feet, wild-eyed.
"What kind of railroad job—"
The judge blinked disappointedly at Paul Meyerhoff. "Not
yet?" he asked, unhappily.
"No." Meyerhoff's hands twitched nervously. "Not yet, Your
Honor. Later, Your Honor. The trial comes
first
."
The judge looked as if his candy had been stolen. "But you
said
I should call for the verdict."
"Later. You have to have the trial before you can have the
verdict."
The Altairian shrugged indifferently. "Now—later—" he
muttered.
"Have the prosecutor call his first witness," said Meyerhoff.
Zeckler leaned over, his face ashen. "These charges," he
whispered. "They're insane!"
"Of course they are," Meyerhoff whispered back.
"But what am I going to—"
"Sit tight. Let
them
set things up."
"But those
lies
. They're liars, the whole pack of them—" He
broke off as the prosecutor roared a name.
The shaggy brute who took the stand was wearing a bright
purple hat which sat rakishly over one ear. He grinned the
Altairian equivalent of a hungry grin at the prosecutor. Then
he cleared his throat and started. "This Terran riffraff—"
"The oath," muttered the judge. "We've got to have the
oath."
The prosecutor nodded, and four natives moved forward,
carrying huge inscribed marble slabs to the front of the court.
One by one the chunks were reverently piled in a heap at the
witness's feet. The witness placed a huge, hairy paw on the
cairn, and the prosecutor said, "Do you swear to tell the truth,
the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, so help you—" he
paused to squint at the paper in his hand, and finished on a
puzzled note, "—Goddess?"
The witness removed the paw from the rock pile long enough
to scratch his ear. Then he replaced it, and replied, "Of course,"
in an injured tone.
"Then tell this court what you have seen of the activities of
this abominable wretch."
The witness settled back into the chair, fixing one eye on
Zeckler's face, another on the prosecutor, and closing the third
as if in meditation. "I think it happened on the fourth night
of the seventh crossing of Altair II (may the Goddess cast
a drought upon it)—or was it the seventh night of the fourth
crossing?—" he grinned apologetically at the judge—"when I
was making my way back through town toward my blessed
land-plot, minding my own business, Your Honor, after weeks
of bargaining for the crop I was harvesting. Suddenly from the
shadow of the building, this creature—" he waved a paw at
Zeckler—"stopped me in my tracks with a vicious cry. He had
a weapon I'd never seen before, and before I could find my
voice he forced me back against the wall. I could see by the
cruel glint in his eyes that there was no warmth, no sympathy
in his heart, that I was—"
"Objection!" Zeckler squealed plaintively, jumping to his
feet. "This witness can't even remember what night he's talking
about!"
The judge looked startled. Then he pawed feverishly through
his bundle of notes. "Overruled," he said abruptly. "Continue,
please."
The witness glowered at Zeckler. "As I was saying before
this loutish interruption," he muttered, "I could see that I was
face to face with the most desperate of criminal types, even
for Terrans. Note the shape of his head, the flabbiness of his
ears. I was petrified with fear. And then, helpless as I was, this
two-legged abomination began to shower me with threats of
evil to my blessed home, dark threats of poisoning my land
unless I would tell him where he could find the resting place
of our blessed Goddess—"
"I never saw him before in my life," Zeckler moaned to
Meyerhoff. "Listen to him! Why should I care where their
Goddess—"
Meyerhoff gave him a stony look. "The Goddess runs things
around here. She makes it rain. If it doesn't rain, somebody's
insulted her. It's very simple."
"But how can I fight testimony like that?"
"I doubt if you
can
fight it."
"But they can't prove a word of it—" He looked at the jury,
who were listening enraptured to the second witness on the
stand. This one was testifying regarding the butcherous slaughter
of eighteen (or was it twenty-three? Oh, yes, twenty-three)
women and children in the suburban village of Karzan. The
pogrom, it seemed, had been accomplished by an energy
weapon which ate great, gaping holes in the sides of buildings.
A third witness took the stand, continuing the drone as the
room grew hotter and muggier. Zeckler grew paler and paler,
his eyes turning glassy as the testimony piled up. "But it's not
true
," he whispered to Meyerhoff.
"Of course it isn't! Can't you understand?
These people
have no regard for truth.
It's stupid, to them, silly, a mark of
low intelligence. The only thing in the world they have any
respect for is a liar bigger and more skillful than they are."
Zeckler jerked around abruptly as he heard his name bellowed
out. "Does the defendant have anything to say before
the jury delivers the verdict?"
"Do I have—" Zeckler was across the room in a flash, his
pale cheeks suddenly taking on a feverish glow. He sat down
gingerly on the witness chair, facing the judge, his eyes bright
with fear and excitement. "Your—Your Honor, I—I have a
statement to make which will have a most important bearing
on this case. You must listen with the greatest care." He
glanced quickly at Meyerhoff, and back to the judge. "Your
Honor," he said in a hushed voice. "You are in gravest of
danger. All of you. Your lives—your very land is at stake."
The judge blinked, and shuffled through his notes hurriedly
as a murmur arose in the court. "Our land?"
"Your lives, your land, everything you hold dear," Zeckler
said quickly, licking his lips nervously. "You must try to
understand me—" he glanced apprehensively over his shoulder
"now, because I may not live long enough to repeat what
I am about to tell you—"
The murmur quieted down, all ears straining in their headsets
to hear his words. "These charges," he continued, "all of
them—they're perfectly true. At least, they
seem
to be perfectly
true. But in every instance, I was working with heart and
soul, risking my life, for the welfare of your beautiful planet."
There was a loud hiss from the back of the court. Zeckler
frowned and rubbed his hands together. "It was my misfortune,"
he said, "to go to the wrong planet when I first came to
Altair from my homeland on Terra. I—I landed on Altair II,
a grave mistake, but as it turned out, a very fortunate error.
Because in attempting to arrange trading in that frightful place,
I made certain contacts." His voice trembled, and sank lower.
"I learned the horrible thing which is about to happen to this
planet, at the hands of those barbarians. The conspiracy is
theirs, not mine. They have bribed your Goddess, flattered her
and lied to her, coerced her all-powerful goodness to their own
evil interests, preparing for the day when they could persuade
her to cast your land into the fiery furnace of a ten-year-drought—"
Somebody in the middle of the court burst out laughing.
One by one the natives nudged one another, and booed, and
guffawed, until the rising tide of racket drowned out Zeckler's
words. "The defendant is obviously lying," roared the prosecutor
over the pandemonium. "Any fool knows that the Goddess
can't be bribed. How could she be a Goddess if she could?"
Zeckler grew paler. "But—perhaps they were very clever—"
"And how could they flatter her, when she knows, beyond
doubt, that she is the most exquisitely radiant creature in all
the Universe? And
you
dare to insult her, drag her name in
the dirt."
The hisses grew louder, more belligerent. Cries of "Butcher
him!" and "Scald his bowels!" rose from the courtroom. The
judge banged for silence, his eyes angry.
"Unless the defendant wishes to take up more of our precious
time with these ridiculous lies, the jury—"
"Wait! Your Honor, I request a short recess before I present
my final plea."
"Recess?"
"A few moments to collect my thoughts, to arrange my
case."
The judge settled back with a disgusted snarl. "Do I have
to?" he asked Meyerhoff.
Meyerhoff nodded. The judge shrugged, pointing over his
shoulder to the anteroom. "You can go in there," he said.
Somehow, Zeckler managed to stumble from the witness
stand, amid riotous boos and hisses, and tottered into the anteroom.
Zeckler puffed hungrily on a cigarette, and looked up at
Meyerhoff with haunted eyes. "It—it doesn't look so good,"
he muttered.
Meyerhoff's eyes were worried, too. For some reason, he
felt a surge of pity and admiration for the haggard con-man.
"It's worse than I'd anticipated," he admitted glumly. "That
was a good try, but you just don't know enough about them
and their Goddess." He sat down wearily. "I don't see what
you can do. They want your blood, and they're going to have
it. They just won't believe you, no matter
how
big a lie you
tell."
Zeckler sat in silence for a moment. "This lying business,"
he said finally, "exactly how does it work?"
"The biggest, most convincing liar wins. It's as simple as
that. It doesn't matter how outlandish a whopper you tell.
Unless, of course, they've made up their minds that you just
naturally aren't as big a liar as they are. And it looks like that's
just what they've done. It wouldn't make any difference to
them
what
you say—unless, somehow, you could
make
them
believe it."
Zeckler frowned. "And how do they regard the—the biggest
liar? I mean, how do they feel toward him?"
Meyerhoff shifted uneasily. "It's hard to say. It's been my
experience that they respect him highly—maybe even fear him
a little. After all, the most convincing liar always wins in any
transaction, so he gets more land, more food, more power.
Yes, I think the biggest liar could go where he pleased without
any interference."
Zeckler was on his feet, his eyes suddenly bright with excitement.
"Wait a minute," he said tensely. "To tell them a lie
that they'd have to believe—a lie they simply couldn't
help
but believe—" He turned on Meyerhoff, his hands trembling.
"Do they
think
the way we do? I mean, with logic, cause and
effect, examining evidence and drawing conclusions? Given
certain evidence, would they have to draw the same conclusions
that we have to draw?"
Meyerhoff blinked. "Well—yes. Oh, yes, they're perfectly
logical."
Zeckler's eyes flashed, and a huge grin broke out on his
sallow face. His thin body fairly shook. He started hopping
up and down on one foot, staring idiotically into space. "If I
could only think—" he muttered. "Somebody—somewhere—something
I read."
"Whatever are you talking about?"
"It was a Greek, I think—"
Meyerhoff stared at him. "Oh, come now. Have you gone
off your rocker completely? You've got a problem on your
hands, man."
"No, no, I've got a problem in the bag!" Zeckler's cheeks
flushed. "Let's go back in there—I think I've got an answer!"
The courtroom quieted the moment they opened the door,
and the judge banged the gavel for silence. As soon as Zeckler
had taken his seat on the witness stand, the judge turned to
the head juryman. "Now, then," he said with happy finality.
"The jury—"
"Hold on! Just one minute more."
The judge stared down at Zeckler as if he were a bug on a
rock. "Oh, yes. You had something else to say. Well, go ahead
and say it."
Zeckler looked sharply around the hushed room. "You want
to convict me," he said softly, "in the worst sort of way. Isn't
that right?"
Eyes swung toward him. The judge broke into an evil grin.
"That's right."
"But you can't really convict me until you've considered
carefully any statement I make in my own defense. Isn't that
right?"
The judge looked uncomfortable. "If you've got something
to say, go ahead and say it."
"I've got just one statement to make. Short and sweet. But
you'd better listen to it, and think it out carefully before you
decide that you really want to convict me." He paused, and
glanced slyly at the judge. "You don't think much of those
who tell the truth, it seems. Well, put
this
statement in your
record, then." His voice was loud and clear in the still room.
"
All Earthmen are absolutely incapable of telling the truth.
"
Puzzled frowns appeared on the jury's faces. One or two
exchanged startled glances, and the room was still as death.
The judge stared at him, and then at Meyerhoff, then back.
"But you"—he stammered. "You're"—He stopped in mid-sentence,
his jaw sagging.
One of the jurymen let out a little squeak, and fainted dead
away. It took, all in all, about ten seconds for the statement
to soak in.
And then pandemonium broke loose in the courtroom.
"Really," said Harry Zeckler loftily, "it was so obvious I'm
amazed that it didn't occur to me first thing." He settled himself
down comfortably in the control cabin of the Interplanetary
Rocket and grinned at the outline of Altair IV looming larger
in the view screen.
Paul Meyerhoff stared stonily at the controls, his lips compressed
angrily. "You might at least have told me what you
were planning."
"And take the chance of being overheard? Don't be silly.
It had to come as a bombshell. I had to establish myself as a
liar—the prize liar of them all, but I had to tell the sort of lie
that they simply could not cope with. Something that would
throw them into such utter confusion that they wouldn't
dare
convict me." He grinned impishly at Meyerhoff. "The paradox
of Epimenides the Cretan. It really stopped them cold. They
knew
I was an Earthmen, which meant that my statement that
Earthmen were liars was a lie, which meant that maybe I wasn't
a liar, in which case—oh, it was tailor-made."
"It sure was." Meyerhoff's voice was a snarl.
"Well, it made me out a liar in a class they couldn't approach,
didn't it?"
Meyerhoff's face was purple with anger. "Oh, indeed it did!
And it put
all
Earthmen in exactly the same class, too."
"So what's honor among thieves? I got off, didn't I?"
Meyerhoff turned on him fiercely. "Oh, you got off just fine.
You scared the living daylights out of them. And in an eon of
lying they never have run up against a short-circuit like that.
You've also completely botched any hope of ever setting up
a trading alliance with Altair I, and that includes uranium, too.
Smart people don't gamble with loaded dice. You scared them
so badly they don't want anything to do with us."
Zeckler's grin broadened, and he leaned back luxuriously.
"Ah, well. After all, the Trading Alliance was
your
outlook,
wasn't it? What a pity!" He clucked his tongue sadly. "Me,
I've got a fortune in credits sitting back at the consulate waiting
for me—enough to keep me on silk for quite a while, I
might say. I think I'll just take a nice, long vacation."
Meyerhoff turned to him, and a twinkle of malignant glee
appeared in his eyes. "Yes, I think you will. I'm quite sure of
it, in fact. Won't cost you a cent, either."
"Eh?"
Meyerhoff grinned unpleasantly. He brushed an imaginary
lint fleck from his lapel, and looked up at Zeckler slyly. "That—uh—jury
trial. The Altairians weren't any too happy to
oblige. They wanted to execute you outright. Thought a trial
was awfully silly—until they got their money back, of course.
Not too much—just three million credits."
Zeckler went white. "But that money was in banking custody!"
"Is that right? My goodness. You don't suppose they could
have lost those papers, do you?" Meyerhoff grinned at the
little con-man. "And incidentally, you're under arrest, you
know."
A choking sound came from Zeckler's throat. "
Arrest!
"
"Oh, yes. Didn't I tell you? Conspiring to undermine the
authority of the Terran Trading Commission. Serious charge,
you know. Yes, I think we'll take a nice long vacation together,
straight back to Terra. And there I think you'll face a jury
trial."
Zeckler spluttered. "There's no evidence—you've got nothing
on me! What kind of a frame are you trying to pull?"
"A
lovely
frame. Airtight. A frame from the bottom up, and
you're right square in the middle. And this time—" Meyerhoff
tapped a cigarette on his thumb with happy finality—"this time
I
don't
think you'll get off."
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from "Tiger by the Tail and Other Science Fiction
Stories by Alan E. Nourse" and was first published in
If Magazine
January 1954. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright
on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | capitalism | laissez faire | socialism | Keynesian | 1 |
24275_U13YG5XY_7 | What does the outcome of Zeckler's trial suggest about the modern legal system? | Letter
of
the
Law
by Alan E. Nourse
The
place was dark and damp, and smelled like moldy leaves.
Meyerhoff followed the huge, bear-like Altairian guard
down the slippery flagstones of the corridor, sniffing the
dead, musty air with distaste. He drew his carefully tailored
Terran-styled jacket closer about his shoulders, shivering as his
eyes avoided the black, yawning cell-holes they were passing.
His foot slipped on the slimy flags from time to time, and
finally he paused to wipe the caked mud from his trouser leg.
"How much farther is it?" he shouted angrily.
The guard waved a heavy paw vaguely into the blackness
ahead. Quite suddenly the corridor took a sharp bend, and the
Altairian stopped, producing a huge key ring from some obscure
fold of his hairy hide. "I still don't see any reason for
all the fuss," he grumbled in a wounded tone. "We've treated
him like a brother."
One of the huge steel doors clicked open. Meyerhoff peered
into the blackness, catching a vaguely human outline against
the back wall. "Harry?" he called sharply.
There was a startled gasp from within, and a skinny, gnarled
little man suddenly appeared in the guard's light, like a grotesque,
twisted ghost out of the blackness. Wide blue eyes
regarded Meyerhoff from beneath uneven black eyebrows, and
then the little man's face broke into a crafty grin. "Paul! So
they sent
you
! I knew I could count on it!" He executed a
deep, awkward bow, motioning Meyerhoff into the dark
cubicle. "Not much to offer you," he said slyly, "but it's the
best I can do under the circumstances."
Meyerhoff scowled, and turned abruptly to the guard. "We'll
have some privacy now, if you please. Interplanetary ruling.
And leave us the light."
The guard grumbled, and started for the door. "It's about
time you showed up!" cried the little man in the cell. "Great
day! Lucky they sent you, pal. Why, I've been in here for
years—"
"Look, Zeckler, the name is Meyerhoff, and I'm not your
pal," Meyerhoff snapped. "And you've been here for two
weeks, three days, and approximately four hours. You're getting
as bad as your gentle guards when it comes to bandying
the truth around." He peered through the dim light at the
gaunt face of the prisoner. Zeckler's face was dark with a
week's beard, and his bloodshot eyes belied the cocky grin
on his lips. His clothes were smeared and sodden, streaked
with great splotches of mud and moss. Meyerhoff's face softened
a little. "So Harry Zeckler's in a jam again," he said.
"You
look
as if they'd treated you like a brother."
The little man snorted. "These overgrown teddy-bears don't
know what brotherhood means, nor humanity, either. Bread
and water I've been getting, nothing more, and then only if they
feel like bringing it down." He sank wearily down on the rock
bench along the wall. "I thought you'd never get here! I sent
an appeal to the Terran Consulate the first day I was arrested.
What happened? I mean, all they had to do was get a man
over here, get the extradition papers signed, and provide transportation
off the planet for me. Why so much time? I've been
sitting here rotting—" He broke off in mid-sentence and stared
at Meyerhoff. "You
brought
the papers, didn't you? I mean,
we can leave now?"
Meyerhoff stared at the little man with a mixture of pity and
disgust. "You are a prize fool," he said finally. "Did you know
that?"
Zeckler's eyes widened. "What do you mean, fool? So I
spend a couple of weeks in this pneumonia trap. The deal was
worth it! I've got three million credits sitting in the Terran
Consulate on Altair V, just waiting for me to walk in and pick
them up. Three million credits—do you hear? That's enough
to set me up for life!"
Meyerhoff nodded grimly. "
If
you live long enough to walk
in and pick them up, that is."
"What do you mean, if?"
Meyerhoff sank down beside the man, his voice a tense
whisper in the musty cell. "I mean that right now you are
practically dead. You may not know it, but you are. You walk
into a newly opened planet with your smart little bag of tricks,
walk in here with a shaky passport and no permit, with no
knowledge of the natives outside of two paragraphs of inaccuracies
in the Explorer's Guide, and even then you're not
content to come in and sell something legitimate, something
the natives might conceivably be able to use. No, nothing so
simple for you. You have to pull your usual high-pressure stuff.
And this time, buddy, you're paying the piper."
"
You mean I'm not being extradited?
"
Meyerhoff grinned unpleasantly. "I mean precisely that.
You've committed a crime here—a major crime. The Altairians
are sore about it. And the Terran Consulate isn't willing
to sell all the trading possibilities here down the river just to
get you out of a mess. You're going to stand trial—and these
natives are out to get you. Personally, I think they're
going
to get you."
Zeckler stood up shakily. "You can't believe anything the
natives say," he said uneasily. "They're pathological liars.
Why, you should see what they tried to sell
me
! You've never
seen such a pack of liars as these critters." He glanced up at
Meyerhoff. "They'll probably drop a little fine on me and let
me go."
"A little fine of one Terran neck." Meyerhoff grinned nastily.
"You've committed the most heinous crime these creatures can
imagine, and they're going to get you for it if it's the last thing
they do. I'm afraid, my friend, that your con-man days are
over."
Zeckler fished in the other man's pocket, extracted a cigarette,
and lighted it with trembling fingers. "It's bad, then,"
he said finally.
"It's bad, all right."
Some shadow of the sly, elfin grin crept over the little con-man's
face. "Well, at any rate, I'm glad they sent you over,"
he said weakly. "Nothing like a good lawyer to handle a trial."
"
Lawyer?
Not me! Oh, no. Sorry, but no thanks." Meyerhoff
chuckled. "I'm your advisor, old boy. Nothing else. I'm here
to keep you from botching things up still worse for the Trading
Commission, that's all. I wouldn't get tangled up in a mess
with those creatures for anything!" He shook his head. "You're
your own lawyer, Mr. Super-salesman. It's all your show. And
you'd better get your head out of the sand, or you're going to
lose a case like it's never been lost before!"
Meyerhoff watched the man's pale face, and shook his head.
In a way, he thought, it was a pity to see such a change in the
rosy-cheeked, dapper, cocksure little man who had talked his
way glibly in and out of more jams than Meyerhoff could
count. Trading brought scalpers; it was almost inevitable that
where rich and unexploited trading ground was uncovered, it
would first fall prey to the fast-trading boys. They spread out
from Terra with the first wave of exploration—the slick, fast-talking
con-men who could work new territories unfettered by
the legal restrictions that soon closed down the more established
planets. The first men in were the richest out, and
through some curious quirk of the Terrestrial mind, they knew
they could count on Terran protection, however crooked and
underhand their methods.
But occasionally a situation arose where the civilization and
social practices of the alien victims made it unwise to tamper
with them. Altair I had been recognized at once by the Trading
Commission as a commercial prize of tremendous value, but
early reports had warned of the danger of wildcat trading on
the little, musty, jungle-like planet with its shaggy, three-eyed
inhabitants—warned specifically against the confidence tactics
so frequently used—but there was always somebody, Meyerhoff
reflected sourly, who just didn't get the word.
Zeckler puffed nervously on his cigarette, his narrow face
a study in troubled concentration. "But I didn't
do
anything!"
he exploded finally. "So I pulled an old con game. So what?
Why should they get so excited? So I clipped a few thousand
credits, pulled a little fast business." He shrugged eloquently,
spreading his hands. "Everybody's doing it. They do it to each
other without batting an eye. You should
see
these critters
operate on each other. Why, my little scheme was peanuts by
comparison."
Meyerhoff pulled a pipe from his pocket, and began stuffing
the bowl with infinite patience. "And precisely what sort of
con game was it?" he asked quietly.
Zeckler shrugged again. "The simplest, tiredest, moldiest
old racket that ever made a quick nickel. Remember the old
Terran gag about the Brooklyn Bridge? The same thing. Only
these critters didn't want bridges. They wanted land—this
gooey, slimy swamp they call 'farm land.' So I gave them
what they wanted. I just sold them some land."
Meyerhoff nodded fiercely. "You sure did. A hundred square
kilos at a swipe. Only you sold the same hundred square kilos
to a dozen different natives." Suddenly he threw back his hands
and roared. "Of all the things you
shouldn't
have done—"
"But what's a chunk of land?"
Meyerhoff shook his head hopelessly. "If you hadn't been
so greedy, you'd have found out what a chunk of land was to
these natives before you started peddling it. You'd have found
out other things about them, too. You'd have learned that
in spite of all their bumbling and fussing and squabbling
they're not so dull. You'd have found out that they're marsupials,
and that two out of five of them get thrown out of
their mother's pouch before they're old enough to survive.
You'd have realized that they have to start fighting for individual
rights almost as soon as they're born. Anything goes,
as long as it benefits them as individuals."
Meyerhoff grinned at the little man's horrified face. "Never
heard of that, had you? And you've never heard of other things,
too. You've probably never heard that there are just too many
Altairians here for the food their planet can supply, and their
diet is so finicky that they just can't live on anything that
doesn't grow here. And consequently, land is the key factor
in their economy, not money; nothing but land. To get land,
it's every man for himself, and the loser starves, and their
entire legal and monetary system revolves on that principle.
They've built up the most confusing and impossible system of
barter and trade imaginable, aimed at individual survival, with
land as the value behind the credit. That explains the lying—of
course they're liars, with an economy like that. They've
completely missed the concept of truth. Pathological? You bet
they're pathological! Only a fool would tell the truth when his
life depended on his being a better liar than the next guy!
Lying is the time-honored tradition, with their entire legal
system built around it."
Zeckler snorted. "But how could they
possibly
have a legal
system? I mean, if they don't recognize the truth when it slaps
them in the face?"
Meyerhoff shrugged. "As we understand legal systems, I
suppose they don't have one. They have only the haziest idea
what truth represents, and they've shrugged off the idea as
impossible and useless." He chuckled maliciously. "So you
went out and found a chunk of ground in the uplands, and
sold it to a dozen separate, self-centered, half-starved natives!
Encroachment on private property is legal grounds for murder
on this planet, and twelve of them descended on the same
chunk of land at the same time, all armed with title-deeds."
Meyerhoff sighed. "You've got twelve mad Altairians in your
hair. You've got a mad planet in your hair. And in the meantime,
Terra's most valuable uranium source in five centuries
is threatening to cut off supply unless they see your blood
splattered liberally all the way from here to the equator."
Zeckler was visibly shaken. "Look," he said weakly, "so I
wasn't so smart. What am I going to do? I mean, are you
going to sit quietly by and let them butcher me? How could
I defend myself in a legal setup like
this
?"
Meyerhoff smiled coolly. "You're going to get your sly little
con-man brain to working, I think," he said softly. "By Interplanetary
Rules, they have to give you a trial in Terran legal
form—judge, jury, court procedure, all that folderol. They
think it's a big joke—after all, what could a judicial oath mean
to them?—but they agreed. Only thing is, they're going to
hang you, if they die trying. So you'd better get those stunted
little wits of yours clicking—and if you try to implicate
me
,
even a little bit, I'll be out of there so fast you won't know
what happened."
With that Meyerhoff walked to the door. He jerked it inward
sharply, and spilled two guards over on their faces.
"Privacy," he grunted, and started back up the slippery corridor.
It certainly
looked
like a courtroom, at any rate. In the front
of the long, damp stone room was a bench, with a seat behind
it, and a small straight chair to the right. To the left was a stand
with twelve chairs—larger chairs, with a railing running along
the front. The rest of the room was filled almost to the door
with seats facing the bench. Zeckler followed the shaggy-haired
guard into the room, nodding approvingly. "Not such a bad
arrangement," he said. "They must have gotten the idea fast."
Meyerhoff wiped the perspiration from his forehead, and
shot the little con-man a stony glance. "At least you've got
a courtroom, a judge, and a jury for this mess. Beyond that—"
He shrugged eloquently. "I can't make any promises."
In the back of the room a door burst open with a bang.
Loud, harsh voices were heard as half a dozen of the huge
Altairians attempted to push through the door at once. Zeckler
clamped on the headset to his translator unit, and watched the
hubbub in the anteroom with growing alarm. Finally the question
of precedent seemed to be settled, and a group of the
Altairians filed in, in order of stature, stalking across the room
in flowing black robes, pug-nosed faces glowering with self-importance.
They descended upon the jury box, grunting and
scrapping with each other for the first-row seats, and the judge
took his place with obvious satisfaction behind the heavy
wooden bench. Finally, the prosecuting attorney appeared,
flanked by two clerks, who took their places beside him. The
prosecutor eyed Zeckler with cold malevolence, then turned
and delivered a sly wink at the judge.
In a moment the room was a hubbub as it filled with the
huge, bumbling, bear-like creatures, jostling each other and
fighting for seats, growling and complaining. Two small fights
broke out in the rear, but were quickly subdued by the group
of gendarmes guarding the entrance. Finally the judge glared
down at Zeckler with all three eyes, and pounded the bench top
with a wooden mallet until the roar of activity subsided. The
jurymen wriggled uncomfortably in their seats, exchanging
winks, and finally turned their attention to the front of the
court.
"We are reading the case of the people of Altair I," the
judge's voice roared out, "against one Harry Zeckler—" he
paused for a long, impressive moment—"Terran." The courtroom
immediately burst into an angry growl, until the judge
pounded the bench five or six times more. "This—creature—is
hereby accused of the following crimes," the judge bellowed.
"Conspiracy to overthrow the government of Altair I. Brutal
murder of seventeen law-abiding citizens of the village of
Karzan at the third hour before dawn in the second period
after his arrival. Desecration of the Temple of our beloved
Goddess Zermat, Queen of the Harvest. Conspiracy with the
lesser gods to cause the unprecedented drought in the Dermatti
section of our fair globe. Obscene exposure of his pouch-marks
in a public square. Four separate and distinct charges of jail-break
and bribery—" The judge pounded the bench for order—"Espionage
with the accursed scum of Altair II in preparation
for interplanetary invasion."
The little con-man's jaw sagged lower and lower, the color
draining from his face. He turned, wide-eyed, to Meyerhoff,
then back to the judge.
"The Chairman of the Jury," said the Judge succinctly, "will
read the verdict."
The little native in the front of the jury-box popped up like
a puppet on a string. "Defendant found guilty on all counts,"
he said.
"Defendant is guilty! The court will pronounce sentence—"
"
Now wait a minute!
" Zeckler was on his feet, wild-eyed.
"What kind of railroad job—"
The judge blinked disappointedly at Paul Meyerhoff. "Not
yet?" he asked, unhappily.
"No." Meyerhoff's hands twitched nervously. "Not yet, Your
Honor. Later, Your Honor. The trial comes
first
."
The judge looked as if his candy had been stolen. "But you
said
I should call for the verdict."
"Later. You have to have the trial before you can have the
verdict."
The Altairian shrugged indifferently. "Now—later—" he
muttered.
"Have the prosecutor call his first witness," said Meyerhoff.
Zeckler leaned over, his face ashen. "These charges," he
whispered. "They're insane!"
"Of course they are," Meyerhoff whispered back.
"But what am I going to—"
"Sit tight. Let
them
set things up."
"But those
lies
. They're liars, the whole pack of them—" He
broke off as the prosecutor roared a name.
The shaggy brute who took the stand was wearing a bright
purple hat which sat rakishly over one ear. He grinned the
Altairian equivalent of a hungry grin at the prosecutor. Then
he cleared his throat and started. "This Terran riffraff—"
"The oath," muttered the judge. "We've got to have the
oath."
The prosecutor nodded, and four natives moved forward,
carrying huge inscribed marble slabs to the front of the court.
One by one the chunks were reverently piled in a heap at the
witness's feet. The witness placed a huge, hairy paw on the
cairn, and the prosecutor said, "Do you swear to tell the truth,
the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, so help you—" he
paused to squint at the paper in his hand, and finished on a
puzzled note, "—Goddess?"
The witness removed the paw from the rock pile long enough
to scratch his ear. Then he replaced it, and replied, "Of course,"
in an injured tone.
"Then tell this court what you have seen of the activities of
this abominable wretch."
The witness settled back into the chair, fixing one eye on
Zeckler's face, another on the prosecutor, and closing the third
as if in meditation. "I think it happened on the fourth night
of the seventh crossing of Altair II (may the Goddess cast
a drought upon it)—or was it the seventh night of the fourth
crossing?—" he grinned apologetically at the judge—"when I
was making my way back through town toward my blessed
land-plot, minding my own business, Your Honor, after weeks
of bargaining for the crop I was harvesting. Suddenly from the
shadow of the building, this creature—" he waved a paw at
Zeckler—"stopped me in my tracks with a vicious cry. He had
a weapon I'd never seen before, and before I could find my
voice he forced me back against the wall. I could see by the
cruel glint in his eyes that there was no warmth, no sympathy
in his heart, that I was—"
"Objection!" Zeckler squealed plaintively, jumping to his
feet. "This witness can't even remember what night he's talking
about!"
The judge looked startled. Then he pawed feverishly through
his bundle of notes. "Overruled," he said abruptly. "Continue,
please."
The witness glowered at Zeckler. "As I was saying before
this loutish interruption," he muttered, "I could see that I was
face to face with the most desperate of criminal types, even
for Terrans. Note the shape of his head, the flabbiness of his
ears. I was petrified with fear. And then, helpless as I was, this
two-legged abomination began to shower me with threats of
evil to my blessed home, dark threats of poisoning my land
unless I would tell him where he could find the resting place
of our blessed Goddess—"
"I never saw him before in my life," Zeckler moaned to
Meyerhoff. "Listen to him! Why should I care where their
Goddess—"
Meyerhoff gave him a stony look. "The Goddess runs things
around here. She makes it rain. If it doesn't rain, somebody's
insulted her. It's very simple."
"But how can I fight testimony like that?"
"I doubt if you
can
fight it."
"But they can't prove a word of it—" He looked at the jury,
who were listening enraptured to the second witness on the
stand. This one was testifying regarding the butcherous slaughter
of eighteen (or was it twenty-three? Oh, yes, twenty-three)
women and children in the suburban village of Karzan. The
pogrom, it seemed, had been accomplished by an energy
weapon which ate great, gaping holes in the sides of buildings.
A third witness took the stand, continuing the drone as the
room grew hotter and muggier. Zeckler grew paler and paler,
his eyes turning glassy as the testimony piled up. "But it's not
true
," he whispered to Meyerhoff.
"Of course it isn't! Can't you understand?
These people
have no regard for truth.
It's stupid, to them, silly, a mark of
low intelligence. The only thing in the world they have any
respect for is a liar bigger and more skillful than they are."
Zeckler jerked around abruptly as he heard his name bellowed
out. "Does the defendant have anything to say before
the jury delivers the verdict?"
"Do I have—" Zeckler was across the room in a flash, his
pale cheeks suddenly taking on a feverish glow. He sat down
gingerly on the witness chair, facing the judge, his eyes bright
with fear and excitement. "Your—Your Honor, I—I have a
statement to make which will have a most important bearing
on this case. You must listen with the greatest care." He
glanced quickly at Meyerhoff, and back to the judge. "Your
Honor," he said in a hushed voice. "You are in gravest of
danger. All of you. Your lives—your very land is at stake."
The judge blinked, and shuffled through his notes hurriedly
as a murmur arose in the court. "Our land?"
"Your lives, your land, everything you hold dear," Zeckler
said quickly, licking his lips nervously. "You must try to
understand me—" he glanced apprehensively over his shoulder
"now, because I may not live long enough to repeat what
I am about to tell you—"
The murmur quieted down, all ears straining in their headsets
to hear his words. "These charges," he continued, "all of
them—they're perfectly true. At least, they
seem
to be perfectly
true. But in every instance, I was working with heart and
soul, risking my life, for the welfare of your beautiful planet."
There was a loud hiss from the back of the court. Zeckler
frowned and rubbed his hands together. "It was my misfortune,"
he said, "to go to the wrong planet when I first came to
Altair from my homeland on Terra. I—I landed on Altair II,
a grave mistake, but as it turned out, a very fortunate error.
Because in attempting to arrange trading in that frightful place,
I made certain contacts." His voice trembled, and sank lower.
"I learned the horrible thing which is about to happen to this
planet, at the hands of those barbarians. The conspiracy is
theirs, not mine. They have bribed your Goddess, flattered her
and lied to her, coerced her all-powerful goodness to their own
evil interests, preparing for the day when they could persuade
her to cast your land into the fiery furnace of a ten-year-drought—"
Somebody in the middle of the court burst out laughing.
One by one the natives nudged one another, and booed, and
guffawed, until the rising tide of racket drowned out Zeckler's
words. "The defendant is obviously lying," roared the prosecutor
over the pandemonium. "Any fool knows that the Goddess
can't be bribed. How could she be a Goddess if she could?"
Zeckler grew paler. "But—perhaps they were very clever—"
"And how could they flatter her, when she knows, beyond
doubt, that she is the most exquisitely radiant creature in all
the Universe? And
you
dare to insult her, drag her name in
the dirt."
The hisses grew louder, more belligerent. Cries of "Butcher
him!" and "Scald his bowels!" rose from the courtroom. The
judge banged for silence, his eyes angry.
"Unless the defendant wishes to take up more of our precious
time with these ridiculous lies, the jury—"
"Wait! Your Honor, I request a short recess before I present
my final plea."
"Recess?"
"A few moments to collect my thoughts, to arrange my
case."
The judge settled back with a disgusted snarl. "Do I have
to?" he asked Meyerhoff.
Meyerhoff nodded. The judge shrugged, pointing over his
shoulder to the anteroom. "You can go in there," he said.
Somehow, Zeckler managed to stumble from the witness
stand, amid riotous boos and hisses, and tottered into the anteroom.
Zeckler puffed hungrily on a cigarette, and looked up at
Meyerhoff with haunted eyes. "It—it doesn't look so good,"
he muttered.
Meyerhoff's eyes were worried, too. For some reason, he
felt a surge of pity and admiration for the haggard con-man.
"It's worse than I'd anticipated," he admitted glumly. "That
was a good try, but you just don't know enough about them
and their Goddess." He sat down wearily. "I don't see what
you can do. They want your blood, and they're going to have
it. They just won't believe you, no matter
how
big a lie you
tell."
Zeckler sat in silence for a moment. "This lying business,"
he said finally, "exactly how does it work?"
"The biggest, most convincing liar wins. It's as simple as
that. It doesn't matter how outlandish a whopper you tell.
Unless, of course, they've made up their minds that you just
naturally aren't as big a liar as they are. And it looks like that's
just what they've done. It wouldn't make any difference to
them
what
you say—unless, somehow, you could
make
them
believe it."
Zeckler frowned. "And how do they regard the—the biggest
liar? I mean, how do they feel toward him?"
Meyerhoff shifted uneasily. "It's hard to say. It's been my
experience that they respect him highly—maybe even fear him
a little. After all, the most convincing liar always wins in any
transaction, so he gets more land, more food, more power.
Yes, I think the biggest liar could go where he pleased without
any interference."
Zeckler was on his feet, his eyes suddenly bright with excitement.
"Wait a minute," he said tensely. "To tell them a lie
that they'd have to believe—a lie they simply couldn't
help
but believe—" He turned on Meyerhoff, his hands trembling.
"Do they
think
the way we do? I mean, with logic, cause and
effect, examining evidence and drawing conclusions? Given
certain evidence, would they have to draw the same conclusions
that we have to draw?"
Meyerhoff blinked. "Well—yes. Oh, yes, they're perfectly
logical."
Zeckler's eyes flashed, and a huge grin broke out on his
sallow face. His thin body fairly shook. He started hopping
up and down on one foot, staring idiotically into space. "If I
could only think—" he muttered. "Somebody—somewhere—something
I read."
"Whatever are you talking about?"
"It was a Greek, I think—"
Meyerhoff stared at him. "Oh, come now. Have you gone
off your rocker completely? You've got a problem on your
hands, man."
"No, no, I've got a problem in the bag!" Zeckler's cheeks
flushed. "Let's go back in there—I think I've got an answer!"
The courtroom quieted the moment they opened the door,
and the judge banged the gavel for silence. As soon as Zeckler
had taken his seat on the witness stand, the judge turned to
the head juryman. "Now, then," he said with happy finality.
"The jury—"
"Hold on! Just one minute more."
The judge stared down at Zeckler as if he were a bug on a
rock. "Oh, yes. You had something else to say. Well, go ahead
and say it."
Zeckler looked sharply around the hushed room. "You want
to convict me," he said softly, "in the worst sort of way. Isn't
that right?"
Eyes swung toward him. The judge broke into an evil grin.
"That's right."
"But you can't really convict me until you've considered
carefully any statement I make in my own defense. Isn't that
right?"
The judge looked uncomfortable. "If you've got something
to say, go ahead and say it."
"I've got just one statement to make. Short and sweet. But
you'd better listen to it, and think it out carefully before you
decide that you really want to convict me." He paused, and
glanced slyly at the judge. "You don't think much of those
who tell the truth, it seems. Well, put
this
statement in your
record, then." His voice was loud and clear in the still room.
"
All Earthmen are absolutely incapable of telling the truth.
"
Puzzled frowns appeared on the jury's faces. One or two
exchanged startled glances, and the room was still as death.
The judge stared at him, and then at Meyerhoff, then back.
"But you"—he stammered. "You're"—He stopped in mid-sentence,
his jaw sagging.
One of the jurymen let out a little squeak, and fainted dead
away. It took, all in all, about ten seconds for the statement
to soak in.
And then pandemonium broke loose in the courtroom.
"Really," said Harry Zeckler loftily, "it was so obvious I'm
amazed that it didn't occur to me first thing." He settled himself
down comfortably in the control cabin of the Interplanetary
Rocket and grinned at the outline of Altair IV looming larger
in the view screen.
Paul Meyerhoff stared stonily at the controls, his lips compressed
angrily. "You might at least have told me what you
were planning."
"And take the chance of being overheard? Don't be silly.
It had to come as a bombshell. I had to establish myself as a
liar—the prize liar of them all, but I had to tell the sort of lie
that they simply could not cope with. Something that would
throw them into such utter confusion that they wouldn't
dare
convict me." He grinned impishly at Meyerhoff. "The paradox
of Epimenides the Cretan. It really stopped them cold. They
knew
I was an Earthmen, which meant that my statement that
Earthmen were liars was a lie, which meant that maybe I wasn't
a liar, in which case—oh, it was tailor-made."
"It sure was." Meyerhoff's voice was a snarl.
"Well, it made me out a liar in a class they couldn't approach,
didn't it?"
Meyerhoff's face was purple with anger. "Oh, indeed it did!
And it put
all
Earthmen in exactly the same class, too."
"So what's honor among thieves? I got off, didn't I?"
Meyerhoff turned on him fiercely. "Oh, you got off just fine.
You scared the living daylights out of them. And in an eon of
lying they never have run up against a short-circuit like that.
You've also completely botched any hope of ever setting up
a trading alliance with Altair I, and that includes uranium, too.
Smart people don't gamble with loaded dice. You scared them
so badly they don't want anything to do with us."
Zeckler's grin broadened, and he leaned back luxuriously.
"Ah, well. After all, the Trading Alliance was
your
outlook,
wasn't it? What a pity!" He clucked his tongue sadly. "Me,
I've got a fortune in credits sitting back at the consulate waiting
for me—enough to keep me on silk for quite a while, I
might say. I think I'll just take a nice, long vacation."
Meyerhoff turned to him, and a twinkle of malignant glee
appeared in his eyes. "Yes, I think you will. I'm quite sure of
it, in fact. Won't cost you a cent, either."
"Eh?"
Meyerhoff grinned unpleasantly. He brushed an imaginary
lint fleck from his lapel, and looked up at Zeckler slyly. "That—uh—jury
trial. The Altairians weren't any too happy to
oblige. They wanted to execute you outright. Thought a trial
was awfully silly—until they got their money back, of course.
Not too much—just three million credits."
Zeckler went white. "But that money was in banking custody!"
"Is that right? My goodness. You don't suppose they could
have lost those papers, do you?" Meyerhoff grinned at the
little con-man. "And incidentally, you're under arrest, you
know."
A choking sound came from Zeckler's throat. "
Arrest!
"
"Oh, yes. Didn't I tell you? Conspiring to undermine the
authority of the Terran Trading Commission. Serious charge,
you know. Yes, I think we'll take a nice long vacation together,
straight back to Terra. And there I think you'll face a jury
trial."
Zeckler spluttered. "There's no evidence—you've got nothing
on me! What kind of a frame are you trying to pull?"
"A
lovely
frame. Airtight. A frame from the bottom up, and
you're right square in the middle. And this time—" Meyerhoff
tapped a cigarette on his thumb with happy finality—"this time
I
don't
think you'll get off."
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from "Tiger by the Tail and Other Science Fiction
Stories by Alan E. Nourse" and was first published in
If Magazine
January 1954. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright
on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | The legal system is set up to benefit those with more power and wealth. | For a defendant in the legal system, there is no desirable outcome. | The better lawyer a defendant has, the more likely they are to clear their names. | Sometimes it is more optimal to lie and make a guilty plea, than to tell the truth and be found guilty. | 2 |
23791_S6420G0B_1 | What makes the far side of the moon intolerable? | SCRIMSHAW
The old man
just wanted to get back his
memory—and the methods he used were
gently hellish, from the viewpoint of the
others....
BY MURRAY LEINSTER
Illustrated by Freas
Pop Young was the one known
man who could stand life on the
surface of the Moon's far side, and,
therefore, he occupied the shack on
the Big Crack's edge, above the
mining colony there. Some people
said that no normal man could do
it, and mentioned the scar of a
ghastly head-wound to explain his
ability. One man partly guessed the
secret, but only partly. His name was
Sattell and he had reason not to
talk. Pop Young alone knew the
whole truth, and he kept his mouth
shut, too. It wasn't anybody else's
business.
The shack and the job he filled
were located in the medieval notion
of the physical appearance of hell.
By day the environment was heat and
torment. By night—lunar night, of
course, and lunar day—it was frigidity
and horror. Once in two weeks
Earth-time a rocketship came around
the horizon from Lunar City with
stores for the colony deep underground.
Pop received the stores and
took care of them. He handed over
the product of the mine, to be forwarded
to Earth. The rocket went
away again. Come nightfall Pop
lowered the supplies down the long
cable into the Big Crack to the colony
far down inside, and freshened up
the landing field marks with magnesium
marking-powder if a rocket-blast
had blurred them. That was
fundamentally all he had to do. But
without him the mine down in the
Crack would have had to shut
down.
The Crack, of course, was that
gaping rocky fault which stretches
nine hundred miles, jaggedly, over
the side of the Moon that Earth
never sees. There is one stretch where
it is a yawning gulf a full half-mile
wide and unguessably deep. Where
Pop Young's shack stood it was only
a hundred yards, but the colony was
a full mile down, in one wall. There
is nothing like it on Earth, of course.
When it was first found, scientists
descended into it to examine the exposed
rock-strata and learn the history
of the Moon before its craters
were made. But they found more
than history. They found the reason
for the colony and the rocket landing
field and the shack.
The reason for Pop was something
else.
The shack stood a hundred feet
from the Big Crack's edge. It looked
like a dust-heap thirty feet high, and
it was. The outside was surface
moondust, piled over a tiny dome to
be insulation against the cold of
night and shadow and the furnace
heat of day. Pop lived in it all alone,
and in his spare time he worked
industriously at recovering some
missing portions of his life that Sattell
had managed to take away from
him.
He thought often of Sattell, down
in the colony underground. There
were galleries and tunnels and living-quarters
down there. There were
air-tight bulkheads for safety, and a
hydroponic garden to keep the air
fresh, and all sorts of things to make
life possible for men under if not
on the Moon.
But it wasn't fun, even underground.
In the Moon's slight gravity,
a man is really adjusted to existence
when he has a well-developed case
of agoraphobia. With such an aid, a
man can get into a tiny, coffinlike
cubbyhole, and feel solidity above
and below and around him, and
happily tell himself that it feels delicious.
Sometimes it does.
But Sattell couldn't comfort himself
so easily. He knew about Pop,
up on the surface. He'd shipped out,
whimpering, to the Moon to get far
away from Pop, and Pop was just
about a mile overhead and there was
no way to get around him. It was
difficult to get away from the mine,
anyhow. It doesn't take too long for
the low gravity to tear a man's
nerves to shreds. He has to develop
kinks in his head to survive. And
those kinks—
The first men to leave the colony
had to be knocked cold and shipped
out unconscious. They'd been underground—and
in low gravity—long
enough to be utterly unable to face
the idea of open spaces. Even now
there were some who had to be carried,
but there were some tougher
ones who were able to walk to the
rocketship if Pop put a tarpaulin
over their heads so they didn't have
to see the sky. In any case Pop was
essential, either for carrying or
guidance.
Sattell got the shakes when he
thought of Pop, and Pop rather
probably knew it. Of course, by the
time he took the job tending the
shack, he was pretty certain about
Sattell. The facts spoke for themselves.
Pop had come back to consciousness
in a hospital with a great
wound in his head and no memory
of anything that had happened before
that moment. It was not that his
identity was in question. When he
was stronger, the doctors told him
who he was, and as gently as possible
what had happened to his wife
and children. They'd been murdered
after he was seemingly killed defending
them. But he didn't remember
a thing. Not then. It was
something of a blessing.
But when he was physically recovered
he set about trying to pick
up the threads of the life he could
no longer remember. He met Sattell
quite by accident. Sattell looked familiar.
Pop eagerly tried to ask him
questions. And Sattell turned gray
and frantically denied that he'd ever
seen Pop before.
All of which happened back on
Earth and a long time ago. It seemed
to Pop that the sight of Sattell had
brought back some vague and cloudy
memories. They were not sharp,
though, and he hunted up Sattell
again to find out if he was right.
And Sattell went into panic when
he returned.
Nowadays, by the Big Crack, Pop
wasn't so insistent on seeing Sattell,
but he was deeply concerned with
the recovery of the memories that
Sattell helped bring back. Pop was
a highly conscientious man. He took
good care of his job. There was a
warning-bell in the shack, and when
a rocketship from Lunar City got
above the horizon and could send a
tight beam, the gong clanged loudly,
and Pop got into a vacuum-suit
and went out the air lock. He usually
reached the moondozer about the
time the ship began to brake for
landing, and he watched it come in.
He saw the silver needle in the
sky fighting momentum above a line
of jagged crater-walls. It slowed, and
slowed, and curved down as it drew
nearer. The pilot killed all forward
motion just above the field and came
steadily and smoothly down to land
between the silvery triangles that
marked the landing place.
Instantly the rockets cut off,
drums of fuel and air and food came
out of the cargo-hatch and Pop swept
forward with the dozer. It was a
miniature tractor with a gigantic
scoop in front. He pushed a great
mound of talc-fine dust before him
to cover up the cargo. It was necessary.
With freight costing what it
did, fuel and air and food came
frozen solid, in containers barely
thicker than foil. While they stayed
at space-shadow temperature, the foil
would hold anything. And a cover of
insulating moondust with vacuum
between the grains kept even air
frozen solid, though in sunlight.
At such times Pop hardly thought
of Sattell. He knew he had plenty
of time for that. He'd started to follow
Sattell knowing what had happened
to his wife and children, but
it was hearsay only. He had no memory
of them at all. But Sattell stirred
the lost memories. At first Pop followed
absorbedly from city to city,
to recover the years that had been
wiped out by an axe-blow. He did
recover a good deal. When Sattell
fled to another continent, Pop followed
because he had some distinct
memories of his wife—and the way
he'd felt about her—and some fugitive
mental images of his children.
When Sattell frenziedly tried to deny
knowledge of the murder in Tangier,
Pop had come to remember both his
children and some of the happiness
of his married life.
Even when Sattell—whimpering—signed
up for Lunar City, Pop tracked
him. By that time he was quite
sure that Sattell was the man who'd
killed his family. If so, Sattell had
profited by less than two days' pay
for wiping out everything that Pop
possessed. But Pop wanted it back.
He couldn't prove Sattell's guilt.
There was no evidence. In any case,
he didn't really want Sattell to die.
If he did, there'd be no way to recover
more lost memories.
Sometimes, in the shack on the far
side of the Moon, Pop Young had
odd fancies about Sattell. There was
the mine, for example. In each two
Earth-weeks of working, the mine-colony
nearly filled up a three-gallon
cannister with greasy-seeming white
crystals shaped like two pyramids
base to base. The filled cannister
would weigh a hundred pounds on
Earth. Here it weighed eighteen. But
on Earth its contents would be computed
in carats, and a hundred
pounds was worth millions. Yet here
on the Moon Pop kept a waiting cannister
on a shelf in his tiny dome,
behind the air-apparatus. It rattled
if he shook it, and it was worth no
more than so many pebbles. But
sometimes Pop wondered if Sattell
ever thought of the value of the
mine's production. If he would kill
a woman and two children and think
he'd killed a man for no more than
a hundred dollars, what enormity
would he commit for a three-gallon
quantity of uncut diamonds?
But he did not dwell on such
speculation. The sun rose very, very
slowly in what by convention was
called the east. It took nearly two
hours to urge its disk above the
horizon, and it burned terribly in
emptiness for fourteen times twenty-four
hours before sunset. Then there
was night, and for three hundred
and thirty-six consecutive hours there
were only stars overhead and the
sky was a hole so terrible that a man
who looked up into it—what with
the nagging sensation of one-sixth
gravity—tended to lose all confidence
in the stability of things. Most men
immediately found it hysterically necessary
to seize hold of something
solid to keep from falling upward.
But nothing felt solid. Everything
fell, too. Wherefore most men tended
to scream.
But not Pop. He'd come to the
Moon in the first place because Sattell
was here. Near Sattell, he found
memories of times when he was a
young man with a young wife who
loved him extravagantly. Then pictures
of his children came out of
emptiness and grew sharp and clear.
He found that he loved them very
dearly. And when he was near Sattell
he literally recovered them—in
the sense that he came to know new
things about them and had new
memories of them every day. He
hadn't yet remembered the crime
which lost them to him. Until he
did—and the fact possessed a certain
grisly humor—Pop didn't even hate
Sattell. He simply wanted to be near
him because it enabled him to recover
new and vivid parts of his
youth that had been lost.
Otherwise, he was wholly matter-of-fact—certainly
so for the far side
of the Moon. He was a rather fussy
housekeeper. The shack above the
Big Crack's rim was as tidy as any
lighthouse or fur-trapper's cabin. He
tended his air-apparatus with a fine
precision. It was perfectly simple. In
the shadow of the shack he had an
unfailing source of extreme low
temperature. Air from the shack
flowed into a shadow-chilled pipe.
Moisture condensed out of it here,
and CO
2
froze solidly out of it there,
and on beyond it collected as restless,
transparent liquid air. At the same
time, liquid air from another tank
evaporated to maintain the proper
air pressure in the shack. Every so
often Pop tapped the pipe where the
moisture froze, and lumps of water
ice clattered out to be returned to the
humidifier. Less often he took out the
CO
2
snow, and measured it, and
dumped an equivalent quantity of
pale-blue liquid oxygen into the liquid
air that had been purified by
cold. The oxygen dissolved. Then the
apparatus reversed itself and supplied
fresh air from the now-enriched
fluid, while the depleted other
tank began to fill up with cold-purified
liquid air.
Outside the shack, jagged stony
pinnacles reared in the starlight, and
craters complained of the bombardment
from space that had made them.
But, outside, nothing ever happened.
Inside, it was quite different.
Working on his memories, one
day Pop made a little sketch. It
helped a great deal. He grew deeply
interested. Writing-material was
scarce, but he spent most of the time
between two particular rocket-landings
getting down on paper exactly
how a child had looked while sleeping,
some fifteen years before. He
remembered with astonishment that
the child had really looked exactly
like that! Later he began a sketch of
his partly-remembered wife. In time—he
had plenty—it became a really
truthful likeness.
The sun rose, and baked the
abomination of desolation which was
the moonscape. Pop Young meticulously
touched up the glittering
triangles which were landing guides
for the Lunar City ships. They glittered
from the thinnest conceivable
layer of magnesium marking-powder.
He checked over the moondozer.
He tended the air apparatus. He did
everything that his job and survival
required. Ungrudgingly.
Then he made more sketches. The
images to be drawn came back more
clearly when he thought of Sattell,
so by keeping Sattell in mind he recovered
the memory of a chair that
had been in his forgotten home.
Then he drew his wife sitting in it,
reading. It felt very good to see her
again. And he speculated about
whether Sattell ever thought of millions
of dollars' worth of new-mined
diamonds knocking about unguarded
in the shack, and he suddenly recollected
clearly the way one of his
children had looked while playing
with her doll. He made a quick
sketch to keep from forgetting that.
There was no purpose in the
sketching, save that he'd lost all his
young manhood through a senseless
crime. He wanted his youth back. He
was recovering it bit by bit. The
occupation made it absurdly easy to
live on the surface of the far side of
the Moon, whether anybody else
could do it or not.
Sattell had no such device for adjusting
to the lunar state of things.
Living on the Moon was bad enough
anyhow, then, but living one mile
underground from Pop Young was
much worse. Sattell clearly remembered
the crime Pop Young hadn't
yet recalled. He considered that Pop
had made no overt attempt to revenge
himself because he planned
some retaliation so horrible and lingering
that it was worth waiting for.
He came to hate Pop with an insane
ferocity. And fear. In his mind the
need to escape became an obsession
on top of the other psychotic states
normal to a Moon-colonist.
But he was helpless. He couldn't
leave. There was Pop. He couldn't
kill Pop. He had no chance—and he
was afraid. The one absurd, irrelevant
thing he could do was write
letters back to Earth. He did that.
He wrote with the desperate, impassioned,
frantic blend of persuasion
and information and genius-like invention
of a prisoner in a high-security
prison, trying to induce someone
to help him escape.
He had friends, of a sort, but for
a long time his letters produced
nothing. The Moon swung in vast
circles about the Earth, and the Earth
swung sedately about the Sun. The
other planets danced their saraband.
The rest of humanity went about its
own affairs with fascinated attention.
But then an event occurred which
bore directly upon Pop Young and
Sattell and Pop Young's missing
years.
Somebody back on Earth promoted
a luxury passenger-line of spaceships
to ply between Earth and
Moon. It looked like a perfect set-up.
Three spacecraft capable of the journey
came into being with attendant
reams of publicity. They promised a
thrill and a new distinction for the
rich. Guided tours to Lunar! The
most expensive and most thrilling
trip in history! One hundred thousand
dollars for a twelve-day cruise
through space, with views of the
Moon's far side and trips through
Lunar City and a landing in Aristarchus,
plus sound-tapes of the journey
and fame hitherto reserved for
honest explorers!
It didn't seem to have anything
to do with Pop or with Sattell. But
it did.
There were just two passenger
tours. The first was fully booked.
But the passengers who paid so highly,
expected to be pleasantly thrilled
and shielded from all reasons for
alarm. And they couldn't be. Something
happens when a self-centered
and complacent individual unsuspectingly
looks out of a spaceship
port and sees the cosmos unshielded
by mists or clouds or other aids to
blindness against reality. It is shattering.
A millionaire cut his throat when
he saw Earth dwindled to a mere
blue-green ball in vastness. He could
not endure his own smallness in the
face of immensity. Not one passenger
disembarked even for Lunar
City. Most of them cowered in their
chairs, hiding their eyes. They were
the simple cases of hysteria. But the
richest girl on Earth, who'd had five
husbands and believed that nothing
could move her—she went into
catatonic withdrawal and neither
saw nor heard nor moved. Two other
passengers sobbed in improvised
strait jackets. The first shipload
started home. Fast.
The second luxury liner took off
with only four passengers and turned
back before reaching the Moon.
Space-pilots could take the strain of
space-flight because they had work
to do. Workers for the lunar mines
could make the trip under heavy
sedation. But it was too early in the
development of space-travel for
pleasure-passengers. They weren't
prepared for the more humbling
facts of life.
Pop heard of the quaint commercial
enterprise through the micro-tapes
put off at the shack for the men
down in the mine. Sattell probably
learned of it the same way. Pop didn't
even think of it again. It seemed
to have nothing to do with him. But
Sattell undoubtedly dealt with it
fully in his desperate writings back
to Earth.
Pop matter-of-factly tended the
shack and the landing field and the
stores for the Big Crack mine. Between-times
he made more drawings
in pursuit of his own private objective.
Quite accidentally, he developed
a certain talent professional artists
might have approved. But he was not
trying to communicate, but to discover.
Drawing—especially with his
mind on Sattell—he found fresh incidents
popping up in his recollection.
Times when he was happy. One
day he remembered the puppy his
children had owned and loved. He
drew it painstakingly—and it was
his again. Thereafter he could remember
it any time he chose. He did
actually recover a completely vanished
past.
He envisioned a way to increase
that recovery. But there was a marked
shortage of artists' materials on the
Moon. All freight had to be hauled
from Earth, on a voyage equal to
rather more than a thousand times
around the equator of the Earth.
Artists' supplies were not often included.
Pop didn't even ask.
He began to explore the area outside
the shack for possible material
no one would think of sending from
Earth. He collected stones of various
sorts, but when warmed up in the
shack they were useless. He found
no strictly lunar material which
would serve for modeling or carving
portraits in the ground. He found
minerals which could be pulverized
and used as pigments, but nothing
suitable for this new adventure in
the recovery of lost youth. He even
considered blasting, to aid his search.
He could. Down in the mine, blasting
was done by soaking carbon black—from
CO
2
—in liquid oxygen, and then
firing it with a spark. It exploded
splendidly. And its fumes were
merely more CO
2
which an air-apparatus
handled easily.
He didn't do any blasting. He didn't
find any signs of the sort of
mineral he required. Marble would
have been perfect, but there is no
marble on the Moon. Naturally! Yet
Pop continued to search absorbedly
for material with which to capture
memory. Sattell still seemed necessary,
but—
Early one lunar morning he was
a good two miles from his shack
when he saw rocket-fumes in the
sky. It was most unlikely. He wasn't
looking for anything of the sort, but
out of the corner of his eye he observed
that something moved. Which
was impossible. He turned his head,
and there were rocket-fumes coming
over the horizon, not in the direction
of Lunar City. Which was more
impossible still.
He stared. A tiny silver rocket to
the westward poured out monstrous
masses of vapor. It decelerated swiftly.
It curved downward. The rockets
checked for an instant, and flamed
again more violently, and checked
once more. This was not an expert
approach. It was a faulty one. Curving
surface-ward in a sharply changing
parabola, the pilot over-corrected
and had to wait to gather down-speed,
and then over-corrected again.
It was an altogether clumsy landing.
The ship was not even perfectly vertical
when it settled not quite in the
landing-area marked by silvery triangles.
One of its tail-fins crumpled
slightly. It tilted a little when fully
landed.
Then nothing happened.
Pop made his way toward it in
the skittering, skating gait one uses
in one-sixth gravity. When he was
within half a mile, an air-lock door
opened in the ship's side. But nothing
came out of the lock. No space-suited
figure. No cargo came drifting
down with the singular deliberation
of falling objects on the Moon.
It was just barely past lunar sunrise
on the far side of the Moon.
Incredibly long and utterly black
shadows stretched across the plain,
and half the rocketship was dazzling
white and half was blacker than
blackness itself. The sun still hung
low indeed in the black, star-speckled
sky. Pop waded through moondust,
raising a trail of slowly settling
powder. He knew only that the ship
didn't come from Lunar City, but
from Earth. He couldn't imagine
why. He did not even wildly connect
it with what—say—Sattell might
have written with desperate plausibility
about greasy-seeming white
crystals out of the mine, knocking
about Pop Young's shack in cannisters
containing a hundred Earth-pounds
weight of richness.
Pop reached the rocketship. He
approached the big tail-fins. On one
of them there were welded ladder-rungs
going up to the opened air-lock
door.
He climbed.
The air-lock was perfectly normal
when he reached it. There was a
glass port in the inner door, and he
saw eyes looking through it at him.
He pulled the outer door shut and
felt the whining vibration of admitted
air. His vacuum suit went slack
about him. The inner door began to
open, and Pop reached up and gave
his helmet the practiced twisting
jerk which removed it.
Then he blinked. There was a red-headed
man in the opened door. He
grinned savagely at Pop. He held a
very nasty hand-weapon trained on
Pop's middle.
"Don't come in!" he said mockingly.
"And I don't give a damn
about how you are. This isn't social.
It's business!"
Pop simply gaped. He couldn't
quite take it in.
"This," snapped the red-headed
man abruptly, "is a stickup!"
Pop's eyes went through the inner
lock-door. He saw that the interior
of the ship was stripped and bare.
But a spiral stairway descended from
some upper compartment. It had a
handrail of pure, transparent, water-clear
plastic. The walls were bare insulation,
but that trace of luxury remained.
Pop gazed at the plastic,
fascinated.
The red-headed man leaned forward,
snarling. He slashed Pop
across the face with the barrel of his
weapon. It drew blood. It was wanton,
savage brutality.
"Pay attention!" snarled the red-headed
man. "A stickup, I said! Get
it? You go get that can of stuff
from the mine! The diamonds!
Bring them here! Understand?"
Pop said numbly: "What the
hell?"
The red-headed man hit him
again. He was nerve-racked, and,
therefore, he wanted to hurt.
"Move!" he rasped. "I want the
diamonds you've got for the ship
from Lunar City! Bring 'em!" Pop
licked blood from his lips and the
man with the weapon raged at him.
"Then phone down to the mine!
Tell Sattell I'm here and he can
come on up! Tell him to bring any
more diamonds they've dug up since
the stuff you've got!"
He leaned forward. His face was
only inches from Pop Young's. It
was seamed and hard-bitten and
nerve-racked. But any man would be
quivering if he wasn't used to space
or the feel of one-sixth gravity on
the Moon. He panted:
"And get it straight! You try
any tricks and we take off! We
swing over your shack! The rocket-blast
smashes it! We burn you
down! Then we swing over the cable
down to the mine and the rocket-flame
melts it! You die and everybody
in the mine besides! No tricks!
We didn't come here for nothing!"
He twitched all over. Then he
struck cruelly again at Pop Young's
face. He seemed filled with fury, at
least partly hysterical. It was the tension
that space-travel—then, at its
beginning—produced. It was meaningless
savagery due to terror. But,
of course, Pop was helpless to resent
it. There were no weapons on the
Moon and the mention of Sattell's
name showed the uselessness of bluff.
He'd pictured the complete set-up
by the edge of the Big Crack. Pop
could do nothing.
The red-headed man checked
himself, panting. He drew back and
slammed the inner lock-door. There
was the sound of pumping.
Pop put his helmet back on and
sealed it. The outer door opened.
Outrushing air tugged at Pop. After
a second or two he went out and
climbed down the welded-on ladder-bars
to the ground.
He headed back toward his shack.
Somehow, the mention of Sattell had
made his mind work better. It always
did. He began painstakingly to
put things together. The red-headed
man knew the routine here in every
detail. He knew Sattell. That part
was simple. Sattell had planned this
multi-million-dollar coup, as a man
in prison might plan his break. The
stripped interior of the ship identified
it.
It was one of the unsuccessful
luxury-liners sold for scrap. Or perhaps
it was stolen for the journey
here. Sattell's associates had had to
steal or somehow get the fuel, and
somehow find a pilot. But there were
diamonds worth at least five million
dollars waiting for them, and the
whole job might not have called for
more than two men—with Sattell as
a third. According to the economics
of crime, it was feasible. Anyhow it
was being done.
Pop reached the dust-heap which
was his shack and went in the air
lock. Inside, he went to the vision-phone
and called the mine-colony
down in the Crack. He gave the
message he'd been told to pass on.
Sattell to come up, with what diamonds
had been dug since the
regular cannister was sent up for the
Lunar City ship that would be due
presently. Otherwise the ship on the
landing strip would destroy shack
and Pop and the colony together.
"I'd guess," said Pop painstakingly,
"that Sattell figured it out. He's
probably got some sort of gun to
keep you from holding him down
there. But he won't know his friends
are here—not right this minute he
won't."
A shaking voice asked questions
from the vision-phone.
"No," said Pop, "they'll do it anyhow.
If we were able to tell about
'em, they'd be chased. But if I'm
dead and the shacks smashed and
the cable burnt through, they'll be
back on Earth long before a new
cable's been got and let down to you.
So they'll do all they can no matter
what I do." He added, "I wouldn't
tell Sattell a thing about it, if I were
you. It'll save trouble. Just let him
keep on waiting for this to happen.
It'll save you trouble."
Another shaky question.
"Me?" asked Pop. "Oh, I'm going
to raise what hell I can. There's
some stuff in that ship I want."
He switched off the phone. He
went over to his air apparatus. He
took down the cannister of diamonds
which were worth five millions or
more back on Earth. He found a
bucket. He dumped the diamonds
casually into it. They floated downward
with great deliberation and
surged from side to side like a liquid
when they stopped. One-sixth gravity.
Pop regarded his drawings meditatively.
A sketch of his wife as he
now remembered her. It was very
good to remember. A drawing of his
two children, playing together. He
looked forward to remembering
much more about them. He grinned.
"That stair-rail," he said in deep
satisfaction. "That'll do it!"
He tore bed linen from his bunk
and worked on the emptied cannister.
It was a double container with a
thermware interior lining. Even on
Earth newly-mined diamonds sometimes
fly to pieces from internal
stress. On the Moon, it was not desirable
that diamonds be exposed to
repeated violent changes of temperature.
So a thermware-lined cannister
kept them at mine-temperature once
they were warmed to touchability.
Pop packed the cotton cloth in the
container. He hurried a little, because
the men in the rocket were shaky and
might not practice patience. He took
a small emergency-lamp from his
spare spacesuit. He carefully cracked
its bulb, exposing the filament within.
He put the lamp on top of the
cotton and sprinkled magnesium
marking-powder over everything.
Then he went to the air-apparatus
and took out a flask of the liquid
oxygen used to keep his breathing-air
in balance. He poured the frigid,
pale-blue stuff into the cotton. He
saturated it.
All the inside of the shack was
foggy when he finished. Then he
pushed the cannister-top down. He
breathed a sigh of relief when it was
in place. He'd arranged for it to
break a frozen-brittle switch as it
descended. When it came off, the
switch would light the lamp with its
bare filament. There was powdered
magnesium in contact with it and
liquid oxygen all about.
He went out of the shack by the
air lock. On the way, thinking about
Sattell, he suddenly recovered a completely
new memory. On their first
wedding anniversary, so long ago,
he and his wife had gone out to
dinner to celebrate. He remembered
how she looked: the almost-smug
joy they shared that they would be
together for always, with one complete
year for proof.
Pop reflected hungrily that it was
something else to be made permanent
and inspected from time to time.
But he wanted more than a drawing
of this! He wanted to make the memory
permanent and to extend it—
If it had not been for his vacuum
suit and the cannister he carried, Pop
would have rubbed his hands.
Tall, jagged crater-walls rose
from the lunar plain. Monstrous, extended
inky shadows stretched
enormous distances, utterly black.
The sun, like a glowing octopod,
floated low at the edge of things and
seemed to hate all creation.
Pop reached the rocket. He
climbed the welded ladder-rungs to
the air lock. He closed the door. Air
whined. His suit sagged against his
body. He took off his helmet.
When the red-headed man opened
the inner door, the hand-weapon
shook and trembled. Pop said
calmly:
"Now I've got to go handle the
hoist, if Sattell's coming up from
the mine. If I don't do it, he don't
come up."
The red-headed man snarled. But
his eyes were on the cannister whose
contents should weigh a hundred
pounds on Earth.
"Any tricks," he rasped, "and you
know what happens!"
"Yeah," said Pop.
He stolidly put his helmet back
on. But his eyes went past the red-headed
man to the stair that wound
down, inside the ship, from some
compartment above. The stair-rail was
pure, clear, water-white plastic, not
less than three inches thick. There
was a lot of it!
The inner door closed. Pop opened
the outer. Air rushed out. He
climbed painstakingly down to the
ground. He started back toward the
shack.
There was the most luridly bright
of all possible flashes. There was no
sound, of course. But something
flamed very brightly, and the ground
thumped under Pop Young's vacuum
boots. He turned.
The rocketship was still in the act
of flying apart. It had been a splendid
explosion. Of course cotton sheeting
in liquid oxygen is not quite as
good an explosive as carbon-black,
which they used down in the mine.
Even with magnesium powder to
start the flame when a bare light-filament
ignited it, the cannister-bomb
hadn't equaled—say—T.N.T.
But the ship had fuel on board for
the trip back to Earth. And it blew,
too. It would be minutes before all
the fragments of the ship returned
to the Moon's surface. On the Moon,
things fall slowly.
Pop didn't wait. He searched
hopefully. Once a mass of steel plating
fell only yards from him, but it
did not interrupt his search.
When he went into the shack, he
grinned to himself. The call-light of
the vision-phone flickered wildly.
When he took off his helmet the bell
clanged incessantly. He answered. A
shaking voice from the mining-colony
panted:
"We felt a shock! What happened?
What do we do?"
"Don't do a thing," advised Pop.
"It's all right. I blew up the ship and
everything's all right. I wouldn't
even mention it to Sattell if I were
you."
He grinned happily down at a section
of plastic stair-rail he'd found
not too far from where the ship exploded.
When the man down in the
mine cut off, Pop got out of his
vacuum suit in a hurry. He placed
the plastic zestfully on the table
where he'd been restricted to drawing
pictures of his wife and children
in order to recover memories of
them.
He began to plan, gloatingly, the
thing he would carve out of a four-inch
section of the plastic. When it
was carved, he'd paint it. While he
worked, he'd think of Sattell, because
that was the way to get back the
missing portions of his life—the
parts Sattell had managed to get
away from him. He'd get back more
than ever, now!
He didn't wonder what he'd do
if he ever remembered the crime
Sattell had committed. He felt, somehow,
that he wouldn't get that back
until he'd recovered all the rest.
Gloating, it was amusing to remember
what people used to call
such art-works as he planned, when
carved by other lonely men in other
faraway places. They called those
sculptures scrimshaw.
But they were a lot more than
that!
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Astounding Science Fiction
September
1955. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | extreme temperatures | loud noises from the mines | social isolation | vicious predators | 0 |
23791_S6420G0B_2 | What motivates Pop Young to live on the far side of the moon? | SCRIMSHAW
The old man
just wanted to get back his
memory—and the methods he used were
gently hellish, from the viewpoint of the
others....
BY MURRAY LEINSTER
Illustrated by Freas
Pop Young was the one known
man who could stand life on the
surface of the Moon's far side, and,
therefore, he occupied the shack on
the Big Crack's edge, above the
mining colony there. Some people
said that no normal man could do
it, and mentioned the scar of a
ghastly head-wound to explain his
ability. One man partly guessed the
secret, but only partly. His name was
Sattell and he had reason not to
talk. Pop Young alone knew the
whole truth, and he kept his mouth
shut, too. It wasn't anybody else's
business.
The shack and the job he filled
were located in the medieval notion
of the physical appearance of hell.
By day the environment was heat and
torment. By night—lunar night, of
course, and lunar day—it was frigidity
and horror. Once in two weeks
Earth-time a rocketship came around
the horizon from Lunar City with
stores for the colony deep underground.
Pop received the stores and
took care of them. He handed over
the product of the mine, to be forwarded
to Earth. The rocket went
away again. Come nightfall Pop
lowered the supplies down the long
cable into the Big Crack to the colony
far down inside, and freshened up
the landing field marks with magnesium
marking-powder if a rocket-blast
had blurred them. That was
fundamentally all he had to do. But
without him the mine down in the
Crack would have had to shut
down.
The Crack, of course, was that
gaping rocky fault which stretches
nine hundred miles, jaggedly, over
the side of the Moon that Earth
never sees. There is one stretch where
it is a yawning gulf a full half-mile
wide and unguessably deep. Where
Pop Young's shack stood it was only
a hundred yards, but the colony was
a full mile down, in one wall. There
is nothing like it on Earth, of course.
When it was first found, scientists
descended into it to examine the exposed
rock-strata and learn the history
of the Moon before its craters
were made. But they found more
than history. They found the reason
for the colony and the rocket landing
field and the shack.
The reason for Pop was something
else.
The shack stood a hundred feet
from the Big Crack's edge. It looked
like a dust-heap thirty feet high, and
it was. The outside was surface
moondust, piled over a tiny dome to
be insulation against the cold of
night and shadow and the furnace
heat of day. Pop lived in it all alone,
and in his spare time he worked
industriously at recovering some
missing portions of his life that Sattell
had managed to take away from
him.
He thought often of Sattell, down
in the colony underground. There
were galleries and tunnels and living-quarters
down there. There were
air-tight bulkheads for safety, and a
hydroponic garden to keep the air
fresh, and all sorts of things to make
life possible for men under if not
on the Moon.
But it wasn't fun, even underground.
In the Moon's slight gravity,
a man is really adjusted to existence
when he has a well-developed case
of agoraphobia. With such an aid, a
man can get into a tiny, coffinlike
cubbyhole, and feel solidity above
and below and around him, and
happily tell himself that it feels delicious.
Sometimes it does.
But Sattell couldn't comfort himself
so easily. He knew about Pop,
up on the surface. He'd shipped out,
whimpering, to the Moon to get far
away from Pop, and Pop was just
about a mile overhead and there was
no way to get around him. It was
difficult to get away from the mine,
anyhow. It doesn't take too long for
the low gravity to tear a man's
nerves to shreds. He has to develop
kinks in his head to survive. And
those kinks—
The first men to leave the colony
had to be knocked cold and shipped
out unconscious. They'd been underground—and
in low gravity—long
enough to be utterly unable to face
the idea of open spaces. Even now
there were some who had to be carried,
but there were some tougher
ones who were able to walk to the
rocketship if Pop put a tarpaulin
over their heads so they didn't have
to see the sky. In any case Pop was
essential, either for carrying or
guidance.
Sattell got the shakes when he
thought of Pop, and Pop rather
probably knew it. Of course, by the
time he took the job tending the
shack, he was pretty certain about
Sattell. The facts spoke for themselves.
Pop had come back to consciousness
in a hospital with a great
wound in his head and no memory
of anything that had happened before
that moment. It was not that his
identity was in question. When he
was stronger, the doctors told him
who he was, and as gently as possible
what had happened to his wife
and children. They'd been murdered
after he was seemingly killed defending
them. But he didn't remember
a thing. Not then. It was
something of a blessing.
But when he was physically recovered
he set about trying to pick
up the threads of the life he could
no longer remember. He met Sattell
quite by accident. Sattell looked familiar.
Pop eagerly tried to ask him
questions. And Sattell turned gray
and frantically denied that he'd ever
seen Pop before.
All of which happened back on
Earth and a long time ago. It seemed
to Pop that the sight of Sattell had
brought back some vague and cloudy
memories. They were not sharp,
though, and he hunted up Sattell
again to find out if he was right.
And Sattell went into panic when
he returned.
Nowadays, by the Big Crack, Pop
wasn't so insistent on seeing Sattell,
but he was deeply concerned with
the recovery of the memories that
Sattell helped bring back. Pop was
a highly conscientious man. He took
good care of his job. There was a
warning-bell in the shack, and when
a rocketship from Lunar City got
above the horizon and could send a
tight beam, the gong clanged loudly,
and Pop got into a vacuum-suit
and went out the air lock. He usually
reached the moondozer about the
time the ship began to brake for
landing, and he watched it come in.
He saw the silver needle in the
sky fighting momentum above a line
of jagged crater-walls. It slowed, and
slowed, and curved down as it drew
nearer. The pilot killed all forward
motion just above the field and came
steadily and smoothly down to land
between the silvery triangles that
marked the landing place.
Instantly the rockets cut off,
drums of fuel and air and food came
out of the cargo-hatch and Pop swept
forward with the dozer. It was a
miniature tractor with a gigantic
scoop in front. He pushed a great
mound of talc-fine dust before him
to cover up the cargo. It was necessary.
With freight costing what it
did, fuel and air and food came
frozen solid, in containers barely
thicker than foil. While they stayed
at space-shadow temperature, the foil
would hold anything. And a cover of
insulating moondust with vacuum
between the grains kept even air
frozen solid, though in sunlight.
At such times Pop hardly thought
of Sattell. He knew he had plenty
of time for that. He'd started to follow
Sattell knowing what had happened
to his wife and children, but
it was hearsay only. He had no memory
of them at all. But Sattell stirred
the lost memories. At first Pop followed
absorbedly from city to city,
to recover the years that had been
wiped out by an axe-blow. He did
recover a good deal. When Sattell
fled to another continent, Pop followed
because he had some distinct
memories of his wife—and the way
he'd felt about her—and some fugitive
mental images of his children.
When Sattell frenziedly tried to deny
knowledge of the murder in Tangier,
Pop had come to remember both his
children and some of the happiness
of his married life.
Even when Sattell—whimpering—signed
up for Lunar City, Pop tracked
him. By that time he was quite
sure that Sattell was the man who'd
killed his family. If so, Sattell had
profited by less than two days' pay
for wiping out everything that Pop
possessed. But Pop wanted it back.
He couldn't prove Sattell's guilt.
There was no evidence. In any case,
he didn't really want Sattell to die.
If he did, there'd be no way to recover
more lost memories.
Sometimes, in the shack on the far
side of the Moon, Pop Young had
odd fancies about Sattell. There was
the mine, for example. In each two
Earth-weeks of working, the mine-colony
nearly filled up a three-gallon
cannister with greasy-seeming white
crystals shaped like two pyramids
base to base. The filled cannister
would weigh a hundred pounds on
Earth. Here it weighed eighteen. But
on Earth its contents would be computed
in carats, and a hundred
pounds was worth millions. Yet here
on the Moon Pop kept a waiting cannister
on a shelf in his tiny dome,
behind the air-apparatus. It rattled
if he shook it, and it was worth no
more than so many pebbles. But
sometimes Pop wondered if Sattell
ever thought of the value of the
mine's production. If he would kill
a woman and two children and think
he'd killed a man for no more than
a hundred dollars, what enormity
would he commit for a three-gallon
quantity of uncut diamonds?
But he did not dwell on such
speculation. The sun rose very, very
slowly in what by convention was
called the east. It took nearly two
hours to urge its disk above the
horizon, and it burned terribly in
emptiness for fourteen times twenty-four
hours before sunset. Then there
was night, and for three hundred
and thirty-six consecutive hours there
were only stars overhead and the
sky was a hole so terrible that a man
who looked up into it—what with
the nagging sensation of one-sixth
gravity—tended to lose all confidence
in the stability of things. Most men
immediately found it hysterically necessary
to seize hold of something
solid to keep from falling upward.
But nothing felt solid. Everything
fell, too. Wherefore most men tended
to scream.
But not Pop. He'd come to the
Moon in the first place because Sattell
was here. Near Sattell, he found
memories of times when he was a
young man with a young wife who
loved him extravagantly. Then pictures
of his children came out of
emptiness and grew sharp and clear.
He found that he loved them very
dearly. And when he was near Sattell
he literally recovered them—in
the sense that he came to know new
things about them and had new
memories of them every day. He
hadn't yet remembered the crime
which lost them to him. Until he
did—and the fact possessed a certain
grisly humor—Pop didn't even hate
Sattell. He simply wanted to be near
him because it enabled him to recover
new and vivid parts of his
youth that had been lost.
Otherwise, he was wholly matter-of-fact—certainly
so for the far side
of the Moon. He was a rather fussy
housekeeper. The shack above the
Big Crack's rim was as tidy as any
lighthouse or fur-trapper's cabin. He
tended his air-apparatus with a fine
precision. It was perfectly simple. In
the shadow of the shack he had an
unfailing source of extreme low
temperature. Air from the shack
flowed into a shadow-chilled pipe.
Moisture condensed out of it here,
and CO
2
froze solidly out of it there,
and on beyond it collected as restless,
transparent liquid air. At the same
time, liquid air from another tank
evaporated to maintain the proper
air pressure in the shack. Every so
often Pop tapped the pipe where the
moisture froze, and lumps of water
ice clattered out to be returned to the
humidifier. Less often he took out the
CO
2
snow, and measured it, and
dumped an equivalent quantity of
pale-blue liquid oxygen into the liquid
air that had been purified by
cold. The oxygen dissolved. Then the
apparatus reversed itself and supplied
fresh air from the now-enriched
fluid, while the depleted other
tank began to fill up with cold-purified
liquid air.
Outside the shack, jagged stony
pinnacles reared in the starlight, and
craters complained of the bombardment
from space that had made them.
But, outside, nothing ever happened.
Inside, it was quite different.
Working on his memories, one
day Pop made a little sketch. It
helped a great deal. He grew deeply
interested. Writing-material was
scarce, but he spent most of the time
between two particular rocket-landings
getting down on paper exactly
how a child had looked while sleeping,
some fifteen years before. He
remembered with astonishment that
the child had really looked exactly
like that! Later he began a sketch of
his partly-remembered wife. In time—he
had plenty—it became a really
truthful likeness.
The sun rose, and baked the
abomination of desolation which was
the moonscape. Pop Young meticulously
touched up the glittering
triangles which were landing guides
for the Lunar City ships. They glittered
from the thinnest conceivable
layer of magnesium marking-powder.
He checked over the moondozer.
He tended the air apparatus. He did
everything that his job and survival
required. Ungrudgingly.
Then he made more sketches. The
images to be drawn came back more
clearly when he thought of Sattell,
so by keeping Sattell in mind he recovered
the memory of a chair that
had been in his forgotten home.
Then he drew his wife sitting in it,
reading. It felt very good to see her
again. And he speculated about
whether Sattell ever thought of millions
of dollars' worth of new-mined
diamonds knocking about unguarded
in the shack, and he suddenly recollected
clearly the way one of his
children had looked while playing
with her doll. He made a quick
sketch to keep from forgetting that.
There was no purpose in the
sketching, save that he'd lost all his
young manhood through a senseless
crime. He wanted his youth back. He
was recovering it bit by bit. The
occupation made it absurdly easy to
live on the surface of the far side of
the Moon, whether anybody else
could do it or not.
Sattell had no such device for adjusting
to the lunar state of things.
Living on the Moon was bad enough
anyhow, then, but living one mile
underground from Pop Young was
much worse. Sattell clearly remembered
the crime Pop Young hadn't
yet recalled. He considered that Pop
had made no overt attempt to revenge
himself because he planned
some retaliation so horrible and lingering
that it was worth waiting for.
He came to hate Pop with an insane
ferocity. And fear. In his mind the
need to escape became an obsession
on top of the other psychotic states
normal to a Moon-colonist.
But he was helpless. He couldn't
leave. There was Pop. He couldn't
kill Pop. He had no chance—and he
was afraid. The one absurd, irrelevant
thing he could do was write
letters back to Earth. He did that.
He wrote with the desperate, impassioned,
frantic blend of persuasion
and information and genius-like invention
of a prisoner in a high-security
prison, trying to induce someone
to help him escape.
He had friends, of a sort, but for
a long time his letters produced
nothing. The Moon swung in vast
circles about the Earth, and the Earth
swung sedately about the Sun. The
other planets danced their saraband.
The rest of humanity went about its
own affairs with fascinated attention.
But then an event occurred which
bore directly upon Pop Young and
Sattell and Pop Young's missing
years.
Somebody back on Earth promoted
a luxury passenger-line of spaceships
to ply between Earth and
Moon. It looked like a perfect set-up.
Three spacecraft capable of the journey
came into being with attendant
reams of publicity. They promised a
thrill and a new distinction for the
rich. Guided tours to Lunar! The
most expensive and most thrilling
trip in history! One hundred thousand
dollars for a twelve-day cruise
through space, with views of the
Moon's far side and trips through
Lunar City and a landing in Aristarchus,
plus sound-tapes of the journey
and fame hitherto reserved for
honest explorers!
It didn't seem to have anything
to do with Pop or with Sattell. But
it did.
There were just two passenger
tours. The first was fully booked.
But the passengers who paid so highly,
expected to be pleasantly thrilled
and shielded from all reasons for
alarm. And they couldn't be. Something
happens when a self-centered
and complacent individual unsuspectingly
looks out of a spaceship
port and sees the cosmos unshielded
by mists or clouds or other aids to
blindness against reality. It is shattering.
A millionaire cut his throat when
he saw Earth dwindled to a mere
blue-green ball in vastness. He could
not endure his own smallness in the
face of immensity. Not one passenger
disembarked even for Lunar
City. Most of them cowered in their
chairs, hiding their eyes. They were
the simple cases of hysteria. But the
richest girl on Earth, who'd had five
husbands and believed that nothing
could move her—she went into
catatonic withdrawal and neither
saw nor heard nor moved. Two other
passengers sobbed in improvised
strait jackets. The first shipload
started home. Fast.
The second luxury liner took off
with only four passengers and turned
back before reaching the Moon.
Space-pilots could take the strain of
space-flight because they had work
to do. Workers for the lunar mines
could make the trip under heavy
sedation. But it was too early in the
development of space-travel for
pleasure-passengers. They weren't
prepared for the more humbling
facts of life.
Pop heard of the quaint commercial
enterprise through the micro-tapes
put off at the shack for the men
down in the mine. Sattell probably
learned of it the same way. Pop didn't
even think of it again. It seemed
to have nothing to do with him. But
Sattell undoubtedly dealt with it
fully in his desperate writings back
to Earth.
Pop matter-of-factly tended the
shack and the landing field and the
stores for the Big Crack mine. Between-times
he made more drawings
in pursuit of his own private objective.
Quite accidentally, he developed
a certain talent professional artists
might have approved. But he was not
trying to communicate, but to discover.
Drawing—especially with his
mind on Sattell—he found fresh incidents
popping up in his recollection.
Times when he was happy. One
day he remembered the puppy his
children had owned and loved. He
drew it painstakingly—and it was
his again. Thereafter he could remember
it any time he chose. He did
actually recover a completely vanished
past.
He envisioned a way to increase
that recovery. But there was a marked
shortage of artists' materials on the
Moon. All freight had to be hauled
from Earth, on a voyage equal to
rather more than a thousand times
around the equator of the Earth.
Artists' supplies were not often included.
Pop didn't even ask.
He began to explore the area outside
the shack for possible material
no one would think of sending from
Earth. He collected stones of various
sorts, but when warmed up in the
shack they were useless. He found
no strictly lunar material which
would serve for modeling or carving
portraits in the ground. He found
minerals which could be pulverized
and used as pigments, but nothing
suitable for this new adventure in
the recovery of lost youth. He even
considered blasting, to aid his search.
He could. Down in the mine, blasting
was done by soaking carbon black—from
CO
2
—in liquid oxygen, and then
firing it with a spark. It exploded
splendidly. And its fumes were
merely more CO
2
which an air-apparatus
handled easily.
He didn't do any blasting. He didn't
find any signs of the sort of
mineral he required. Marble would
have been perfect, but there is no
marble on the Moon. Naturally! Yet
Pop continued to search absorbedly
for material with which to capture
memory. Sattell still seemed necessary,
but—
Early one lunar morning he was
a good two miles from his shack
when he saw rocket-fumes in the
sky. It was most unlikely. He wasn't
looking for anything of the sort, but
out of the corner of his eye he observed
that something moved. Which
was impossible. He turned his head,
and there were rocket-fumes coming
over the horizon, not in the direction
of Lunar City. Which was more
impossible still.
He stared. A tiny silver rocket to
the westward poured out monstrous
masses of vapor. It decelerated swiftly.
It curved downward. The rockets
checked for an instant, and flamed
again more violently, and checked
once more. This was not an expert
approach. It was a faulty one. Curving
surface-ward in a sharply changing
parabola, the pilot over-corrected
and had to wait to gather down-speed,
and then over-corrected again.
It was an altogether clumsy landing.
The ship was not even perfectly vertical
when it settled not quite in the
landing-area marked by silvery triangles.
One of its tail-fins crumpled
slightly. It tilted a little when fully
landed.
Then nothing happened.
Pop made his way toward it in
the skittering, skating gait one uses
in one-sixth gravity. When he was
within half a mile, an air-lock door
opened in the ship's side. But nothing
came out of the lock. No space-suited
figure. No cargo came drifting
down with the singular deliberation
of falling objects on the Moon.
It was just barely past lunar sunrise
on the far side of the Moon.
Incredibly long and utterly black
shadows stretched across the plain,
and half the rocketship was dazzling
white and half was blacker than
blackness itself. The sun still hung
low indeed in the black, star-speckled
sky. Pop waded through moondust,
raising a trail of slowly settling
powder. He knew only that the ship
didn't come from Lunar City, but
from Earth. He couldn't imagine
why. He did not even wildly connect
it with what—say—Sattell might
have written with desperate plausibility
about greasy-seeming white
crystals out of the mine, knocking
about Pop Young's shack in cannisters
containing a hundred Earth-pounds
weight of richness.
Pop reached the rocketship. He
approached the big tail-fins. On one
of them there were welded ladder-rungs
going up to the opened air-lock
door.
He climbed.
The air-lock was perfectly normal
when he reached it. There was a
glass port in the inner door, and he
saw eyes looking through it at him.
He pulled the outer door shut and
felt the whining vibration of admitted
air. His vacuum suit went slack
about him. The inner door began to
open, and Pop reached up and gave
his helmet the practiced twisting
jerk which removed it.
Then he blinked. There was a red-headed
man in the opened door. He
grinned savagely at Pop. He held a
very nasty hand-weapon trained on
Pop's middle.
"Don't come in!" he said mockingly.
"And I don't give a damn
about how you are. This isn't social.
It's business!"
Pop simply gaped. He couldn't
quite take it in.
"This," snapped the red-headed
man abruptly, "is a stickup!"
Pop's eyes went through the inner
lock-door. He saw that the interior
of the ship was stripped and bare.
But a spiral stairway descended from
some upper compartment. It had a
handrail of pure, transparent, water-clear
plastic. The walls were bare insulation,
but that trace of luxury remained.
Pop gazed at the plastic,
fascinated.
The red-headed man leaned forward,
snarling. He slashed Pop
across the face with the barrel of his
weapon. It drew blood. It was wanton,
savage brutality.
"Pay attention!" snarled the red-headed
man. "A stickup, I said! Get
it? You go get that can of stuff
from the mine! The diamonds!
Bring them here! Understand?"
Pop said numbly: "What the
hell?"
The red-headed man hit him
again. He was nerve-racked, and,
therefore, he wanted to hurt.
"Move!" he rasped. "I want the
diamonds you've got for the ship
from Lunar City! Bring 'em!" Pop
licked blood from his lips and the
man with the weapon raged at him.
"Then phone down to the mine!
Tell Sattell I'm here and he can
come on up! Tell him to bring any
more diamonds they've dug up since
the stuff you've got!"
He leaned forward. His face was
only inches from Pop Young's. It
was seamed and hard-bitten and
nerve-racked. But any man would be
quivering if he wasn't used to space
or the feel of one-sixth gravity on
the Moon. He panted:
"And get it straight! You try
any tricks and we take off! We
swing over your shack! The rocket-blast
smashes it! We burn you
down! Then we swing over the cable
down to the mine and the rocket-flame
melts it! You die and everybody
in the mine besides! No tricks!
We didn't come here for nothing!"
He twitched all over. Then he
struck cruelly again at Pop Young's
face. He seemed filled with fury, at
least partly hysterical. It was the tension
that space-travel—then, at its
beginning—produced. It was meaningless
savagery due to terror. But,
of course, Pop was helpless to resent
it. There were no weapons on the
Moon and the mention of Sattell's
name showed the uselessness of bluff.
He'd pictured the complete set-up
by the edge of the Big Crack. Pop
could do nothing.
The red-headed man checked
himself, panting. He drew back and
slammed the inner lock-door. There
was the sound of pumping.
Pop put his helmet back on and
sealed it. The outer door opened.
Outrushing air tugged at Pop. After
a second or two he went out and
climbed down the welded-on ladder-bars
to the ground.
He headed back toward his shack.
Somehow, the mention of Sattell had
made his mind work better. It always
did. He began painstakingly to
put things together. The red-headed
man knew the routine here in every
detail. He knew Sattell. That part
was simple. Sattell had planned this
multi-million-dollar coup, as a man
in prison might plan his break. The
stripped interior of the ship identified
it.
It was one of the unsuccessful
luxury-liners sold for scrap. Or perhaps
it was stolen for the journey
here. Sattell's associates had had to
steal or somehow get the fuel, and
somehow find a pilot. But there were
diamonds worth at least five million
dollars waiting for them, and the
whole job might not have called for
more than two men—with Sattell as
a third. According to the economics
of crime, it was feasible. Anyhow it
was being done.
Pop reached the dust-heap which
was his shack and went in the air
lock. Inside, he went to the vision-phone
and called the mine-colony
down in the Crack. He gave the
message he'd been told to pass on.
Sattell to come up, with what diamonds
had been dug since the
regular cannister was sent up for the
Lunar City ship that would be due
presently. Otherwise the ship on the
landing strip would destroy shack
and Pop and the colony together.
"I'd guess," said Pop painstakingly,
"that Sattell figured it out. He's
probably got some sort of gun to
keep you from holding him down
there. But he won't know his friends
are here—not right this minute he
won't."
A shaking voice asked questions
from the vision-phone.
"No," said Pop, "they'll do it anyhow.
If we were able to tell about
'em, they'd be chased. But if I'm
dead and the shacks smashed and
the cable burnt through, they'll be
back on Earth long before a new
cable's been got and let down to you.
So they'll do all they can no matter
what I do." He added, "I wouldn't
tell Sattell a thing about it, if I were
you. It'll save trouble. Just let him
keep on waiting for this to happen.
It'll save you trouble."
Another shaky question.
"Me?" asked Pop. "Oh, I'm going
to raise what hell I can. There's
some stuff in that ship I want."
He switched off the phone. He
went over to his air apparatus. He
took down the cannister of diamonds
which were worth five millions or
more back on Earth. He found a
bucket. He dumped the diamonds
casually into it. They floated downward
with great deliberation and
surged from side to side like a liquid
when they stopped. One-sixth gravity.
Pop regarded his drawings meditatively.
A sketch of his wife as he
now remembered her. It was very
good to remember. A drawing of his
two children, playing together. He
looked forward to remembering
much more about them. He grinned.
"That stair-rail," he said in deep
satisfaction. "That'll do it!"
He tore bed linen from his bunk
and worked on the emptied cannister.
It was a double container with a
thermware interior lining. Even on
Earth newly-mined diamonds sometimes
fly to pieces from internal
stress. On the Moon, it was not desirable
that diamonds be exposed to
repeated violent changes of temperature.
So a thermware-lined cannister
kept them at mine-temperature once
they were warmed to touchability.
Pop packed the cotton cloth in the
container. He hurried a little, because
the men in the rocket were shaky and
might not practice patience. He took
a small emergency-lamp from his
spare spacesuit. He carefully cracked
its bulb, exposing the filament within.
He put the lamp on top of the
cotton and sprinkled magnesium
marking-powder over everything.
Then he went to the air-apparatus
and took out a flask of the liquid
oxygen used to keep his breathing-air
in balance. He poured the frigid,
pale-blue stuff into the cotton. He
saturated it.
All the inside of the shack was
foggy when he finished. Then he
pushed the cannister-top down. He
breathed a sigh of relief when it was
in place. He'd arranged for it to
break a frozen-brittle switch as it
descended. When it came off, the
switch would light the lamp with its
bare filament. There was powdered
magnesium in contact with it and
liquid oxygen all about.
He went out of the shack by the
air lock. On the way, thinking about
Sattell, he suddenly recovered a completely
new memory. On their first
wedding anniversary, so long ago,
he and his wife had gone out to
dinner to celebrate. He remembered
how she looked: the almost-smug
joy they shared that they would be
together for always, with one complete
year for proof.
Pop reflected hungrily that it was
something else to be made permanent
and inspected from time to time.
But he wanted more than a drawing
of this! He wanted to make the memory
permanent and to extend it—
If it had not been for his vacuum
suit and the cannister he carried, Pop
would have rubbed his hands.
Tall, jagged crater-walls rose
from the lunar plain. Monstrous, extended
inky shadows stretched
enormous distances, utterly black.
The sun, like a glowing octopod,
floated low at the edge of things and
seemed to hate all creation.
Pop reached the rocket. He
climbed the welded ladder-rungs to
the air lock. He closed the door. Air
whined. His suit sagged against his
body. He took off his helmet.
When the red-headed man opened
the inner door, the hand-weapon
shook and trembled. Pop said
calmly:
"Now I've got to go handle the
hoist, if Sattell's coming up from
the mine. If I don't do it, he don't
come up."
The red-headed man snarled. But
his eyes were on the cannister whose
contents should weigh a hundred
pounds on Earth.
"Any tricks," he rasped, "and you
know what happens!"
"Yeah," said Pop.
He stolidly put his helmet back
on. But his eyes went past the red-headed
man to the stair that wound
down, inside the ship, from some
compartment above. The stair-rail was
pure, clear, water-white plastic, not
less than three inches thick. There
was a lot of it!
The inner door closed. Pop opened
the outer. Air rushed out. He
climbed painstakingly down to the
ground. He started back toward the
shack.
There was the most luridly bright
of all possible flashes. There was no
sound, of course. But something
flamed very brightly, and the ground
thumped under Pop Young's vacuum
boots. He turned.
The rocketship was still in the act
of flying apart. It had been a splendid
explosion. Of course cotton sheeting
in liquid oxygen is not quite as
good an explosive as carbon-black,
which they used down in the mine.
Even with magnesium powder to
start the flame when a bare light-filament
ignited it, the cannister-bomb
hadn't equaled—say—T.N.T.
But the ship had fuel on board for
the trip back to Earth. And it blew,
too. It would be minutes before all
the fragments of the ship returned
to the Moon's surface. On the Moon,
things fall slowly.
Pop didn't wait. He searched
hopefully. Once a mass of steel plating
fell only yards from him, but it
did not interrupt his search.
When he went into the shack, he
grinned to himself. The call-light of
the vision-phone flickered wildly.
When he took off his helmet the bell
clanged incessantly. He answered. A
shaking voice from the mining-colony
panted:
"We felt a shock! What happened?
What do we do?"
"Don't do a thing," advised Pop.
"It's all right. I blew up the ship and
everything's all right. I wouldn't
even mention it to Sattell if I were
you."
He grinned happily down at a section
of plastic stair-rail he'd found
not too far from where the ship exploded.
When the man down in the
mine cut off, Pop got out of his
vacuum suit in a hurry. He placed
the plastic zestfully on the table
where he'd been restricted to drawing
pictures of his wife and children
in order to recover memories of
them.
He began to plan, gloatingly, the
thing he would carve out of a four-inch
section of the plastic. When it
was carved, he'd paint it. While he
worked, he'd think of Sattell, because
that was the way to get back the
missing portions of his life—the
parts Sattell had managed to get
away from him. He'd get back more
than ever, now!
He didn't wonder what he'd do
if he ever remembered the crime
Sattell had committed. He felt, somehow,
that he wouldn't get that back
until he'd recovered all the rest.
Gloating, it was amusing to remember
what people used to call
such art-works as he planned, when
carved by other lonely men in other
faraway places. They called those
sculptures scrimshaw.
But they were a lot more than
that!
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Astounding Science Fiction
September
1955. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | He is being compensated for a wrongful death suit that occurred back on Earth | He is close to Sattell's location, which enhances his memories of his wife and children | If he left his post, there would be no one to monitor the mines in the Big Crack | If he returned to Earth, he would be arrested for the murder of his family | 1 |
23791_S6420G0B_3 | Which item would most likely be shared by Sattell and Pop? | SCRIMSHAW
The old man
just wanted to get back his
memory—and the methods he used were
gently hellish, from the viewpoint of the
others....
BY MURRAY LEINSTER
Illustrated by Freas
Pop Young was the one known
man who could stand life on the
surface of the Moon's far side, and,
therefore, he occupied the shack on
the Big Crack's edge, above the
mining colony there. Some people
said that no normal man could do
it, and mentioned the scar of a
ghastly head-wound to explain his
ability. One man partly guessed the
secret, but only partly. His name was
Sattell and he had reason not to
talk. Pop Young alone knew the
whole truth, and he kept his mouth
shut, too. It wasn't anybody else's
business.
The shack and the job he filled
were located in the medieval notion
of the physical appearance of hell.
By day the environment was heat and
torment. By night—lunar night, of
course, and lunar day—it was frigidity
and horror. Once in two weeks
Earth-time a rocketship came around
the horizon from Lunar City with
stores for the colony deep underground.
Pop received the stores and
took care of them. He handed over
the product of the mine, to be forwarded
to Earth. The rocket went
away again. Come nightfall Pop
lowered the supplies down the long
cable into the Big Crack to the colony
far down inside, and freshened up
the landing field marks with magnesium
marking-powder if a rocket-blast
had blurred them. That was
fundamentally all he had to do. But
without him the mine down in the
Crack would have had to shut
down.
The Crack, of course, was that
gaping rocky fault which stretches
nine hundred miles, jaggedly, over
the side of the Moon that Earth
never sees. There is one stretch where
it is a yawning gulf a full half-mile
wide and unguessably deep. Where
Pop Young's shack stood it was only
a hundred yards, but the colony was
a full mile down, in one wall. There
is nothing like it on Earth, of course.
When it was first found, scientists
descended into it to examine the exposed
rock-strata and learn the history
of the Moon before its craters
were made. But they found more
than history. They found the reason
for the colony and the rocket landing
field and the shack.
The reason for Pop was something
else.
The shack stood a hundred feet
from the Big Crack's edge. It looked
like a dust-heap thirty feet high, and
it was. The outside was surface
moondust, piled over a tiny dome to
be insulation against the cold of
night and shadow and the furnace
heat of day. Pop lived in it all alone,
and in his spare time he worked
industriously at recovering some
missing portions of his life that Sattell
had managed to take away from
him.
He thought often of Sattell, down
in the colony underground. There
were galleries and tunnels and living-quarters
down there. There were
air-tight bulkheads for safety, and a
hydroponic garden to keep the air
fresh, and all sorts of things to make
life possible for men under if not
on the Moon.
But it wasn't fun, even underground.
In the Moon's slight gravity,
a man is really adjusted to existence
when he has a well-developed case
of agoraphobia. With such an aid, a
man can get into a tiny, coffinlike
cubbyhole, and feel solidity above
and below and around him, and
happily tell himself that it feels delicious.
Sometimes it does.
But Sattell couldn't comfort himself
so easily. He knew about Pop,
up on the surface. He'd shipped out,
whimpering, to the Moon to get far
away from Pop, and Pop was just
about a mile overhead and there was
no way to get around him. It was
difficult to get away from the mine,
anyhow. It doesn't take too long for
the low gravity to tear a man's
nerves to shreds. He has to develop
kinks in his head to survive. And
those kinks—
The first men to leave the colony
had to be knocked cold and shipped
out unconscious. They'd been underground—and
in low gravity—long
enough to be utterly unable to face
the idea of open spaces. Even now
there were some who had to be carried,
but there were some tougher
ones who were able to walk to the
rocketship if Pop put a tarpaulin
over their heads so they didn't have
to see the sky. In any case Pop was
essential, either for carrying or
guidance.
Sattell got the shakes when he
thought of Pop, and Pop rather
probably knew it. Of course, by the
time he took the job tending the
shack, he was pretty certain about
Sattell. The facts spoke for themselves.
Pop had come back to consciousness
in a hospital with a great
wound in his head and no memory
of anything that had happened before
that moment. It was not that his
identity was in question. When he
was stronger, the doctors told him
who he was, and as gently as possible
what had happened to his wife
and children. They'd been murdered
after he was seemingly killed defending
them. But he didn't remember
a thing. Not then. It was
something of a blessing.
But when he was physically recovered
he set about trying to pick
up the threads of the life he could
no longer remember. He met Sattell
quite by accident. Sattell looked familiar.
Pop eagerly tried to ask him
questions. And Sattell turned gray
and frantically denied that he'd ever
seen Pop before.
All of which happened back on
Earth and a long time ago. It seemed
to Pop that the sight of Sattell had
brought back some vague and cloudy
memories. They were not sharp,
though, and he hunted up Sattell
again to find out if he was right.
And Sattell went into panic when
he returned.
Nowadays, by the Big Crack, Pop
wasn't so insistent on seeing Sattell,
but he was deeply concerned with
the recovery of the memories that
Sattell helped bring back. Pop was
a highly conscientious man. He took
good care of his job. There was a
warning-bell in the shack, and when
a rocketship from Lunar City got
above the horizon and could send a
tight beam, the gong clanged loudly,
and Pop got into a vacuum-suit
and went out the air lock. He usually
reached the moondozer about the
time the ship began to brake for
landing, and he watched it come in.
He saw the silver needle in the
sky fighting momentum above a line
of jagged crater-walls. It slowed, and
slowed, and curved down as it drew
nearer. The pilot killed all forward
motion just above the field and came
steadily and smoothly down to land
between the silvery triangles that
marked the landing place.
Instantly the rockets cut off,
drums of fuel and air and food came
out of the cargo-hatch and Pop swept
forward with the dozer. It was a
miniature tractor with a gigantic
scoop in front. He pushed a great
mound of talc-fine dust before him
to cover up the cargo. It was necessary.
With freight costing what it
did, fuel and air and food came
frozen solid, in containers barely
thicker than foil. While they stayed
at space-shadow temperature, the foil
would hold anything. And a cover of
insulating moondust with vacuum
between the grains kept even air
frozen solid, though in sunlight.
At such times Pop hardly thought
of Sattell. He knew he had plenty
of time for that. He'd started to follow
Sattell knowing what had happened
to his wife and children, but
it was hearsay only. He had no memory
of them at all. But Sattell stirred
the lost memories. At first Pop followed
absorbedly from city to city,
to recover the years that had been
wiped out by an axe-blow. He did
recover a good deal. When Sattell
fled to another continent, Pop followed
because he had some distinct
memories of his wife—and the way
he'd felt about her—and some fugitive
mental images of his children.
When Sattell frenziedly tried to deny
knowledge of the murder in Tangier,
Pop had come to remember both his
children and some of the happiness
of his married life.
Even when Sattell—whimpering—signed
up for Lunar City, Pop tracked
him. By that time he was quite
sure that Sattell was the man who'd
killed his family. If so, Sattell had
profited by less than two days' pay
for wiping out everything that Pop
possessed. But Pop wanted it back.
He couldn't prove Sattell's guilt.
There was no evidence. In any case,
he didn't really want Sattell to die.
If he did, there'd be no way to recover
more lost memories.
Sometimes, in the shack on the far
side of the Moon, Pop Young had
odd fancies about Sattell. There was
the mine, for example. In each two
Earth-weeks of working, the mine-colony
nearly filled up a three-gallon
cannister with greasy-seeming white
crystals shaped like two pyramids
base to base. The filled cannister
would weigh a hundred pounds on
Earth. Here it weighed eighteen. But
on Earth its contents would be computed
in carats, and a hundred
pounds was worth millions. Yet here
on the Moon Pop kept a waiting cannister
on a shelf in his tiny dome,
behind the air-apparatus. It rattled
if he shook it, and it was worth no
more than so many pebbles. But
sometimes Pop wondered if Sattell
ever thought of the value of the
mine's production. If he would kill
a woman and two children and think
he'd killed a man for no more than
a hundred dollars, what enormity
would he commit for a three-gallon
quantity of uncut diamonds?
But he did not dwell on such
speculation. The sun rose very, very
slowly in what by convention was
called the east. It took nearly two
hours to urge its disk above the
horizon, and it burned terribly in
emptiness for fourteen times twenty-four
hours before sunset. Then there
was night, and for three hundred
and thirty-six consecutive hours there
were only stars overhead and the
sky was a hole so terrible that a man
who looked up into it—what with
the nagging sensation of one-sixth
gravity—tended to lose all confidence
in the stability of things. Most men
immediately found it hysterically necessary
to seize hold of something
solid to keep from falling upward.
But nothing felt solid. Everything
fell, too. Wherefore most men tended
to scream.
But not Pop. He'd come to the
Moon in the first place because Sattell
was here. Near Sattell, he found
memories of times when he was a
young man with a young wife who
loved him extravagantly. Then pictures
of his children came out of
emptiness and grew sharp and clear.
He found that he loved them very
dearly. And when he was near Sattell
he literally recovered them—in
the sense that he came to know new
things about them and had new
memories of them every day. He
hadn't yet remembered the crime
which lost them to him. Until he
did—and the fact possessed a certain
grisly humor—Pop didn't even hate
Sattell. He simply wanted to be near
him because it enabled him to recover
new and vivid parts of his
youth that had been lost.
Otherwise, he was wholly matter-of-fact—certainly
so for the far side
of the Moon. He was a rather fussy
housekeeper. The shack above the
Big Crack's rim was as tidy as any
lighthouse or fur-trapper's cabin. He
tended his air-apparatus with a fine
precision. It was perfectly simple. In
the shadow of the shack he had an
unfailing source of extreme low
temperature. Air from the shack
flowed into a shadow-chilled pipe.
Moisture condensed out of it here,
and CO
2
froze solidly out of it there,
and on beyond it collected as restless,
transparent liquid air. At the same
time, liquid air from another tank
evaporated to maintain the proper
air pressure in the shack. Every so
often Pop tapped the pipe where the
moisture froze, and lumps of water
ice clattered out to be returned to the
humidifier. Less often he took out the
CO
2
snow, and measured it, and
dumped an equivalent quantity of
pale-blue liquid oxygen into the liquid
air that had been purified by
cold. The oxygen dissolved. Then the
apparatus reversed itself and supplied
fresh air from the now-enriched
fluid, while the depleted other
tank began to fill up with cold-purified
liquid air.
Outside the shack, jagged stony
pinnacles reared in the starlight, and
craters complained of the bombardment
from space that had made them.
But, outside, nothing ever happened.
Inside, it was quite different.
Working on his memories, one
day Pop made a little sketch. It
helped a great deal. He grew deeply
interested. Writing-material was
scarce, but he spent most of the time
between two particular rocket-landings
getting down on paper exactly
how a child had looked while sleeping,
some fifteen years before. He
remembered with astonishment that
the child had really looked exactly
like that! Later he began a sketch of
his partly-remembered wife. In time—he
had plenty—it became a really
truthful likeness.
The sun rose, and baked the
abomination of desolation which was
the moonscape. Pop Young meticulously
touched up the glittering
triangles which were landing guides
for the Lunar City ships. They glittered
from the thinnest conceivable
layer of magnesium marking-powder.
He checked over the moondozer.
He tended the air apparatus. He did
everything that his job and survival
required. Ungrudgingly.
Then he made more sketches. The
images to be drawn came back more
clearly when he thought of Sattell,
so by keeping Sattell in mind he recovered
the memory of a chair that
had been in his forgotten home.
Then he drew his wife sitting in it,
reading. It felt very good to see her
again. And he speculated about
whether Sattell ever thought of millions
of dollars' worth of new-mined
diamonds knocking about unguarded
in the shack, and he suddenly recollected
clearly the way one of his
children had looked while playing
with her doll. He made a quick
sketch to keep from forgetting that.
There was no purpose in the
sketching, save that he'd lost all his
young manhood through a senseless
crime. He wanted his youth back. He
was recovering it bit by bit. The
occupation made it absurdly easy to
live on the surface of the far side of
the Moon, whether anybody else
could do it or not.
Sattell had no such device for adjusting
to the lunar state of things.
Living on the Moon was bad enough
anyhow, then, but living one mile
underground from Pop Young was
much worse. Sattell clearly remembered
the crime Pop Young hadn't
yet recalled. He considered that Pop
had made no overt attempt to revenge
himself because he planned
some retaliation so horrible and lingering
that it was worth waiting for.
He came to hate Pop with an insane
ferocity. And fear. In his mind the
need to escape became an obsession
on top of the other psychotic states
normal to a Moon-colonist.
But he was helpless. He couldn't
leave. There was Pop. He couldn't
kill Pop. He had no chance—and he
was afraid. The one absurd, irrelevant
thing he could do was write
letters back to Earth. He did that.
He wrote with the desperate, impassioned,
frantic blend of persuasion
and information and genius-like invention
of a prisoner in a high-security
prison, trying to induce someone
to help him escape.
He had friends, of a sort, but for
a long time his letters produced
nothing. The Moon swung in vast
circles about the Earth, and the Earth
swung sedately about the Sun. The
other planets danced their saraband.
The rest of humanity went about its
own affairs with fascinated attention.
But then an event occurred which
bore directly upon Pop Young and
Sattell and Pop Young's missing
years.
Somebody back on Earth promoted
a luxury passenger-line of spaceships
to ply between Earth and
Moon. It looked like a perfect set-up.
Three spacecraft capable of the journey
came into being with attendant
reams of publicity. They promised a
thrill and a new distinction for the
rich. Guided tours to Lunar! The
most expensive and most thrilling
trip in history! One hundred thousand
dollars for a twelve-day cruise
through space, with views of the
Moon's far side and trips through
Lunar City and a landing in Aristarchus,
plus sound-tapes of the journey
and fame hitherto reserved for
honest explorers!
It didn't seem to have anything
to do with Pop or with Sattell. But
it did.
There were just two passenger
tours. The first was fully booked.
But the passengers who paid so highly,
expected to be pleasantly thrilled
and shielded from all reasons for
alarm. And they couldn't be. Something
happens when a self-centered
and complacent individual unsuspectingly
looks out of a spaceship
port and sees the cosmos unshielded
by mists or clouds or other aids to
blindness against reality. It is shattering.
A millionaire cut his throat when
he saw Earth dwindled to a mere
blue-green ball in vastness. He could
not endure his own smallness in the
face of immensity. Not one passenger
disembarked even for Lunar
City. Most of them cowered in their
chairs, hiding their eyes. They were
the simple cases of hysteria. But the
richest girl on Earth, who'd had five
husbands and believed that nothing
could move her—she went into
catatonic withdrawal and neither
saw nor heard nor moved. Two other
passengers sobbed in improvised
strait jackets. The first shipload
started home. Fast.
The second luxury liner took off
with only four passengers and turned
back before reaching the Moon.
Space-pilots could take the strain of
space-flight because they had work
to do. Workers for the lunar mines
could make the trip under heavy
sedation. But it was too early in the
development of space-travel for
pleasure-passengers. They weren't
prepared for the more humbling
facts of life.
Pop heard of the quaint commercial
enterprise through the micro-tapes
put off at the shack for the men
down in the mine. Sattell probably
learned of it the same way. Pop didn't
even think of it again. It seemed
to have nothing to do with him. But
Sattell undoubtedly dealt with it
fully in his desperate writings back
to Earth.
Pop matter-of-factly tended the
shack and the landing field and the
stores for the Big Crack mine. Between-times
he made more drawings
in pursuit of his own private objective.
Quite accidentally, he developed
a certain talent professional artists
might have approved. But he was not
trying to communicate, but to discover.
Drawing—especially with his
mind on Sattell—he found fresh incidents
popping up in his recollection.
Times when he was happy. One
day he remembered the puppy his
children had owned and loved. He
drew it painstakingly—and it was
his again. Thereafter he could remember
it any time he chose. He did
actually recover a completely vanished
past.
He envisioned a way to increase
that recovery. But there was a marked
shortage of artists' materials on the
Moon. All freight had to be hauled
from Earth, on a voyage equal to
rather more than a thousand times
around the equator of the Earth.
Artists' supplies were not often included.
Pop didn't even ask.
He began to explore the area outside
the shack for possible material
no one would think of sending from
Earth. He collected stones of various
sorts, but when warmed up in the
shack they were useless. He found
no strictly lunar material which
would serve for modeling or carving
portraits in the ground. He found
minerals which could be pulverized
and used as pigments, but nothing
suitable for this new adventure in
the recovery of lost youth. He even
considered blasting, to aid his search.
He could. Down in the mine, blasting
was done by soaking carbon black—from
CO
2
—in liquid oxygen, and then
firing it with a spark. It exploded
splendidly. And its fumes were
merely more CO
2
which an air-apparatus
handled easily.
He didn't do any blasting. He didn't
find any signs of the sort of
mineral he required. Marble would
have been perfect, but there is no
marble on the Moon. Naturally! Yet
Pop continued to search absorbedly
for material with which to capture
memory. Sattell still seemed necessary,
but—
Early one lunar morning he was
a good two miles from his shack
when he saw rocket-fumes in the
sky. It was most unlikely. He wasn't
looking for anything of the sort, but
out of the corner of his eye he observed
that something moved. Which
was impossible. He turned his head,
and there were rocket-fumes coming
over the horizon, not in the direction
of Lunar City. Which was more
impossible still.
He stared. A tiny silver rocket to
the westward poured out monstrous
masses of vapor. It decelerated swiftly.
It curved downward. The rockets
checked for an instant, and flamed
again more violently, and checked
once more. This was not an expert
approach. It was a faulty one. Curving
surface-ward in a sharply changing
parabola, the pilot over-corrected
and had to wait to gather down-speed,
and then over-corrected again.
It was an altogether clumsy landing.
The ship was not even perfectly vertical
when it settled not quite in the
landing-area marked by silvery triangles.
One of its tail-fins crumpled
slightly. It tilted a little when fully
landed.
Then nothing happened.
Pop made his way toward it in
the skittering, skating gait one uses
in one-sixth gravity. When he was
within half a mile, an air-lock door
opened in the ship's side. But nothing
came out of the lock. No space-suited
figure. No cargo came drifting
down with the singular deliberation
of falling objects on the Moon.
It was just barely past lunar sunrise
on the far side of the Moon.
Incredibly long and utterly black
shadows stretched across the plain,
and half the rocketship was dazzling
white and half was blacker than
blackness itself. The sun still hung
low indeed in the black, star-speckled
sky. Pop waded through moondust,
raising a trail of slowly settling
powder. He knew only that the ship
didn't come from Lunar City, but
from Earth. He couldn't imagine
why. He did not even wildly connect
it with what—say—Sattell might
have written with desperate plausibility
about greasy-seeming white
crystals out of the mine, knocking
about Pop Young's shack in cannisters
containing a hundred Earth-pounds
weight of richness.
Pop reached the rocketship. He
approached the big tail-fins. On one
of them there were welded ladder-rungs
going up to the opened air-lock
door.
He climbed.
The air-lock was perfectly normal
when he reached it. There was a
glass port in the inner door, and he
saw eyes looking through it at him.
He pulled the outer door shut and
felt the whining vibration of admitted
air. His vacuum suit went slack
about him. The inner door began to
open, and Pop reached up and gave
his helmet the practiced twisting
jerk which removed it.
Then he blinked. There was a red-headed
man in the opened door. He
grinned savagely at Pop. He held a
very nasty hand-weapon trained on
Pop's middle.
"Don't come in!" he said mockingly.
"And I don't give a damn
about how you are. This isn't social.
It's business!"
Pop simply gaped. He couldn't
quite take it in.
"This," snapped the red-headed
man abruptly, "is a stickup!"
Pop's eyes went through the inner
lock-door. He saw that the interior
of the ship was stripped and bare.
But a spiral stairway descended from
some upper compartment. It had a
handrail of pure, transparent, water-clear
plastic. The walls were bare insulation,
but that trace of luxury remained.
Pop gazed at the plastic,
fascinated.
The red-headed man leaned forward,
snarling. He slashed Pop
across the face with the barrel of his
weapon. It drew blood. It was wanton,
savage brutality.
"Pay attention!" snarled the red-headed
man. "A stickup, I said! Get
it? You go get that can of stuff
from the mine! The diamonds!
Bring them here! Understand?"
Pop said numbly: "What the
hell?"
The red-headed man hit him
again. He was nerve-racked, and,
therefore, he wanted to hurt.
"Move!" he rasped. "I want the
diamonds you've got for the ship
from Lunar City! Bring 'em!" Pop
licked blood from his lips and the
man with the weapon raged at him.
"Then phone down to the mine!
Tell Sattell I'm here and he can
come on up! Tell him to bring any
more diamonds they've dug up since
the stuff you've got!"
He leaned forward. His face was
only inches from Pop Young's. It
was seamed and hard-bitten and
nerve-racked. But any man would be
quivering if he wasn't used to space
or the feel of one-sixth gravity on
the Moon. He panted:
"And get it straight! You try
any tricks and we take off! We
swing over your shack! The rocket-blast
smashes it! We burn you
down! Then we swing over the cable
down to the mine and the rocket-flame
melts it! You die and everybody
in the mine besides! No tricks!
We didn't come here for nothing!"
He twitched all over. Then he
struck cruelly again at Pop Young's
face. He seemed filled with fury, at
least partly hysterical. It was the tension
that space-travel—then, at its
beginning—produced. It was meaningless
savagery due to terror. But,
of course, Pop was helpless to resent
it. There were no weapons on the
Moon and the mention of Sattell's
name showed the uselessness of bluff.
He'd pictured the complete set-up
by the edge of the Big Crack. Pop
could do nothing.
The red-headed man checked
himself, panting. He drew back and
slammed the inner lock-door. There
was the sound of pumping.
Pop put his helmet back on and
sealed it. The outer door opened.
Outrushing air tugged at Pop. After
a second or two he went out and
climbed down the welded-on ladder-bars
to the ground.
He headed back toward his shack.
Somehow, the mention of Sattell had
made his mind work better. It always
did. He began painstakingly to
put things together. The red-headed
man knew the routine here in every
detail. He knew Sattell. That part
was simple. Sattell had planned this
multi-million-dollar coup, as a man
in prison might plan his break. The
stripped interior of the ship identified
it.
It was one of the unsuccessful
luxury-liners sold for scrap. Or perhaps
it was stolen for the journey
here. Sattell's associates had had to
steal or somehow get the fuel, and
somehow find a pilot. But there were
diamonds worth at least five million
dollars waiting for them, and the
whole job might not have called for
more than two men—with Sattell as
a third. According to the economics
of crime, it was feasible. Anyhow it
was being done.
Pop reached the dust-heap which
was his shack and went in the air
lock. Inside, he went to the vision-phone
and called the mine-colony
down in the Crack. He gave the
message he'd been told to pass on.
Sattell to come up, with what diamonds
had been dug since the
regular cannister was sent up for the
Lunar City ship that would be due
presently. Otherwise the ship on the
landing strip would destroy shack
and Pop and the colony together.
"I'd guess," said Pop painstakingly,
"that Sattell figured it out. He's
probably got some sort of gun to
keep you from holding him down
there. But he won't know his friends
are here—not right this minute he
won't."
A shaking voice asked questions
from the vision-phone.
"No," said Pop, "they'll do it anyhow.
If we were able to tell about
'em, they'd be chased. But if I'm
dead and the shacks smashed and
the cable burnt through, they'll be
back on Earth long before a new
cable's been got and let down to you.
So they'll do all they can no matter
what I do." He added, "I wouldn't
tell Sattell a thing about it, if I were
you. It'll save trouble. Just let him
keep on waiting for this to happen.
It'll save you trouble."
Another shaky question.
"Me?" asked Pop. "Oh, I'm going
to raise what hell I can. There's
some stuff in that ship I want."
He switched off the phone. He
went over to his air apparatus. He
took down the cannister of diamonds
which were worth five millions or
more back on Earth. He found a
bucket. He dumped the diamonds
casually into it. They floated downward
with great deliberation and
surged from side to side like a liquid
when they stopped. One-sixth gravity.
Pop regarded his drawings meditatively.
A sketch of his wife as he
now remembered her. It was very
good to remember. A drawing of his
two children, playing together. He
looked forward to remembering
much more about them. He grinned.
"That stair-rail," he said in deep
satisfaction. "That'll do it!"
He tore bed linen from his bunk
and worked on the emptied cannister.
It was a double container with a
thermware interior lining. Even on
Earth newly-mined diamonds sometimes
fly to pieces from internal
stress. On the Moon, it was not desirable
that diamonds be exposed to
repeated violent changes of temperature.
So a thermware-lined cannister
kept them at mine-temperature once
they were warmed to touchability.
Pop packed the cotton cloth in the
container. He hurried a little, because
the men in the rocket were shaky and
might not practice patience. He took
a small emergency-lamp from his
spare spacesuit. He carefully cracked
its bulb, exposing the filament within.
He put the lamp on top of the
cotton and sprinkled magnesium
marking-powder over everything.
Then he went to the air-apparatus
and took out a flask of the liquid
oxygen used to keep his breathing-air
in balance. He poured the frigid,
pale-blue stuff into the cotton. He
saturated it.
All the inside of the shack was
foggy when he finished. Then he
pushed the cannister-top down. He
breathed a sigh of relief when it was
in place. He'd arranged for it to
break a frozen-brittle switch as it
descended. When it came off, the
switch would light the lamp with its
bare filament. There was powdered
magnesium in contact with it and
liquid oxygen all about.
He went out of the shack by the
air lock. On the way, thinking about
Sattell, he suddenly recovered a completely
new memory. On their first
wedding anniversary, so long ago,
he and his wife had gone out to
dinner to celebrate. He remembered
how she looked: the almost-smug
joy they shared that they would be
together for always, with one complete
year for proof.
Pop reflected hungrily that it was
something else to be made permanent
and inspected from time to time.
But he wanted more than a drawing
of this! He wanted to make the memory
permanent and to extend it—
If it had not been for his vacuum
suit and the cannister he carried, Pop
would have rubbed his hands.
Tall, jagged crater-walls rose
from the lunar plain. Monstrous, extended
inky shadows stretched
enormous distances, utterly black.
The sun, like a glowing octopod,
floated low at the edge of things and
seemed to hate all creation.
Pop reached the rocket. He
climbed the welded ladder-rungs to
the air lock. He closed the door. Air
whined. His suit sagged against his
body. He took off his helmet.
When the red-headed man opened
the inner door, the hand-weapon
shook and trembled. Pop said
calmly:
"Now I've got to go handle the
hoist, if Sattell's coming up from
the mine. If I don't do it, he don't
come up."
The red-headed man snarled. But
his eyes were on the cannister whose
contents should weigh a hundred
pounds on Earth.
"Any tricks," he rasped, "and you
know what happens!"
"Yeah," said Pop.
He stolidly put his helmet back
on. But his eyes went past the red-headed
man to the stair that wound
down, inside the ship, from some
compartment above. The stair-rail was
pure, clear, water-white plastic, not
less than three inches thick. There
was a lot of it!
The inner door closed. Pop opened
the outer. Air rushed out. He
climbed painstakingly down to the
ground. He started back toward the
shack.
There was the most luridly bright
of all possible flashes. There was no
sound, of course. But something
flamed very brightly, and the ground
thumped under Pop Young's vacuum
boots. He turned.
The rocketship was still in the act
of flying apart. It had been a splendid
explosion. Of course cotton sheeting
in liquid oxygen is not quite as
good an explosive as carbon-black,
which they used down in the mine.
Even with magnesium powder to
start the flame when a bare light-filament
ignited it, the cannister-bomb
hadn't equaled—say—T.N.T.
But the ship had fuel on board for
the trip back to Earth. And it blew,
too. It would be minutes before all
the fragments of the ship returned
to the Moon's surface. On the Moon,
things fall slowly.
Pop didn't wait. He searched
hopefully. Once a mass of steel plating
fell only yards from him, but it
did not interrupt his search.
When he went into the shack, he
grinned to himself. The call-light of
the vision-phone flickered wildly.
When he took off his helmet the bell
clanged incessantly. He answered. A
shaking voice from the mining-colony
panted:
"We felt a shock! What happened?
What do we do?"
"Don't do a thing," advised Pop.
"It's all right. I blew up the ship and
everything's all right. I wouldn't
even mention it to Sattell if I were
you."
He grinned happily down at a section
of plastic stair-rail he'd found
not too far from where the ship exploded.
When the man down in the
mine cut off, Pop got out of his
vacuum suit in a hurry. He placed
the plastic zestfully on the table
where he'd been restricted to drawing
pictures of his wife and children
in order to recover memories of
them.
He began to plan, gloatingly, the
thing he would carve out of a four-inch
section of the plastic. When it
was carved, he'd paint it. While he
worked, he'd think of Sattell, because
that was the way to get back the
missing portions of his life—the
parts Sattell had managed to get
away from him. He'd get back more
than ever, now!
He didn't wonder what he'd do
if he ever remembered the crime
Sattell had committed. He felt, somehow,
that he wouldn't get that back
until he'd recovered all the rest.
Gloating, it was amusing to remember
what people used to call
such art-works as he planned, when
carved by other lonely men in other
faraway places. They called those
sculptures scrimshaw.
But they were a lot more than
that!
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Astounding Science Fiction
September
1955. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | hatchet | pencil | lighter | screwdriver | 1 |
23791_S6420G0B_4 | What is the relationship between Sattell and Pop Young? | SCRIMSHAW
The old man
just wanted to get back his
memory—and the methods he used were
gently hellish, from the viewpoint of the
others....
BY MURRAY LEINSTER
Illustrated by Freas
Pop Young was the one known
man who could stand life on the
surface of the Moon's far side, and,
therefore, he occupied the shack on
the Big Crack's edge, above the
mining colony there. Some people
said that no normal man could do
it, and mentioned the scar of a
ghastly head-wound to explain his
ability. One man partly guessed the
secret, but only partly. His name was
Sattell and he had reason not to
talk. Pop Young alone knew the
whole truth, and he kept his mouth
shut, too. It wasn't anybody else's
business.
The shack and the job he filled
were located in the medieval notion
of the physical appearance of hell.
By day the environment was heat and
torment. By night—lunar night, of
course, and lunar day—it was frigidity
and horror. Once in two weeks
Earth-time a rocketship came around
the horizon from Lunar City with
stores for the colony deep underground.
Pop received the stores and
took care of them. He handed over
the product of the mine, to be forwarded
to Earth. The rocket went
away again. Come nightfall Pop
lowered the supplies down the long
cable into the Big Crack to the colony
far down inside, and freshened up
the landing field marks with magnesium
marking-powder if a rocket-blast
had blurred them. That was
fundamentally all he had to do. But
without him the mine down in the
Crack would have had to shut
down.
The Crack, of course, was that
gaping rocky fault which stretches
nine hundred miles, jaggedly, over
the side of the Moon that Earth
never sees. There is one stretch where
it is a yawning gulf a full half-mile
wide and unguessably deep. Where
Pop Young's shack stood it was only
a hundred yards, but the colony was
a full mile down, in one wall. There
is nothing like it on Earth, of course.
When it was first found, scientists
descended into it to examine the exposed
rock-strata and learn the history
of the Moon before its craters
were made. But they found more
than history. They found the reason
for the colony and the rocket landing
field and the shack.
The reason for Pop was something
else.
The shack stood a hundred feet
from the Big Crack's edge. It looked
like a dust-heap thirty feet high, and
it was. The outside was surface
moondust, piled over a tiny dome to
be insulation against the cold of
night and shadow and the furnace
heat of day. Pop lived in it all alone,
and in his spare time he worked
industriously at recovering some
missing portions of his life that Sattell
had managed to take away from
him.
He thought often of Sattell, down
in the colony underground. There
were galleries and tunnels and living-quarters
down there. There were
air-tight bulkheads for safety, and a
hydroponic garden to keep the air
fresh, and all sorts of things to make
life possible for men under if not
on the Moon.
But it wasn't fun, even underground.
In the Moon's slight gravity,
a man is really adjusted to existence
when he has a well-developed case
of agoraphobia. With such an aid, a
man can get into a tiny, coffinlike
cubbyhole, and feel solidity above
and below and around him, and
happily tell himself that it feels delicious.
Sometimes it does.
But Sattell couldn't comfort himself
so easily. He knew about Pop,
up on the surface. He'd shipped out,
whimpering, to the Moon to get far
away from Pop, and Pop was just
about a mile overhead and there was
no way to get around him. It was
difficult to get away from the mine,
anyhow. It doesn't take too long for
the low gravity to tear a man's
nerves to shreds. He has to develop
kinks in his head to survive. And
those kinks—
The first men to leave the colony
had to be knocked cold and shipped
out unconscious. They'd been underground—and
in low gravity—long
enough to be utterly unable to face
the idea of open spaces. Even now
there were some who had to be carried,
but there were some tougher
ones who were able to walk to the
rocketship if Pop put a tarpaulin
over their heads so they didn't have
to see the sky. In any case Pop was
essential, either for carrying or
guidance.
Sattell got the shakes when he
thought of Pop, and Pop rather
probably knew it. Of course, by the
time he took the job tending the
shack, he was pretty certain about
Sattell. The facts spoke for themselves.
Pop had come back to consciousness
in a hospital with a great
wound in his head and no memory
of anything that had happened before
that moment. It was not that his
identity was in question. When he
was stronger, the doctors told him
who he was, and as gently as possible
what had happened to his wife
and children. They'd been murdered
after he was seemingly killed defending
them. But he didn't remember
a thing. Not then. It was
something of a blessing.
But when he was physically recovered
he set about trying to pick
up the threads of the life he could
no longer remember. He met Sattell
quite by accident. Sattell looked familiar.
Pop eagerly tried to ask him
questions. And Sattell turned gray
and frantically denied that he'd ever
seen Pop before.
All of which happened back on
Earth and a long time ago. It seemed
to Pop that the sight of Sattell had
brought back some vague and cloudy
memories. They were not sharp,
though, and he hunted up Sattell
again to find out if he was right.
And Sattell went into panic when
he returned.
Nowadays, by the Big Crack, Pop
wasn't so insistent on seeing Sattell,
but he was deeply concerned with
the recovery of the memories that
Sattell helped bring back. Pop was
a highly conscientious man. He took
good care of his job. There was a
warning-bell in the shack, and when
a rocketship from Lunar City got
above the horizon and could send a
tight beam, the gong clanged loudly,
and Pop got into a vacuum-suit
and went out the air lock. He usually
reached the moondozer about the
time the ship began to brake for
landing, and he watched it come in.
He saw the silver needle in the
sky fighting momentum above a line
of jagged crater-walls. It slowed, and
slowed, and curved down as it drew
nearer. The pilot killed all forward
motion just above the field and came
steadily and smoothly down to land
between the silvery triangles that
marked the landing place.
Instantly the rockets cut off,
drums of fuel and air and food came
out of the cargo-hatch and Pop swept
forward with the dozer. It was a
miniature tractor with a gigantic
scoop in front. He pushed a great
mound of talc-fine dust before him
to cover up the cargo. It was necessary.
With freight costing what it
did, fuel and air and food came
frozen solid, in containers barely
thicker than foil. While they stayed
at space-shadow temperature, the foil
would hold anything. And a cover of
insulating moondust with vacuum
between the grains kept even air
frozen solid, though in sunlight.
At such times Pop hardly thought
of Sattell. He knew he had plenty
of time for that. He'd started to follow
Sattell knowing what had happened
to his wife and children, but
it was hearsay only. He had no memory
of them at all. But Sattell stirred
the lost memories. At first Pop followed
absorbedly from city to city,
to recover the years that had been
wiped out by an axe-blow. He did
recover a good deal. When Sattell
fled to another continent, Pop followed
because he had some distinct
memories of his wife—and the way
he'd felt about her—and some fugitive
mental images of his children.
When Sattell frenziedly tried to deny
knowledge of the murder in Tangier,
Pop had come to remember both his
children and some of the happiness
of his married life.
Even when Sattell—whimpering—signed
up for Lunar City, Pop tracked
him. By that time he was quite
sure that Sattell was the man who'd
killed his family. If so, Sattell had
profited by less than two days' pay
for wiping out everything that Pop
possessed. But Pop wanted it back.
He couldn't prove Sattell's guilt.
There was no evidence. In any case,
he didn't really want Sattell to die.
If he did, there'd be no way to recover
more lost memories.
Sometimes, in the shack on the far
side of the Moon, Pop Young had
odd fancies about Sattell. There was
the mine, for example. In each two
Earth-weeks of working, the mine-colony
nearly filled up a three-gallon
cannister with greasy-seeming white
crystals shaped like two pyramids
base to base. The filled cannister
would weigh a hundred pounds on
Earth. Here it weighed eighteen. But
on Earth its contents would be computed
in carats, and a hundred
pounds was worth millions. Yet here
on the Moon Pop kept a waiting cannister
on a shelf in his tiny dome,
behind the air-apparatus. It rattled
if he shook it, and it was worth no
more than so many pebbles. But
sometimes Pop wondered if Sattell
ever thought of the value of the
mine's production. If he would kill
a woman and two children and think
he'd killed a man for no more than
a hundred dollars, what enormity
would he commit for a three-gallon
quantity of uncut diamonds?
But he did not dwell on such
speculation. The sun rose very, very
slowly in what by convention was
called the east. It took nearly two
hours to urge its disk above the
horizon, and it burned terribly in
emptiness for fourteen times twenty-four
hours before sunset. Then there
was night, and for three hundred
and thirty-six consecutive hours there
were only stars overhead and the
sky was a hole so terrible that a man
who looked up into it—what with
the nagging sensation of one-sixth
gravity—tended to lose all confidence
in the stability of things. Most men
immediately found it hysterically necessary
to seize hold of something
solid to keep from falling upward.
But nothing felt solid. Everything
fell, too. Wherefore most men tended
to scream.
But not Pop. He'd come to the
Moon in the first place because Sattell
was here. Near Sattell, he found
memories of times when he was a
young man with a young wife who
loved him extravagantly. Then pictures
of his children came out of
emptiness and grew sharp and clear.
He found that he loved them very
dearly. And when he was near Sattell
he literally recovered them—in
the sense that he came to know new
things about them and had new
memories of them every day. He
hadn't yet remembered the crime
which lost them to him. Until he
did—and the fact possessed a certain
grisly humor—Pop didn't even hate
Sattell. He simply wanted to be near
him because it enabled him to recover
new and vivid parts of his
youth that had been lost.
Otherwise, he was wholly matter-of-fact—certainly
so for the far side
of the Moon. He was a rather fussy
housekeeper. The shack above the
Big Crack's rim was as tidy as any
lighthouse or fur-trapper's cabin. He
tended his air-apparatus with a fine
precision. It was perfectly simple. In
the shadow of the shack he had an
unfailing source of extreme low
temperature. Air from the shack
flowed into a shadow-chilled pipe.
Moisture condensed out of it here,
and CO
2
froze solidly out of it there,
and on beyond it collected as restless,
transparent liquid air. At the same
time, liquid air from another tank
evaporated to maintain the proper
air pressure in the shack. Every so
often Pop tapped the pipe where the
moisture froze, and lumps of water
ice clattered out to be returned to the
humidifier. Less often he took out the
CO
2
snow, and measured it, and
dumped an equivalent quantity of
pale-blue liquid oxygen into the liquid
air that had been purified by
cold. The oxygen dissolved. Then the
apparatus reversed itself and supplied
fresh air from the now-enriched
fluid, while the depleted other
tank began to fill up with cold-purified
liquid air.
Outside the shack, jagged stony
pinnacles reared in the starlight, and
craters complained of the bombardment
from space that had made them.
But, outside, nothing ever happened.
Inside, it was quite different.
Working on his memories, one
day Pop made a little sketch. It
helped a great deal. He grew deeply
interested. Writing-material was
scarce, but he spent most of the time
between two particular rocket-landings
getting down on paper exactly
how a child had looked while sleeping,
some fifteen years before. He
remembered with astonishment that
the child had really looked exactly
like that! Later he began a sketch of
his partly-remembered wife. In time—he
had plenty—it became a really
truthful likeness.
The sun rose, and baked the
abomination of desolation which was
the moonscape. Pop Young meticulously
touched up the glittering
triangles which were landing guides
for the Lunar City ships. They glittered
from the thinnest conceivable
layer of magnesium marking-powder.
He checked over the moondozer.
He tended the air apparatus. He did
everything that his job and survival
required. Ungrudgingly.
Then he made more sketches. The
images to be drawn came back more
clearly when he thought of Sattell,
so by keeping Sattell in mind he recovered
the memory of a chair that
had been in his forgotten home.
Then he drew his wife sitting in it,
reading. It felt very good to see her
again. And he speculated about
whether Sattell ever thought of millions
of dollars' worth of new-mined
diamonds knocking about unguarded
in the shack, and he suddenly recollected
clearly the way one of his
children had looked while playing
with her doll. He made a quick
sketch to keep from forgetting that.
There was no purpose in the
sketching, save that he'd lost all his
young manhood through a senseless
crime. He wanted his youth back. He
was recovering it bit by bit. The
occupation made it absurdly easy to
live on the surface of the far side of
the Moon, whether anybody else
could do it or not.
Sattell had no such device for adjusting
to the lunar state of things.
Living on the Moon was bad enough
anyhow, then, but living one mile
underground from Pop Young was
much worse. Sattell clearly remembered
the crime Pop Young hadn't
yet recalled. He considered that Pop
had made no overt attempt to revenge
himself because he planned
some retaliation so horrible and lingering
that it was worth waiting for.
He came to hate Pop with an insane
ferocity. And fear. In his mind the
need to escape became an obsession
on top of the other psychotic states
normal to a Moon-colonist.
But he was helpless. He couldn't
leave. There was Pop. He couldn't
kill Pop. He had no chance—and he
was afraid. The one absurd, irrelevant
thing he could do was write
letters back to Earth. He did that.
He wrote with the desperate, impassioned,
frantic blend of persuasion
and information and genius-like invention
of a prisoner in a high-security
prison, trying to induce someone
to help him escape.
He had friends, of a sort, but for
a long time his letters produced
nothing. The Moon swung in vast
circles about the Earth, and the Earth
swung sedately about the Sun. The
other planets danced their saraband.
The rest of humanity went about its
own affairs with fascinated attention.
But then an event occurred which
bore directly upon Pop Young and
Sattell and Pop Young's missing
years.
Somebody back on Earth promoted
a luxury passenger-line of spaceships
to ply between Earth and
Moon. It looked like a perfect set-up.
Three spacecraft capable of the journey
came into being with attendant
reams of publicity. They promised a
thrill and a new distinction for the
rich. Guided tours to Lunar! The
most expensive and most thrilling
trip in history! One hundred thousand
dollars for a twelve-day cruise
through space, with views of the
Moon's far side and trips through
Lunar City and a landing in Aristarchus,
plus sound-tapes of the journey
and fame hitherto reserved for
honest explorers!
It didn't seem to have anything
to do with Pop or with Sattell. But
it did.
There were just two passenger
tours. The first was fully booked.
But the passengers who paid so highly,
expected to be pleasantly thrilled
and shielded from all reasons for
alarm. And they couldn't be. Something
happens when a self-centered
and complacent individual unsuspectingly
looks out of a spaceship
port and sees the cosmos unshielded
by mists or clouds or other aids to
blindness against reality. It is shattering.
A millionaire cut his throat when
he saw Earth dwindled to a mere
blue-green ball in vastness. He could
not endure his own smallness in the
face of immensity. Not one passenger
disembarked even for Lunar
City. Most of them cowered in their
chairs, hiding their eyes. They were
the simple cases of hysteria. But the
richest girl on Earth, who'd had five
husbands and believed that nothing
could move her—she went into
catatonic withdrawal and neither
saw nor heard nor moved. Two other
passengers sobbed in improvised
strait jackets. The first shipload
started home. Fast.
The second luxury liner took off
with only four passengers and turned
back before reaching the Moon.
Space-pilots could take the strain of
space-flight because they had work
to do. Workers for the lunar mines
could make the trip under heavy
sedation. But it was too early in the
development of space-travel for
pleasure-passengers. They weren't
prepared for the more humbling
facts of life.
Pop heard of the quaint commercial
enterprise through the micro-tapes
put off at the shack for the men
down in the mine. Sattell probably
learned of it the same way. Pop didn't
even think of it again. It seemed
to have nothing to do with him. But
Sattell undoubtedly dealt with it
fully in his desperate writings back
to Earth.
Pop matter-of-factly tended the
shack and the landing field and the
stores for the Big Crack mine. Between-times
he made more drawings
in pursuit of his own private objective.
Quite accidentally, he developed
a certain talent professional artists
might have approved. But he was not
trying to communicate, but to discover.
Drawing—especially with his
mind on Sattell—he found fresh incidents
popping up in his recollection.
Times when he was happy. One
day he remembered the puppy his
children had owned and loved. He
drew it painstakingly—and it was
his again. Thereafter he could remember
it any time he chose. He did
actually recover a completely vanished
past.
He envisioned a way to increase
that recovery. But there was a marked
shortage of artists' materials on the
Moon. All freight had to be hauled
from Earth, on a voyage equal to
rather more than a thousand times
around the equator of the Earth.
Artists' supplies were not often included.
Pop didn't even ask.
He began to explore the area outside
the shack for possible material
no one would think of sending from
Earth. He collected stones of various
sorts, but when warmed up in the
shack they were useless. He found
no strictly lunar material which
would serve for modeling or carving
portraits in the ground. He found
minerals which could be pulverized
and used as pigments, but nothing
suitable for this new adventure in
the recovery of lost youth. He even
considered blasting, to aid his search.
He could. Down in the mine, blasting
was done by soaking carbon black—from
CO
2
—in liquid oxygen, and then
firing it with a spark. It exploded
splendidly. And its fumes were
merely more CO
2
which an air-apparatus
handled easily.
He didn't do any blasting. He didn't
find any signs of the sort of
mineral he required. Marble would
have been perfect, but there is no
marble on the Moon. Naturally! Yet
Pop continued to search absorbedly
for material with which to capture
memory. Sattell still seemed necessary,
but—
Early one lunar morning he was
a good two miles from his shack
when he saw rocket-fumes in the
sky. It was most unlikely. He wasn't
looking for anything of the sort, but
out of the corner of his eye he observed
that something moved. Which
was impossible. He turned his head,
and there were rocket-fumes coming
over the horizon, not in the direction
of Lunar City. Which was more
impossible still.
He stared. A tiny silver rocket to
the westward poured out monstrous
masses of vapor. It decelerated swiftly.
It curved downward. The rockets
checked for an instant, and flamed
again more violently, and checked
once more. This was not an expert
approach. It was a faulty one. Curving
surface-ward in a sharply changing
parabola, the pilot over-corrected
and had to wait to gather down-speed,
and then over-corrected again.
It was an altogether clumsy landing.
The ship was not even perfectly vertical
when it settled not quite in the
landing-area marked by silvery triangles.
One of its tail-fins crumpled
slightly. It tilted a little when fully
landed.
Then nothing happened.
Pop made his way toward it in
the skittering, skating gait one uses
in one-sixth gravity. When he was
within half a mile, an air-lock door
opened in the ship's side. But nothing
came out of the lock. No space-suited
figure. No cargo came drifting
down with the singular deliberation
of falling objects on the Moon.
It was just barely past lunar sunrise
on the far side of the Moon.
Incredibly long and utterly black
shadows stretched across the plain,
and half the rocketship was dazzling
white and half was blacker than
blackness itself. The sun still hung
low indeed in the black, star-speckled
sky. Pop waded through moondust,
raising a trail of slowly settling
powder. He knew only that the ship
didn't come from Lunar City, but
from Earth. He couldn't imagine
why. He did not even wildly connect
it with what—say—Sattell might
have written with desperate plausibility
about greasy-seeming white
crystals out of the mine, knocking
about Pop Young's shack in cannisters
containing a hundred Earth-pounds
weight of richness.
Pop reached the rocketship. He
approached the big tail-fins. On one
of them there were welded ladder-rungs
going up to the opened air-lock
door.
He climbed.
The air-lock was perfectly normal
when he reached it. There was a
glass port in the inner door, and he
saw eyes looking through it at him.
He pulled the outer door shut and
felt the whining vibration of admitted
air. His vacuum suit went slack
about him. The inner door began to
open, and Pop reached up and gave
his helmet the practiced twisting
jerk which removed it.
Then he blinked. There was a red-headed
man in the opened door. He
grinned savagely at Pop. He held a
very nasty hand-weapon trained on
Pop's middle.
"Don't come in!" he said mockingly.
"And I don't give a damn
about how you are. This isn't social.
It's business!"
Pop simply gaped. He couldn't
quite take it in.
"This," snapped the red-headed
man abruptly, "is a stickup!"
Pop's eyes went through the inner
lock-door. He saw that the interior
of the ship was stripped and bare.
But a spiral stairway descended from
some upper compartment. It had a
handrail of pure, transparent, water-clear
plastic. The walls were bare insulation,
but that trace of luxury remained.
Pop gazed at the plastic,
fascinated.
The red-headed man leaned forward,
snarling. He slashed Pop
across the face with the barrel of his
weapon. It drew blood. It was wanton,
savage brutality.
"Pay attention!" snarled the red-headed
man. "A stickup, I said! Get
it? You go get that can of stuff
from the mine! The diamonds!
Bring them here! Understand?"
Pop said numbly: "What the
hell?"
The red-headed man hit him
again. He was nerve-racked, and,
therefore, he wanted to hurt.
"Move!" he rasped. "I want the
diamonds you've got for the ship
from Lunar City! Bring 'em!" Pop
licked blood from his lips and the
man with the weapon raged at him.
"Then phone down to the mine!
Tell Sattell I'm here and he can
come on up! Tell him to bring any
more diamonds they've dug up since
the stuff you've got!"
He leaned forward. His face was
only inches from Pop Young's. It
was seamed and hard-bitten and
nerve-racked. But any man would be
quivering if he wasn't used to space
or the feel of one-sixth gravity on
the Moon. He panted:
"And get it straight! You try
any tricks and we take off! We
swing over your shack! The rocket-blast
smashes it! We burn you
down! Then we swing over the cable
down to the mine and the rocket-flame
melts it! You die and everybody
in the mine besides! No tricks!
We didn't come here for nothing!"
He twitched all over. Then he
struck cruelly again at Pop Young's
face. He seemed filled with fury, at
least partly hysterical. It was the tension
that space-travel—then, at its
beginning—produced. It was meaningless
savagery due to terror. But,
of course, Pop was helpless to resent
it. There were no weapons on the
Moon and the mention of Sattell's
name showed the uselessness of bluff.
He'd pictured the complete set-up
by the edge of the Big Crack. Pop
could do nothing.
The red-headed man checked
himself, panting. He drew back and
slammed the inner lock-door. There
was the sound of pumping.
Pop put his helmet back on and
sealed it. The outer door opened.
Outrushing air tugged at Pop. After
a second or two he went out and
climbed down the welded-on ladder-bars
to the ground.
He headed back toward his shack.
Somehow, the mention of Sattell had
made his mind work better. It always
did. He began painstakingly to
put things together. The red-headed
man knew the routine here in every
detail. He knew Sattell. That part
was simple. Sattell had planned this
multi-million-dollar coup, as a man
in prison might plan his break. The
stripped interior of the ship identified
it.
It was one of the unsuccessful
luxury-liners sold for scrap. Or perhaps
it was stolen for the journey
here. Sattell's associates had had to
steal or somehow get the fuel, and
somehow find a pilot. But there were
diamonds worth at least five million
dollars waiting for them, and the
whole job might not have called for
more than two men—with Sattell as
a third. According to the economics
of crime, it was feasible. Anyhow it
was being done.
Pop reached the dust-heap which
was his shack and went in the air
lock. Inside, he went to the vision-phone
and called the mine-colony
down in the Crack. He gave the
message he'd been told to pass on.
Sattell to come up, with what diamonds
had been dug since the
regular cannister was sent up for the
Lunar City ship that would be due
presently. Otherwise the ship on the
landing strip would destroy shack
and Pop and the colony together.
"I'd guess," said Pop painstakingly,
"that Sattell figured it out. He's
probably got some sort of gun to
keep you from holding him down
there. But he won't know his friends
are here—not right this minute he
won't."
A shaking voice asked questions
from the vision-phone.
"No," said Pop, "they'll do it anyhow.
If we were able to tell about
'em, they'd be chased. But if I'm
dead and the shacks smashed and
the cable burnt through, they'll be
back on Earth long before a new
cable's been got and let down to you.
So they'll do all they can no matter
what I do." He added, "I wouldn't
tell Sattell a thing about it, if I were
you. It'll save trouble. Just let him
keep on waiting for this to happen.
It'll save you trouble."
Another shaky question.
"Me?" asked Pop. "Oh, I'm going
to raise what hell I can. There's
some stuff in that ship I want."
He switched off the phone. He
went over to his air apparatus. He
took down the cannister of diamonds
which were worth five millions or
more back on Earth. He found a
bucket. He dumped the diamonds
casually into it. They floated downward
with great deliberation and
surged from side to side like a liquid
when they stopped. One-sixth gravity.
Pop regarded his drawings meditatively.
A sketch of his wife as he
now remembered her. It was very
good to remember. A drawing of his
two children, playing together. He
looked forward to remembering
much more about them. He grinned.
"That stair-rail," he said in deep
satisfaction. "That'll do it!"
He tore bed linen from his bunk
and worked on the emptied cannister.
It was a double container with a
thermware interior lining. Even on
Earth newly-mined diamonds sometimes
fly to pieces from internal
stress. On the Moon, it was not desirable
that diamonds be exposed to
repeated violent changes of temperature.
So a thermware-lined cannister
kept them at mine-temperature once
they were warmed to touchability.
Pop packed the cotton cloth in the
container. He hurried a little, because
the men in the rocket were shaky and
might not practice patience. He took
a small emergency-lamp from his
spare spacesuit. He carefully cracked
its bulb, exposing the filament within.
He put the lamp on top of the
cotton and sprinkled magnesium
marking-powder over everything.
Then he went to the air-apparatus
and took out a flask of the liquid
oxygen used to keep his breathing-air
in balance. He poured the frigid,
pale-blue stuff into the cotton. He
saturated it.
All the inside of the shack was
foggy when he finished. Then he
pushed the cannister-top down. He
breathed a sigh of relief when it was
in place. He'd arranged for it to
break a frozen-brittle switch as it
descended. When it came off, the
switch would light the lamp with its
bare filament. There was powdered
magnesium in contact with it and
liquid oxygen all about.
He went out of the shack by the
air lock. On the way, thinking about
Sattell, he suddenly recovered a completely
new memory. On their first
wedding anniversary, so long ago,
he and his wife had gone out to
dinner to celebrate. He remembered
how she looked: the almost-smug
joy they shared that they would be
together for always, with one complete
year for proof.
Pop reflected hungrily that it was
something else to be made permanent
and inspected from time to time.
But he wanted more than a drawing
of this! He wanted to make the memory
permanent and to extend it—
If it had not been for his vacuum
suit and the cannister he carried, Pop
would have rubbed his hands.
Tall, jagged crater-walls rose
from the lunar plain. Monstrous, extended
inky shadows stretched
enormous distances, utterly black.
The sun, like a glowing octopod,
floated low at the edge of things and
seemed to hate all creation.
Pop reached the rocket. He
climbed the welded ladder-rungs to
the air lock. He closed the door. Air
whined. His suit sagged against his
body. He took off his helmet.
When the red-headed man opened
the inner door, the hand-weapon
shook and trembled. Pop said
calmly:
"Now I've got to go handle the
hoist, if Sattell's coming up from
the mine. If I don't do it, he don't
come up."
The red-headed man snarled. But
his eyes were on the cannister whose
contents should weigh a hundred
pounds on Earth.
"Any tricks," he rasped, "and you
know what happens!"
"Yeah," said Pop.
He stolidly put his helmet back
on. But his eyes went past the red-headed
man to the stair that wound
down, inside the ship, from some
compartment above. The stair-rail was
pure, clear, water-white plastic, not
less than three inches thick. There
was a lot of it!
The inner door closed. Pop opened
the outer. Air rushed out. He
climbed painstakingly down to the
ground. He started back toward the
shack.
There was the most luridly bright
of all possible flashes. There was no
sound, of course. But something
flamed very brightly, and the ground
thumped under Pop Young's vacuum
boots. He turned.
The rocketship was still in the act
of flying apart. It had been a splendid
explosion. Of course cotton sheeting
in liquid oxygen is not quite as
good an explosive as carbon-black,
which they used down in the mine.
Even with magnesium powder to
start the flame when a bare light-filament
ignited it, the cannister-bomb
hadn't equaled—say—T.N.T.
But the ship had fuel on board for
the trip back to Earth. And it blew,
too. It would be minutes before all
the fragments of the ship returned
to the Moon's surface. On the Moon,
things fall slowly.
Pop didn't wait. He searched
hopefully. Once a mass of steel plating
fell only yards from him, but it
did not interrupt his search.
When he went into the shack, he
grinned to himself. The call-light of
the vision-phone flickered wildly.
When he took off his helmet the bell
clanged incessantly. He answered. A
shaking voice from the mining-colony
panted:
"We felt a shock! What happened?
What do we do?"
"Don't do a thing," advised Pop.
"It's all right. I blew up the ship and
everything's all right. I wouldn't
even mention it to Sattell if I were
you."
He grinned happily down at a section
of plastic stair-rail he'd found
not too far from where the ship exploded.
When the man down in the
mine cut off, Pop got out of his
vacuum suit in a hurry. He placed
the plastic zestfully on the table
where he'd been restricted to drawing
pictures of his wife and children
in order to recover memories of
them.
He began to plan, gloatingly, the
thing he would carve out of a four-inch
section of the plastic. When it
was carved, he'd paint it. While he
worked, he'd think of Sattell, because
that was the way to get back the
missing portions of his life—the
parts Sattell had managed to get
away from him. He'd get back more
than ever, now!
He didn't wonder what he'd do
if he ever remembered the crime
Sattell had committed. He felt, somehow,
that he wouldn't get that back
until he'd recovered all the rest.
Gloating, it was amusing to remember
what people used to call
such art-works as he planned, when
carved by other lonely men in other
faraway places. They called those
sculptures scrimshaw.
But they were a lot more than
that!
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Astounding Science Fiction
September
1955. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | Sattell uses methods to help Pop recover his memories | Sattell is trying to escape Pop, who believes he killed his family | Sattell was Pop's neighbor back on Earth | Sattell is Pop's son and the only witness who saw Pop murder his wife and other children | 1 |
23791_S6420G0B_5 | What do the colony inhabitants share? | SCRIMSHAW
The old man
just wanted to get back his
memory—and the methods he used were
gently hellish, from the viewpoint of the
others....
BY MURRAY LEINSTER
Illustrated by Freas
Pop Young was the one known
man who could stand life on the
surface of the Moon's far side, and,
therefore, he occupied the shack on
the Big Crack's edge, above the
mining colony there. Some people
said that no normal man could do
it, and mentioned the scar of a
ghastly head-wound to explain his
ability. One man partly guessed the
secret, but only partly. His name was
Sattell and he had reason not to
talk. Pop Young alone knew the
whole truth, and he kept his mouth
shut, too. It wasn't anybody else's
business.
The shack and the job he filled
were located in the medieval notion
of the physical appearance of hell.
By day the environment was heat and
torment. By night—lunar night, of
course, and lunar day—it was frigidity
and horror. Once in two weeks
Earth-time a rocketship came around
the horizon from Lunar City with
stores for the colony deep underground.
Pop received the stores and
took care of them. He handed over
the product of the mine, to be forwarded
to Earth. The rocket went
away again. Come nightfall Pop
lowered the supplies down the long
cable into the Big Crack to the colony
far down inside, and freshened up
the landing field marks with magnesium
marking-powder if a rocket-blast
had blurred them. That was
fundamentally all he had to do. But
without him the mine down in the
Crack would have had to shut
down.
The Crack, of course, was that
gaping rocky fault which stretches
nine hundred miles, jaggedly, over
the side of the Moon that Earth
never sees. There is one stretch where
it is a yawning gulf a full half-mile
wide and unguessably deep. Where
Pop Young's shack stood it was only
a hundred yards, but the colony was
a full mile down, in one wall. There
is nothing like it on Earth, of course.
When it was first found, scientists
descended into it to examine the exposed
rock-strata and learn the history
of the Moon before its craters
were made. But they found more
than history. They found the reason
for the colony and the rocket landing
field and the shack.
The reason for Pop was something
else.
The shack stood a hundred feet
from the Big Crack's edge. It looked
like a dust-heap thirty feet high, and
it was. The outside was surface
moondust, piled over a tiny dome to
be insulation against the cold of
night and shadow and the furnace
heat of day. Pop lived in it all alone,
and in his spare time he worked
industriously at recovering some
missing portions of his life that Sattell
had managed to take away from
him.
He thought often of Sattell, down
in the colony underground. There
were galleries and tunnels and living-quarters
down there. There were
air-tight bulkheads for safety, and a
hydroponic garden to keep the air
fresh, and all sorts of things to make
life possible for men under if not
on the Moon.
But it wasn't fun, even underground.
In the Moon's slight gravity,
a man is really adjusted to existence
when he has a well-developed case
of agoraphobia. With such an aid, a
man can get into a tiny, coffinlike
cubbyhole, and feel solidity above
and below and around him, and
happily tell himself that it feels delicious.
Sometimes it does.
But Sattell couldn't comfort himself
so easily. He knew about Pop,
up on the surface. He'd shipped out,
whimpering, to the Moon to get far
away from Pop, and Pop was just
about a mile overhead and there was
no way to get around him. It was
difficult to get away from the mine,
anyhow. It doesn't take too long for
the low gravity to tear a man's
nerves to shreds. He has to develop
kinks in his head to survive. And
those kinks—
The first men to leave the colony
had to be knocked cold and shipped
out unconscious. They'd been underground—and
in low gravity—long
enough to be utterly unable to face
the idea of open spaces. Even now
there were some who had to be carried,
but there were some tougher
ones who were able to walk to the
rocketship if Pop put a tarpaulin
over their heads so they didn't have
to see the sky. In any case Pop was
essential, either for carrying or
guidance.
Sattell got the shakes when he
thought of Pop, and Pop rather
probably knew it. Of course, by the
time he took the job tending the
shack, he was pretty certain about
Sattell. The facts spoke for themselves.
Pop had come back to consciousness
in a hospital with a great
wound in his head and no memory
of anything that had happened before
that moment. It was not that his
identity was in question. When he
was stronger, the doctors told him
who he was, and as gently as possible
what had happened to his wife
and children. They'd been murdered
after he was seemingly killed defending
them. But he didn't remember
a thing. Not then. It was
something of a blessing.
But when he was physically recovered
he set about trying to pick
up the threads of the life he could
no longer remember. He met Sattell
quite by accident. Sattell looked familiar.
Pop eagerly tried to ask him
questions. And Sattell turned gray
and frantically denied that he'd ever
seen Pop before.
All of which happened back on
Earth and a long time ago. It seemed
to Pop that the sight of Sattell had
brought back some vague and cloudy
memories. They were not sharp,
though, and he hunted up Sattell
again to find out if he was right.
And Sattell went into panic when
he returned.
Nowadays, by the Big Crack, Pop
wasn't so insistent on seeing Sattell,
but he was deeply concerned with
the recovery of the memories that
Sattell helped bring back. Pop was
a highly conscientious man. He took
good care of his job. There was a
warning-bell in the shack, and when
a rocketship from Lunar City got
above the horizon and could send a
tight beam, the gong clanged loudly,
and Pop got into a vacuum-suit
and went out the air lock. He usually
reached the moondozer about the
time the ship began to brake for
landing, and he watched it come in.
He saw the silver needle in the
sky fighting momentum above a line
of jagged crater-walls. It slowed, and
slowed, and curved down as it drew
nearer. The pilot killed all forward
motion just above the field and came
steadily and smoothly down to land
between the silvery triangles that
marked the landing place.
Instantly the rockets cut off,
drums of fuel and air and food came
out of the cargo-hatch and Pop swept
forward with the dozer. It was a
miniature tractor with a gigantic
scoop in front. He pushed a great
mound of talc-fine dust before him
to cover up the cargo. It was necessary.
With freight costing what it
did, fuel and air and food came
frozen solid, in containers barely
thicker than foil. While they stayed
at space-shadow temperature, the foil
would hold anything. And a cover of
insulating moondust with vacuum
between the grains kept even air
frozen solid, though in sunlight.
At such times Pop hardly thought
of Sattell. He knew he had plenty
of time for that. He'd started to follow
Sattell knowing what had happened
to his wife and children, but
it was hearsay only. He had no memory
of them at all. But Sattell stirred
the lost memories. At first Pop followed
absorbedly from city to city,
to recover the years that had been
wiped out by an axe-blow. He did
recover a good deal. When Sattell
fled to another continent, Pop followed
because he had some distinct
memories of his wife—and the way
he'd felt about her—and some fugitive
mental images of his children.
When Sattell frenziedly tried to deny
knowledge of the murder in Tangier,
Pop had come to remember both his
children and some of the happiness
of his married life.
Even when Sattell—whimpering—signed
up for Lunar City, Pop tracked
him. By that time he was quite
sure that Sattell was the man who'd
killed his family. If so, Sattell had
profited by less than two days' pay
for wiping out everything that Pop
possessed. But Pop wanted it back.
He couldn't prove Sattell's guilt.
There was no evidence. In any case,
he didn't really want Sattell to die.
If he did, there'd be no way to recover
more lost memories.
Sometimes, in the shack on the far
side of the Moon, Pop Young had
odd fancies about Sattell. There was
the mine, for example. In each two
Earth-weeks of working, the mine-colony
nearly filled up a three-gallon
cannister with greasy-seeming white
crystals shaped like two pyramids
base to base. The filled cannister
would weigh a hundred pounds on
Earth. Here it weighed eighteen. But
on Earth its contents would be computed
in carats, and a hundred
pounds was worth millions. Yet here
on the Moon Pop kept a waiting cannister
on a shelf in his tiny dome,
behind the air-apparatus. It rattled
if he shook it, and it was worth no
more than so many pebbles. But
sometimes Pop wondered if Sattell
ever thought of the value of the
mine's production. If he would kill
a woman and two children and think
he'd killed a man for no more than
a hundred dollars, what enormity
would he commit for a three-gallon
quantity of uncut diamonds?
But he did not dwell on such
speculation. The sun rose very, very
slowly in what by convention was
called the east. It took nearly two
hours to urge its disk above the
horizon, and it burned terribly in
emptiness for fourteen times twenty-four
hours before sunset. Then there
was night, and for three hundred
and thirty-six consecutive hours there
were only stars overhead and the
sky was a hole so terrible that a man
who looked up into it—what with
the nagging sensation of one-sixth
gravity—tended to lose all confidence
in the stability of things. Most men
immediately found it hysterically necessary
to seize hold of something
solid to keep from falling upward.
But nothing felt solid. Everything
fell, too. Wherefore most men tended
to scream.
But not Pop. He'd come to the
Moon in the first place because Sattell
was here. Near Sattell, he found
memories of times when he was a
young man with a young wife who
loved him extravagantly. Then pictures
of his children came out of
emptiness and grew sharp and clear.
He found that he loved them very
dearly. And when he was near Sattell
he literally recovered them—in
the sense that he came to know new
things about them and had new
memories of them every day. He
hadn't yet remembered the crime
which lost them to him. Until he
did—and the fact possessed a certain
grisly humor—Pop didn't even hate
Sattell. He simply wanted to be near
him because it enabled him to recover
new and vivid parts of his
youth that had been lost.
Otherwise, he was wholly matter-of-fact—certainly
so for the far side
of the Moon. He was a rather fussy
housekeeper. The shack above the
Big Crack's rim was as tidy as any
lighthouse or fur-trapper's cabin. He
tended his air-apparatus with a fine
precision. It was perfectly simple. In
the shadow of the shack he had an
unfailing source of extreme low
temperature. Air from the shack
flowed into a shadow-chilled pipe.
Moisture condensed out of it here,
and CO
2
froze solidly out of it there,
and on beyond it collected as restless,
transparent liquid air. At the same
time, liquid air from another tank
evaporated to maintain the proper
air pressure in the shack. Every so
often Pop tapped the pipe where the
moisture froze, and lumps of water
ice clattered out to be returned to the
humidifier. Less often he took out the
CO
2
snow, and measured it, and
dumped an equivalent quantity of
pale-blue liquid oxygen into the liquid
air that had been purified by
cold. The oxygen dissolved. Then the
apparatus reversed itself and supplied
fresh air from the now-enriched
fluid, while the depleted other
tank began to fill up with cold-purified
liquid air.
Outside the shack, jagged stony
pinnacles reared in the starlight, and
craters complained of the bombardment
from space that had made them.
But, outside, nothing ever happened.
Inside, it was quite different.
Working on his memories, one
day Pop made a little sketch. It
helped a great deal. He grew deeply
interested. Writing-material was
scarce, but he spent most of the time
between two particular rocket-landings
getting down on paper exactly
how a child had looked while sleeping,
some fifteen years before. He
remembered with astonishment that
the child had really looked exactly
like that! Later he began a sketch of
his partly-remembered wife. In time—he
had plenty—it became a really
truthful likeness.
The sun rose, and baked the
abomination of desolation which was
the moonscape. Pop Young meticulously
touched up the glittering
triangles which were landing guides
for the Lunar City ships. They glittered
from the thinnest conceivable
layer of magnesium marking-powder.
He checked over the moondozer.
He tended the air apparatus. He did
everything that his job and survival
required. Ungrudgingly.
Then he made more sketches. The
images to be drawn came back more
clearly when he thought of Sattell,
so by keeping Sattell in mind he recovered
the memory of a chair that
had been in his forgotten home.
Then he drew his wife sitting in it,
reading. It felt very good to see her
again. And he speculated about
whether Sattell ever thought of millions
of dollars' worth of new-mined
diamonds knocking about unguarded
in the shack, and he suddenly recollected
clearly the way one of his
children had looked while playing
with her doll. He made a quick
sketch to keep from forgetting that.
There was no purpose in the
sketching, save that he'd lost all his
young manhood through a senseless
crime. He wanted his youth back. He
was recovering it bit by bit. The
occupation made it absurdly easy to
live on the surface of the far side of
the Moon, whether anybody else
could do it or not.
Sattell had no such device for adjusting
to the lunar state of things.
Living on the Moon was bad enough
anyhow, then, but living one mile
underground from Pop Young was
much worse. Sattell clearly remembered
the crime Pop Young hadn't
yet recalled. He considered that Pop
had made no overt attempt to revenge
himself because he planned
some retaliation so horrible and lingering
that it was worth waiting for.
He came to hate Pop with an insane
ferocity. And fear. In his mind the
need to escape became an obsession
on top of the other psychotic states
normal to a Moon-colonist.
But he was helpless. He couldn't
leave. There was Pop. He couldn't
kill Pop. He had no chance—and he
was afraid. The one absurd, irrelevant
thing he could do was write
letters back to Earth. He did that.
He wrote with the desperate, impassioned,
frantic blend of persuasion
and information and genius-like invention
of a prisoner in a high-security
prison, trying to induce someone
to help him escape.
He had friends, of a sort, but for
a long time his letters produced
nothing. The Moon swung in vast
circles about the Earth, and the Earth
swung sedately about the Sun. The
other planets danced their saraband.
The rest of humanity went about its
own affairs with fascinated attention.
But then an event occurred which
bore directly upon Pop Young and
Sattell and Pop Young's missing
years.
Somebody back on Earth promoted
a luxury passenger-line of spaceships
to ply between Earth and
Moon. It looked like a perfect set-up.
Three spacecraft capable of the journey
came into being with attendant
reams of publicity. They promised a
thrill and a new distinction for the
rich. Guided tours to Lunar! The
most expensive and most thrilling
trip in history! One hundred thousand
dollars for a twelve-day cruise
through space, with views of the
Moon's far side and trips through
Lunar City and a landing in Aristarchus,
plus sound-tapes of the journey
and fame hitherto reserved for
honest explorers!
It didn't seem to have anything
to do with Pop or with Sattell. But
it did.
There were just two passenger
tours. The first was fully booked.
But the passengers who paid so highly,
expected to be pleasantly thrilled
and shielded from all reasons for
alarm. And they couldn't be. Something
happens when a self-centered
and complacent individual unsuspectingly
looks out of a spaceship
port and sees the cosmos unshielded
by mists or clouds or other aids to
blindness against reality. It is shattering.
A millionaire cut his throat when
he saw Earth dwindled to a mere
blue-green ball in vastness. He could
not endure his own smallness in the
face of immensity. Not one passenger
disembarked even for Lunar
City. Most of them cowered in their
chairs, hiding their eyes. They were
the simple cases of hysteria. But the
richest girl on Earth, who'd had five
husbands and believed that nothing
could move her—she went into
catatonic withdrawal and neither
saw nor heard nor moved. Two other
passengers sobbed in improvised
strait jackets. The first shipload
started home. Fast.
The second luxury liner took off
with only four passengers and turned
back before reaching the Moon.
Space-pilots could take the strain of
space-flight because they had work
to do. Workers for the lunar mines
could make the trip under heavy
sedation. But it was too early in the
development of space-travel for
pleasure-passengers. They weren't
prepared for the more humbling
facts of life.
Pop heard of the quaint commercial
enterprise through the micro-tapes
put off at the shack for the men
down in the mine. Sattell probably
learned of it the same way. Pop didn't
even think of it again. It seemed
to have nothing to do with him. But
Sattell undoubtedly dealt with it
fully in his desperate writings back
to Earth.
Pop matter-of-factly tended the
shack and the landing field and the
stores for the Big Crack mine. Between-times
he made more drawings
in pursuit of his own private objective.
Quite accidentally, he developed
a certain talent professional artists
might have approved. But he was not
trying to communicate, but to discover.
Drawing—especially with his
mind on Sattell—he found fresh incidents
popping up in his recollection.
Times when he was happy. One
day he remembered the puppy his
children had owned and loved. He
drew it painstakingly—and it was
his again. Thereafter he could remember
it any time he chose. He did
actually recover a completely vanished
past.
He envisioned a way to increase
that recovery. But there was a marked
shortage of artists' materials on the
Moon. All freight had to be hauled
from Earth, on a voyage equal to
rather more than a thousand times
around the equator of the Earth.
Artists' supplies were not often included.
Pop didn't even ask.
He began to explore the area outside
the shack for possible material
no one would think of sending from
Earth. He collected stones of various
sorts, but when warmed up in the
shack they were useless. He found
no strictly lunar material which
would serve for modeling or carving
portraits in the ground. He found
minerals which could be pulverized
and used as pigments, but nothing
suitable for this new adventure in
the recovery of lost youth. He even
considered blasting, to aid his search.
He could. Down in the mine, blasting
was done by soaking carbon black—from
CO
2
—in liquid oxygen, and then
firing it with a spark. It exploded
splendidly. And its fumes were
merely more CO
2
which an air-apparatus
handled easily.
He didn't do any blasting. He didn't
find any signs of the sort of
mineral he required. Marble would
have been perfect, but there is no
marble on the Moon. Naturally! Yet
Pop continued to search absorbedly
for material with which to capture
memory. Sattell still seemed necessary,
but—
Early one lunar morning he was
a good two miles from his shack
when he saw rocket-fumes in the
sky. It was most unlikely. He wasn't
looking for anything of the sort, but
out of the corner of his eye he observed
that something moved. Which
was impossible. He turned his head,
and there were rocket-fumes coming
over the horizon, not in the direction
of Lunar City. Which was more
impossible still.
He stared. A tiny silver rocket to
the westward poured out monstrous
masses of vapor. It decelerated swiftly.
It curved downward. The rockets
checked for an instant, and flamed
again more violently, and checked
once more. This was not an expert
approach. It was a faulty one. Curving
surface-ward in a sharply changing
parabola, the pilot over-corrected
and had to wait to gather down-speed,
and then over-corrected again.
It was an altogether clumsy landing.
The ship was not even perfectly vertical
when it settled not quite in the
landing-area marked by silvery triangles.
One of its tail-fins crumpled
slightly. It tilted a little when fully
landed.
Then nothing happened.
Pop made his way toward it in
the skittering, skating gait one uses
in one-sixth gravity. When he was
within half a mile, an air-lock door
opened in the ship's side. But nothing
came out of the lock. No space-suited
figure. No cargo came drifting
down with the singular deliberation
of falling objects on the Moon.
It was just barely past lunar sunrise
on the far side of the Moon.
Incredibly long and utterly black
shadows stretched across the plain,
and half the rocketship was dazzling
white and half was blacker than
blackness itself. The sun still hung
low indeed in the black, star-speckled
sky. Pop waded through moondust,
raising a trail of slowly settling
powder. He knew only that the ship
didn't come from Lunar City, but
from Earth. He couldn't imagine
why. He did not even wildly connect
it with what—say—Sattell might
have written with desperate plausibility
about greasy-seeming white
crystals out of the mine, knocking
about Pop Young's shack in cannisters
containing a hundred Earth-pounds
weight of richness.
Pop reached the rocketship. He
approached the big tail-fins. On one
of them there were welded ladder-rungs
going up to the opened air-lock
door.
He climbed.
The air-lock was perfectly normal
when he reached it. There was a
glass port in the inner door, and he
saw eyes looking through it at him.
He pulled the outer door shut and
felt the whining vibration of admitted
air. His vacuum suit went slack
about him. The inner door began to
open, and Pop reached up and gave
his helmet the practiced twisting
jerk which removed it.
Then he blinked. There was a red-headed
man in the opened door. He
grinned savagely at Pop. He held a
very nasty hand-weapon trained on
Pop's middle.
"Don't come in!" he said mockingly.
"And I don't give a damn
about how you are. This isn't social.
It's business!"
Pop simply gaped. He couldn't
quite take it in.
"This," snapped the red-headed
man abruptly, "is a stickup!"
Pop's eyes went through the inner
lock-door. He saw that the interior
of the ship was stripped and bare.
But a spiral stairway descended from
some upper compartment. It had a
handrail of pure, transparent, water-clear
plastic. The walls were bare insulation,
but that trace of luxury remained.
Pop gazed at the plastic,
fascinated.
The red-headed man leaned forward,
snarling. He slashed Pop
across the face with the barrel of his
weapon. It drew blood. It was wanton,
savage brutality.
"Pay attention!" snarled the red-headed
man. "A stickup, I said! Get
it? You go get that can of stuff
from the mine! The diamonds!
Bring them here! Understand?"
Pop said numbly: "What the
hell?"
The red-headed man hit him
again. He was nerve-racked, and,
therefore, he wanted to hurt.
"Move!" he rasped. "I want the
diamonds you've got for the ship
from Lunar City! Bring 'em!" Pop
licked blood from his lips and the
man with the weapon raged at him.
"Then phone down to the mine!
Tell Sattell I'm here and he can
come on up! Tell him to bring any
more diamonds they've dug up since
the stuff you've got!"
He leaned forward. His face was
only inches from Pop Young's. It
was seamed and hard-bitten and
nerve-racked. But any man would be
quivering if he wasn't used to space
or the feel of one-sixth gravity on
the Moon. He panted:
"And get it straight! You try
any tricks and we take off! We
swing over your shack! The rocket-blast
smashes it! We burn you
down! Then we swing over the cable
down to the mine and the rocket-flame
melts it! You die and everybody
in the mine besides! No tricks!
We didn't come here for nothing!"
He twitched all over. Then he
struck cruelly again at Pop Young's
face. He seemed filled with fury, at
least partly hysterical. It was the tension
that space-travel—then, at its
beginning—produced. It was meaningless
savagery due to terror. But,
of course, Pop was helpless to resent
it. There were no weapons on the
Moon and the mention of Sattell's
name showed the uselessness of bluff.
He'd pictured the complete set-up
by the edge of the Big Crack. Pop
could do nothing.
The red-headed man checked
himself, panting. He drew back and
slammed the inner lock-door. There
was the sound of pumping.
Pop put his helmet back on and
sealed it. The outer door opened.
Outrushing air tugged at Pop. After
a second or two he went out and
climbed down the welded-on ladder-bars
to the ground.
He headed back toward his shack.
Somehow, the mention of Sattell had
made his mind work better. It always
did. He began painstakingly to
put things together. The red-headed
man knew the routine here in every
detail. He knew Sattell. That part
was simple. Sattell had planned this
multi-million-dollar coup, as a man
in prison might plan his break. The
stripped interior of the ship identified
it.
It was one of the unsuccessful
luxury-liners sold for scrap. Or perhaps
it was stolen for the journey
here. Sattell's associates had had to
steal or somehow get the fuel, and
somehow find a pilot. But there were
diamonds worth at least five million
dollars waiting for them, and the
whole job might not have called for
more than two men—with Sattell as
a third. According to the economics
of crime, it was feasible. Anyhow it
was being done.
Pop reached the dust-heap which
was his shack and went in the air
lock. Inside, he went to the vision-phone
and called the mine-colony
down in the Crack. He gave the
message he'd been told to pass on.
Sattell to come up, with what diamonds
had been dug since the
regular cannister was sent up for the
Lunar City ship that would be due
presently. Otherwise the ship on the
landing strip would destroy shack
and Pop and the colony together.
"I'd guess," said Pop painstakingly,
"that Sattell figured it out. He's
probably got some sort of gun to
keep you from holding him down
there. But he won't know his friends
are here—not right this minute he
won't."
A shaking voice asked questions
from the vision-phone.
"No," said Pop, "they'll do it anyhow.
If we were able to tell about
'em, they'd be chased. But if I'm
dead and the shacks smashed and
the cable burnt through, they'll be
back on Earth long before a new
cable's been got and let down to you.
So they'll do all they can no matter
what I do." He added, "I wouldn't
tell Sattell a thing about it, if I were
you. It'll save trouble. Just let him
keep on waiting for this to happen.
It'll save you trouble."
Another shaky question.
"Me?" asked Pop. "Oh, I'm going
to raise what hell I can. There's
some stuff in that ship I want."
He switched off the phone. He
went over to his air apparatus. He
took down the cannister of diamonds
which were worth five millions or
more back on Earth. He found a
bucket. He dumped the diamonds
casually into it. They floated downward
with great deliberation and
surged from side to side like a liquid
when they stopped. One-sixth gravity.
Pop regarded his drawings meditatively.
A sketch of his wife as he
now remembered her. It was very
good to remember. A drawing of his
two children, playing together. He
looked forward to remembering
much more about them. He grinned.
"That stair-rail," he said in deep
satisfaction. "That'll do it!"
He tore bed linen from his bunk
and worked on the emptied cannister.
It was a double container with a
thermware interior lining. Even on
Earth newly-mined diamonds sometimes
fly to pieces from internal
stress. On the Moon, it was not desirable
that diamonds be exposed to
repeated violent changes of temperature.
So a thermware-lined cannister
kept them at mine-temperature once
they were warmed to touchability.
Pop packed the cotton cloth in the
container. He hurried a little, because
the men in the rocket were shaky and
might not practice patience. He took
a small emergency-lamp from his
spare spacesuit. He carefully cracked
its bulb, exposing the filament within.
He put the lamp on top of the
cotton and sprinkled magnesium
marking-powder over everything.
Then he went to the air-apparatus
and took out a flask of the liquid
oxygen used to keep his breathing-air
in balance. He poured the frigid,
pale-blue stuff into the cotton. He
saturated it.
All the inside of the shack was
foggy when he finished. Then he
pushed the cannister-top down. He
breathed a sigh of relief when it was
in place. He'd arranged for it to
break a frozen-brittle switch as it
descended. When it came off, the
switch would light the lamp with its
bare filament. There was powdered
magnesium in contact with it and
liquid oxygen all about.
He went out of the shack by the
air lock. On the way, thinking about
Sattell, he suddenly recovered a completely
new memory. On their first
wedding anniversary, so long ago,
he and his wife had gone out to
dinner to celebrate. He remembered
how she looked: the almost-smug
joy they shared that they would be
together for always, with one complete
year for proof.
Pop reflected hungrily that it was
something else to be made permanent
and inspected from time to time.
But he wanted more than a drawing
of this! He wanted to make the memory
permanent and to extend it—
If it had not been for his vacuum
suit and the cannister he carried, Pop
would have rubbed his hands.
Tall, jagged crater-walls rose
from the lunar plain. Monstrous, extended
inky shadows stretched
enormous distances, utterly black.
The sun, like a glowing octopod,
floated low at the edge of things and
seemed to hate all creation.
Pop reached the rocket. He
climbed the welded ladder-rungs to
the air lock. He closed the door. Air
whined. His suit sagged against his
body. He took off his helmet.
When the red-headed man opened
the inner door, the hand-weapon
shook and trembled. Pop said
calmly:
"Now I've got to go handle the
hoist, if Sattell's coming up from
the mine. If I don't do it, he don't
come up."
The red-headed man snarled. But
his eyes were on the cannister whose
contents should weigh a hundred
pounds on Earth.
"Any tricks," he rasped, "and you
know what happens!"
"Yeah," said Pop.
He stolidly put his helmet back
on. But his eyes went past the red-headed
man to the stair that wound
down, inside the ship, from some
compartment above. The stair-rail was
pure, clear, water-white plastic, not
less than three inches thick. There
was a lot of it!
The inner door closed. Pop opened
the outer. Air rushed out. He
climbed painstakingly down to the
ground. He started back toward the
shack.
There was the most luridly bright
of all possible flashes. There was no
sound, of course. But something
flamed very brightly, and the ground
thumped under Pop Young's vacuum
boots. He turned.
The rocketship was still in the act
of flying apart. It had been a splendid
explosion. Of course cotton sheeting
in liquid oxygen is not quite as
good an explosive as carbon-black,
which they used down in the mine.
Even with magnesium powder to
start the flame when a bare light-filament
ignited it, the cannister-bomb
hadn't equaled—say—T.N.T.
But the ship had fuel on board for
the trip back to Earth. And it blew,
too. It would be minutes before all
the fragments of the ship returned
to the Moon's surface. On the Moon,
things fall slowly.
Pop didn't wait. He searched
hopefully. Once a mass of steel plating
fell only yards from him, but it
did not interrupt his search.
When he went into the shack, he
grinned to himself. The call-light of
the vision-phone flickered wildly.
When he took off his helmet the bell
clanged incessantly. He answered. A
shaking voice from the mining-colony
panted:
"We felt a shock! What happened?
What do we do?"
"Don't do a thing," advised Pop.
"It's all right. I blew up the ship and
everything's all right. I wouldn't
even mention it to Sattell if I were
you."
He grinned happily down at a section
of plastic stair-rail he'd found
not too far from where the ship exploded.
When the man down in the
mine cut off, Pop got out of his
vacuum suit in a hurry. He placed
the plastic zestfully on the table
where he'd been restricted to drawing
pictures of his wife and children
in order to recover memories of
them.
He began to plan, gloatingly, the
thing he would carve out of a four-inch
section of the plastic. When it
was carved, he'd paint it. While he
worked, he'd think of Sattell, because
that was the way to get back the
missing portions of his life—the
parts Sattell had managed to get
away from him. He'd get back more
than ever, now!
He didn't wonder what he'd do
if he ever remembered the crime
Sattell had committed. He felt, somehow,
that he wouldn't get that back
until he'd recovered all the rest.
Gloating, it was amusing to remember
what people used to call
such art-works as he planned, when
carved by other lonely men in other
faraway places. They called those
sculptures scrimshaw.
But they were a lot more than
that!
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Astounding Science Fiction
September
1955. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | traumatic brain injuries | criminal backgrounds | fear of open spaces | aversion to sunlight | 2 |
23791_S6420G0B_6 | What effect does Sattell's proximity have on Pop? | SCRIMSHAW
The old man
just wanted to get back his
memory—and the methods he used were
gently hellish, from the viewpoint of the
others....
BY MURRAY LEINSTER
Illustrated by Freas
Pop Young was the one known
man who could stand life on the
surface of the Moon's far side, and,
therefore, he occupied the shack on
the Big Crack's edge, above the
mining colony there. Some people
said that no normal man could do
it, and mentioned the scar of a
ghastly head-wound to explain his
ability. One man partly guessed the
secret, but only partly. His name was
Sattell and he had reason not to
talk. Pop Young alone knew the
whole truth, and he kept his mouth
shut, too. It wasn't anybody else's
business.
The shack and the job he filled
were located in the medieval notion
of the physical appearance of hell.
By day the environment was heat and
torment. By night—lunar night, of
course, and lunar day—it was frigidity
and horror. Once in two weeks
Earth-time a rocketship came around
the horizon from Lunar City with
stores for the colony deep underground.
Pop received the stores and
took care of them. He handed over
the product of the mine, to be forwarded
to Earth. The rocket went
away again. Come nightfall Pop
lowered the supplies down the long
cable into the Big Crack to the colony
far down inside, and freshened up
the landing field marks with magnesium
marking-powder if a rocket-blast
had blurred them. That was
fundamentally all he had to do. But
without him the mine down in the
Crack would have had to shut
down.
The Crack, of course, was that
gaping rocky fault which stretches
nine hundred miles, jaggedly, over
the side of the Moon that Earth
never sees. There is one stretch where
it is a yawning gulf a full half-mile
wide and unguessably deep. Where
Pop Young's shack stood it was only
a hundred yards, but the colony was
a full mile down, in one wall. There
is nothing like it on Earth, of course.
When it was first found, scientists
descended into it to examine the exposed
rock-strata and learn the history
of the Moon before its craters
were made. But they found more
than history. They found the reason
for the colony and the rocket landing
field and the shack.
The reason for Pop was something
else.
The shack stood a hundred feet
from the Big Crack's edge. It looked
like a dust-heap thirty feet high, and
it was. The outside was surface
moondust, piled over a tiny dome to
be insulation against the cold of
night and shadow and the furnace
heat of day. Pop lived in it all alone,
and in his spare time he worked
industriously at recovering some
missing portions of his life that Sattell
had managed to take away from
him.
He thought often of Sattell, down
in the colony underground. There
were galleries and tunnels and living-quarters
down there. There were
air-tight bulkheads for safety, and a
hydroponic garden to keep the air
fresh, and all sorts of things to make
life possible for men under if not
on the Moon.
But it wasn't fun, even underground.
In the Moon's slight gravity,
a man is really adjusted to existence
when he has a well-developed case
of agoraphobia. With such an aid, a
man can get into a tiny, coffinlike
cubbyhole, and feel solidity above
and below and around him, and
happily tell himself that it feels delicious.
Sometimes it does.
But Sattell couldn't comfort himself
so easily. He knew about Pop,
up on the surface. He'd shipped out,
whimpering, to the Moon to get far
away from Pop, and Pop was just
about a mile overhead and there was
no way to get around him. It was
difficult to get away from the mine,
anyhow. It doesn't take too long for
the low gravity to tear a man's
nerves to shreds. He has to develop
kinks in his head to survive. And
those kinks—
The first men to leave the colony
had to be knocked cold and shipped
out unconscious. They'd been underground—and
in low gravity—long
enough to be utterly unable to face
the idea of open spaces. Even now
there were some who had to be carried,
but there were some tougher
ones who were able to walk to the
rocketship if Pop put a tarpaulin
over their heads so they didn't have
to see the sky. In any case Pop was
essential, either for carrying or
guidance.
Sattell got the shakes when he
thought of Pop, and Pop rather
probably knew it. Of course, by the
time he took the job tending the
shack, he was pretty certain about
Sattell. The facts spoke for themselves.
Pop had come back to consciousness
in a hospital with a great
wound in his head and no memory
of anything that had happened before
that moment. It was not that his
identity was in question. When he
was stronger, the doctors told him
who he was, and as gently as possible
what had happened to his wife
and children. They'd been murdered
after he was seemingly killed defending
them. But he didn't remember
a thing. Not then. It was
something of a blessing.
But when he was physically recovered
he set about trying to pick
up the threads of the life he could
no longer remember. He met Sattell
quite by accident. Sattell looked familiar.
Pop eagerly tried to ask him
questions. And Sattell turned gray
and frantically denied that he'd ever
seen Pop before.
All of which happened back on
Earth and a long time ago. It seemed
to Pop that the sight of Sattell had
brought back some vague and cloudy
memories. They were not sharp,
though, and he hunted up Sattell
again to find out if he was right.
And Sattell went into panic when
he returned.
Nowadays, by the Big Crack, Pop
wasn't so insistent on seeing Sattell,
but he was deeply concerned with
the recovery of the memories that
Sattell helped bring back. Pop was
a highly conscientious man. He took
good care of his job. There was a
warning-bell in the shack, and when
a rocketship from Lunar City got
above the horizon and could send a
tight beam, the gong clanged loudly,
and Pop got into a vacuum-suit
and went out the air lock. He usually
reached the moondozer about the
time the ship began to brake for
landing, and he watched it come in.
He saw the silver needle in the
sky fighting momentum above a line
of jagged crater-walls. It slowed, and
slowed, and curved down as it drew
nearer. The pilot killed all forward
motion just above the field and came
steadily and smoothly down to land
between the silvery triangles that
marked the landing place.
Instantly the rockets cut off,
drums of fuel and air and food came
out of the cargo-hatch and Pop swept
forward with the dozer. It was a
miniature tractor with a gigantic
scoop in front. He pushed a great
mound of talc-fine dust before him
to cover up the cargo. It was necessary.
With freight costing what it
did, fuel and air and food came
frozen solid, in containers barely
thicker than foil. While they stayed
at space-shadow temperature, the foil
would hold anything. And a cover of
insulating moondust with vacuum
between the grains kept even air
frozen solid, though in sunlight.
At such times Pop hardly thought
of Sattell. He knew he had plenty
of time for that. He'd started to follow
Sattell knowing what had happened
to his wife and children, but
it was hearsay only. He had no memory
of them at all. But Sattell stirred
the lost memories. At first Pop followed
absorbedly from city to city,
to recover the years that had been
wiped out by an axe-blow. He did
recover a good deal. When Sattell
fled to another continent, Pop followed
because he had some distinct
memories of his wife—and the way
he'd felt about her—and some fugitive
mental images of his children.
When Sattell frenziedly tried to deny
knowledge of the murder in Tangier,
Pop had come to remember both his
children and some of the happiness
of his married life.
Even when Sattell—whimpering—signed
up for Lunar City, Pop tracked
him. By that time he was quite
sure that Sattell was the man who'd
killed his family. If so, Sattell had
profited by less than two days' pay
for wiping out everything that Pop
possessed. But Pop wanted it back.
He couldn't prove Sattell's guilt.
There was no evidence. In any case,
he didn't really want Sattell to die.
If he did, there'd be no way to recover
more lost memories.
Sometimes, in the shack on the far
side of the Moon, Pop Young had
odd fancies about Sattell. There was
the mine, for example. In each two
Earth-weeks of working, the mine-colony
nearly filled up a three-gallon
cannister with greasy-seeming white
crystals shaped like two pyramids
base to base. The filled cannister
would weigh a hundred pounds on
Earth. Here it weighed eighteen. But
on Earth its contents would be computed
in carats, and a hundred
pounds was worth millions. Yet here
on the Moon Pop kept a waiting cannister
on a shelf in his tiny dome,
behind the air-apparatus. It rattled
if he shook it, and it was worth no
more than so many pebbles. But
sometimes Pop wondered if Sattell
ever thought of the value of the
mine's production. If he would kill
a woman and two children and think
he'd killed a man for no more than
a hundred dollars, what enormity
would he commit for a three-gallon
quantity of uncut diamonds?
But he did not dwell on such
speculation. The sun rose very, very
slowly in what by convention was
called the east. It took nearly two
hours to urge its disk above the
horizon, and it burned terribly in
emptiness for fourteen times twenty-four
hours before sunset. Then there
was night, and for three hundred
and thirty-six consecutive hours there
were only stars overhead and the
sky was a hole so terrible that a man
who looked up into it—what with
the nagging sensation of one-sixth
gravity—tended to lose all confidence
in the stability of things. Most men
immediately found it hysterically necessary
to seize hold of something
solid to keep from falling upward.
But nothing felt solid. Everything
fell, too. Wherefore most men tended
to scream.
But not Pop. He'd come to the
Moon in the first place because Sattell
was here. Near Sattell, he found
memories of times when he was a
young man with a young wife who
loved him extravagantly. Then pictures
of his children came out of
emptiness and grew sharp and clear.
He found that he loved them very
dearly. And when he was near Sattell
he literally recovered them—in
the sense that he came to know new
things about them and had new
memories of them every day. He
hadn't yet remembered the crime
which lost them to him. Until he
did—and the fact possessed a certain
grisly humor—Pop didn't even hate
Sattell. He simply wanted to be near
him because it enabled him to recover
new and vivid parts of his
youth that had been lost.
Otherwise, he was wholly matter-of-fact—certainly
so for the far side
of the Moon. He was a rather fussy
housekeeper. The shack above the
Big Crack's rim was as tidy as any
lighthouse or fur-trapper's cabin. He
tended his air-apparatus with a fine
precision. It was perfectly simple. In
the shadow of the shack he had an
unfailing source of extreme low
temperature. Air from the shack
flowed into a shadow-chilled pipe.
Moisture condensed out of it here,
and CO
2
froze solidly out of it there,
and on beyond it collected as restless,
transparent liquid air. At the same
time, liquid air from another tank
evaporated to maintain the proper
air pressure in the shack. Every so
often Pop tapped the pipe where the
moisture froze, and lumps of water
ice clattered out to be returned to the
humidifier. Less often he took out the
CO
2
snow, and measured it, and
dumped an equivalent quantity of
pale-blue liquid oxygen into the liquid
air that had been purified by
cold. The oxygen dissolved. Then the
apparatus reversed itself and supplied
fresh air from the now-enriched
fluid, while the depleted other
tank began to fill up with cold-purified
liquid air.
Outside the shack, jagged stony
pinnacles reared in the starlight, and
craters complained of the bombardment
from space that had made them.
But, outside, nothing ever happened.
Inside, it was quite different.
Working on his memories, one
day Pop made a little sketch. It
helped a great deal. He grew deeply
interested. Writing-material was
scarce, but he spent most of the time
between two particular rocket-landings
getting down on paper exactly
how a child had looked while sleeping,
some fifteen years before. He
remembered with astonishment that
the child had really looked exactly
like that! Later he began a sketch of
his partly-remembered wife. In time—he
had plenty—it became a really
truthful likeness.
The sun rose, and baked the
abomination of desolation which was
the moonscape. Pop Young meticulously
touched up the glittering
triangles which were landing guides
for the Lunar City ships. They glittered
from the thinnest conceivable
layer of magnesium marking-powder.
He checked over the moondozer.
He tended the air apparatus. He did
everything that his job and survival
required. Ungrudgingly.
Then he made more sketches. The
images to be drawn came back more
clearly when he thought of Sattell,
so by keeping Sattell in mind he recovered
the memory of a chair that
had been in his forgotten home.
Then he drew his wife sitting in it,
reading. It felt very good to see her
again. And he speculated about
whether Sattell ever thought of millions
of dollars' worth of new-mined
diamonds knocking about unguarded
in the shack, and he suddenly recollected
clearly the way one of his
children had looked while playing
with her doll. He made a quick
sketch to keep from forgetting that.
There was no purpose in the
sketching, save that he'd lost all his
young manhood through a senseless
crime. He wanted his youth back. He
was recovering it bit by bit. The
occupation made it absurdly easy to
live on the surface of the far side of
the Moon, whether anybody else
could do it or not.
Sattell had no such device for adjusting
to the lunar state of things.
Living on the Moon was bad enough
anyhow, then, but living one mile
underground from Pop Young was
much worse. Sattell clearly remembered
the crime Pop Young hadn't
yet recalled. He considered that Pop
had made no overt attempt to revenge
himself because he planned
some retaliation so horrible and lingering
that it was worth waiting for.
He came to hate Pop with an insane
ferocity. And fear. In his mind the
need to escape became an obsession
on top of the other psychotic states
normal to a Moon-colonist.
But he was helpless. He couldn't
leave. There was Pop. He couldn't
kill Pop. He had no chance—and he
was afraid. The one absurd, irrelevant
thing he could do was write
letters back to Earth. He did that.
He wrote with the desperate, impassioned,
frantic blend of persuasion
and information and genius-like invention
of a prisoner in a high-security
prison, trying to induce someone
to help him escape.
He had friends, of a sort, but for
a long time his letters produced
nothing. The Moon swung in vast
circles about the Earth, and the Earth
swung sedately about the Sun. The
other planets danced their saraband.
The rest of humanity went about its
own affairs with fascinated attention.
But then an event occurred which
bore directly upon Pop Young and
Sattell and Pop Young's missing
years.
Somebody back on Earth promoted
a luxury passenger-line of spaceships
to ply between Earth and
Moon. It looked like a perfect set-up.
Three spacecraft capable of the journey
came into being with attendant
reams of publicity. They promised a
thrill and a new distinction for the
rich. Guided tours to Lunar! The
most expensive and most thrilling
trip in history! One hundred thousand
dollars for a twelve-day cruise
through space, with views of the
Moon's far side and trips through
Lunar City and a landing in Aristarchus,
plus sound-tapes of the journey
and fame hitherto reserved for
honest explorers!
It didn't seem to have anything
to do with Pop or with Sattell. But
it did.
There were just two passenger
tours. The first was fully booked.
But the passengers who paid so highly,
expected to be pleasantly thrilled
and shielded from all reasons for
alarm. And they couldn't be. Something
happens when a self-centered
and complacent individual unsuspectingly
looks out of a spaceship
port and sees the cosmos unshielded
by mists or clouds or other aids to
blindness against reality. It is shattering.
A millionaire cut his throat when
he saw Earth dwindled to a mere
blue-green ball in vastness. He could
not endure his own smallness in the
face of immensity. Not one passenger
disembarked even for Lunar
City. Most of them cowered in their
chairs, hiding their eyes. They were
the simple cases of hysteria. But the
richest girl on Earth, who'd had five
husbands and believed that nothing
could move her—she went into
catatonic withdrawal and neither
saw nor heard nor moved. Two other
passengers sobbed in improvised
strait jackets. The first shipload
started home. Fast.
The second luxury liner took off
with only four passengers and turned
back before reaching the Moon.
Space-pilots could take the strain of
space-flight because they had work
to do. Workers for the lunar mines
could make the trip under heavy
sedation. But it was too early in the
development of space-travel for
pleasure-passengers. They weren't
prepared for the more humbling
facts of life.
Pop heard of the quaint commercial
enterprise through the micro-tapes
put off at the shack for the men
down in the mine. Sattell probably
learned of it the same way. Pop didn't
even think of it again. It seemed
to have nothing to do with him. But
Sattell undoubtedly dealt with it
fully in his desperate writings back
to Earth.
Pop matter-of-factly tended the
shack and the landing field and the
stores for the Big Crack mine. Between-times
he made more drawings
in pursuit of his own private objective.
Quite accidentally, he developed
a certain talent professional artists
might have approved. But he was not
trying to communicate, but to discover.
Drawing—especially with his
mind on Sattell—he found fresh incidents
popping up in his recollection.
Times when he was happy. One
day he remembered the puppy his
children had owned and loved. He
drew it painstakingly—and it was
his again. Thereafter he could remember
it any time he chose. He did
actually recover a completely vanished
past.
He envisioned a way to increase
that recovery. But there was a marked
shortage of artists' materials on the
Moon. All freight had to be hauled
from Earth, on a voyage equal to
rather more than a thousand times
around the equator of the Earth.
Artists' supplies were not often included.
Pop didn't even ask.
He began to explore the area outside
the shack for possible material
no one would think of sending from
Earth. He collected stones of various
sorts, but when warmed up in the
shack they were useless. He found
no strictly lunar material which
would serve for modeling or carving
portraits in the ground. He found
minerals which could be pulverized
and used as pigments, but nothing
suitable for this new adventure in
the recovery of lost youth. He even
considered blasting, to aid his search.
He could. Down in the mine, blasting
was done by soaking carbon black—from
CO
2
—in liquid oxygen, and then
firing it with a spark. It exploded
splendidly. And its fumes were
merely more CO
2
which an air-apparatus
handled easily.
He didn't do any blasting. He didn't
find any signs of the sort of
mineral he required. Marble would
have been perfect, but there is no
marble on the Moon. Naturally! Yet
Pop continued to search absorbedly
for material with which to capture
memory. Sattell still seemed necessary,
but—
Early one lunar morning he was
a good two miles from his shack
when he saw rocket-fumes in the
sky. It was most unlikely. He wasn't
looking for anything of the sort, but
out of the corner of his eye he observed
that something moved. Which
was impossible. He turned his head,
and there were rocket-fumes coming
over the horizon, not in the direction
of Lunar City. Which was more
impossible still.
He stared. A tiny silver rocket to
the westward poured out monstrous
masses of vapor. It decelerated swiftly.
It curved downward. The rockets
checked for an instant, and flamed
again more violently, and checked
once more. This was not an expert
approach. It was a faulty one. Curving
surface-ward in a sharply changing
parabola, the pilot over-corrected
and had to wait to gather down-speed,
and then over-corrected again.
It was an altogether clumsy landing.
The ship was not even perfectly vertical
when it settled not quite in the
landing-area marked by silvery triangles.
One of its tail-fins crumpled
slightly. It tilted a little when fully
landed.
Then nothing happened.
Pop made his way toward it in
the skittering, skating gait one uses
in one-sixth gravity. When he was
within half a mile, an air-lock door
opened in the ship's side. But nothing
came out of the lock. No space-suited
figure. No cargo came drifting
down with the singular deliberation
of falling objects on the Moon.
It was just barely past lunar sunrise
on the far side of the Moon.
Incredibly long and utterly black
shadows stretched across the plain,
and half the rocketship was dazzling
white and half was blacker than
blackness itself. The sun still hung
low indeed in the black, star-speckled
sky. Pop waded through moondust,
raising a trail of slowly settling
powder. He knew only that the ship
didn't come from Lunar City, but
from Earth. He couldn't imagine
why. He did not even wildly connect
it with what—say—Sattell might
have written with desperate plausibility
about greasy-seeming white
crystals out of the mine, knocking
about Pop Young's shack in cannisters
containing a hundred Earth-pounds
weight of richness.
Pop reached the rocketship. He
approached the big tail-fins. On one
of them there were welded ladder-rungs
going up to the opened air-lock
door.
He climbed.
The air-lock was perfectly normal
when he reached it. There was a
glass port in the inner door, and he
saw eyes looking through it at him.
He pulled the outer door shut and
felt the whining vibration of admitted
air. His vacuum suit went slack
about him. The inner door began to
open, and Pop reached up and gave
his helmet the practiced twisting
jerk which removed it.
Then he blinked. There was a red-headed
man in the opened door. He
grinned savagely at Pop. He held a
very nasty hand-weapon trained on
Pop's middle.
"Don't come in!" he said mockingly.
"And I don't give a damn
about how you are. This isn't social.
It's business!"
Pop simply gaped. He couldn't
quite take it in.
"This," snapped the red-headed
man abruptly, "is a stickup!"
Pop's eyes went through the inner
lock-door. He saw that the interior
of the ship was stripped and bare.
But a spiral stairway descended from
some upper compartment. It had a
handrail of pure, transparent, water-clear
plastic. The walls were bare insulation,
but that trace of luxury remained.
Pop gazed at the plastic,
fascinated.
The red-headed man leaned forward,
snarling. He slashed Pop
across the face with the barrel of his
weapon. It drew blood. It was wanton,
savage brutality.
"Pay attention!" snarled the red-headed
man. "A stickup, I said! Get
it? You go get that can of stuff
from the mine! The diamonds!
Bring them here! Understand?"
Pop said numbly: "What the
hell?"
The red-headed man hit him
again. He was nerve-racked, and,
therefore, he wanted to hurt.
"Move!" he rasped. "I want the
diamonds you've got for the ship
from Lunar City! Bring 'em!" Pop
licked blood from his lips and the
man with the weapon raged at him.
"Then phone down to the mine!
Tell Sattell I'm here and he can
come on up! Tell him to bring any
more diamonds they've dug up since
the stuff you've got!"
He leaned forward. His face was
only inches from Pop Young's. It
was seamed and hard-bitten and
nerve-racked. But any man would be
quivering if he wasn't used to space
or the feel of one-sixth gravity on
the Moon. He panted:
"And get it straight! You try
any tricks and we take off! We
swing over your shack! The rocket-blast
smashes it! We burn you
down! Then we swing over the cable
down to the mine and the rocket-flame
melts it! You die and everybody
in the mine besides! No tricks!
We didn't come here for nothing!"
He twitched all over. Then he
struck cruelly again at Pop Young's
face. He seemed filled with fury, at
least partly hysterical. It was the tension
that space-travel—then, at its
beginning—produced. It was meaningless
savagery due to terror. But,
of course, Pop was helpless to resent
it. There were no weapons on the
Moon and the mention of Sattell's
name showed the uselessness of bluff.
He'd pictured the complete set-up
by the edge of the Big Crack. Pop
could do nothing.
The red-headed man checked
himself, panting. He drew back and
slammed the inner lock-door. There
was the sound of pumping.
Pop put his helmet back on and
sealed it. The outer door opened.
Outrushing air tugged at Pop. After
a second or two he went out and
climbed down the welded-on ladder-bars
to the ground.
He headed back toward his shack.
Somehow, the mention of Sattell had
made his mind work better. It always
did. He began painstakingly to
put things together. The red-headed
man knew the routine here in every
detail. He knew Sattell. That part
was simple. Sattell had planned this
multi-million-dollar coup, as a man
in prison might plan his break. The
stripped interior of the ship identified
it.
It was one of the unsuccessful
luxury-liners sold for scrap. Or perhaps
it was stolen for the journey
here. Sattell's associates had had to
steal or somehow get the fuel, and
somehow find a pilot. But there were
diamonds worth at least five million
dollars waiting for them, and the
whole job might not have called for
more than two men—with Sattell as
a third. According to the economics
of crime, it was feasible. Anyhow it
was being done.
Pop reached the dust-heap which
was his shack and went in the air
lock. Inside, he went to the vision-phone
and called the mine-colony
down in the Crack. He gave the
message he'd been told to pass on.
Sattell to come up, with what diamonds
had been dug since the
regular cannister was sent up for the
Lunar City ship that would be due
presently. Otherwise the ship on the
landing strip would destroy shack
and Pop and the colony together.
"I'd guess," said Pop painstakingly,
"that Sattell figured it out. He's
probably got some sort of gun to
keep you from holding him down
there. But he won't know his friends
are here—not right this minute he
won't."
A shaking voice asked questions
from the vision-phone.
"No," said Pop, "they'll do it anyhow.
If we were able to tell about
'em, they'd be chased. But if I'm
dead and the shacks smashed and
the cable burnt through, they'll be
back on Earth long before a new
cable's been got and let down to you.
So they'll do all they can no matter
what I do." He added, "I wouldn't
tell Sattell a thing about it, if I were
you. It'll save trouble. Just let him
keep on waiting for this to happen.
It'll save you trouble."
Another shaky question.
"Me?" asked Pop. "Oh, I'm going
to raise what hell I can. There's
some stuff in that ship I want."
He switched off the phone. He
went over to his air apparatus. He
took down the cannister of diamonds
which were worth five millions or
more back on Earth. He found a
bucket. He dumped the diamonds
casually into it. They floated downward
with great deliberation and
surged from side to side like a liquid
when they stopped. One-sixth gravity.
Pop regarded his drawings meditatively.
A sketch of his wife as he
now remembered her. It was very
good to remember. A drawing of his
two children, playing together. He
looked forward to remembering
much more about them. He grinned.
"That stair-rail," he said in deep
satisfaction. "That'll do it!"
He tore bed linen from his bunk
and worked on the emptied cannister.
It was a double container with a
thermware interior lining. Even on
Earth newly-mined diamonds sometimes
fly to pieces from internal
stress. On the Moon, it was not desirable
that diamonds be exposed to
repeated violent changes of temperature.
So a thermware-lined cannister
kept them at mine-temperature once
they were warmed to touchability.
Pop packed the cotton cloth in the
container. He hurried a little, because
the men in the rocket were shaky and
might not practice patience. He took
a small emergency-lamp from his
spare spacesuit. He carefully cracked
its bulb, exposing the filament within.
He put the lamp on top of the
cotton and sprinkled magnesium
marking-powder over everything.
Then he went to the air-apparatus
and took out a flask of the liquid
oxygen used to keep his breathing-air
in balance. He poured the frigid,
pale-blue stuff into the cotton. He
saturated it.
All the inside of the shack was
foggy when he finished. Then he
pushed the cannister-top down. He
breathed a sigh of relief when it was
in place. He'd arranged for it to
break a frozen-brittle switch as it
descended. When it came off, the
switch would light the lamp with its
bare filament. There was powdered
magnesium in contact with it and
liquid oxygen all about.
He went out of the shack by the
air lock. On the way, thinking about
Sattell, he suddenly recovered a completely
new memory. On their first
wedding anniversary, so long ago,
he and his wife had gone out to
dinner to celebrate. He remembered
how she looked: the almost-smug
joy they shared that they would be
together for always, with one complete
year for proof.
Pop reflected hungrily that it was
something else to be made permanent
and inspected from time to time.
But he wanted more than a drawing
of this! He wanted to make the memory
permanent and to extend it—
If it had not been for his vacuum
suit and the cannister he carried, Pop
would have rubbed his hands.
Tall, jagged crater-walls rose
from the lunar plain. Monstrous, extended
inky shadows stretched
enormous distances, utterly black.
The sun, like a glowing octopod,
floated low at the edge of things and
seemed to hate all creation.
Pop reached the rocket. He
climbed the welded ladder-rungs to
the air lock. He closed the door. Air
whined. His suit sagged against his
body. He took off his helmet.
When the red-headed man opened
the inner door, the hand-weapon
shook and trembled. Pop said
calmly:
"Now I've got to go handle the
hoist, if Sattell's coming up from
the mine. If I don't do it, he don't
come up."
The red-headed man snarled. But
his eyes were on the cannister whose
contents should weigh a hundred
pounds on Earth.
"Any tricks," he rasped, "and you
know what happens!"
"Yeah," said Pop.
He stolidly put his helmet back
on. But his eyes went past the red-headed
man to the stair that wound
down, inside the ship, from some
compartment above. The stair-rail was
pure, clear, water-white plastic, not
less than three inches thick. There
was a lot of it!
The inner door closed. Pop opened
the outer. Air rushed out. He
climbed painstakingly down to the
ground. He started back toward the
shack.
There was the most luridly bright
of all possible flashes. There was no
sound, of course. But something
flamed very brightly, and the ground
thumped under Pop Young's vacuum
boots. He turned.
The rocketship was still in the act
of flying apart. It had been a splendid
explosion. Of course cotton sheeting
in liquid oxygen is not quite as
good an explosive as carbon-black,
which they used down in the mine.
Even with magnesium powder to
start the flame when a bare light-filament
ignited it, the cannister-bomb
hadn't equaled—say—T.N.T.
But the ship had fuel on board for
the trip back to Earth. And it blew,
too. It would be minutes before all
the fragments of the ship returned
to the Moon's surface. On the Moon,
things fall slowly.
Pop didn't wait. He searched
hopefully. Once a mass of steel plating
fell only yards from him, but it
did not interrupt his search.
When he went into the shack, he
grinned to himself. The call-light of
the vision-phone flickered wildly.
When he took off his helmet the bell
clanged incessantly. He answered. A
shaking voice from the mining-colony
panted:
"We felt a shock! What happened?
What do we do?"
"Don't do a thing," advised Pop.
"It's all right. I blew up the ship and
everything's all right. I wouldn't
even mention it to Sattell if I were
you."
He grinned happily down at a section
of plastic stair-rail he'd found
not too far from where the ship exploded.
When the man down in the
mine cut off, Pop got out of his
vacuum suit in a hurry. He placed
the plastic zestfully on the table
where he'd been restricted to drawing
pictures of his wife and children
in order to recover memories of
them.
He began to plan, gloatingly, the
thing he would carve out of a four-inch
section of the plastic. When it
was carved, he'd paint it. While he
worked, he'd think of Sattell, because
that was the way to get back the
missing portions of his life—the
parts Sattell had managed to get
away from him. He'd get back more
than ever, now!
He didn't wonder what he'd do
if he ever remembered the crime
Sattell had committed. He felt, somehow,
that he wouldn't get that back
until he'd recovered all the rest.
Gloating, it was amusing to remember
what people used to call
such art-works as he planned, when
carved by other lonely men in other
faraway places. They called those
sculptures scrimshaw.
But they were a lot more than
that!
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Astounding Science Fiction
September
1955. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | It brings Pop's memory of the murder of his family into clarity | It motivates him to plot his revenge against his family's murderer | It amplifies the pain of his Pop's head injury | It restores Pop's memories of his wife and children | 3 |
23791_S6420G0B_7 | Which of the following describes Pop's attitude toward Sattell? | SCRIMSHAW
The old man
just wanted to get back his
memory—and the methods he used were
gently hellish, from the viewpoint of the
others....
BY MURRAY LEINSTER
Illustrated by Freas
Pop Young was the one known
man who could stand life on the
surface of the Moon's far side, and,
therefore, he occupied the shack on
the Big Crack's edge, above the
mining colony there. Some people
said that no normal man could do
it, and mentioned the scar of a
ghastly head-wound to explain his
ability. One man partly guessed the
secret, but only partly. His name was
Sattell and he had reason not to
talk. Pop Young alone knew the
whole truth, and he kept his mouth
shut, too. It wasn't anybody else's
business.
The shack and the job he filled
were located in the medieval notion
of the physical appearance of hell.
By day the environment was heat and
torment. By night—lunar night, of
course, and lunar day—it was frigidity
and horror. Once in two weeks
Earth-time a rocketship came around
the horizon from Lunar City with
stores for the colony deep underground.
Pop received the stores and
took care of them. He handed over
the product of the mine, to be forwarded
to Earth. The rocket went
away again. Come nightfall Pop
lowered the supplies down the long
cable into the Big Crack to the colony
far down inside, and freshened up
the landing field marks with magnesium
marking-powder if a rocket-blast
had blurred them. That was
fundamentally all he had to do. But
without him the mine down in the
Crack would have had to shut
down.
The Crack, of course, was that
gaping rocky fault which stretches
nine hundred miles, jaggedly, over
the side of the Moon that Earth
never sees. There is one stretch where
it is a yawning gulf a full half-mile
wide and unguessably deep. Where
Pop Young's shack stood it was only
a hundred yards, but the colony was
a full mile down, in one wall. There
is nothing like it on Earth, of course.
When it was first found, scientists
descended into it to examine the exposed
rock-strata and learn the history
of the Moon before its craters
were made. But they found more
than history. They found the reason
for the colony and the rocket landing
field and the shack.
The reason for Pop was something
else.
The shack stood a hundred feet
from the Big Crack's edge. It looked
like a dust-heap thirty feet high, and
it was. The outside was surface
moondust, piled over a tiny dome to
be insulation against the cold of
night and shadow and the furnace
heat of day. Pop lived in it all alone,
and in his spare time he worked
industriously at recovering some
missing portions of his life that Sattell
had managed to take away from
him.
He thought often of Sattell, down
in the colony underground. There
were galleries and tunnels and living-quarters
down there. There were
air-tight bulkheads for safety, and a
hydroponic garden to keep the air
fresh, and all sorts of things to make
life possible for men under if not
on the Moon.
But it wasn't fun, even underground.
In the Moon's slight gravity,
a man is really adjusted to existence
when he has a well-developed case
of agoraphobia. With such an aid, a
man can get into a tiny, coffinlike
cubbyhole, and feel solidity above
and below and around him, and
happily tell himself that it feels delicious.
Sometimes it does.
But Sattell couldn't comfort himself
so easily. He knew about Pop,
up on the surface. He'd shipped out,
whimpering, to the Moon to get far
away from Pop, and Pop was just
about a mile overhead and there was
no way to get around him. It was
difficult to get away from the mine,
anyhow. It doesn't take too long for
the low gravity to tear a man's
nerves to shreds. He has to develop
kinks in his head to survive. And
those kinks—
The first men to leave the colony
had to be knocked cold and shipped
out unconscious. They'd been underground—and
in low gravity—long
enough to be utterly unable to face
the idea of open spaces. Even now
there were some who had to be carried,
but there were some tougher
ones who were able to walk to the
rocketship if Pop put a tarpaulin
over their heads so they didn't have
to see the sky. In any case Pop was
essential, either for carrying or
guidance.
Sattell got the shakes when he
thought of Pop, and Pop rather
probably knew it. Of course, by the
time he took the job tending the
shack, he was pretty certain about
Sattell. The facts spoke for themselves.
Pop had come back to consciousness
in a hospital with a great
wound in his head and no memory
of anything that had happened before
that moment. It was not that his
identity was in question. When he
was stronger, the doctors told him
who he was, and as gently as possible
what had happened to his wife
and children. They'd been murdered
after he was seemingly killed defending
them. But he didn't remember
a thing. Not then. It was
something of a blessing.
But when he was physically recovered
he set about trying to pick
up the threads of the life he could
no longer remember. He met Sattell
quite by accident. Sattell looked familiar.
Pop eagerly tried to ask him
questions. And Sattell turned gray
and frantically denied that he'd ever
seen Pop before.
All of which happened back on
Earth and a long time ago. It seemed
to Pop that the sight of Sattell had
brought back some vague and cloudy
memories. They were not sharp,
though, and he hunted up Sattell
again to find out if he was right.
And Sattell went into panic when
he returned.
Nowadays, by the Big Crack, Pop
wasn't so insistent on seeing Sattell,
but he was deeply concerned with
the recovery of the memories that
Sattell helped bring back. Pop was
a highly conscientious man. He took
good care of his job. There was a
warning-bell in the shack, and when
a rocketship from Lunar City got
above the horizon and could send a
tight beam, the gong clanged loudly,
and Pop got into a vacuum-suit
and went out the air lock. He usually
reached the moondozer about the
time the ship began to brake for
landing, and he watched it come in.
He saw the silver needle in the
sky fighting momentum above a line
of jagged crater-walls. It slowed, and
slowed, and curved down as it drew
nearer. The pilot killed all forward
motion just above the field and came
steadily and smoothly down to land
between the silvery triangles that
marked the landing place.
Instantly the rockets cut off,
drums of fuel and air and food came
out of the cargo-hatch and Pop swept
forward with the dozer. It was a
miniature tractor with a gigantic
scoop in front. He pushed a great
mound of talc-fine dust before him
to cover up the cargo. It was necessary.
With freight costing what it
did, fuel and air and food came
frozen solid, in containers barely
thicker than foil. While they stayed
at space-shadow temperature, the foil
would hold anything. And a cover of
insulating moondust with vacuum
between the grains kept even air
frozen solid, though in sunlight.
At such times Pop hardly thought
of Sattell. He knew he had plenty
of time for that. He'd started to follow
Sattell knowing what had happened
to his wife and children, but
it was hearsay only. He had no memory
of them at all. But Sattell stirred
the lost memories. At first Pop followed
absorbedly from city to city,
to recover the years that had been
wiped out by an axe-blow. He did
recover a good deal. When Sattell
fled to another continent, Pop followed
because he had some distinct
memories of his wife—and the way
he'd felt about her—and some fugitive
mental images of his children.
When Sattell frenziedly tried to deny
knowledge of the murder in Tangier,
Pop had come to remember both his
children and some of the happiness
of his married life.
Even when Sattell—whimpering—signed
up for Lunar City, Pop tracked
him. By that time he was quite
sure that Sattell was the man who'd
killed his family. If so, Sattell had
profited by less than two days' pay
for wiping out everything that Pop
possessed. But Pop wanted it back.
He couldn't prove Sattell's guilt.
There was no evidence. In any case,
he didn't really want Sattell to die.
If he did, there'd be no way to recover
more lost memories.
Sometimes, in the shack on the far
side of the Moon, Pop Young had
odd fancies about Sattell. There was
the mine, for example. In each two
Earth-weeks of working, the mine-colony
nearly filled up a three-gallon
cannister with greasy-seeming white
crystals shaped like two pyramids
base to base. The filled cannister
would weigh a hundred pounds on
Earth. Here it weighed eighteen. But
on Earth its contents would be computed
in carats, and a hundred
pounds was worth millions. Yet here
on the Moon Pop kept a waiting cannister
on a shelf in his tiny dome,
behind the air-apparatus. It rattled
if he shook it, and it was worth no
more than so many pebbles. But
sometimes Pop wondered if Sattell
ever thought of the value of the
mine's production. If he would kill
a woman and two children and think
he'd killed a man for no more than
a hundred dollars, what enormity
would he commit for a three-gallon
quantity of uncut diamonds?
But he did not dwell on such
speculation. The sun rose very, very
slowly in what by convention was
called the east. It took nearly two
hours to urge its disk above the
horizon, and it burned terribly in
emptiness for fourteen times twenty-four
hours before sunset. Then there
was night, and for three hundred
and thirty-six consecutive hours there
were only stars overhead and the
sky was a hole so terrible that a man
who looked up into it—what with
the nagging sensation of one-sixth
gravity—tended to lose all confidence
in the stability of things. Most men
immediately found it hysterically necessary
to seize hold of something
solid to keep from falling upward.
But nothing felt solid. Everything
fell, too. Wherefore most men tended
to scream.
But not Pop. He'd come to the
Moon in the first place because Sattell
was here. Near Sattell, he found
memories of times when he was a
young man with a young wife who
loved him extravagantly. Then pictures
of his children came out of
emptiness and grew sharp and clear.
He found that he loved them very
dearly. And when he was near Sattell
he literally recovered them—in
the sense that he came to know new
things about them and had new
memories of them every day. He
hadn't yet remembered the crime
which lost them to him. Until he
did—and the fact possessed a certain
grisly humor—Pop didn't even hate
Sattell. He simply wanted to be near
him because it enabled him to recover
new and vivid parts of his
youth that had been lost.
Otherwise, he was wholly matter-of-fact—certainly
so for the far side
of the Moon. He was a rather fussy
housekeeper. The shack above the
Big Crack's rim was as tidy as any
lighthouse or fur-trapper's cabin. He
tended his air-apparatus with a fine
precision. It was perfectly simple. In
the shadow of the shack he had an
unfailing source of extreme low
temperature. Air from the shack
flowed into a shadow-chilled pipe.
Moisture condensed out of it here,
and CO
2
froze solidly out of it there,
and on beyond it collected as restless,
transparent liquid air. At the same
time, liquid air from another tank
evaporated to maintain the proper
air pressure in the shack. Every so
often Pop tapped the pipe where the
moisture froze, and lumps of water
ice clattered out to be returned to the
humidifier. Less often he took out the
CO
2
snow, and measured it, and
dumped an equivalent quantity of
pale-blue liquid oxygen into the liquid
air that had been purified by
cold. The oxygen dissolved. Then the
apparatus reversed itself and supplied
fresh air from the now-enriched
fluid, while the depleted other
tank began to fill up with cold-purified
liquid air.
Outside the shack, jagged stony
pinnacles reared in the starlight, and
craters complained of the bombardment
from space that had made them.
But, outside, nothing ever happened.
Inside, it was quite different.
Working on his memories, one
day Pop made a little sketch. It
helped a great deal. He grew deeply
interested. Writing-material was
scarce, but he spent most of the time
between two particular rocket-landings
getting down on paper exactly
how a child had looked while sleeping,
some fifteen years before. He
remembered with astonishment that
the child had really looked exactly
like that! Later he began a sketch of
his partly-remembered wife. In time—he
had plenty—it became a really
truthful likeness.
The sun rose, and baked the
abomination of desolation which was
the moonscape. Pop Young meticulously
touched up the glittering
triangles which were landing guides
for the Lunar City ships. They glittered
from the thinnest conceivable
layer of magnesium marking-powder.
He checked over the moondozer.
He tended the air apparatus. He did
everything that his job and survival
required. Ungrudgingly.
Then he made more sketches. The
images to be drawn came back more
clearly when he thought of Sattell,
so by keeping Sattell in mind he recovered
the memory of a chair that
had been in his forgotten home.
Then he drew his wife sitting in it,
reading. It felt very good to see her
again. And he speculated about
whether Sattell ever thought of millions
of dollars' worth of new-mined
diamonds knocking about unguarded
in the shack, and he suddenly recollected
clearly the way one of his
children had looked while playing
with her doll. He made a quick
sketch to keep from forgetting that.
There was no purpose in the
sketching, save that he'd lost all his
young manhood through a senseless
crime. He wanted his youth back. He
was recovering it bit by bit. The
occupation made it absurdly easy to
live on the surface of the far side of
the Moon, whether anybody else
could do it or not.
Sattell had no such device for adjusting
to the lunar state of things.
Living on the Moon was bad enough
anyhow, then, but living one mile
underground from Pop Young was
much worse. Sattell clearly remembered
the crime Pop Young hadn't
yet recalled. He considered that Pop
had made no overt attempt to revenge
himself because he planned
some retaliation so horrible and lingering
that it was worth waiting for.
He came to hate Pop with an insane
ferocity. And fear. In his mind the
need to escape became an obsession
on top of the other psychotic states
normal to a Moon-colonist.
But he was helpless. He couldn't
leave. There was Pop. He couldn't
kill Pop. He had no chance—and he
was afraid. The one absurd, irrelevant
thing he could do was write
letters back to Earth. He did that.
He wrote with the desperate, impassioned,
frantic blend of persuasion
and information and genius-like invention
of a prisoner in a high-security
prison, trying to induce someone
to help him escape.
He had friends, of a sort, but for
a long time his letters produced
nothing. The Moon swung in vast
circles about the Earth, and the Earth
swung sedately about the Sun. The
other planets danced their saraband.
The rest of humanity went about its
own affairs with fascinated attention.
But then an event occurred which
bore directly upon Pop Young and
Sattell and Pop Young's missing
years.
Somebody back on Earth promoted
a luxury passenger-line of spaceships
to ply between Earth and
Moon. It looked like a perfect set-up.
Three spacecraft capable of the journey
came into being with attendant
reams of publicity. They promised a
thrill and a new distinction for the
rich. Guided tours to Lunar! The
most expensive and most thrilling
trip in history! One hundred thousand
dollars for a twelve-day cruise
through space, with views of the
Moon's far side and trips through
Lunar City and a landing in Aristarchus,
plus sound-tapes of the journey
and fame hitherto reserved for
honest explorers!
It didn't seem to have anything
to do with Pop or with Sattell. But
it did.
There were just two passenger
tours. The first was fully booked.
But the passengers who paid so highly,
expected to be pleasantly thrilled
and shielded from all reasons for
alarm. And they couldn't be. Something
happens when a self-centered
and complacent individual unsuspectingly
looks out of a spaceship
port and sees the cosmos unshielded
by mists or clouds or other aids to
blindness against reality. It is shattering.
A millionaire cut his throat when
he saw Earth dwindled to a mere
blue-green ball in vastness. He could
not endure his own smallness in the
face of immensity. Not one passenger
disembarked even for Lunar
City. Most of them cowered in their
chairs, hiding their eyes. They were
the simple cases of hysteria. But the
richest girl on Earth, who'd had five
husbands and believed that nothing
could move her—she went into
catatonic withdrawal and neither
saw nor heard nor moved. Two other
passengers sobbed in improvised
strait jackets. The first shipload
started home. Fast.
The second luxury liner took off
with only four passengers and turned
back before reaching the Moon.
Space-pilots could take the strain of
space-flight because they had work
to do. Workers for the lunar mines
could make the trip under heavy
sedation. But it was too early in the
development of space-travel for
pleasure-passengers. They weren't
prepared for the more humbling
facts of life.
Pop heard of the quaint commercial
enterprise through the micro-tapes
put off at the shack for the men
down in the mine. Sattell probably
learned of it the same way. Pop didn't
even think of it again. It seemed
to have nothing to do with him. But
Sattell undoubtedly dealt with it
fully in his desperate writings back
to Earth.
Pop matter-of-factly tended the
shack and the landing field and the
stores for the Big Crack mine. Between-times
he made more drawings
in pursuit of his own private objective.
Quite accidentally, he developed
a certain talent professional artists
might have approved. But he was not
trying to communicate, but to discover.
Drawing—especially with his
mind on Sattell—he found fresh incidents
popping up in his recollection.
Times when he was happy. One
day he remembered the puppy his
children had owned and loved. He
drew it painstakingly—and it was
his again. Thereafter he could remember
it any time he chose. He did
actually recover a completely vanished
past.
He envisioned a way to increase
that recovery. But there was a marked
shortage of artists' materials on the
Moon. All freight had to be hauled
from Earth, on a voyage equal to
rather more than a thousand times
around the equator of the Earth.
Artists' supplies were not often included.
Pop didn't even ask.
He began to explore the area outside
the shack for possible material
no one would think of sending from
Earth. He collected stones of various
sorts, but when warmed up in the
shack they were useless. He found
no strictly lunar material which
would serve for modeling or carving
portraits in the ground. He found
minerals which could be pulverized
and used as pigments, but nothing
suitable for this new adventure in
the recovery of lost youth. He even
considered blasting, to aid his search.
He could. Down in the mine, blasting
was done by soaking carbon black—from
CO
2
—in liquid oxygen, and then
firing it with a spark. It exploded
splendidly. And its fumes were
merely more CO
2
which an air-apparatus
handled easily.
He didn't do any blasting. He didn't
find any signs of the sort of
mineral he required. Marble would
have been perfect, but there is no
marble on the Moon. Naturally! Yet
Pop continued to search absorbedly
for material with which to capture
memory. Sattell still seemed necessary,
but—
Early one lunar morning he was
a good two miles from his shack
when he saw rocket-fumes in the
sky. It was most unlikely. He wasn't
looking for anything of the sort, but
out of the corner of his eye he observed
that something moved. Which
was impossible. He turned his head,
and there were rocket-fumes coming
over the horizon, not in the direction
of Lunar City. Which was more
impossible still.
He stared. A tiny silver rocket to
the westward poured out monstrous
masses of vapor. It decelerated swiftly.
It curved downward. The rockets
checked for an instant, and flamed
again more violently, and checked
once more. This was not an expert
approach. It was a faulty one. Curving
surface-ward in a sharply changing
parabola, the pilot over-corrected
and had to wait to gather down-speed,
and then over-corrected again.
It was an altogether clumsy landing.
The ship was not even perfectly vertical
when it settled not quite in the
landing-area marked by silvery triangles.
One of its tail-fins crumpled
slightly. It tilted a little when fully
landed.
Then nothing happened.
Pop made his way toward it in
the skittering, skating gait one uses
in one-sixth gravity. When he was
within half a mile, an air-lock door
opened in the ship's side. But nothing
came out of the lock. No space-suited
figure. No cargo came drifting
down with the singular deliberation
of falling objects on the Moon.
It was just barely past lunar sunrise
on the far side of the Moon.
Incredibly long and utterly black
shadows stretched across the plain,
and half the rocketship was dazzling
white and half was blacker than
blackness itself. The sun still hung
low indeed in the black, star-speckled
sky. Pop waded through moondust,
raising a trail of slowly settling
powder. He knew only that the ship
didn't come from Lunar City, but
from Earth. He couldn't imagine
why. He did not even wildly connect
it with what—say—Sattell might
have written with desperate plausibility
about greasy-seeming white
crystals out of the mine, knocking
about Pop Young's shack in cannisters
containing a hundred Earth-pounds
weight of richness.
Pop reached the rocketship. He
approached the big tail-fins. On one
of them there were welded ladder-rungs
going up to the opened air-lock
door.
He climbed.
The air-lock was perfectly normal
when he reached it. There was a
glass port in the inner door, and he
saw eyes looking through it at him.
He pulled the outer door shut and
felt the whining vibration of admitted
air. His vacuum suit went slack
about him. The inner door began to
open, and Pop reached up and gave
his helmet the practiced twisting
jerk which removed it.
Then he blinked. There was a red-headed
man in the opened door. He
grinned savagely at Pop. He held a
very nasty hand-weapon trained on
Pop's middle.
"Don't come in!" he said mockingly.
"And I don't give a damn
about how you are. This isn't social.
It's business!"
Pop simply gaped. He couldn't
quite take it in.
"This," snapped the red-headed
man abruptly, "is a stickup!"
Pop's eyes went through the inner
lock-door. He saw that the interior
of the ship was stripped and bare.
But a spiral stairway descended from
some upper compartment. It had a
handrail of pure, transparent, water-clear
plastic. The walls were bare insulation,
but that trace of luxury remained.
Pop gazed at the plastic,
fascinated.
The red-headed man leaned forward,
snarling. He slashed Pop
across the face with the barrel of his
weapon. It drew blood. It was wanton,
savage brutality.
"Pay attention!" snarled the red-headed
man. "A stickup, I said! Get
it? You go get that can of stuff
from the mine! The diamonds!
Bring them here! Understand?"
Pop said numbly: "What the
hell?"
The red-headed man hit him
again. He was nerve-racked, and,
therefore, he wanted to hurt.
"Move!" he rasped. "I want the
diamonds you've got for the ship
from Lunar City! Bring 'em!" Pop
licked blood from his lips and the
man with the weapon raged at him.
"Then phone down to the mine!
Tell Sattell I'm here and he can
come on up! Tell him to bring any
more diamonds they've dug up since
the stuff you've got!"
He leaned forward. His face was
only inches from Pop Young's. It
was seamed and hard-bitten and
nerve-racked. But any man would be
quivering if he wasn't used to space
or the feel of one-sixth gravity on
the Moon. He panted:
"And get it straight! You try
any tricks and we take off! We
swing over your shack! The rocket-blast
smashes it! We burn you
down! Then we swing over the cable
down to the mine and the rocket-flame
melts it! You die and everybody
in the mine besides! No tricks!
We didn't come here for nothing!"
He twitched all over. Then he
struck cruelly again at Pop Young's
face. He seemed filled with fury, at
least partly hysterical. It was the tension
that space-travel—then, at its
beginning—produced. It was meaningless
savagery due to terror. But,
of course, Pop was helpless to resent
it. There were no weapons on the
Moon and the mention of Sattell's
name showed the uselessness of bluff.
He'd pictured the complete set-up
by the edge of the Big Crack. Pop
could do nothing.
The red-headed man checked
himself, panting. He drew back and
slammed the inner lock-door. There
was the sound of pumping.
Pop put his helmet back on and
sealed it. The outer door opened.
Outrushing air tugged at Pop. After
a second or two he went out and
climbed down the welded-on ladder-bars
to the ground.
He headed back toward his shack.
Somehow, the mention of Sattell had
made his mind work better. It always
did. He began painstakingly to
put things together. The red-headed
man knew the routine here in every
detail. He knew Sattell. That part
was simple. Sattell had planned this
multi-million-dollar coup, as a man
in prison might plan his break. The
stripped interior of the ship identified
it.
It was one of the unsuccessful
luxury-liners sold for scrap. Or perhaps
it was stolen for the journey
here. Sattell's associates had had to
steal or somehow get the fuel, and
somehow find a pilot. But there were
diamonds worth at least five million
dollars waiting for them, and the
whole job might not have called for
more than two men—with Sattell as
a third. According to the economics
of crime, it was feasible. Anyhow it
was being done.
Pop reached the dust-heap which
was his shack and went in the air
lock. Inside, he went to the vision-phone
and called the mine-colony
down in the Crack. He gave the
message he'd been told to pass on.
Sattell to come up, with what diamonds
had been dug since the
regular cannister was sent up for the
Lunar City ship that would be due
presently. Otherwise the ship on the
landing strip would destroy shack
and Pop and the colony together.
"I'd guess," said Pop painstakingly,
"that Sattell figured it out. He's
probably got some sort of gun to
keep you from holding him down
there. But he won't know his friends
are here—not right this minute he
won't."
A shaking voice asked questions
from the vision-phone.
"No," said Pop, "they'll do it anyhow.
If we were able to tell about
'em, they'd be chased. But if I'm
dead and the shacks smashed and
the cable burnt through, they'll be
back on Earth long before a new
cable's been got and let down to you.
So they'll do all they can no matter
what I do." He added, "I wouldn't
tell Sattell a thing about it, if I were
you. It'll save trouble. Just let him
keep on waiting for this to happen.
It'll save you trouble."
Another shaky question.
"Me?" asked Pop. "Oh, I'm going
to raise what hell I can. There's
some stuff in that ship I want."
He switched off the phone. He
went over to his air apparatus. He
took down the cannister of diamonds
which were worth five millions or
more back on Earth. He found a
bucket. He dumped the diamonds
casually into it. They floated downward
with great deliberation and
surged from side to side like a liquid
when they stopped. One-sixth gravity.
Pop regarded his drawings meditatively.
A sketch of his wife as he
now remembered her. It was very
good to remember. A drawing of his
two children, playing together. He
looked forward to remembering
much more about them. He grinned.
"That stair-rail," he said in deep
satisfaction. "That'll do it!"
He tore bed linen from his bunk
and worked on the emptied cannister.
It was a double container with a
thermware interior lining. Even on
Earth newly-mined diamonds sometimes
fly to pieces from internal
stress. On the Moon, it was not desirable
that diamonds be exposed to
repeated violent changes of temperature.
So a thermware-lined cannister
kept them at mine-temperature once
they were warmed to touchability.
Pop packed the cotton cloth in the
container. He hurried a little, because
the men in the rocket were shaky and
might not practice patience. He took
a small emergency-lamp from his
spare spacesuit. He carefully cracked
its bulb, exposing the filament within.
He put the lamp on top of the
cotton and sprinkled magnesium
marking-powder over everything.
Then he went to the air-apparatus
and took out a flask of the liquid
oxygen used to keep his breathing-air
in balance. He poured the frigid,
pale-blue stuff into the cotton. He
saturated it.
All the inside of the shack was
foggy when he finished. Then he
pushed the cannister-top down. He
breathed a sigh of relief when it was
in place. He'd arranged for it to
break a frozen-brittle switch as it
descended. When it came off, the
switch would light the lamp with its
bare filament. There was powdered
magnesium in contact with it and
liquid oxygen all about.
He went out of the shack by the
air lock. On the way, thinking about
Sattell, he suddenly recovered a completely
new memory. On their first
wedding anniversary, so long ago,
he and his wife had gone out to
dinner to celebrate. He remembered
how she looked: the almost-smug
joy they shared that they would be
together for always, with one complete
year for proof.
Pop reflected hungrily that it was
something else to be made permanent
and inspected from time to time.
But he wanted more than a drawing
of this! He wanted to make the memory
permanent and to extend it—
If it had not been for his vacuum
suit and the cannister he carried, Pop
would have rubbed his hands.
Tall, jagged crater-walls rose
from the lunar plain. Monstrous, extended
inky shadows stretched
enormous distances, utterly black.
The sun, like a glowing octopod,
floated low at the edge of things and
seemed to hate all creation.
Pop reached the rocket. He
climbed the welded ladder-rungs to
the air lock. He closed the door. Air
whined. His suit sagged against his
body. He took off his helmet.
When the red-headed man opened
the inner door, the hand-weapon
shook and trembled. Pop said
calmly:
"Now I've got to go handle the
hoist, if Sattell's coming up from
the mine. If I don't do it, he don't
come up."
The red-headed man snarled. But
his eyes were on the cannister whose
contents should weigh a hundred
pounds on Earth.
"Any tricks," he rasped, "and you
know what happens!"
"Yeah," said Pop.
He stolidly put his helmet back
on. But his eyes went past the red-headed
man to the stair that wound
down, inside the ship, from some
compartment above. The stair-rail was
pure, clear, water-white plastic, not
less than three inches thick. There
was a lot of it!
The inner door closed. Pop opened
the outer. Air rushed out. He
climbed painstakingly down to the
ground. He started back toward the
shack.
There was the most luridly bright
of all possible flashes. There was no
sound, of course. But something
flamed very brightly, and the ground
thumped under Pop Young's vacuum
boots. He turned.
The rocketship was still in the act
of flying apart. It had been a splendid
explosion. Of course cotton sheeting
in liquid oxygen is not quite as
good an explosive as carbon-black,
which they used down in the mine.
Even with magnesium powder to
start the flame when a bare light-filament
ignited it, the cannister-bomb
hadn't equaled—say—T.N.T.
But the ship had fuel on board for
the trip back to Earth. And it blew,
too. It would be minutes before all
the fragments of the ship returned
to the Moon's surface. On the Moon,
things fall slowly.
Pop didn't wait. He searched
hopefully. Once a mass of steel plating
fell only yards from him, but it
did not interrupt his search.
When he went into the shack, he
grinned to himself. The call-light of
the vision-phone flickered wildly.
When he took off his helmet the bell
clanged incessantly. He answered. A
shaking voice from the mining-colony
panted:
"We felt a shock! What happened?
What do we do?"
"Don't do a thing," advised Pop.
"It's all right. I blew up the ship and
everything's all right. I wouldn't
even mention it to Sattell if I were
you."
He grinned happily down at a section
of plastic stair-rail he'd found
not too far from where the ship exploded.
When the man down in the
mine cut off, Pop got out of his
vacuum suit in a hurry. He placed
the plastic zestfully on the table
where he'd been restricted to drawing
pictures of his wife and children
in order to recover memories of
them.
He began to plan, gloatingly, the
thing he would carve out of a four-inch
section of the plastic. When it
was carved, he'd paint it. While he
worked, he'd think of Sattell, because
that was the way to get back the
missing portions of his life—the
parts Sattell had managed to get
away from him. He'd get back more
than ever, now!
He didn't wonder what he'd do
if he ever remembered the crime
Sattell had committed. He felt, somehow,
that he wouldn't get that back
until he'd recovered all the rest.
Gloating, it was amusing to remember
what people used to call
such art-works as he planned, when
carved by other lonely men in other
faraway places. They called those
sculptures scrimshaw.
But they were a lot more than
that!
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Astounding Science Fiction
September
1955. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | obsessive | delirious | ambivalent | vengeful | 0 |
23791_S6420G0B_8 | Which term best describes Pop's attitude toward his lunar occupation? | SCRIMSHAW
The old man
just wanted to get back his
memory—and the methods he used were
gently hellish, from the viewpoint of the
others....
BY MURRAY LEINSTER
Illustrated by Freas
Pop Young was the one known
man who could stand life on the
surface of the Moon's far side, and,
therefore, he occupied the shack on
the Big Crack's edge, above the
mining colony there. Some people
said that no normal man could do
it, and mentioned the scar of a
ghastly head-wound to explain his
ability. One man partly guessed the
secret, but only partly. His name was
Sattell and he had reason not to
talk. Pop Young alone knew the
whole truth, and he kept his mouth
shut, too. It wasn't anybody else's
business.
The shack and the job he filled
were located in the medieval notion
of the physical appearance of hell.
By day the environment was heat and
torment. By night—lunar night, of
course, and lunar day—it was frigidity
and horror. Once in two weeks
Earth-time a rocketship came around
the horizon from Lunar City with
stores for the colony deep underground.
Pop received the stores and
took care of them. He handed over
the product of the mine, to be forwarded
to Earth. The rocket went
away again. Come nightfall Pop
lowered the supplies down the long
cable into the Big Crack to the colony
far down inside, and freshened up
the landing field marks with magnesium
marking-powder if a rocket-blast
had blurred them. That was
fundamentally all he had to do. But
without him the mine down in the
Crack would have had to shut
down.
The Crack, of course, was that
gaping rocky fault which stretches
nine hundred miles, jaggedly, over
the side of the Moon that Earth
never sees. There is one stretch where
it is a yawning gulf a full half-mile
wide and unguessably deep. Where
Pop Young's shack stood it was only
a hundred yards, but the colony was
a full mile down, in one wall. There
is nothing like it on Earth, of course.
When it was first found, scientists
descended into it to examine the exposed
rock-strata and learn the history
of the Moon before its craters
were made. But they found more
than history. They found the reason
for the colony and the rocket landing
field and the shack.
The reason for Pop was something
else.
The shack stood a hundred feet
from the Big Crack's edge. It looked
like a dust-heap thirty feet high, and
it was. The outside was surface
moondust, piled over a tiny dome to
be insulation against the cold of
night and shadow and the furnace
heat of day. Pop lived in it all alone,
and in his spare time he worked
industriously at recovering some
missing portions of his life that Sattell
had managed to take away from
him.
He thought often of Sattell, down
in the colony underground. There
were galleries and tunnels and living-quarters
down there. There were
air-tight bulkheads for safety, and a
hydroponic garden to keep the air
fresh, and all sorts of things to make
life possible for men under if not
on the Moon.
But it wasn't fun, even underground.
In the Moon's slight gravity,
a man is really adjusted to existence
when he has a well-developed case
of agoraphobia. With such an aid, a
man can get into a tiny, coffinlike
cubbyhole, and feel solidity above
and below and around him, and
happily tell himself that it feels delicious.
Sometimes it does.
But Sattell couldn't comfort himself
so easily. He knew about Pop,
up on the surface. He'd shipped out,
whimpering, to the Moon to get far
away from Pop, and Pop was just
about a mile overhead and there was
no way to get around him. It was
difficult to get away from the mine,
anyhow. It doesn't take too long for
the low gravity to tear a man's
nerves to shreds. He has to develop
kinks in his head to survive. And
those kinks—
The first men to leave the colony
had to be knocked cold and shipped
out unconscious. They'd been underground—and
in low gravity—long
enough to be utterly unable to face
the idea of open spaces. Even now
there were some who had to be carried,
but there were some tougher
ones who were able to walk to the
rocketship if Pop put a tarpaulin
over their heads so they didn't have
to see the sky. In any case Pop was
essential, either for carrying or
guidance.
Sattell got the shakes when he
thought of Pop, and Pop rather
probably knew it. Of course, by the
time he took the job tending the
shack, he was pretty certain about
Sattell. The facts spoke for themselves.
Pop had come back to consciousness
in a hospital with a great
wound in his head and no memory
of anything that had happened before
that moment. It was not that his
identity was in question. When he
was stronger, the doctors told him
who he was, and as gently as possible
what had happened to his wife
and children. They'd been murdered
after he was seemingly killed defending
them. But he didn't remember
a thing. Not then. It was
something of a blessing.
But when he was physically recovered
he set about trying to pick
up the threads of the life he could
no longer remember. He met Sattell
quite by accident. Sattell looked familiar.
Pop eagerly tried to ask him
questions. And Sattell turned gray
and frantically denied that he'd ever
seen Pop before.
All of which happened back on
Earth and a long time ago. It seemed
to Pop that the sight of Sattell had
brought back some vague and cloudy
memories. They were not sharp,
though, and he hunted up Sattell
again to find out if he was right.
And Sattell went into panic when
he returned.
Nowadays, by the Big Crack, Pop
wasn't so insistent on seeing Sattell,
but he was deeply concerned with
the recovery of the memories that
Sattell helped bring back. Pop was
a highly conscientious man. He took
good care of his job. There was a
warning-bell in the shack, and when
a rocketship from Lunar City got
above the horizon and could send a
tight beam, the gong clanged loudly,
and Pop got into a vacuum-suit
and went out the air lock. He usually
reached the moondozer about the
time the ship began to brake for
landing, and he watched it come in.
He saw the silver needle in the
sky fighting momentum above a line
of jagged crater-walls. It slowed, and
slowed, and curved down as it drew
nearer. The pilot killed all forward
motion just above the field and came
steadily and smoothly down to land
between the silvery triangles that
marked the landing place.
Instantly the rockets cut off,
drums of fuel and air and food came
out of the cargo-hatch and Pop swept
forward with the dozer. It was a
miniature tractor with a gigantic
scoop in front. He pushed a great
mound of talc-fine dust before him
to cover up the cargo. It was necessary.
With freight costing what it
did, fuel and air and food came
frozen solid, in containers barely
thicker than foil. While they stayed
at space-shadow temperature, the foil
would hold anything. And a cover of
insulating moondust with vacuum
between the grains kept even air
frozen solid, though in sunlight.
At such times Pop hardly thought
of Sattell. He knew he had plenty
of time for that. He'd started to follow
Sattell knowing what had happened
to his wife and children, but
it was hearsay only. He had no memory
of them at all. But Sattell stirred
the lost memories. At first Pop followed
absorbedly from city to city,
to recover the years that had been
wiped out by an axe-blow. He did
recover a good deal. When Sattell
fled to another continent, Pop followed
because he had some distinct
memories of his wife—and the way
he'd felt about her—and some fugitive
mental images of his children.
When Sattell frenziedly tried to deny
knowledge of the murder in Tangier,
Pop had come to remember both his
children and some of the happiness
of his married life.
Even when Sattell—whimpering—signed
up for Lunar City, Pop tracked
him. By that time he was quite
sure that Sattell was the man who'd
killed his family. If so, Sattell had
profited by less than two days' pay
for wiping out everything that Pop
possessed. But Pop wanted it back.
He couldn't prove Sattell's guilt.
There was no evidence. In any case,
he didn't really want Sattell to die.
If he did, there'd be no way to recover
more lost memories.
Sometimes, in the shack on the far
side of the Moon, Pop Young had
odd fancies about Sattell. There was
the mine, for example. In each two
Earth-weeks of working, the mine-colony
nearly filled up a three-gallon
cannister with greasy-seeming white
crystals shaped like two pyramids
base to base. The filled cannister
would weigh a hundred pounds on
Earth. Here it weighed eighteen. But
on Earth its contents would be computed
in carats, and a hundred
pounds was worth millions. Yet here
on the Moon Pop kept a waiting cannister
on a shelf in his tiny dome,
behind the air-apparatus. It rattled
if he shook it, and it was worth no
more than so many pebbles. But
sometimes Pop wondered if Sattell
ever thought of the value of the
mine's production. If he would kill
a woman and two children and think
he'd killed a man for no more than
a hundred dollars, what enormity
would he commit for a three-gallon
quantity of uncut diamonds?
But he did not dwell on such
speculation. The sun rose very, very
slowly in what by convention was
called the east. It took nearly two
hours to urge its disk above the
horizon, and it burned terribly in
emptiness for fourteen times twenty-four
hours before sunset. Then there
was night, and for three hundred
and thirty-six consecutive hours there
were only stars overhead and the
sky was a hole so terrible that a man
who looked up into it—what with
the nagging sensation of one-sixth
gravity—tended to lose all confidence
in the stability of things. Most men
immediately found it hysterically necessary
to seize hold of something
solid to keep from falling upward.
But nothing felt solid. Everything
fell, too. Wherefore most men tended
to scream.
But not Pop. He'd come to the
Moon in the first place because Sattell
was here. Near Sattell, he found
memories of times when he was a
young man with a young wife who
loved him extravagantly. Then pictures
of his children came out of
emptiness and grew sharp and clear.
He found that he loved them very
dearly. And when he was near Sattell
he literally recovered them—in
the sense that he came to know new
things about them and had new
memories of them every day. He
hadn't yet remembered the crime
which lost them to him. Until he
did—and the fact possessed a certain
grisly humor—Pop didn't even hate
Sattell. He simply wanted to be near
him because it enabled him to recover
new and vivid parts of his
youth that had been lost.
Otherwise, he was wholly matter-of-fact—certainly
so for the far side
of the Moon. He was a rather fussy
housekeeper. The shack above the
Big Crack's rim was as tidy as any
lighthouse or fur-trapper's cabin. He
tended his air-apparatus with a fine
precision. It was perfectly simple. In
the shadow of the shack he had an
unfailing source of extreme low
temperature. Air from the shack
flowed into a shadow-chilled pipe.
Moisture condensed out of it here,
and CO
2
froze solidly out of it there,
and on beyond it collected as restless,
transparent liquid air. At the same
time, liquid air from another tank
evaporated to maintain the proper
air pressure in the shack. Every so
often Pop tapped the pipe where the
moisture froze, and lumps of water
ice clattered out to be returned to the
humidifier. Less often he took out the
CO
2
snow, and measured it, and
dumped an equivalent quantity of
pale-blue liquid oxygen into the liquid
air that had been purified by
cold. The oxygen dissolved. Then the
apparatus reversed itself and supplied
fresh air from the now-enriched
fluid, while the depleted other
tank began to fill up with cold-purified
liquid air.
Outside the shack, jagged stony
pinnacles reared in the starlight, and
craters complained of the bombardment
from space that had made them.
But, outside, nothing ever happened.
Inside, it was quite different.
Working on his memories, one
day Pop made a little sketch. It
helped a great deal. He grew deeply
interested. Writing-material was
scarce, but he spent most of the time
between two particular rocket-landings
getting down on paper exactly
how a child had looked while sleeping,
some fifteen years before. He
remembered with astonishment that
the child had really looked exactly
like that! Later he began a sketch of
his partly-remembered wife. In time—he
had plenty—it became a really
truthful likeness.
The sun rose, and baked the
abomination of desolation which was
the moonscape. Pop Young meticulously
touched up the glittering
triangles which were landing guides
for the Lunar City ships. They glittered
from the thinnest conceivable
layer of magnesium marking-powder.
He checked over the moondozer.
He tended the air apparatus. He did
everything that his job and survival
required. Ungrudgingly.
Then he made more sketches. The
images to be drawn came back more
clearly when he thought of Sattell,
so by keeping Sattell in mind he recovered
the memory of a chair that
had been in his forgotten home.
Then he drew his wife sitting in it,
reading. It felt very good to see her
again. And he speculated about
whether Sattell ever thought of millions
of dollars' worth of new-mined
diamonds knocking about unguarded
in the shack, and he suddenly recollected
clearly the way one of his
children had looked while playing
with her doll. He made a quick
sketch to keep from forgetting that.
There was no purpose in the
sketching, save that he'd lost all his
young manhood through a senseless
crime. He wanted his youth back. He
was recovering it bit by bit. The
occupation made it absurdly easy to
live on the surface of the far side of
the Moon, whether anybody else
could do it or not.
Sattell had no such device for adjusting
to the lunar state of things.
Living on the Moon was bad enough
anyhow, then, but living one mile
underground from Pop Young was
much worse. Sattell clearly remembered
the crime Pop Young hadn't
yet recalled. He considered that Pop
had made no overt attempt to revenge
himself because he planned
some retaliation so horrible and lingering
that it was worth waiting for.
He came to hate Pop with an insane
ferocity. And fear. In his mind the
need to escape became an obsession
on top of the other psychotic states
normal to a Moon-colonist.
But he was helpless. He couldn't
leave. There was Pop. He couldn't
kill Pop. He had no chance—and he
was afraid. The one absurd, irrelevant
thing he could do was write
letters back to Earth. He did that.
He wrote with the desperate, impassioned,
frantic blend of persuasion
and information and genius-like invention
of a prisoner in a high-security
prison, trying to induce someone
to help him escape.
He had friends, of a sort, but for
a long time his letters produced
nothing. The Moon swung in vast
circles about the Earth, and the Earth
swung sedately about the Sun. The
other planets danced their saraband.
The rest of humanity went about its
own affairs with fascinated attention.
But then an event occurred which
bore directly upon Pop Young and
Sattell and Pop Young's missing
years.
Somebody back on Earth promoted
a luxury passenger-line of spaceships
to ply between Earth and
Moon. It looked like a perfect set-up.
Three spacecraft capable of the journey
came into being with attendant
reams of publicity. They promised a
thrill and a new distinction for the
rich. Guided tours to Lunar! The
most expensive and most thrilling
trip in history! One hundred thousand
dollars for a twelve-day cruise
through space, with views of the
Moon's far side and trips through
Lunar City and a landing in Aristarchus,
plus sound-tapes of the journey
and fame hitherto reserved for
honest explorers!
It didn't seem to have anything
to do with Pop or with Sattell. But
it did.
There were just two passenger
tours. The first was fully booked.
But the passengers who paid so highly,
expected to be pleasantly thrilled
and shielded from all reasons for
alarm. And they couldn't be. Something
happens when a self-centered
and complacent individual unsuspectingly
looks out of a spaceship
port and sees the cosmos unshielded
by mists or clouds or other aids to
blindness against reality. It is shattering.
A millionaire cut his throat when
he saw Earth dwindled to a mere
blue-green ball in vastness. He could
not endure his own smallness in the
face of immensity. Not one passenger
disembarked even for Lunar
City. Most of them cowered in their
chairs, hiding their eyes. They were
the simple cases of hysteria. But the
richest girl on Earth, who'd had five
husbands and believed that nothing
could move her—she went into
catatonic withdrawal and neither
saw nor heard nor moved. Two other
passengers sobbed in improvised
strait jackets. The first shipload
started home. Fast.
The second luxury liner took off
with only four passengers and turned
back before reaching the Moon.
Space-pilots could take the strain of
space-flight because they had work
to do. Workers for the lunar mines
could make the trip under heavy
sedation. But it was too early in the
development of space-travel for
pleasure-passengers. They weren't
prepared for the more humbling
facts of life.
Pop heard of the quaint commercial
enterprise through the micro-tapes
put off at the shack for the men
down in the mine. Sattell probably
learned of it the same way. Pop didn't
even think of it again. It seemed
to have nothing to do with him. But
Sattell undoubtedly dealt with it
fully in his desperate writings back
to Earth.
Pop matter-of-factly tended the
shack and the landing field and the
stores for the Big Crack mine. Between-times
he made more drawings
in pursuit of his own private objective.
Quite accidentally, he developed
a certain talent professional artists
might have approved. But he was not
trying to communicate, but to discover.
Drawing—especially with his
mind on Sattell—he found fresh incidents
popping up in his recollection.
Times when he was happy. One
day he remembered the puppy his
children had owned and loved. He
drew it painstakingly—and it was
his again. Thereafter he could remember
it any time he chose. He did
actually recover a completely vanished
past.
He envisioned a way to increase
that recovery. But there was a marked
shortage of artists' materials on the
Moon. All freight had to be hauled
from Earth, on a voyage equal to
rather more than a thousand times
around the equator of the Earth.
Artists' supplies were not often included.
Pop didn't even ask.
He began to explore the area outside
the shack for possible material
no one would think of sending from
Earth. He collected stones of various
sorts, but when warmed up in the
shack they were useless. He found
no strictly lunar material which
would serve for modeling or carving
portraits in the ground. He found
minerals which could be pulverized
and used as pigments, but nothing
suitable for this new adventure in
the recovery of lost youth. He even
considered blasting, to aid his search.
He could. Down in the mine, blasting
was done by soaking carbon black—from
CO
2
—in liquid oxygen, and then
firing it with a spark. It exploded
splendidly. And its fumes were
merely more CO
2
which an air-apparatus
handled easily.
He didn't do any blasting. He didn't
find any signs of the sort of
mineral he required. Marble would
have been perfect, but there is no
marble on the Moon. Naturally! Yet
Pop continued to search absorbedly
for material with which to capture
memory. Sattell still seemed necessary,
but—
Early one lunar morning he was
a good two miles from his shack
when he saw rocket-fumes in the
sky. It was most unlikely. He wasn't
looking for anything of the sort, but
out of the corner of his eye he observed
that something moved. Which
was impossible. He turned his head,
and there were rocket-fumes coming
over the horizon, not in the direction
of Lunar City. Which was more
impossible still.
He stared. A tiny silver rocket to
the westward poured out monstrous
masses of vapor. It decelerated swiftly.
It curved downward. The rockets
checked for an instant, and flamed
again more violently, and checked
once more. This was not an expert
approach. It was a faulty one. Curving
surface-ward in a sharply changing
parabola, the pilot over-corrected
and had to wait to gather down-speed,
and then over-corrected again.
It was an altogether clumsy landing.
The ship was not even perfectly vertical
when it settled not quite in the
landing-area marked by silvery triangles.
One of its tail-fins crumpled
slightly. It tilted a little when fully
landed.
Then nothing happened.
Pop made his way toward it in
the skittering, skating gait one uses
in one-sixth gravity. When he was
within half a mile, an air-lock door
opened in the ship's side. But nothing
came out of the lock. No space-suited
figure. No cargo came drifting
down with the singular deliberation
of falling objects on the Moon.
It was just barely past lunar sunrise
on the far side of the Moon.
Incredibly long and utterly black
shadows stretched across the plain,
and half the rocketship was dazzling
white and half was blacker than
blackness itself. The sun still hung
low indeed in the black, star-speckled
sky. Pop waded through moondust,
raising a trail of slowly settling
powder. He knew only that the ship
didn't come from Lunar City, but
from Earth. He couldn't imagine
why. He did not even wildly connect
it with what—say—Sattell might
have written with desperate plausibility
about greasy-seeming white
crystals out of the mine, knocking
about Pop Young's shack in cannisters
containing a hundred Earth-pounds
weight of richness.
Pop reached the rocketship. He
approached the big tail-fins. On one
of them there were welded ladder-rungs
going up to the opened air-lock
door.
He climbed.
The air-lock was perfectly normal
when he reached it. There was a
glass port in the inner door, and he
saw eyes looking through it at him.
He pulled the outer door shut and
felt the whining vibration of admitted
air. His vacuum suit went slack
about him. The inner door began to
open, and Pop reached up and gave
his helmet the practiced twisting
jerk which removed it.
Then he blinked. There was a red-headed
man in the opened door. He
grinned savagely at Pop. He held a
very nasty hand-weapon trained on
Pop's middle.
"Don't come in!" he said mockingly.
"And I don't give a damn
about how you are. This isn't social.
It's business!"
Pop simply gaped. He couldn't
quite take it in.
"This," snapped the red-headed
man abruptly, "is a stickup!"
Pop's eyes went through the inner
lock-door. He saw that the interior
of the ship was stripped and bare.
But a spiral stairway descended from
some upper compartment. It had a
handrail of pure, transparent, water-clear
plastic. The walls were bare insulation,
but that trace of luxury remained.
Pop gazed at the plastic,
fascinated.
The red-headed man leaned forward,
snarling. He slashed Pop
across the face with the barrel of his
weapon. It drew blood. It was wanton,
savage brutality.
"Pay attention!" snarled the red-headed
man. "A stickup, I said! Get
it? You go get that can of stuff
from the mine! The diamonds!
Bring them here! Understand?"
Pop said numbly: "What the
hell?"
The red-headed man hit him
again. He was nerve-racked, and,
therefore, he wanted to hurt.
"Move!" he rasped. "I want the
diamonds you've got for the ship
from Lunar City! Bring 'em!" Pop
licked blood from his lips and the
man with the weapon raged at him.
"Then phone down to the mine!
Tell Sattell I'm here and he can
come on up! Tell him to bring any
more diamonds they've dug up since
the stuff you've got!"
He leaned forward. His face was
only inches from Pop Young's. It
was seamed and hard-bitten and
nerve-racked. But any man would be
quivering if he wasn't used to space
or the feel of one-sixth gravity on
the Moon. He panted:
"And get it straight! You try
any tricks and we take off! We
swing over your shack! The rocket-blast
smashes it! We burn you
down! Then we swing over the cable
down to the mine and the rocket-flame
melts it! You die and everybody
in the mine besides! No tricks!
We didn't come here for nothing!"
He twitched all over. Then he
struck cruelly again at Pop Young's
face. He seemed filled with fury, at
least partly hysterical. It was the tension
that space-travel—then, at its
beginning—produced. It was meaningless
savagery due to terror. But,
of course, Pop was helpless to resent
it. There were no weapons on the
Moon and the mention of Sattell's
name showed the uselessness of bluff.
He'd pictured the complete set-up
by the edge of the Big Crack. Pop
could do nothing.
The red-headed man checked
himself, panting. He drew back and
slammed the inner lock-door. There
was the sound of pumping.
Pop put his helmet back on and
sealed it. The outer door opened.
Outrushing air tugged at Pop. After
a second or two he went out and
climbed down the welded-on ladder-bars
to the ground.
He headed back toward his shack.
Somehow, the mention of Sattell had
made his mind work better. It always
did. He began painstakingly to
put things together. The red-headed
man knew the routine here in every
detail. He knew Sattell. That part
was simple. Sattell had planned this
multi-million-dollar coup, as a man
in prison might plan his break. The
stripped interior of the ship identified
it.
It was one of the unsuccessful
luxury-liners sold for scrap. Or perhaps
it was stolen for the journey
here. Sattell's associates had had to
steal or somehow get the fuel, and
somehow find a pilot. But there were
diamonds worth at least five million
dollars waiting for them, and the
whole job might not have called for
more than two men—with Sattell as
a third. According to the economics
of crime, it was feasible. Anyhow it
was being done.
Pop reached the dust-heap which
was his shack and went in the air
lock. Inside, he went to the vision-phone
and called the mine-colony
down in the Crack. He gave the
message he'd been told to pass on.
Sattell to come up, with what diamonds
had been dug since the
regular cannister was sent up for the
Lunar City ship that would be due
presently. Otherwise the ship on the
landing strip would destroy shack
and Pop and the colony together.
"I'd guess," said Pop painstakingly,
"that Sattell figured it out. He's
probably got some sort of gun to
keep you from holding him down
there. But he won't know his friends
are here—not right this minute he
won't."
A shaking voice asked questions
from the vision-phone.
"No," said Pop, "they'll do it anyhow.
If we were able to tell about
'em, they'd be chased. But if I'm
dead and the shacks smashed and
the cable burnt through, they'll be
back on Earth long before a new
cable's been got and let down to you.
So they'll do all they can no matter
what I do." He added, "I wouldn't
tell Sattell a thing about it, if I were
you. It'll save trouble. Just let him
keep on waiting for this to happen.
It'll save you trouble."
Another shaky question.
"Me?" asked Pop. "Oh, I'm going
to raise what hell I can. There's
some stuff in that ship I want."
He switched off the phone. He
went over to his air apparatus. He
took down the cannister of diamonds
which were worth five millions or
more back on Earth. He found a
bucket. He dumped the diamonds
casually into it. They floated downward
with great deliberation and
surged from side to side like a liquid
when they stopped. One-sixth gravity.
Pop regarded his drawings meditatively.
A sketch of his wife as he
now remembered her. It was very
good to remember. A drawing of his
two children, playing together. He
looked forward to remembering
much more about them. He grinned.
"That stair-rail," he said in deep
satisfaction. "That'll do it!"
He tore bed linen from his bunk
and worked on the emptied cannister.
It was a double container with a
thermware interior lining. Even on
Earth newly-mined diamonds sometimes
fly to pieces from internal
stress. On the Moon, it was not desirable
that diamonds be exposed to
repeated violent changes of temperature.
So a thermware-lined cannister
kept them at mine-temperature once
they were warmed to touchability.
Pop packed the cotton cloth in the
container. He hurried a little, because
the men in the rocket were shaky and
might not practice patience. He took
a small emergency-lamp from his
spare spacesuit. He carefully cracked
its bulb, exposing the filament within.
He put the lamp on top of the
cotton and sprinkled magnesium
marking-powder over everything.
Then he went to the air-apparatus
and took out a flask of the liquid
oxygen used to keep his breathing-air
in balance. He poured the frigid,
pale-blue stuff into the cotton. He
saturated it.
All the inside of the shack was
foggy when he finished. Then he
pushed the cannister-top down. He
breathed a sigh of relief when it was
in place. He'd arranged for it to
break a frozen-brittle switch as it
descended. When it came off, the
switch would light the lamp with its
bare filament. There was powdered
magnesium in contact with it and
liquid oxygen all about.
He went out of the shack by the
air lock. On the way, thinking about
Sattell, he suddenly recovered a completely
new memory. On their first
wedding anniversary, so long ago,
he and his wife had gone out to
dinner to celebrate. He remembered
how she looked: the almost-smug
joy they shared that they would be
together for always, with one complete
year for proof.
Pop reflected hungrily that it was
something else to be made permanent
and inspected from time to time.
But he wanted more than a drawing
of this! He wanted to make the memory
permanent and to extend it—
If it had not been for his vacuum
suit and the cannister he carried, Pop
would have rubbed his hands.
Tall, jagged crater-walls rose
from the lunar plain. Monstrous, extended
inky shadows stretched
enormous distances, utterly black.
The sun, like a glowing octopod,
floated low at the edge of things and
seemed to hate all creation.
Pop reached the rocket. He
climbed the welded ladder-rungs to
the air lock. He closed the door. Air
whined. His suit sagged against his
body. He took off his helmet.
When the red-headed man opened
the inner door, the hand-weapon
shook and trembled. Pop said
calmly:
"Now I've got to go handle the
hoist, if Sattell's coming up from
the mine. If I don't do it, he don't
come up."
The red-headed man snarled. But
his eyes were on the cannister whose
contents should weigh a hundred
pounds on Earth.
"Any tricks," he rasped, "and you
know what happens!"
"Yeah," said Pop.
He stolidly put his helmet back
on. But his eyes went past the red-headed
man to the stair that wound
down, inside the ship, from some
compartment above. The stair-rail was
pure, clear, water-white plastic, not
less than three inches thick. There
was a lot of it!
The inner door closed. Pop opened
the outer. Air rushed out. He
climbed painstakingly down to the
ground. He started back toward the
shack.
There was the most luridly bright
of all possible flashes. There was no
sound, of course. But something
flamed very brightly, and the ground
thumped under Pop Young's vacuum
boots. He turned.
The rocketship was still in the act
of flying apart. It had been a splendid
explosion. Of course cotton sheeting
in liquid oxygen is not quite as
good an explosive as carbon-black,
which they used down in the mine.
Even with magnesium powder to
start the flame when a bare light-filament
ignited it, the cannister-bomb
hadn't equaled—say—T.N.T.
But the ship had fuel on board for
the trip back to Earth. And it blew,
too. It would be minutes before all
the fragments of the ship returned
to the Moon's surface. On the Moon,
things fall slowly.
Pop didn't wait. He searched
hopefully. Once a mass of steel plating
fell only yards from him, but it
did not interrupt his search.
When he went into the shack, he
grinned to himself. The call-light of
the vision-phone flickered wildly.
When he took off his helmet the bell
clanged incessantly. He answered. A
shaking voice from the mining-colony
panted:
"We felt a shock! What happened?
What do we do?"
"Don't do a thing," advised Pop.
"It's all right. I blew up the ship and
everything's all right. I wouldn't
even mention it to Sattell if I were
you."
He grinned happily down at a section
of plastic stair-rail he'd found
not too far from where the ship exploded.
When the man down in the
mine cut off, Pop got out of his
vacuum suit in a hurry. He placed
the plastic zestfully on the table
where he'd been restricted to drawing
pictures of his wife and children
in order to recover memories of
them.
He began to plan, gloatingly, the
thing he would carve out of a four-inch
section of the plastic. When it
was carved, he'd paint it. While he
worked, he'd think of Sattell, because
that was the way to get back the
missing portions of his life—the
parts Sattell had managed to get
away from him. He'd get back more
than ever, now!
He didn't wonder what he'd do
if he ever remembered the crime
Sattell had committed. He felt, somehow,
that he wouldn't get that back
until he'd recovered all the rest.
Gloating, it was amusing to remember
what people used to call
such art-works as he planned, when
carved by other lonely men in other
faraway places. They called those
sculptures scrimshaw.
But they were a lot more than
that!
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Astounding Science Fiction
September
1955. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | methodical | unselfish | passionate | resentful | 0 |
23791_S6420G0B_9 | Which term best describes Sattell's attitude toward Pop? | SCRIMSHAW
The old man
just wanted to get back his
memory—and the methods he used were
gently hellish, from the viewpoint of the
others....
BY MURRAY LEINSTER
Illustrated by Freas
Pop Young was the one known
man who could stand life on the
surface of the Moon's far side, and,
therefore, he occupied the shack on
the Big Crack's edge, above the
mining colony there. Some people
said that no normal man could do
it, and mentioned the scar of a
ghastly head-wound to explain his
ability. One man partly guessed the
secret, but only partly. His name was
Sattell and he had reason not to
talk. Pop Young alone knew the
whole truth, and he kept his mouth
shut, too. It wasn't anybody else's
business.
The shack and the job he filled
were located in the medieval notion
of the physical appearance of hell.
By day the environment was heat and
torment. By night—lunar night, of
course, and lunar day—it was frigidity
and horror. Once in two weeks
Earth-time a rocketship came around
the horizon from Lunar City with
stores for the colony deep underground.
Pop received the stores and
took care of them. He handed over
the product of the mine, to be forwarded
to Earth. The rocket went
away again. Come nightfall Pop
lowered the supplies down the long
cable into the Big Crack to the colony
far down inside, and freshened up
the landing field marks with magnesium
marking-powder if a rocket-blast
had blurred them. That was
fundamentally all he had to do. But
without him the mine down in the
Crack would have had to shut
down.
The Crack, of course, was that
gaping rocky fault which stretches
nine hundred miles, jaggedly, over
the side of the Moon that Earth
never sees. There is one stretch where
it is a yawning gulf a full half-mile
wide and unguessably deep. Where
Pop Young's shack stood it was only
a hundred yards, but the colony was
a full mile down, in one wall. There
is nothing like it on Earth, of course.
When it was first found, scientists
descended into it to examine the exposed
rock-strata and learn the history
of the Moon before its craters
were made. But they found more
than history. They found the reason
for the colony and the rocket landing
field and the shack.
The reason for Pop was something
else.
The shack stood a hundred feet
from the Big Crack's edge. It looked
like a dust-heap thirty feet high, and
it was. The outside was surface
moondust, piled over a tiny dome to
be insulation against the cold of
night and shadow and the furnace
heat of day. Pop lived in it all alone,
and in his spare time he worked
industriously at recovering some
missing portions of his life that Sattell
had managed to take away from
him.
He thought often of Sattell, down
in the colony underground. There
were galleries and tunnels and living-quarters
down there. There were
air-tight bulkheads for safety, and a
hydroponic garden to keep the air
fresh, and all sorts of things to make
life possible for men under if not
on the Moon.
But it wasn't fun, even underground.
In the Moon's slight gravity,
a man is really adjusted to existence
when he has a well-developed case
of agoraphobia. With such an aid, a
man can get into a tiny, coffinlike
cubbyhole, and feel solidity above
and below and around him, and
happily tell himself that it feels delicious.
Sometimes it does.
But Sattell couldn't comfort himself
so easily. He knew about Pop,
up on the surface. He'd shipped out,
whimpering, to the Moon to get far
away from Pop, and Pop was just
about a mile overhead and there was
no way to get around him. It was
difficult to get away from the mine,
anyhow. It doesn't take too long for
the low gravity to tear a man's
nerves to shreds. He has to develop
kinks in his head to survive. And
those kinks—
The first men to leave the colony
had to be knocked cold and shipped
out unconscious. They'd been underground—and
in low gravity—long
enough to be utterly unable to face
the idea of open spaces. Even now
there were some who had to be carried,
but there were some tougher
ones who were able to walk to the
rocketship if Pop put a tarpaulin
over their heads so they didn't have
to see the sky. In any case Pop was
essential, either for carrying or
guidance.
Sattell got the shakes when he
thought of Pop, and Pop rather
probably knew it. Of course, by the
time he took the job tending the
shack, he was pretty certain about
Sattell. The facts spoke for themselves.
Pop had come back to consciousness
in a hospital with a great
wound in his head and no memory
of anything that had happened before
that moment. It was not that his
identity was in question. When he
was stronger, the doctors told him
who he was, and as gently as possible
what had happened to his wife
and children. They'd been murdered
after he was seemingly killed defending
them. But he didn't remember
a thing. Not then. It was
something of a blessing.
But when he was physically recovered
he set about trying to pick
up the threads of the life he could
no longer remember. He met Sattell
quite by accident. Sattell looked familiar.
Pop eagerly tried to ask him
questions. And Sattell turned gray
and frantically denied that he'd ever
seen Pop before.
All of which happened back on
Earth and a long time ago. It seemed
to Pop that the sight of Sattell had
brought back some vague and cloudy
memories. They were not sharp,
though, and he hunted up Sattell
again to find out if he was right.
And Sattell went into panic when
he returned.
Nowadays, by the Big Crack, Pop
wasn't so insistent on seeing Sattell,
but he was deeply concerned with
the recovery of the memories that
Sattell helped bring back. Pop was
a highly conscientious man. He took
good care of his job. There was a
warning-bell in the shack, and when
a rocketship from Lunar City got
above the horizon and could send a
tight beam, the gong clanged loudly,
and Pop got into a vacuum-suit
and went out the air lock. He usually
reached the moondozer about the
time the ship began to brake for
landing, and he watched it come in.
He saw the silver needle in the
sky fighting momentum above a line
of jagged crater-walls. It slowed, and
slowed, and curved down as it drew
nearer. The pilot killed all forward
motion just above the field and came
steadily and smoothly down to land
between the silvery triangles that
marked the landing place.
Instantly the rockets cut off,
drums of fuel and air and food came
out of the cargo-hatch and Pop swept
forward with the dozer. It was a
miniature tractor with a gigantic
scoop in front. He pushed a great
mound of talc-fine dust before him
to cover up the cargo. It was necessary.
With freight costing what it
did, fuel and air and food came
frozen solid, in containers barely
thicker than foil. While they stayed
at space-shadow temperature, the foil
would hold anything. And a cover of
insulating moondust with vacuum
between the grains kept even air
frozen solid, though in sunlight.
At such times Pop hardly thought
of Sattell. He knew he had plenty
of time for that. He'd started to follow
Sattell knowing what had happened
to his wife and children, but
it was hearsay only. He had no memory
of them at all. But Sattell stirred
the lost memories. At first Pop followed
absorbedly from city to city,
to recover the years that had been
wiped out by an axe-blow. He did
recover a good deal. When Sattell
fled to another continent, Pop followed
because he had some distinct
memories of his wife—and the way
he'd felt about her—and some fugitive
mental images of his children.
When Sattell frenziedly tried to deny
knowledge of the murder in Tangier,
Pop had come to remember both his
children and some of the happiness
of his married life.
Even when Sattell—whimpering—signed
up for Lunar City, Pop tracked
him. By that time he was quite
sure that Sattell was the man who'd
killed his family. If so, Sattell had
profited by less than two days' pay
for wiping out everything that Pop
possessed. But Pop wanted it back.
He couldn't prove Sattell's guilt.
There was no evidence. In any case,
he didn't really want Sattell to die.
If he did, there'd be no way to recover
more lost memories.
Sometimes, in the shack on the far
side of the Moon, Pop Young had
odd fancies about Sattell. There was
the mine, for example. In each two
Earth-weeks of working, the mine-colony
nearly filled up a three-gallon
cannister with greasy-seeming white
crystals shaped like two pyramids
base to base. The filled cannister
would weigh a hundred pounds on
Earth. Here it weighed eighteen. But
on Earth its contents would be computed
in carats, and a hundred
pounds was worth millions. Yet here
on the Moon Pop kept a waiting cannister
on a shelf in his tiny dome,
behind the air-apparatus. It rattled
if he shook it, and it was worth no
more than so many pebbles. But
sometimes Pop wondered if Sattell
ever thought of the value of the
mine's production. If he would kill
a woman and two children and think
he'd killed a man for no more than
a hundred dollars, what enormity
would he commit for a three-gallon
quantity of uncut diamonds?
But he did not dwell on such
speculation. The sun rose very, very
slowly in what by convention was
called the east. It took nearly two
hours to urge its disk above the
horizon, and it burned terribly in
emptiness for fourteen times twenty-four
hours before sunset. Then there
was night, and for three hundred
and thirty-six consecutive hours there
were only stars overhead and the
sky was a hole so terrible that a man
who looked up into it—what with
the nagging sensation of one-sixth
gravity—tended to lose all confidence
in the stability of things. Most men
immediately found it hysterically necessary
to seize hold of something
solid to keep from falling upward.
But nothing felt solid. Everything
fell, too. Wherefore most men tended
to scream.
But not Pop. He'd come to the
Moon in the first place because Sattell
was here. Near Sattell, he found
memories of times when he was a
young man with a young wife who
loved him extravagantly. Then pictures
of his children came out of
emptiness and grew sharp and clear.
He found that he loved them very
dearly. And when he was near Sattell
he literally recovered them—in
the sense that he came to know new
things about them and had new
memories of them every day. He
hadn't yet remembered the crime
which lost them to him. Until he
did—and the fact possessed a certain
grisly humor—Pop didn't even hate
Sattell. He simply wanted to be near
him because it enabled him to recover
new and vivid parts of his
youth that had been lost.
Otherwise, he was wholly matter-of-fact—certainly
so for the far side
of the Moon. He was a rather fussy
housekeeper. The shack above the
Big Crack's rim was as tidy as any
lighthouse or fur-trapper's cabin. He
tended his air-apparatus with a fine
precision. It was perfectly simple. In
the shadow of the shack he had an
unfailing source of extreme low
temperature. Air from the shack
flowed into a shadow-chilled pipe.
Moisture condensed out of it here,
and CO
2
froze solidly out of it there,
and on beyond it collected as restless,
transparent liquid air. At the same
time, liquid air from another tank
evaporated to maintain the proper
air pressure in the shack. Every so
often Pop tapped the pipe where the
moisture froze, and lumps of water
ice clattered out to be returned to the
humidifier. Less often he took out the
CO
2
snow, and measured it, and
dumped an equivalent quantity of
pale-blue liquid oxygen into the liquid
air that had been purified by
cold. The oxygen dissolved. Then the
apparatus reversed itself and supplied
fresh air from the now-enriched
fluid, while the depleted other
tank began to fill up with cold-purified
liquid air.
Outside the shack, jagged stony
pinnacles reared in the starlight, and
craters complained of the bombardment
from space that had made them.
But, outside, nothing ever happened.
Inside, it was quite different.
Working on his memories, one
day Pop made a little sketch. It
helped a great deal. He grew deeply
interested. Writing-material was
scarce, but he spent most of the time
between two particular rocket-landings
getting down on paper exactly
how a child had looked while sleeping,
some fifteen years before. He
remembered with astonishment that
the child had really looked exactly
like that! Later he began a sketch of
his partly-remembered wife. In time—he
had plenty—it became a really
truthful likeness.
The sun rose, and baked the
abomination of desolation which was
the moonscape. Pop Young meticulously
touched up the glittering
triangles which were landing guides
for the Lunar City ships. They glittered
from the thinnest conceivable
layer of magnesium marking-powder.
He checked over the moondozer.
He tended the air apparatus. He did
everything that his job and survival
required. Ungrudgingly.
Then he made more sketches. The
images to be drawn came back more
clearly when he thought of Sattell,
so by keeping Sattell in mind he recovered
the memory of a chair that
had been in his forgotten home.
Then he drew his wife sitting in it,
reading. It felt very good to see her
again. And he speculated about
whether Sattell ever thought of millions
of dollars' worth of new-mined
diamonds knocking about unguarded
in the shack, and he suddenly recollected
clearly the way one of his
children had looked while playing
with her doll. He made a quick
sketch to keep from forgetting that.
There was no purpose in the
sketching, save that he'd lost all his
young manhood through a senseless
crime. He wanted his youth back. He
was recovering it bit by bit. The
occupation made it absurdly easy to
live on the surface of the far side of
the Moon, whether anybody else
could do it or not.
Sattell had no such device for adjusting
to the lunar state of things.
Living on the Moon was bad enough
anyhow, then, but living one mile
underground from Pop Young was
much worse. Sattell clearly remembered
the crime Pop Young hadn't
yet recalled. He considered that Pop
had made no overt attempt to revenge
himself because he planned
some retaliation so horrible and lingering
that it was worth waiting for.
He came to hate Pop with an insane
ferocity. And fear. In his mind the
need to escape became an obsession
on top of the other psychotic states
normal to a Moon-colonist.
But he was helpless. He couldn't
leave. There was Pop. He couldn't
kill Pop. He had no chance—and he
was afraid. The one absurd, irrelevant
thing he could do was write
letters back to Earth. He did that.
He wrote with the desperate, impassioned,
frantic blend of persuasion
and information and genius-like invention
of a prisoner in a high-security
prison, trying to induce someone
to help him escape.
He had friends, of a sort, but for
a long time his letters produced
nothing. The Moon swung in vast
circles about the Earth, and the Earth
swung sedately about the Sun. The
other planets danced their saraband.
The rest of humanity went about its
own affairs with fascinated attention.
But then an event occurred which
bore directly upon Pop Young and
Sattell and Pop Young's missing
years.
Somebody back on Earth promoted
a luxury passenger-line of spaceships
to ply between Earth and
Moon. It looked like a perfect set-up.
Three spacecraft capable of the journey
came into being with attendant
reams of publicity. They promised a
thrill and a new distinction for the
rich. Guided tours to Lunar! The
most expensive and most thrilling
trip in history! One hundred thousand
dollars for a twelve-day cruise
through space, with views of the
Moon's far side and trips through
Lunar City and a landing in Aristarchus,
plus sound-tapes of the journey
and fame hitherto reserved for
honest explorers!
It didn't seem to have anything
to do with Pop or with Sattell. But
it did.
There were just two passenger
tours. The first was fully booked.
But the passengers who paid so highly,
expected to be pleasantly thrilled
and shielded from all reasons for
alarm. And they couldn't be. Something
happens when a self-centered
and complacent individual unsuspectingly
looks out of a spaceship
port and sees the cosmos unshielded
by mists or clouds or other aids to
blindness against reality. It is shattering.
A millionaire cut his throat when
he saw Earth dwindled to a mere
blue-green ball in vastness. He could
not endure his own smallness in the
face of immensity. Not one passenger
disembarked even for Lunar
City. Most of them cowered in their
chairs, hiding their eyes. They were
the simple cases of hysteria. But the
richest girl on Earth, who'd had five
husbands and believed that nothing
could move her—she went into
catatonic withdrawal and neither
saw nor heard nor moved. Two other
passengers sobbed in improvised
strait jackets. The first shipload
started home. Fast.
The second luxury liner took off
with only four passengers and turned
back before reaching the Moon.
Space-pilots could take the strain of
space-flight because they had work
to do. Workers for the lunar mines
could make the trip under heavy
sedation. But it was too early in the
development of space-travel for
pleasure-passengers. They weren't
prepared for the more humbling
facts of life.
Pop heard of the quaint commercial
enterprise through the micro-tapes
put off at the shack for the men
down in the mine. Sattell probably
learned of it the same way. Pop didn't
even think of it again. It seemed
to have nothing to do with him. But
Sattell undoubtedly dealt with it
fully in his desperate writings back
to Earth.
Pop matter-of-factly tended the
shack and the landing field and the
stores for the Big Crack mine. Between-times
he made more drawings
in pursuit of his own private objective.
Quite accidentally, he developed
a certain talent professional artists
might have approved. But he was not
trying to communicate, but to discover.
Drawing—especially with his
mind on Sattell—he found fresh incidents
popping up in his recollection.
Times when he was happy. One
day he remembered the puppy his
children had owned and loved. He
drew it painstakingly—and it was
his again. Thereafter he could remember
it any time he chose. He did
actually recover a completely vanished
past.
He envisioned a way to increase
that recovery. But there was a marked
shortage of artists' materials on the
Moon. All freight had to be hauled
from Earth, on a voyage equal to
rather more than a thousand times
around the equator of the Earth.
Artists' supplies were not often included.
Pop didn't even ask.
He began to explore the area outside
the shack for possible material
no one would think of sending from
Earth. He collected stones of various
sorts, but when warmed up in the
shack they were useless. He found
no strictly lunar material which
would serve for modeling or carving
portraits in the ground. He found
minerals which could be pulverized
and used as pigments, but nothing
suitable for this new adventure in
the recovery of lost youth. He even
considered blasting, to aid his search.
He could. Down in the mine, blasting
was done by soaking carbon black—from
CO
2
—in liquid oxygen, and then
firing it with a spark. It exploded
splendidly. And its fumes were
merely more CO
2
which an air-apparatus
handled easily.
He didn't do any blasting. He didn't
find any signs of the sort of
mineral he required. Marble would
have been perfect, but there is no
marble on the Moon. Naturally! Yet
Pop continued to search absorbedly
for material with which to capture
memory. Sattell still seemed necessary,
but—
Early one lunar morning he was
a good two miles from his shack
when he saw rocket-fumes in the
sky. It was most unlikely. He wasn't
looking for anything of the sort, but
out of the corner of his eye he observed
that something moved. Which
was impossible. He turned his head,
and there were rocket-fumes coming
over the horizon, not in the direction
of Lunar City. Which was more
impossible still.
He stared. A tiny silver rocket to
the westward poured out monstrous
masses of vapor. It decelerated swiftly.
It curved downward. The rockets
checked for an instant, and flamed
again more violently, and checked
once more. This was not an expert
approach. It was a faulty one. Curving
surface-ward in a sharply changing
parabola, the pilot over-corrected
and had to wait to gather down-speed,
and then over-corrected again.
It was an altogether clumsy landing.
The ship was not even perfectly vertical
when it settled not quite in the
landing-area marked by silvery triangles.
One of its tail-fins crumpled
slightly. It tilted a little when fully
landed.
Then nothing happened.
Pop made his way toward it in
the skittering, skating gait one uses
in one-sixth gravity. When he was
within half a mile, an air-lock door
opened in the ship's side. But nothing
came out of the lock. No space-suited
figure. No cargo came drifting
down with the singular deliberation
of falling objects on the Moon.
It was just barely past lunar sunrise
on the far side of the Moon.
Incredibly long and utterly black
shadows stretched across the plain,
and half the rocketship was dazzling
white and half was blacker than
blackness itself. The sun still hung
low indeed in the black, star-speckled
sky. Pop waded through moondust,
raising a trail of slowly settling
powder. He knew only that the ship
didn't come from Lunar City, but
from Earth. He couldn't imagine
why. He did not even wildly connect
it with what—say—Sattell might
have written with desperate plausibility
about greasy-seeming white
crystals out of the mine, knocking
about Pop Young's shack in cannisters
containing a hundred Earth-pounds
weight of richness.
Pop reached the rocketship. He
approached the big tail-fins. On one
of them there were welded ladder-rungs
going up to the opened air-lock
door.
He climbed.
The air-lock was perfectly normal
when he reached it. There was a
glass port in the inner door, and he
saw eyes looking through it at him.
He pulled the outer door shut and
felt the whining vibration of admitted
air. His vacuum suit went slack
about him. The inner door began to
open, and Pop reached up and gave
his helmet the practiced twisting
jerk which removed it.
Then he blinked. There was a red-headed
man in the opened door. He
grinned savagely at Pop. He held a
very nasty hand-weapon trained on
Pop's middle.
"Don't come in!" he said mockingly.
"And I don't give a damn
about how you are. This isn't social.
It's business!"
Pop simply gaped. He couldn't
quite take it in.
"This," snapped the red-headed
man abruptly, "is a stickup!"
Pop's eyes went through the inner
lock-door. He saw that the interior
of the ship was stripped and bare.
But a spiral stairway descended from
some upper compartment. It had a
handrail of pure, transparent, water-clear
plastic. The walls were bare insulation,
but that trace of luxury remained.
Pop gazed at the plastic,
fascinated.
The red-headed man leaned forward,
snarling. He slashed Pop
across the face with the barrel of his
weapon. It drew blood. It was wanton,
savage brutality.
"Pay attention!" snarled the red-headed
man. "A stickup, I said! Get
it? You go get that can of stuff
from the mine! The diamonds!
Bring them here! Understand?"
Pop said numbly: "What the
hell?"
The red-headed man hit him
again. He was nerve-racked, and,
therefore, he wanted to hurt.
"Move!" he rasped. "I want the
diamonds you've got for the ship
from Lunar City! Bring 'em!" Pop
licked blood from his lips and the
man with the weapon raged at him.
"Then phone down to the mine!
Tell Sattell I'm here and he can
come on up! Tell him to bring any
more diamonds they've dug up since
the stuff you've got!"
He leaned forward. His face was
only inches from Pop Young's. It
was seamed and hard-bitten and
nerve-racked. But any man would be
quivering if he wasn't used to space
or the feel of one-sixth gravity on
the Moon. He panted:
"And get it straight! You try
any tricks and we take off! We
swing over your shack! The rocket-blast
smashes it! We burn you
down! Then we swing over the cable
down to the mine and the rocket-flame
melts it! You die and everybody
in the mine besides! No tricks!
We didn't come here for nothing!"
He twitched all over. Then he
struck cruelly again at Pop Young's
face. He seemed filled with fury, at
least partly hysterical. It was the tension
that space-travel—then, at its
beginning—produced. It was meaningless
savagery due to terror. But,
of course, Pop was helpless to resent
it. There were no weapons on the
Moon and the mention of Sattell's
name showed the uselessness of bluff.
He'd pictured the complete set-up
by the edge of the Big Crack. Pop
could do nothing.
The red-headed man checked
himself, panting. He drew back and
slammed the inner lock-door. There
was the sound of pumping.
Pop put his helmet back on and
sealed it. The outer door opened.
Outrushing air tugged at Pop. After
a second or two he went out and
climbed down the welded-on ladder-bars
to the ground.
He headed back toward his shack.
Somehow, the mention of Sattell had
made his mind work better. It always
did. He began painstakingly to
put things together. The red-headed
man knew the routine here in every
detail. He knew Sattell. That part
was simple. Sattell had planned this
multi-million-dollar coup, as a man
in prison might plan his break. The
stripped interior of the ship identified
it.
It was one of the unsuccessful
luxury-liners sold for scrap. Or perhaps
it was stolen for the journey
here. Sattell's associates had had to
steal or somehow get the fuel, and
somehow find a pilot. But there were
diamonds worth at least five million
dollars waiting for them, and the
whole job might not have called for
more than two men—with Sattell as
a third. According to the economics
of crime, it was feasible. Anyhow it
was being done.
Pop reached the dust-heap which
was his shack and went in the air
lock. Inside, he went to the vision-phone
and called the mine-colony
down in the Crack. He gave the
message he'd been told to pass on.
Sattell to come up, with what diamonds
had been dug since the
regular cannister was sent up for the
Lunar City ship that would be due
presently. Otherwise the ship on the
landing strip would destroy shack
and Pop and the colony together.
"I'd guess," said Pop painstakingly,
"that Sattell figured it out. He's
probably got some sort of gun to
keep you from holding him down
there. But he won't know his friends
are here—not right this minute he
won't."
A shaking voice asked questions
from the vision-phone.
"No," said Pop, "they'll do it anyhow.
If we were able to tell about
'em, they'd be chased. But if I'm
dead and the shacks smashed and
the cable burnt through, they'll be
back on Earth long before a new
cable's been got and let down to you.
So they'll do all they can no matter
what I do." He added, "I wouldn't
tell Sattell a thing about it, if I were
you. It'll save trouble. Just let him
keep on waiting for this to happen.
It'll save you trouble."
Another shaky question.
"Me?" asked Pop. "Oh, I'm going
to raise what hell I can. There's
some stuff in that ship I want."
He switched off the phone. He
went over to his air apparatus. He
took down the cannister of diamonds
which were worth five millions or
more back on Earth. He found a
bucket. He dumped the diamonds
casually into it. They floated downward
with great deliberation and
surged from side to side like a liquid
when they stopped. One-sixth gravity.
Pop regarded his drawings meditatively.
A sketch of his wife as he
now remembered her. It was very
good to remember. A drawing of his
two children, playing together. He
looked forward to remembering
much more about them. He grinned.
"That stair-rail," he said in deep
satisfaction. "That'll do it!"
He tore bed linen from his bunk
and worked on the emptied cannister.
It was a double container with a
thermware interior lining. Even on
Earth newly-mined diamonds sometimes
fly to pieces from internal
stress. On the Moon, it was not desirable
that diamonds be exposed to
repeated violent changes of temperature.
So a thermware-lined cannister
kept them at mine-temperature once
they were warmed to touchability.
Pop packed the cotton cloth in the
container. He hurried a little, because
the men in the rocket were shaky and
might not practice patience. He took
a small emergency-lamp from his
spare spacesuit. He carefully cracked
its bulb, exposing the filament within.
He put the lamp on top of the
cotton and sprinkled magnesium
marking-powder over everything.
Then he went to the air-apparatus
and took out a flask of the liquid
oxygen used to keep his breathing-air
in balance. He poured the frigid,
pale-blue stuff into the cotton. He
saturated it.
All the inside of the shack was
foggy when he finished. Then he
pushed the cannister-top down. He
breathed a sigh of relief when it was
in place. He'd arranged for it to
break a frozen-brittle switch as it
descended. When it came off, the
switch would light the lamp with its
bare filament. There was powdered
magnesium in contact with it and
liquid oxygen all about.
He went out of the shack by the
air lock. On the way, thinking about
Sattell, he suddenly recovered a completely
new memory. On their first
wedding anniversary, so long ago,
he and his wife had gone out to
dinner to celebrate. He remembered
how she looked: the almost-smug
joy they shared that they would be
together for always, with one complete
year for proof.
Pop reflected hungrily that it was
something else to be made permanent
and inspected from time to time.
But he wanted more than a drawing
of this! He wanted to make the memory
permanent and to extend it—
If it had not been for his vacuum
suit and the cannister he carried, Pop
would have rubbed his hands.
Tall, jagged crater-walls rose
from the lunar plain. Monstrous, extended
inky shadows stretched
enormous distances, utterly black.
The sun, like a glowing octopod,
floated low at the edge of things and
seemed to hate all creation.
Pop reached the rocket. He
climbed the welded ladder-rungs to
the air lock. He closed the door. Air
whined. His suit sagged against his
body. He took off his helmet.
When the red-headed man opened
the inner door, the hand-weapon
shook and trembled. Pop said
calmly:
"Now I've got to go handle the
hoist, if Sattell's coming up from
the mine. If I don't do it, he don't
come up."
The red-headed man snarled. But
his eyes were on the cannister whose
contents should weigh a hundred
pounds on Earth.
"Any tricks," he rasped, "and you
know what happens!"
"Yeah," said Pop.
He stolidly put his helmet back
on. But his eyes went past the red-headed
man to the stair that wound
down, inside the ship, from some
compartment above. The stair-rail was
pure, clear, water-white plastic, not
less than three inches thick. There
was a lot of it!
The inner door closed. Pop opened
the outer. Air rushed out. He
climbed painstakingly down to the
ground. He started back toward the
shack.
There was the most luridly bright
of all possible flashes. There was no
sound, of course. But something
flamed very brightly, and the ground
thumped under Pop Young's vacuum
boots. He turned.
The rocketship was still in the act
of flying apart. It had been a splendid
explosion. Of course cotton sheeting
in liquid oxygen is not quite as
good an explosive as carbon-black,
which they used down in the mine.
Even with magnesium powder to
start the flame when a bare light-filament
ignited it, the cannister-bomb
hadn't equaled—say—T.N.T.
But the ship had fuel on board for
the trip back to Earth. And it blew,
too. It would be minutes before all
the fragments of the ship returned
to the Moon's surface. On the Moon,
things fall slowly.
Pop didn't wait. He searched
hopefully. Once a mass of steel plating
fell only yards from him, but it
did not interrupt his search.
When he went into the shack, he
grinned to himself. The call-light of
the vision-phone flickered wildly.
When he took off his helmet the bell
clanged incessantly. He answered. A
shaking voice from the mining-colony
panted:
"We felt a shock! What happened?
What do we do?"
"Don't do a thing," advised Pop.
"It's all right. I blew up the ship and
everything's all right. I wouldn't
even mention it to Sattell if I were
you."
He grinned happily down at a section
of plastic stair-rail he'd found
not too far from where the ship exploded.
When the man down in the
mine cut off, Pop got out of his
vacuum suit in a hurry. He placed
the plastic zestfully on the table
where he'd been restricted to drawing
pictures of his wife and children
in order to recover memories of
them.
He began to plan, gloatingly, the
thing he would carve out of a four-inch
section of the plastic. When it
was carved, he'd paint it. While he
worked, he'd think of Sattell, because
that was the way to get back the
missing portions of his life—the
parts Sattell had managed to get
away from him. He'd get back more
than ever, now!
He didn't wonder what he'd do
if he ever remembered the crime
Sattell had committed. He felt, somehow,
that he wouldn't get that back
until he'd recovered all the rest.
Gloating, it was amusing to remember
what people used to call
such art-works as he planned, when
carved by other lonely men in other
faraway places. They called those
sculptures scrimshaw.
But they were a lot more than
that!
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Astounding Science Fiction
September
1955. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | condescending | frenetic | aggrieved | repugnant | 2 |
23791_S6420G0B_10 | How does Sattell hope to get rid of Pop? | SCRIMSHAW
The old man
just wanted to get back his
memory—and the methods he used were
gently hellish, from the viewpoint of the
others....
BY MURRAY LEINSTER
Illustrated by Freas
Pop Young was the one known
man who could stand life on the
surface of the Moon's far side, and,
therefore, he occupied the shack on
the Big Crack's edge, above the
mining colony there. Some people
said that no normal man could do
it, and mentioned the scar of a
ghastly head-wound to explain his
ability. One man partly guessed the
secret, but only partly. His name was
Sattell and he had reason not to
talk. Pop Young alone knew the
whole truth, and he kept his mouth
shut, too. It wasn't anybody else's
business.
The shack and the job he filled
were located in the medieval notion
of the physical appearance of hell.
By day the environment was heat and
torment. By night—lunar night, of
course, and lunar day—it was frigidity
and horror. Once in two weeks
Earth-time a rocketship came around
the horizon from Lunar City with
stores for the colony deep underground.
Pop received the stores and
took care of them. He handed over
the product of the mine, to be forwarded
to Earth. The rocket went
away again. Come nightfall Pop
lowered the supplies down the long
cable into the Big Crack to the colony
far down inside, and freshened up
the landing field marks with magnesium
marking-powder if a rocket-blast
had blurred them. That was
fundamentally all he had to do. But
without him the mine down in the
Crack would have had to shut
down.
The Crack, of course, was that
gaping rocky fault which stretches
nine hundred miles, jaggedly, over
the side of the Moon that Earth
never sees. There is one stretch where
it is a yawning gulf a full half-mile
wide and unguessably deep. Where
Pop Young's shack stood it was only
a hundred yards, but the colony was
a full mile down, in one wall. There
is nothing like it on Earth, of course.
When it was first found, scientists
descended into it to examine the exposed
rock-strata and learn the history
of the Moon before its craters
were made. But they found more
than history. They found the reason
for the colony and the rocket landing
field and the shack.
The reason for Pop was something
else.
The shack stood a hundred feet
from the Big Crack's edge. It looked
like a dust-heap thirty feet high, and
it was. The outside was surface
moondust, piled over a tiny dome to
be insulation against the cold of
night and shadow and the furnace
heat of day. Pop lived in it all alone,
and in his spare time he worked
industriously at recovering some
missing portions of his life that Sattell
had managed to take away from
him.
He thought often of Sattell, down
in the colony underground. There
were galleries and tunnels and living-quarters
down there. There were
air-tight bulkheads for safety, and a
hydroponic garden to keep the air
fresh, and all sorts of things to make
life possible for men under if not
on the Moon.
But it wasn't fun, even underground.
In the Moon's slight gravity,
a man is really adjusted to existence
when he has a well-developed case
of agoraphobia. With such an aid, a
man can get into a tiny, coffinlike
cubbyhole, and feel solidity above
and below and around him, and
happily tell himself that it feels delicious.
Sometimes it does.
But Sattell couldn't comfort himself
so easily. He knew about Pop,
up on the surface. He'd shipped out,
whimpering, to the Moon to get far
away from Pop, and Pop was just
about a mile overhead and there was
no way to get around him. It was
difficult to get away from the mine,
anyhow. It doesn't take too long for
the low gravity to tear a man's
nerves to shreds. He has to develop
kinks in his head to survive. And
those kinks—
The first men to leave the colony
had to be knocked cold and shipped
out unconscious. They'd been underground—and
in low gravity—long
enough to be utterly unable to face
the idea of open spaces. Even now
there were some who had to be carried,
but there were some tougher
ones who were able to walk to the
rocketship if Pop put a tarpaulin
over their heads so they didn't have
to see the sky. In any case Pop was
essential, either for carrying or
guidance.
Sattell got the shakes when he
thought of Pop, and Pop rather
probably knew it. Of course, by the
time he took the job tending the
shack, he was pretty certain about
Sattell. The facts spoke for themselves.
Pop had come back to consciousness
in a hospital with a great
wound in his head and no memory
of anything that had happened before
that moment. It was not that his
identity was in question. When he
was stronger, the doctors told him
who he was, and as gently as possible
what had happened to his wife
and children. They'd been murdered
after he was seemingly killed defending
them. But he didn't remember
a thing. Not then. It was
something of a blessing.
But when he was physically recovered
he set about trying to pick
up the threads of the life he could
no longer remember. He met Sattell
quite by accident. Sattell looked familiar.
Pop eagerly tried to ask him
questions. And Sattell turned gray
and frantically denied that he'd ever
seen Pop before.
All of which happened back on
Earth and a long time ago. It seemed
to Pop that the sight of Sattell had
brought back some vague and cloudy
memories. They were not sharp,
though, and he hunted up Sattell
again to find out if he was right.
And Sattell went into panic when
he returned.
Nowadays, by the Big Crack, Pop
wasn't so insistent on seeing Sattell,
but he was deeply concerned with
the recovery of the memories that
Sattell helped bring back. Pop was
a highly conscientious man. He took
good care of his job. There was a
warning-bell in the shack, and when
a rocketship from Lunar City got
above the horizon and could send a
tight beam, the gong clanged loudly,
and Pop got into a vacuum-suit
and went out the air lock. He usually
reached the moondozer about the
time the ship began to brake for
landing, and he watched it come in.
He saw the silver needle in the
sky fighting momentum above a line
of jagged crater-walls. It slowed, and
slowed, and curved down as it drew
nearer. The pilot killed all forward
motion just above the field and came
steadily and smoothly down to land
between the silvery triangles that
marked the landing place.
Instantly the rockets cut off,
drums of fuel and air and food came
out of the cargo-hatch and Pop swept
forward with the dozer. It was a
miniature tractor with a gigantic
scoop in front. He pushed a great
mound of talc-fine dust before him
to cover up the cargo. It was necessary.
With freight costing what it
did, fuel and air and food came
frozen solid, in containers barely
thicker than foil. While they stayed
at space-shadow temperature, the foil
would hold anything. And a cover of
insulating moondust with vacuum
between the grains kept even air
frozen solid, though in sunlight.
At such times Pop hardly thought
of Sattell. He knew he had plenty
of time for that. He'd started to follow
Sattell knowing what had happened
to his wife and children, but
it was hearsay only. He had no memory
of them at all. But Sattell stirred
the lost memories. At first Pop followed
absorbedly from city to city,
to recover the years that had been
wiped out by an axe-blow. He did
recover a good deal. When Sattell
fled to another continent, Pop followed
because he had some distinct
memories of his wife—and the way
he'd felt about her—and some fugitive
mental images of his children.
When Sattell frenziedly tried to deny
knowledge of the murder in Tangier,
Pop had come to remember both his
children and some of the happiness
of his married life.
Even when Sattell—whimpering—signed
up for Lunar City, Pop tracked
him. By that time he was quite
sure that Sattell was the man who'd
killed his family. If so, Sattell had
profited by less than two days' pay
for wiping out everything that Pop
possessed. But Pop wanted it back.
He couldn't prove Sattell's guilt.
There was no evidence. In any case,
he didn't really want Sattell to die.
If he did, there'd be no way to recover
more lost memories.
Sometimes, in the shack on the far
side of the Moon, Pop Young had
odd fancies about Sattell. There was
the mine, for example. In each two
Earth-weeks of working, the mine-colony
nearly filled up a three-gallon
cannister with greasy-seeming white
crystals shaped like two pyramids
base to base. The filled cannister
would weigh a hundred pounds on
Earth. Here it weighed eighteen. But
on Earth its contents would be computed
in carats, and a hundred
pounds was worth millions. Yet here
on the Moon Pop kept a waiting cannister
on a shelf in his tiny dome,
behind the air-apparatus. It rattled
if he shook it, and it was worth no
more than so many pebbles. But
sometimes Pop wondered if Sattell
ever thought of the value of the
mine's production. If he would kill
a woman and two children and think
he'd killed a man for no more than
a hundred dollars, what enormity
would he commit for a three-gallon
quantity of uncut diamonds?
But he did not dwell on such
speculation. The sun rose very, very
slowly in what by convention was
called the east. It took nearly two
hours to urge its disk above the
horizon, and it burned terribly in
emptiness for fourteen times twenty-four
hours before sunset. Then there
was night, and for three hundred
and thirty-six consecutive hours there
were only stars overhead and the
sky was a hole so terrible that a man
who looked up into it—what with
the nagging sensation of one-sixth
gravity—tended to lose all confidence
in the stability of things. Most men
immediately found it hysterically necessary
to seize hold of something
solid to keep from falling upward.
But nothing felt solid. Everything
fell, too. Wherefore most men tended
to scream.
But not Pop. He'd come to the
Moon in the first place because Sattell
was here. Near Sattell, he found
memories of times when he was a
young man with a young wife who
loved him extravagantly. Then pictures
of his children came out of
emptiness and grew sharp and clear.
He found that he loved them very
dearly. And when he was near Sattell
he literally recovered them—in
the sense that he came to know new
things about them and had new
memories of them every day. He
hadn't yet remembered the crime
which lost them to him. Until he
did—and the fact possessed a certain
grisly humor—Pop didn't even hate
Sattell. He simply wanted to be near
him because it enabled him to recover
new and vivid parts of his
youth that had been lost.
Otherwise, he was wholly matter-of-fact—certainly
so for the far side
of the Moon. He was a rather fussy
housekeeper. The shack above the
Big Crack's rim was as tidy as any
lighthouse or fur-trapper's cabin. He
tended his air-apparatus with a fine
precision. It was perfectly simple. In
the shadow of the shack he had an
unfailing source of extreme low
temperature. Air from the shack
flowed into a shadow-chilled pipe.
Moisture condensed out of it here,
and CO
2
froze solidly out of it there,
and on beyond it collected as restless,
transparent liquid air. At the same
time, liquid air from another tank
evaporated to maintain the proper
air pressure in the shack. Every so
often Pop tapped the pipe where the
moisture froze, and lumps of water
ice clattered out to be returned to the
humidifier. Less often he took out the
CO
2
snow, and measured it, and
dumped an equivalent quantity of
pale-blue liquid oxygen into the liquid
air that had been purified by
cold. The oxygen dissolved. Then the
apparatus reversed itself and supplied
fresh air from the now-enriched
fluid, while the depleted other
tank began to fill up with cold-purified
liquid air.
Outside the shack, jagged stony
pinnacles reared in the starlight, and
craters complained of the bombardment
from space that had made them.
But, outside, nothing ever happened.
Inside, it was quite different.
Working on his memories, one
day Pop made a little sketch. It
helped a great deal. He grew deeply
interested. Writing-material was
scarce, but he spent most of the time
between two particular rocket-landings
getting down on paper exactly
how a child had looked while sleeping,
some fifteen years before. He
remembered with astonishment that
the child had really looked exactly
like that! Later he began a sketch of
his partly-remembered wife. In time—he
had plenty—it became a really
truthful likeness.
The sun rose, and baked the
abomination of desolation which was
the moonscape. Pop Young meticulously
touched up the glittering
triangles which were landing guides
for the Lunar City ships. They glittered
from the thinnest conceivable
layer of magnesium marking-powder.
He checked over the moondozer.
He tended the air apparatus. He did
everything that his job and survival
required. Ungrudgingly.
Then he made more sketches. The
images to be drawn came back more
clearly when he thought of Sattell,
so by keeping Sattell in mind he recovered
the memory of a chair that
had been in his forgotten home.
Then he drew his wife sitting in it,
reading. It felt very good to see her
again. And he speculated about
whether Sattell ever thought of millions
of dollars' worth of new-mined
diamonds knocking about unguarded
in the shack, and he suddenly recollected
clearly the way one of his
children had looked while playing
with her doll. He made a quick
sketch to keep from forgetting that.
There was no purpose in the
sketching, save that he'd lost all his
young manhood through a senseless
crime. He wanted his youth back. He
was recovering it bit by bit. The
occupation made it absurdly easy to
live on the surface of the far side of
the Moon, whether anybody else
could do it or not.
Sattell had no such device for adjusting
to the lunar state of things.
Living on the Moon was bad enough
anyhow, then, but living one mile
underground from Pop Young was
much worse. Sattell clearly remembered
the crime Pop Young hadn't
yet recalled. He considered that Pop
had made no overt attempt to revenge
himself because he planned
some retaliation so horrible and lingering
that it was worth waiting for.
He came to hate Pop with an insane
ferocity. And fear. In his mind the
need to escape became an obsession
on top of the other psychotic states
normal to a Moon-colonist.
But he was helpless. He couldn't
leave. There was Pop. He couldn't
kill Pop. He had no chance—and he
was afraid. The one absurd, irrelevant
thing he could do was write
letters back to Earth. He did that.
He wrote with the desperate, impassioned,
frantic blend of persuasion
and information and genius-like invention
of a prisoner in a high-security
prison, trying to induce someone
to help him escape.
He had friends, of a sort, but for
a long time his letters produced
nothing. The Moon swung in vast
circles about the Earth, and the Earth
swung sedately about the Sun. The
other planets danced their saraband.
The rest of humanity went about its
own affairs with fascinated attention.
But then an event occurred which
bore directly upon Pop Young and
Sattell and Pop Young's missing
years.
Somebody back on Earth promoted
a luxury passenger-line of spaceships
to ply between Earth and
Moon. It looked like a perfect set-up.
Three spacecraft capable of the journey
came into being with attendant
reams of publicity. They promised a
thrill and a new distinction for the
rich. Guided tours to Lunar! The
most expensive and most thrilling
trip in history! One hundred thousand
dollars for a twelve-day cruise
through space, with views of the
Moon's far side and trips through
Lunar City and a landing in Aristarchus,
plus sound-tapes of the journey
and fame hitherto reserved for
honest explorers!
It didn't seem to have anything
to do with Pop or with Sattell. But
it did.
There were just two passenger
tours. The first was fully booked.
But the passengers who paid so highly,
expected to be pleasantly thrilled
and shielded from all reasons for
alarm. And they couldn't be. Something
happens when a self-centered
and complacent individual unsuspectingly
looks out of a spaceship
port and sees the cosmos unshielded
by mists or clouds or other aids to
blindness against reality. It is shattering.
A millionaire cut his throat when
he saw Earth dwindled to a mere
blue-green ball in vastness. He could
not endure his own smallness in the
face of immensity. Not one passenger
disembarked even for Lunar
City. Most of them cowered in their
chairs, hiding their eyes. They were
the simple cases of hysteria. But the
richest girl on Earth, who'd had five
husbands and believed that nothing
could move her—she went into
catatonic withdrawal and neither
saw nor heard nor moved. Two other
passengers sobbed in improvised
strait jackets. The first shipload
started home. Fast.
The second luxury liner took off
with only four passengers and turned
back before reaching the Moon.
Space-pilots could take the strain of
space-flight because they had work
to do. Workers for the lunar mines
could make the trip under heavy
sedation. But it was too early in the
development of space-travel for
pleasure-passengers. They weren't
prepared for the more humbling
facts of life.
Pop heard of the quaint commercial
enterprise through the micro-tapes
put off at the shack for the men
down in the mine. Sattell probably
learned of it the same way. Pop didn't
even think of it again. It seemed
to have nothing to do with him. But
Sattell undoubtedly dealt with it
fully in his desperate writings back
to Earth.
Pop matter-of-factly tended the
shack and the landing field and the
stores for the Big Crack mine. Between-times
he made more drawings
in pursuit of his own private objective.
Quite accidentally, he developed
a certain talent professional artists
might have approved. But he was not
trying to communicate, but to discover.
Drawing—especially with his
mind on Sattell—he found fresh incidents
popping up in his recollection.
Times when he was happy. One
day he remembered the puppy his
children had owned and loved. He
drew it painstakingly—and it was
his again. Thereafter he could remember
it any time he chose. He did
actually recover a completely vanished
past.
He envisioned a way to increase
that recovery. But there was a marked
shortage of artists' materials on the
Moon. All freight had to be hauled
from Earth, on a voyage equal to
rather more than a thousand times
around the equator of the Earth.
Artists' supplies were not often included.
Pop didn't even ask.
He began to explore the area outside
the shack for possible material
no one would think of sending from
Earth. He collected stones of various
sorts, but when warmed up in the
shack they were useless. He found
no strictly lunar material which
would serve for modeling or carving
portraits in the ground. He found
minerals which could be pulverized
and used as pigments, but nothing
suitable for this new adventure in
the recovery of lost youth. He even
considered blasting, to aid his search.
He could. Down in the mine, blasting
was done by soaking carbon black—from
CO
2
—in liquid oxygen, and then
firing it with a spark. It exploded
splendidly. And its fumes were
merely more CO
2
which an air-apparatus
handled easily.
He didn't do any blasting. He didn't
find any signs of the sort of
mineral he required. Marble would
have been perfect, but there is no
marble on the Moon. Naturally! Yet
Pop continued to search absorbedly
for material with which to capture
memory. Sattell still seemed necessary,
but—
Early one lunar morning he was
a good two miles from his shack
when he saw rocket-fumes in the
sky. It was most unlikely. He wasn't
looking for anything of the sort, but
out of the corner of his eye he observed
that something moved. Which
was impossible. He turned his head,
and there were rocket-fumes coming
over the horizon, not in the direction
of Lunar City. Which was more
impossible still.
He stared. A tiny silver rocket to
the westward poured out monstrous
masses of vapor. It decelerated swiftly.
It curved downward. The rockets
checked for an instant, and flamed
again more violently, and checked
once more. This was not an expert
approach. It was a faulty one. Curving
surface-ward in a sharply changing
parabola, the pilot over-corrected
and had to wait to gather down-speed,
and then over-corrected again.
It was an altogether clumsy landing.
The ship was not even perfectly vertical
when it settled not quite in the
landing-area marked by silvery triangles.
One of its tail-fins crumpled
slightly. It tilted a little when fully
landed.
Then nothing happened.
Pop made his way toward it in
the skittering, skating gait one uses
in one-sixth gravity. When he was
within half a mile, an air-lock door
opened in the ship's side. But nothing
came out of the lock. No space-suited
figure. No cargo came drifting
down with the singular deliberation
of falling objects on the Moon.
It was just barely past lunar sunrise
on the far side of the Moon.
Incredibly long and utterly black
shadows stretched across the plain,
and half the rocketship was dazzling
white and half was blacker than
blackness itself. The sun still hung
low indeed in the black, star-speckled
sky. Pop waded through moondust,
raising a trail of slowly settling
powder. He knew only that the ship
didn't come from Lunar City, but
from Earth. He couldn't imagine
why. He did not even wildly connect
it with what—say—Sattell might
have written with desperate plausibility
about greasy-seeming white
crystals out of the mine, knocking
about Pop Young's shack in cannisters
containing a hundred Earth-pounds
weight of richness.
Pop reached the rocketship. He
approached the big tail-fins. On one
of them there were welded ladder-rungs
going up to the opened air-lock
door.
He climbed.
The air-lock was perfectly normal
when he reached it. There was a
glass port in the inner door, and he
saw eyes looking through it at him.
He pulled the outer door shut and
felt the whining vibration of admitted
air. His vacuum suit went slack
about him. The inner door began to
open, and Pop reached up and gave
his helmet the practiced twisting
jerk which removed it.
Then he blinked. There was a red-headed
man in the opened door. He
grinned savagely at Pop. He held a
very nasty hand-weapon trained on
Pop's middle.
"Don't come in!" he said mockingly.
"And I don't give a damn
about how you are. This isn't social.
It's business!"
Pop simply gaped. He couldn't
quite take it in.
"This," snapped the red-headed
man abruptly, "is a stickup!"
Pop's eyes went through the inner
lock-door. He saw that the interior
of the ship was stripped and bare.
But a spiral stairway descended from
some upper compartment. It had a
handrail of pure, transparent, water-clear
plastic. The walls were bare insulation,
but that trace of luxury remained.
Pop gazed at the plastic,
fascinated.
The red-headed man leaned forward,
snarling. He slashed Pop
across the face with the barrel of his
weapon. It drew blood. It was wanton,
savage brutality.
"Pay attention!" snarled the red-headed
man. "A stickup, I said! Get
it? You go get that can of stuff
from the mine! The diamonds!
Bring them here! Understand?"
Pop said numbly: "What the
hell?"
The red-headed man hit him
again. He was nerve-racked, and,
therefore, he wanted to hurt.
"Move!" he rasped. "I want the
diamonds you've got for the ship
from Lunar City! Bring 'em!" Pop
licked blood from his lips and the
man with the weapon raged at him.
"Then phone down to the mine!
Tell Sattell I'm here and he can
come on up! Tell him to bring any
more diamonds they've dug up since
the stuff you've got!"
He leaned forward. His face was
only inches from Pop Young's. It
was seamed and hard-bitten and
nerve-racked. But any man would be
quivering if he wasn't used to space
or the feel of one-sixth gravity on
the Moon. He panted:
"And get it straight! You try
any tricks and we take off! We
swing over your shack! The rocket-blast
smashes it! We burn you
down! Then we swing over the cable
down to the mine and the rocket-flame
melts it! You die and everybody
in the mine besides! No tricks!
We didn't come here for nothing!"
He twitched all over. Then he
struck cruelly again at Pop Young's
face. He seemed filled with fury, at
least partly hysterical. It was the tension
that space-travel—then, at its
beginning—produced. It was meaningless
savagery due to terror. But,
of course, Pop was helpless to resent
it. There were no weapons on the
Moon and the mention of Sattell's
name showed the uselessness of bluff.
He'd pictured the complete set-up
by the edge of the Big Crack. Pop
could do nothing.
The red-headed man checked
himself, panting. He drew back and
slammed the inner lock-door. There
was the sound of pumping.
Pop put his helmet back on and
sealed it. The outer door opened.
Outrushing air tugged at Pop. After
a second or two he went out and
climbed down the welded-on ladder-bars
to the ground.
He headed back toward his shack.
Somehow, the mention of Sattell had
made his mind work better. It always
did. He began painstakingly to
put things together. The red-headed
man knew the routine here in every
detail. He knew Sattell. That part
was simple. Sattell had planned this
multi-million-dollar coup, as a man
in prison might plan his break. The
stripped interior of the ship identified
it.
It was one of the unsuccessful
luxury-liners sold for scrap. Or perhaps
it was stolen for the journey
here. Sattell's associates had had to
steal or somehow get the fuel, and
somehow find a pilot. But there were
diamonds worth at least five million
dollars waiting for them, and the
whole job might not have called for
more than two men—with Sattell as
a third. According to the economics
of crime, it was feasible. Anyhow it
was being done.
Pop reached the dust-heap which
was his shack and went in the air
lock. Inside, he went to the vision-phone
and called the mine-colony
down in the Crack. He gave the
message he'd been told to pass on.
Sattell to come up, with what diamonds
had been dug since the
regular cannister was sent up for the
Lunar City ship that would be due
presently. Otherwise the ship on the
landing strip would destroy shack
and Pop and the colony together.
"I'd guess," said Pop painstakingly,
"that Sattell figured it out. He's
probably got some sort of gun to
keep you from holding him down
there. But he won't know his friends
are here—not right this minute he
won't."
A shaking voice asked questions
from the vision-phone.
"No," said Pop, "they'll do it anyhow.
If we were able to tell about
'em, they'd be chased. But if I'm
dead and the shacks smashed and
the cable burnt through, they'll be
back on Earth long before a new
cable's been got and let down to you.
So they'll do all they can no matter
what I do." He added, "I wouldn't
tell Sattell a thing about it, if I were
you. It'll save trouble. Just let him
keep on waiting for this to happen.
It'll save you trouble."
Another shaky question.
"Me?" asked Pop. "Oh, I'm going
to raise what hell I can. There's
some stuff in that ship I want."
He switched off the phone. He
went over to his air apparatus. He
took down the cannister of diamonds
which were worth five millions or
more back on Earth. He found a
bucket. He dumped the diamonds
casually into it. They floated downward
with great deliberation and
surged from side to side like a liquid
when they stopped. One-sixth gravity.
Pop regarded his drawings meditatively.
A sketch of his wife as he
now remembered her. It was very
good to remember. A drawing of his
two children, playing together. He
looked forward to remembering
much more about them. He grinned.
"That stair-rail," he said in deep
satisfaction. "That'll do it!"
He tore bed linen from his bunk
and worked on the emptied cannister.
It was a double container with a
thermware interior lining. Even on
Earth newly-mined diamonds sometimes
fly to pieces from internal
stress. On the Moon, it was not desirable
that diamonds be exposed to
repeated violent changes of temperature.
So a thermware-lined cannister
kept them at mine-temperature once
they were warmed to touchability.
Pop packed the cotton cloth in the
container. He hurried a little, because
the men in the rocket were shaky and
might not practice patience. He took
a small emergency-lamp from his
spare spacesuit. He carefully cracked
its bulb, exposing the filament within.
He put the lamp on top of the
cotton and sprinkled magnesium
marking-powder over everything.
Then he went to the air-apparatus
and took out a flask of the liquid
oxygen used to keep his breathing-air
in balance. He poured the frigid,
pale-blue stuff into the cotton. He
saturated it.
All the inside of the shack was
foggy when he finished. Then he
pushed the cannister-top down. He
breathed a sigh of relief when it was
in place. He'd arranged for it to
break a frozen-brittle switch as it
descended. When it came off, the
switch would light the lamp with its
bare filament. There was powdered
magnesium in contact with it and
liquid oxygen all about.
He went out of the shack by the
air lock. On the way, thinking about
Sattell, he suddenly recovered a completely
new memory. On their first
wedding anniversary, so long ago,
he and his wife had gone out to
dinner to celebrate. He remembered
how she looked: the almost-smug
joy they shared that they would be
together for always, with one complete
year for proof.
Pop reflected hungrily that it was
something else to be made permanent
and inspected from time to time.
But he wanted more than a drawing
of this! He wanted to make the memory
permanent and to extend it—
If it had not been for his vacuum
suit and the cannister he carried, Pop
would have rubbed his hands.
Tall, jagged crater-walls rose
from the lunar plain. Monstrous, extended
inky shadows stretched
enormous distances, utterly black.
The sun, like a glowing octopod,
floated low at the edge of things and
seemed to hate all creation.
Pop reached the rocket. He
climbed the welded ladder-rungs to
the air lock. He closed the door. Air
whined. His suit sagged against his
body. He took off his helmet.
When the red-headed man opened
the inner door, the hand-weapon
shook and trembled. Pop said
calmly:
"Now I've got to go handle the
hoist, if Sattell's coming up from
the mine. If I don't do it, he don't
come up."
The red-headed man snarled. But
his eyes were on the cannister whose
contents should weigh a hundred
pounds on Earth.
"Any tricks," he rasped, "and you
know what happens!"
"Yeah," said Pop.
He stolidly put his helmet back
on. But his eyes went past the red-headed
man to the stair that wound
down, inside the ship, from some
compartment above. The stair-rail was
pure, clear, water-white plastic, not
less than three inches thick. There
was a lot of it!
The inner door closed. Pop opened
the outer. Air rushed out. He
climbed painstakingly down to the
ground. He started back toward the
shack.
There was the most luridly bright
of all possible flashes. There was no
sound, of course. But something
flamed very brightly, and the ground
thumped under Pop Young's vacuum
boots. He turned.
The rocketship was still in the act
of flying apart. It had been a splendid
explosion. Of course cotton sheeting
in liquid oxygen is not quite as
good an explosive as carbon-black,
which they used down in the mine.
Even with magnesium powder to
start the flame when a bare light-filament
ignited it, the cannister-bomb
hadn't equaled—say—T.N.T.
But the ship had fuel on board for
the trip back to Earth. And it blew,
too. It would be minutes before all
the fragments of the ship returned
to the Moon's surface. On the Moon,
things fall slowly.
Pop didn't wait. He searched
hopefully. Once a mass of steel plating
fell only yards from him, but it
did not interrupt his search.
When he went into the shack, he
grinned to himself. The call-light of
the vision-phone flickered wildly.
When he took off his helmet the bell
clanged incessantly. He answered. A
shaking voice from the mining-colony
panted:
"We felt a shock! What happened?
What do we do?"
"Don't do a thing," advised Pop.
"It's all right. I blew up the ship and
everything's all right. I wouldn't
even mention it to Sattell if I were
you."
He grinned happily down at a section
of plastic stair-rail he'd found
not too far from where the ship exploded.
When the man down in the
mine cut off, Pop got out of his
vacuum suit in a hurry. He placed
the plastic zestfully on the table
where he'd been restricted to drawing
pictures of his wife and children
in order to recover memories of
them.
He began to plan, gloatingly, the
thing he would carve out of a four-inch
section of the plastic. When it
was carved, he'd paint it. While he
worked, he'd think of Sattell, because
that was the way to get back the
missing portions of his life—the
parts Sattell had managed to get
away from him. He'd get back more
than ever, now!
He didn't wonder what he'd do
if he ever remembered the crime
Sattell had committed. He felt, somehow,
that he wouldn't get that back
until he'd recovered all the rest.
Gloating, it was amusing to remember
what people used to call
such art-works as he planned, when
carved by other lonely men in other
faraway places. They called those
sculptures scrimshaw.
But they were a lot more than
that!
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Astounding Science Fiction
September
1955. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | Luring him down into the Big Crack and killing him | Hiring an assassin from a neighboring planet | Blowing up the shack near the edge of the Big Crack | Escaping on board a secondhand lunar tour vessel | 3 |
24247_0D8BR739_1 | What is Prantera referring to when he mentions 'Quentin'? | Illustrated by van Dongen
A gun is an interesting weapon; it can be hired, of
course, and naturally doesn't care who hires it. Something
much the same can be said of the gunman, too....
GUN FOR HIRE
By
MACK
REYNOLDS
Joe Prantera
called
softly, "Al." The pleasurable,
comfortable,
warm feeling began
spreading over him, the
way it always did.
The older man stopped and
squinted, but not suspiciously, even
now.
The evening was dark, it was unlikely
that the other even saw the
circle of steel that was the mouth of
the shotgun barrel, now resting on
the car's window ledge.
"Who's it?" he growled.
Joe Prantera said softly, "Big Louis
sent me, Al."
And he pressed the trigger.
And at that moment, the universe
caved inward upon Joseph Marie
Prantera.
There was nausea and nausea upon
nausea.
There was a falling through all
space and through all time. There was
doubling and twisting and twitching
of every muscle and nerve.
There was pain, horror and tumultuous
fear.
And he came out of it as quickly
and completely as he'd gone in.
He was in, he thought, a hospital
and his first reaction was to think,
This here California. Everything different.
Then his second thought was
Something went wrong. Big Louis, he
ain't going to like this.
He brought his thinking to the
present. So far as he could remember,
he hadn't completely pulled the trigger.
That at least meant that whatever
the rap was it wouldn't be too
tough. With luck, the syndicate would
get him off with a couple of years at
Quentin.
A door slid open in the wall in a
way that Joe had never seen a door
operate before.
This here California.
The clothes on the newcomer were
wrong, too. For the first time, Joe
Prantera began to sense an alienness—a
something that was awfully
wrong.
The other spoke precisely and
slowly, the way a highly educated man
speaks a language which he reads
and writes fluently but has little occasion
to practice vocally. "You have recovered?"
Joe Prantera looked at the other
expressionlessly. Maybe the old duck
was one of these foreign doctors, like.
The newcomer said, "You have undoubtedly
been through a most harrowing
experience. If you have any
untoward symptoms, possibly I could
be of assistance."
Joe couldn't figure out how he
stood. For one thing, there should
have been some kind of police guard.
The other said, "Perhaps a bit of
stimulant?"
Joe said flatly, "I wanta lawyer."
The newcomer frowned at him. "A
lawyer?"
"I'm not sayin' nothin'. Not until I
get a mouthpiece."
The newcomer started off on another
tack. "My name is Lawrence
Reston-Farrell. If I am not mistaken,
you are Joseph Salviati-Prantera."
Salviati happened to be Joe's mother's
maiden name. But it was unlikely
this character could have known that.
Joe had been born in Naples and his
mother had died in childbirth. His
father hadn't brought him to the
States until the age of five and by that
time he had a stepmother.
"I wanta mouthpiece," Joe said
flatly, "or let me outta here."
Lawrence Reston-Farrell said, "You
are not being constrained. There are
clothes for you in the closet there."
Joe gingerly tried swinging his
feet to the floor and sitting up, while
the other stood watching him, strangely.
He came to his feet. With the exception
of a faint nausea, which
brought back memories of that extreme
condition he'd suffered during
... during what? He hadn't the
vaguest idea of what had happened.
He was dressed in a hospital-type
nightgown. He looked down at it and
snorted and made his way over to the
closet. It opened on his approach, the
door sliding back into the wall in
much the same manner as the room's
door had opened for Reston-Farrell.
Joe Prantera scowled and said,
"These ain't my clothes."
"No, I am afraid not."
"You think I'd be seen dead wearing
this stuff? What is this, some religious
crackpot hospital?"
Reston-Farrell said, "I am afraid,
Mr. Salviati-Prantera, that these are
the only garments available. I suggest
you look out the window there."
Joe gave him a long, chill look
and then stepped to the window. He
couldn't figure the other. Unless he
was a fruitcake. Maybe he was in
some kind of pressure cooker and
this was one of the fruitcakes.
He looked out, however, not on the
lawns and walks of a sanitarium but
upon a wide boulevard of what was
obviously a populous city.
And for a moment again, Joe Prantera
felt the depths of nausea.
This was not his world.
He stared for a long, long moment.
The cars didn't even have wheels, he
noted dully. He turned slowly and
faced the older man.
Reston-Farrell said compassionately,
"Try this, it's excellent cognac."
Joe Prantera stared at him, said finally,
flatly, "What's it all about?"
The other put down the unaccepted
glass. "We were afraid first
realization would be a shock to you,"
he said. "My colleague is in the adjoining
room. We will be glad to explain
to you if you will join us there."
"I wanta get out of here," Joe said.
"Where would you go?"
The fear of police, of Al Rossi's
vengeance, of the measures that
might be taken by Big Louis on his
failure, were now far away.
Reston-Farrell had approached the
door by which he had entered and it
reopened for him. He went through
it without looking back.
There was nothing else to do. Joe
dressed, then followed him.
In the adjoining room was a circular
table that would have accommodated
a dozen persons. Two were
seated there now, papers, books and
soiled coffee cups before them. There
had evidently been a long wait.
Reston-Farrell, the one Joe had already
met, was tall and drawn of face
and with a chainsmoker's nervousness.
The other was heavier and more
at ease. They were both, Joe estimated,
somewhere in their middle fifties.
They both looked like docs. He
wondered, all over again, if this was
some kind of pressure cooker.
But that didn't explain the view
from the window.
Reston-Farrell said, "May I present
my colleague, Citizen Warren Brett-James?
Warren, this is our guest from
... from yesteryear, Mr. Joseph Salviati-Prantera."
Brett-James nodded to him, friendly,
so far as Joe could see. He said
gently, "I think it would be Mr. Joseph
Prantera, wouldn't it? The maternal
linage was almost universally
ignored." His voice too gave the impression
he was speaking a language
not usually on his tongue.
Joe took an empty chair, hardly
bothering to note its alien qualities.
His body seemed to
fit
into the piece
of furniture, as though it had been
molded to his order.
Joe said, "I think maybe I'll take
that there drink, Doc."
Reston-Farrell said, "Of course,"
and then something else Joe didn't
get. Whatever the something else
was, a slot opened in the middle of
the table and a glass, so clear of texture
as to be all but invisible, was
elevated. It contained possibly three
ounces of golden fluid.
Joe didn't allow himself to think
of its means of delivery. He took up
the drink and bolted it. He put the
glass down and said carefully,
"What's it all about, huh?"
Warren Brett-James said soothingly,
"Prepare yourself for somewhat
of a shock, Mr. Prantera. You are no
longer in Los Angeles—"
"Ya think I'm stupid? I can see
that."
"I was about to say, Los Angeles of
1960. Mr. Prantera, we welcome you
to Nuevo Los Angeles."
"Ta where?"
"To Nuevo Los Angeles and to
the year—" Brett-James looked at his
companion. "What is the date, Old
Calendar?"
"2133," Reston-Farrell said. "2133
A.D. they would say."
Joe Prantera looked from one of
them to the other, scowling. "What
are you guys talking about?"
Warren Brett-James said softly,
"Mr. Prantera, you are no longer in
the year 1960, you are now in the
year 2133."
He said, uncomprehendingly, "You
mean I been, like, unconscious for—"
He let the sentence fall away as he
realized the impossibility.
Brett-James said gently, "Hardly
for one hundred and seventy years,
Mr. Prantera."
Reston-Farrell said, "I am afraid we
are confusing you. Briefly, we have
transported
you, I suppose one might
say, from your own era to ours."
Joe Prantera had never been exposed
to the concept of time travel.
He had simply never associated with
anyone who had ever even remotely
considered such an idea. Now he said,
"You mean, like, I been asleep all
that time?"
"Not exactly," Brett-James said,
frowning.
Reston-Farrell said, "Suffice to say,
you are now one hundred and seventy-three
years after the last memory you
have."
Joe Prantera's mind suddenly reverted
to those last memories and his
eyes narrowed dangerously. He felt
suddenly at bay. He said, "Maybe
you guys better let me in on what's
this all about."
Reston-Farrell said, "Mr. Prantera,
we have brought you from your era
to perform a task for us."
Joe stared at him, and then at the
other. He couldn't believe he was getting
through to them. Or, at least,
that they were to him.
Finally he said, "If I get this, you
want me to do a job for you."
"That is correct."
Joe said, "You guys know the kind
of jobs I do?"
"That is correct."
"Like hell you do. You think I'm
stupid? I never even seen you before."
Joe Prantera came abruptly to
his feet. "I'm gettin' outta here."
For the second time, Reston-Farrell
said, "Where would you go, Mr.
Prantera?"
Joe glared at him. Then sat down
again, as abruptly as he'd arisen.
"Let's start all over again. I got this
straight, you brought me, some
screwy way, all the way ... here.
O.K., I'll buy that. I seen what it looks
like out that window—" The real
comprehension was seeping through
to him even as he talked. "Everybody
I know, Jessie, Tony, the Kid, Big
Louis, everybody, they're dead. Even
Big Louis."
"Yes," Brett-James said, his voice
soft. "They are all dead, Mr. Prantera.
Their children are all dead, and their
grandchildren."
The two men of the future said
nothing more for long minutes while
Joe Prantera's mind whirled its confusion.
Finally he said, "What's this bit
about you wanting me to give it to
some guy."
"That is why we brought you here,
Mr. Prantera. You were ... you
are, a professional assassin."
"Hey, wait a minute, now."
Reston-Farrell went on, ignoring
the interruption. "There is small
point in denying your calling. Pray
remember that at the point when we
...
transported
you, you were about
to dispose of a contemporary named
Alphonso Annunziata-Rossi. A citizen,
I might say, whose demise would
probably have caused small dismay to
society."
They had him pegged all right. Joe
said, "But why me? Why don't you
get some heavy from now? Somebody
knows the ropes these days."
Brett-James said, "Mr. Prantera,
there are no professional assassins in
this age, nor have there been for over
a century and a half."
"Well, then do it yourself." Joe
Prantera's irritation over this whole
complicated mess was growing. And
already he was beginning to long for
the things he knew—for Jessie and
Tony and the others, for his favorite
bar, for the lasagne down at Papa
Giovanni's. Right now he could have
welcomed a calling down at the hands
of Big Louis.
Reston-Farrell had come to his feet
and walked to one of the large room's
windows. He looked out, as though
unseeing. Then, his back turned, he
said, "We have tried, but it is simply
not in us, Mr. Prantera."
"You mean you're yella?"
"No, if by that you mean afraid. It
is simply not within us to take the
life of a fellow creature—not to speak
of a fellow man."
Joe snapped: "Everything you guys
say sounds crazy. Let's start all over
again."
Brett-James said, "Let me do it,
Lawrence." He turned his eyes to Joe.
"Mr. Prantera, in your own era, did
you ever consider the future?"
Joe looked at him blankly.
"In your day you were confronted
with national and international, problems.
Just as we are today and just as
nations were a century or a millennium
ago."
"Sure, O.K., so we had problems. I
know whatcha mean—like wars, and
depressions and dictators and like
that."
"Yes, like that," Brett-James
nodded.
The heavy-set man paused a moment.
"Yes, like that," he repeated.
"That we confront you now indicates
that the problems of your day were
solved. Hadn't they been, the world
most surely would have destroyed itself.
Wars? Our pedagogues are hard
put to convince their students that
such ever existed. More than a century
and a half ago our society eliminated
the reasons for international
conflict. For that matter," he added
musingly, "we eliminated most international
boundaries. Depressions?
Shortly after your own period, man
awoke to the fact that he had achieved
to the point where it was possible to
produce an abundance for all with a
minimum of toil. Overnight, for all
practical purposes, the whole world
was industrialized, automated. The
second industrial revolution was accompanied
by revolutionary changes
in almost every field, certainly in every
science. Dictators? Your ancestors
found, Mr. Prantera, that it is
difficult for a man to be free so long
as others are still enslaved. Today the
democratic ethic has reached a pinnacle
never dreamed of in your own
era."
"O.K., O.K.," Joe Prantera growled.
"So everybody's got it made. What I
wanta know is what's all this about
me giving it ta somebody? If everything's
so great, how come you want
me to knock this guy off?"
Reston-Farrell bent forward and
thumped his right index finger twice
on the table. "The bacterium of hate—a
new strain—has found the human
race unprotected from its disease.
We had thought our vaccines
immunized us."
"What's that suppose to mean?"
Brett-James took up the ball again.
"Mr. Prantera, have you ever heard of
Ghengis Khan, of Tamerlane, Alexander,
Caesar?"
Joe Prantera scowled at him emptily.
"Or, more likely, of Napoleon, Hitler,
Stalin?"
"Sure I heard of Hitler and Stalin,"
Joe growled. "I ain't stupid."
The other nodded. "Such men are
unique. They have a drive ... a
drive to power which exceeds by far
the ambitions of the average man.
They are genii in their way, Mr. Prantera,
genii of evil. Such a genius of
evil has appeared on the current
scene."
"Now we're getting somewheres,"
Joe snorted. "So you got a guy what's
a little ambitious, like, eh? And you
guys ain't got the guts to give it to
him. O.K. What's in it for me?"
The two of them frowned, exchanged
glances. Reston-Farrell said,
"You know, that is one aspect we had
not considered."
Brett-James said to Joe Prantera,
"Had we not, ah, taken you at the
time we did, do you realize what
would have happened?"
"Sure," Joe grunted. "I woulda let
old Al Rossi have it right in the guts,
five times. Then I woulda took the
plane back to Chi."
Brett-James was shaking his head.
"No. You see, by coincidence, a police
squad car was coming down the
street just at that moment to arrest
Mr. Rossi. You would have been apprehended.
As I understand Californian
law of the period, your life
would have been forfeit, Mr. Prantera."
Joe winced. It didn't occur to him
to doubt their word.
Reston-Farrell said, "As to reward,
Mr. Prantera, we have already told
you there is ultra-abundance in this
age. Once this task has been performed,
we will sponsor your entry
into present day society. Competent
psychiatric therapy will soon remove
your present—"
"Waita minute, now. You figure on
gettin' me candled by some head
shrinker, eh? No thanks, Buster. I'm
going back to my own—"
Brett-James was shaking his head
again. "I am afraid there is no return,
Mr. Prantera. Time travel works but
in one direction,
with
the flow of the
time stream. There can be no return
to your own era."
Joe Prantera had been rocking
with the mental blows he had been
assimilating, but this was the final
haymaker. He was stuck in this
squaresville of a world.
Joe Prantera on a job was thorough.
Careful, painstaking, competent.
He spent the first three days of his
life in the year 2133 getting the feel
of things. Brett-James and Reston-Farrell
had been appointed to work
with him. Joe didn't meet any of the
others who belonged to the group
which had taken the measures to
bring him from the past. He didn't
want to meet them. The fewer persons
involved, the better.
He stayed in the apartment of
Reston-Farrell. Joe had been right,
Reston-Farrell was a medical doctor.
Brett-James evidently had something
to do with the process that had enabled
them to bring Joe from the
past. Joe didn't know how they'd
done it, and he didn't care. Joe was a
realist. He was here. The thing was
to adapt.
There didn't seem to be any hurry.
Once the deal was made, they left it
up to him to make the decisions.
They drove him around the town,
when he wished to check the traffic
arteries. They flew him about the
whole vicinity. From the air, Southern
California looked much the same
as it had in his own time. Oceans,
mountains, and to a lesser extent, deserts,
are fairly permanent even
against man's corroding efforts.
It was while he was flying with
Brett-James on the second day that
Joe said, "How about Mexico? Could
I make the get to Mexico?"
The physicist looked at him questioningly.
"Get?" he said.
Joe Prantera said impatiently, "The
getaway. After I give it to this Howard
Temple-Tracy guy, I gotta go on
the run, don't I?"
"I see." Brett-James cleared his
throat. "Mexico is no longer a separate
nation, Mr. Prantera. All North
America has been united into one
unit. Today, there are only eight nations
in the world."
"Where's the nearest?"
"South America."
"That's a helluva long way to go on
a get."
"We hadn't thought of the matter
being handled in that manner."
Joe eyed him in scorn. "Oh, you
didn't, huh? What happens after I
give it to this guy? I just sit around
and wait for the cops to put the arm
on me?"
Brett-James grimaced in amusement.
"Mr. Prantera, this will probably
be difficult for you to comprehend,
but there are no police in this
era."
Joe gaped at him. "No police!
What happens if you gotta throw
some guy in stir?"
"If I understand your idiom correctly,
you mean prison. There are
no prisons in this era, Mr. Prantera."
Joe stared. "No cops, no jails. What
stops anybody? What stops anybody
from just going into some bank, like,
and collecting up all the bread?"
Brett-James cleared his throat.
"Mr. Prantera, there are no banks."
"No banks! You gotta have banks!"
"And no money to put in them.
We found it a rather antiquated
method of distribution well over a
century ago."
Joe had given up. Now he merely
stared.
Brett-James said reasonably, "We
found we were devoting as much
time to financial matters in all their
endless ramifications—including
bank robberies—as we were to productive
efforts. So we turned to more
efficient methods of distribution."
On the fourth day, Joe said, "O.K.,
let's get down to facts. Summa the
things you guys say don't stick together
so good. Now, first place,
where's this guy Temple-Tracy you
want knocked off?"
Reston-Farrell and Brett-James
were both present. The three of them
sat in the living room of the latter's
apartment, sipping a sparkling wine
which seemed to be the prevailing
beverage of the day. For Joe's taste
it was insipid stuff. Happily, rye was
available to those who wanted it.
Reston-Farrell said, "You mean,
where does he reside? Why, here in
this city."
"Well, that's handy, eh?" Joe
scratched himself thoughtfully. "You
got somebody can finger him for me?"
"Finger him?"
"Look, before I can give it to this
guy I gotta know some place where
he'll be at some time. Get it? Like Al
Rossi. My finger, he works in Rossi's
house, see? He lets me know every
Wednesday night, eight o'clock, Al
leaves the house all by hisself. O.K.,
so I can make plans, like, to give it
to him." Joe Prantera wound it up
reasonably. "You gotta have a finger."
Brett-James said, "Why not just go
to Temple-Tracy's apartment and, ah,
dispose of him?"
"Jest walk in, eh? You think I'm
stupid? How do I know how many
witnesses hangin' around? How do I
know if the guy's carryin' heat?"
"Heat?"
"A gun, a gun. Ya think I'm stupid?
I come to give it to him and he
gives it to me instead."
Dr. Reston-Farrell said, "Howard
Temple-Tracy lives alone. He customarily
receives visitors every afternoon,
largely potential followers. He
is attempting to recruit members to
an organization he is forming. It
would be quite simple for you to
enter his establishment and dispose
of him. I assure you, he does not possess
weapons."
Joe was indignant. "Just like that,
eh?" he said sarcastically. "Then what
happens? How do I get out of the
building? Where's my get car parked?
Where do I hide out? Where do I
dump the heat?"
"Dump the heat?"
"Get rid of the gun. You want I
should get caught with the gun on
me? I'd wind up in the gas chamber
so quick—"
"See here, Mr. Prantera," Brett-James
said softly. "We no longer have
capital punishment, you must realize."
"O.K. I still don't wanta get caught.
What
is
the rap these days, huh?"
Joe scowled. "You said they didn't
have no jails any more."
"This is difficult for you to understand,
I imagine," Reston-Farrell told
him, "but, you see, we no longer punish
people in this era."
That took a long, unbelieving moment
to sink in. "You mean, like, no
matter what they do? That's crazy.
Everybody'd be running around giving
it to everybody else."
"The motivation for crime has
been removed, Mr. Prantera," Reston-Farrell
attempted to explain. "A
person who commits a violence
against another is obviously in need
of medical care. And, consequently,
receives it."
"You mean, like, if I steal a car or
something, they just take me to a
doctor?" Joe Prantera was unbelieving.
"Why would anybody wish to steal
a car?" Reston-Farrell said easily.
"But if I
give it
to somebody?"
"You will be turned over to a medical
institution. Citizen Howard Temple-Tracy
is the last man you will
ever kill, Mr. Prantera."
A chillness was in the belly of Joe
Prantera. He said very slowly, very
dangerously, "You guys figure on me
getting caught, don't you?"
"Yes," Brett-James said evenly.
"Well then, figure something else.
You think I'm stupid?"
"Mr. Prantera," Dr. Reston-Farrell
said, "there has been as much progress
in the field of psychiatry in the
past two centuries as there has in
any other. Your treatment would be
brief and painless, believe me."
Joe said coldly, "And what happens
to you guys? How do you know I
won't rat on you?"
Brett-James said gently, "The moment
after you have accomplished
your mission, we plan to turn ourselves
over to the nearest institution
to have determined whether or not
we also need therapy."
"Now I'm beginning to wonder
about you guys," Joe said. "Look, all
over again, what'd'ya wanta give it to
this guy for?"
The doctor said, "We explained
the other day, Mr. Prantera. Citizen
Howard Temple-Tracy is a dangerous,
atavistic, evil genius. We are
afraid for our institutions if his plans
are allowed to mature."
"Well if you got things so good,
everybody's got it made, like, who'd
listen to him?"
The doctor nodded at the validity
of the question. "Mr. Prantera,
Homo
sapiens
is a unique animal. Physically
he matures at approximately the age
of thirteen. However, mental maturity
and adjustment is often not fully
realized until thirty or even more.
Indeed, it is sometimes never
achieved. Before such maturity is
reached, our youth are susceptible to
romantic appeal. Nationalism, chauvinism,
racism, the supposed glory of
the military, all seem romantic to the
immature. They rebel at the orderliness
of present society. They seek entertainment
in excitement. Citizen
Temple-Tracy is aware of this and
finds his recruits among the young."
"O.K., so this guy is dangerous.
You want him knocked off before he
screws everything up. But the way
things are, there's no way of making
a get. So you'll have to get some other
patsy. Not me."
"I am afraid you have no alternative,"
Brett-James said gently. "Without
us, what will you do? Mr. Prantera,
you do not even speak the language."
"What'd'ya mean? I don't understand
summa the big words you eggheads
use, but I get by O.K."
Brett-James said, "Amer-English is
no longer the language spoken by the
man in the street, Mr. Prantera. Only
students of such subjects any longer
speak such tongues as Amer-English,
French, Russian or the many others
that once confused the race with
their limitations as a means of communication."
"You mean there's no place in the
whole world where they talk American?"
Joe demanded, aghast.
Dr. Reston-Farrell controlled the
car. Joe Prantera sat in the seat next
to him and Warren Brett-James sat
in the back. Joe had, tucked in his
belt, a .45 caliber automatic, once displayed
in a museum. It had been
more easily procured than the ammunition
to fit it, but that problem too
had been solved.
The others were nervous, obviously
repelled by the very conception of
what they had planned.
Inwardly, Joe was amused. Now
that they had got in the clutch, the
others were on the verge of chickening
out. He knew it wouldn't have
taken much for them to cancel the
project. It wasn't any answer though.
If they allowed him to call it off today,
they'd talk themselves into it
again before the week was through.
Besides, already Joe was beginning
to feel the comfortable, pleasurable,
warm feeling that came to him on
occasions like this.
He said, "You're sure this guy talks
American, eh?"
Warren Brett-James said, "Quite
sure. He is a student of history."
"And he won't think it's funny I
talk American to him, eh?"
"He'll undoubtedly be intrigued."
They pulled up before a large
apartment building that overlooked
the area once known as Wilmington.
Joe was coolly efficient now. He
pulled out the automatic, held it
down below his knees and threw a
shell into the barrel. He eased the
hammer down, thumbed on the
safety, stuck the weapon back in his
belt and beneath the jacketlike garment
he wore.
He said, "O.K. See you guys later."
He left them and entered the building.
An elevator—he still wasn't used
to their speed in this era—whooshed
him to the penthouse duplex occupied
by Citizen Howard Temple-Tracy.
There were two persons in the reception
room but they left on Joe's
arrival, without bothering to look at
him more than glancingly.
He spotted the screen immediately
and went over and stood before it.
The screen lit and revealed a
heavy-set, dour of countenance man
seated at a desk. He looked into Joe
Prantera's face, scowled and said
something.
Joe said, "Joseph Salviati-Prantera
to interview Citizen Howard Temple-Tracy."
The other's shaggy eyebrows rose.
"Indeed," he said. "In Amer-English?"
Joe nodded.
"Enter," the other said.
A door had slid open on the other
side of the room. Joe walked through
it and into what was obviously an office.
Citizen Temple-Tracy sat at a
desk. There was only one other chair
in the room. Joe Prantera ignored it
and remained standing.
Citizen Temple-Tracy said, "What
can I do for you?"
Joe looked at him for a long, long
moment. Then he reached down to
his belt and brought forth the .45
automatic. He moistened his lips.
Joe said softly, "You know what
this here is?"
Temple-Tracy stared at the weapon.
"It's a handgun, circa, I would
say, about 1925 Old Calendar. What
in the world are you doing with it?"
Joe said, very slowly, "Chief, in the
line you're in these days you needa
heavy around with wunna these. Otherwise,
Chief, you're gunna wind up
in some gutter with a lotta holes in
you. What I'm doin', I'm askin' for a
job. You need a good man knows how
to handle wunna these, Chief."
Citizen Howard Temple-Tracy
eyed him appraisingly. "Perhaps," he
said, "you are right at that. In the near
future, I may well need an assistant
knowledgeable in the field of violence.
Tell me more about yourself.
You surprise me considerably."
"Sure, Chief. It's kinda a long
story, though. First off, I better tell
you you got some bad enemies, Chief.
Two guys special, named Brett-James
and Doc Reston-Farrell. I think one
of the first jobs I'm gunna hafta do
for you, Chief, is to give it to those
two."
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Analog
December
1960. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | a target | an asylum | an associate | a prison | 3 |
24247_0D8BR739_2 | What is Prantera referring to when he mentions a 'mouthpiece'? | Illustrated by van Dongen
A gun is an interesting weapon; it can be hired, of
course, and naturally doesn't care who hires it. Something
much the same can be said of the gunman, too....
GUN FOR HIRE
By
MACK
REYNOLDS
Joe Prantera
called
softly, "Al." The pleasurable,
comfortable,
warm feeling began
spreading over him, the
way it always did.
The older man stopped and
squinted, but not suspiciously, even
now.
The evening was dark, it was unlikely
that the other even saw the
circle of steel that was the mouth of
the shotgun barrel, now resting on
the car's window ledge.
"Who's it?" he growled.
Joe Prantera said softly, "Big Louis
sent me, Al."
And he pressed the trigger.
And at that moment, the universe
caved inward upon Joseph Marie
Prantera.
There was nausea and nausea upon
nausea.
There was a falling through all
space and through all time. There was
doubling and twisting and twitching
of every muscle and nerve.
There was pain, horror and tumultuous
fear.
And he came out of it as quickly
and completely as he'd gone in.
He was in, he thought, a hospital
and his first reaction was to think,
This here California. Everything different.
Then his second thought was
Something went wrong. Big Louis, he
ain't going to like this.
He brought his thinking to the
present. So far as he could remember,
he hadn't completely pulled the trigger.
That at least meant that whatever
the rap was it wouldn't be too
tough. With luck, the syndicate would
get him off with a couple of years at
Quentin.
A door slid open in the wall in a
way that Joe had never seen a door
operate before.
This here California.
The clothes on the newcomer were
wrong, too. For the first time, Joe
Prantera began to sense an alienness—a
something that was awfully
wrong.
The other spoke precisely and
slowly, the way a highly educated man
speaks a language which he reads
and writes fluently but has little occasion
to practice vocally. "You have recovered?"
Joe Prantera looked at the other
expressionlessly. Maybe the old duck
was one of these foreign doctors, like.
The newcomer said, "You have undoubtedly
been through a most harrowing
experience. If you have any
untoward symptoms, possibly I could
be of assistance."
Joe couldn't figure out how he
stood. For one thing, there should
have been some kind of police guard.
The other said, "Perhaps a bit of
stimulant?"
Joe said flatly, "I wanta lawyer."
The newcomer frowned at him. "A
lawyer?"
"I'm not sayin' nothin'. Not until I
get a mouthpiece."
The newcomer started off on another
tack. "My name is Lawrence
Reston-Farrell. If I am not mistaken,
you are Joseph Salviati-Prantera."
Salviati happened to be Joe's mother's
maiden name. But it was unlikely
this character could have known that.
Joe had been born in Naples and his
mother had died in childbirth. His
father hadn't brought him to the
States until the age of five and by that
time he had a stepmother.
"I wanta mouthpiece," Joe said
flatly, "or let me outta here."
Lawrence Reston-Farrell said, "You
are not being constrained. There are
clothes for you in the closet there."
Joe gingerly tried swinging his
feet to the floor and sitting up, while
the other stood watching him, strangely.
He came to his feet. With the exception
of a faint nausea, which
brought back memories of that extreme
condition he'd suffered during
... during what? He hadn't the
vaguest idea of what had happened.
He was dressed in a hospital-type
nightgown. He looked down at it and
snorted and made his way over to the
closet. It opened on his approach, the
door sliding back into the wall in
much the same manner as the room's
door had opened for Reston-Farrell.
Joe Prantera scowled and said,
"These ain't my clothes."
"No, I am afraid not."
"You think I'd be seen dead wearing
this stuff? What is this, some religious
crackpot hospital?"
Reston-Farrell said, "I am afraid,
Mr. Salviati-Prantera, that these are
the only garments available. I suggest
you look out the window there."
Joe gave him a long, chill look
and then stepped to the window. He
couldn't figure the other. Unless he
was a fruitcake. Maybe he was in
some kind of pressure cooker and
this was one of the fruitcakes.
He looked out, however, not on the
lawns and walks of a sanitarium but
upon a wide boulevard of what was
obviously a populous city.
And for a moment again, Joe Prantera
felt the depths of nausea.
This was not his world.
He stared for a long, long moment.
The cars didn't even have wheels, he
noted dully. He turned slowly and
faced the older man.
Reston-Farrell said compassionately,
"Try this, it's excellent cognac."
Joe Prantera stared at him, said finally,
flatly, "What's it all about?"
The other put down the unaccepted
glass. "We were afraid first
realization would be a shock to you,"
he said. "My colleague is in the adjoining
room. We will be glad to explain
to you if you will join us there."
"I wanta get out of here," Joe said.
"Where would you go?"
The fear of police, of Al Rossi's
vengeance, of the measures that
might be taken by Big Louis on his
failure, were now far away.
Reston-Farrell had approached the
door by which he had entered and it
reopened for him. He went through
it without looking back.
There was nothing else to do. Joe
dressed, then followed him.
In the adjoining room was a circular
table that would have accommodated
a dozen persons. Two were
seated there now, papers, books and
soiled coffee cups before them. There
had evidently been a long wait.
Reston-Farrell, the one Joe had already
met, was tall and drawn of face
and with a chainsmoker's nervousness.
The other was heavier and more
at ease. They were both, Joe estimated,
somewhere in their middle fifties.
They both looked like docs. He
wondered, all over again, if this was
some kind of pressure cooker.
But that didn't explain the view
from the window.
Reston-Farrell said, "May I present
my colleague, Citizen Warren Brett-James?
Warren, this is our guest from
... from yesteryear, Mr. Joseph Salviati-Prantera."
Brett-James nodded to him, friendly,
so far as Joe could see. He said
gently, "I think it would be Mr. Joseph
Prantera, wouldn't it? The maternal
linage was almost universally
ignored." His voice too gave the impression
he was speaking a language
not usually on his tongue.
Joe took an empty chair, hardly
bothering to note its alien qualities.
His body seemed to
fit
into the piece
of furniture, as though it had been
molded to his order.
Joe said, "I think maybe I'll take
that there drink, Doc."
Reston-Farrell said, "Of course,"
and then something else Joe didn't
get. Whatever the something else
was, a slot opened in the middle of
the table and a glass, so clear of texture
as to be all but invisible, was
elevated. It contained possibly three
ounces of golden fluid.
Joe didn't allow himself to think
of its means of delivery. He took up
the drink and bolted it. He put the
glass down and said carefully,
"What's it all about, huh?"
Warren Brett-James said soothingly,
"Prepare yourself for somewhat
of a shock, Mr. Prantera. You are no
longer in Los Angeles—"
"Ya think I'm stupid? I can see
that."
"I was about to say, Los Angeles of
1960. Mr. Prantera, we welcome you
to Nuevo Los Angeles."
"Ta where?"
"To Nuevo Los Angeles and to
the year—" Brett-James looked at his
companion. "What is the date, Old
Calendar?"
"2133," Reston-Farrell said. "2133
A.D. they would say."
Joe Prantera looked from one of
them to the other, scowling. "What
are you guys talking about?"
Warren Brett-James said softly,
"Mr. Prantera, you are no longer in
the year 1960, you are now in the
year 2133."
He said, uncomprehendingly, "You
mean I been, like, unconscious for—"
He let the sentence fall away as he
realized the impossibility.
Brett-James said gently, "Hardly
for one hundred and seventy years,
Mr. Prantera."
Reston-Farrell said, "I am afraid we
are confusing you. Briefly, we have
transported
you, I suppose one might
say, from your own era to ours."
Joe Prantera had never been exposed
to the concept of time travel.
He had simply never associated with
anyone who had ever even remotely
considered such an idea. Now he said,
"You mean, like, I been asleep all
that time?"
"Not exactly," Brett-James said,
frowning.
Reston-Farrell said, "Suffice to say,
you are now one hundred and seventy-three
years after the last memory you
have."
Joe Prantera's mind suddenly reverted
to those last memories and his
eyes narrowed dangerously. He felt
suddenly at bay. He said, "Maybe
you guys better let me in on what's
this all about."
Reston-Farrell said, "Mr. Prantera,
we have brought you from your era
to perform a task for us."
Joe stared at him, and then at the
other. He couldn't believe he was getting
through to them. Or, at least,
that they were to him.
Finally he said, "If I get this, you
want me to do a job for you."
"That is correct."
Joe said, "You guys know the kind
of jobs I do?"
"That is correct."
"Like hell you do. You think I'm
stupid? I never even seen you before."
Joe Prantera came abruptly to
his feet. "I'm gettin' outta here."
For the second time, Reston-Farrell
said, "Where would you go, Mr.
Prantera?"
Joe glared at him. Then sat down
again, as abruptly as he'd arisen.
"Let's start all over again. I got this
straight, you brought me, some
screwy way, all the way ... here.
O.K., I'll buy that. I seen what it looks
like out that window—" The real
comprehension was seeping through
to him even as he talked. "Everybody
I know, Jessie, Tony, the Kid, Big
Louis, everybody, they're dead. Even
Big Louis."
"Yes," Brett-James said, his voice
soft. "They are all dead, Mr. Prantera.
Their children are all dead, and their
grandchildren."
The two men of the future said
nothing more for long minutes while
Joe Prantera's mind whirled its confusion.
Finally he said, "What's this bit
about you wanting me to give it to
some guy."
"That is why we brought you here,
Mr. Prantera. You were ... you
are, a professional assassin."
"Hey, wait a minute, now."
Reston-Farrell went on, ignoring
the interruption. "There is small
point in denying your calling. Pray
remember that at the point when we
...
transported
you, you were about
to dispose of a contemporary named
Alphonso Annunziata-Rossi. A citizen,
I might say, whose demise would
probably have caused small dismay to
society."
They had him pegged all right. Joe
said, "But why me? Why don't you
get some heavy from now? Somebody
knows the ropes these days."
Brett-James said, "Mr. Prantera,
there are no professional assassins in
this age, nor have there been for over
a century and a half."
"Well, then do it yourself." Joe
Prantera's irritation over this whole
complicated mess was growing. And
already he was beginning to long for
the things he knew—for Jessie and
Tony and the others, for his favorite
bar, for the lasagne down at Papa
Giovanni's. Right now he could have
welcomed a calling down at the hands
of Big Louis.
Reston-Farrell had come to his feet
and walked to one of the large room's
windows. He looked out, as though
unseeing. Then, his back turned, he
said, "We have tried, but it is simply
not in us, Mr. Prantera."
"You mean you're yella?"
"No, if by that you mean afraid. It
is simply not within us to take the
life of a fellow creature—not to speak
of a fellow man."
Joe snapped: "Everything you guys
say sounds crazy. Let's start all over
again."
Brett-James said, "Let me do it,
Lawrence." He turned his eyes to Joe.
"Mr. Prantera, in your own era, did
you ever consider the future?"
Joe looked at him blankly.
"In your day you were confronted
with national and international, problems.
Just as we are today and just as
nations were a century or a millennium
ago."
"Sure, O.K., so we had problems. I
know whatcha mean—like wars, and
depressions and dictators and like
that."
"Yes, like that," Brett-James
nodded.
The heavy-set man paused a moment.
"Yes, like that," he repeated.
"That we confront you now indicates
that the problems of your day were
solved. Hadn't they been, the world
most surely would have destroyed itself.
Wars? Our pedagogues are hard
put to convince their students that
such ever existed. More than a century
and a half ago our society eliminated
the reasons for international
conflict. For that matter," he added
musingly, "we eliminated most international
boundaries. Depressions?
Shortly after your own period, man
awoke to the fact that he had achieved
to the point where it was possible to
produce an abundance for all with a
minimum of toil. Overnight, for all
practical purposes, the whole world
was industrialized, automated. The
second industrial revolution was accompanied
by revolutionary changes
in almost every field, certainly in every
science. Dictators? Your ancestors
found, Mr. Prantera, that it is
difficult for a man to be free so long
as others are still enslaved. Today the
democratic ethic has reached a pinnacle
never dreamed of in your own
era."
"O.K., O.K.," Joe Prantera growled.
"So everybody's got it made. What I
wanta know is what's all this about
me giving it ta somebody? If everything's
so great, how come you want
me to knock this guy off?"
Reston-Farrell bent forward and
thumped his right index finger twice
on the table. "The bacterium of hate—a
new strain—has found the human
race unprotected from its disease.
We had thought our vaccines
immunized us."
"What's that suppose to mean?"
Brett-James took up the ball again.
"Mr. Prantera, have you ever heard of
Ghengis Khan, of Tamerlane, Alexander,
Caesar?"
Joe Prantera scowled at him emptily.
"Or, more likely, of Napoleon, Hitler,
Stalin?"
"Sure I heard of Hitler and Stalin,"
Joe growled. "I ain't stupid."
The other nodded. "Such men are
unique. They have a drive ... a
drive to power which exceeds by far
the ambitions of the average man.
They are genii in their way, Mr. Prantera,
genii of evil. Such a genius of
evil has appeared on the current
scene."
"Now we're getting somewheres,"
Joe snorted. "So you got a guy what's
a little ambitious, like, eh? And you
guys ain't got the guts to give it to
him. O.K. What's in it for me?"
The two of them frowned, exchanged
glances. Reston-Farrell said,
"You know, that is one aspect we had
not considered."
Brett-James said to Joe Prantera,
"Had we not, ah, taken you at the
time we did, do you realize what
would have happened?"
"Sure," Joe grunted. "I woulda let
old Al Rossi have it right in the guts,
five times. Then I woulda took the
plane back to Chi."
Brett-James was shaking his head.
"No. You see, by coincidence, a police
squad car was coming down the
street just at that moment to arrest
Mr. Rossi. You would have been apprehended.
As I understand Californian
law of the period, your life
would have been forfeit, Mr. Prantera."
Joe winced. It didn't occur to him
to doubt their word.
Reston-Farrell said, "As to reward,
Mr. Prantera, we have already told
you there is ultra-abundance in this
age. Once this task has been performed,
we will sponsor your entry
into present day society. Competent
psychiatric therapy will soon remove
your present—"
"Waita minute, now. You figure on
gettin' me candled by some head
shrinker, eh? No thanks, Buster. I'm
going back to my own—"
Brett-James was shaking his head
again. "I am afraid there is no return,
Mr. Prantera. Time travel works but
in one direction,
with
the flow of the
time stream. There can be no return
to your own era."
Joe Prantera had been rocking
with the mental blows he had been
assimilating, but this was the final
haymaker. He was stuck in this
squaresville of a world.
Joe Prantera on a job was thorough.
Careful, painstaking, competent.
He spent the first three days of his
life in the year 2133 getting the feel
of things. Brett-James and Reston-Farrell
had been appointed to work
with him. Joe didn't meet any of the
others who belonged to the group
which had taken the measures to
bring him from the past. He didn't
want to meet them. The fewer persons
involved, the better.
He stayed in the apartment of
Reston-Farrell. Joe had been right,
Reston-Farrell was a medical doctor.
Brett-James evidently had something
to do with the process that had enabled
them to bring Joe from the
past. Joe didn't know how they'd
done it, and he didn't care. Joe was a
realist. He was here. The thing was
to adapt.
There didn't seem to be any hurry.
Once the deal was made, they left it
up to him to make the decisions.
They drove him around the town,
when he wished to check the traffic
arteries. They flew him about the
whole vicinity. From the air, Southern
California looked much the same
as it had in his own time. Oceans,
mountains, and to a lesser extent, deserts,
are fairly permanent even
against man's corroding efforts.
It was while he was flying with
Brett-James on the second day that
Joe said, "How about Mexico? Could
I make the get to Mexico?"
The physicist looked at him questioningly.
"Get?" he said.
Joe Prantera said impatiently, "The
getaway. After I give it to this Howard
Temple-Tracy guy, I gotta go on
the run, don't I?"
"I see." Brett-James cleared his
throat. "Mexico is no longer a separate
nation, Mr. Prantera. All North
America has been united into one
unit. Today, there are only eight nations
in the world."
"Where's the nearest?"
"South America."
"That's a helluva long way to go on
a get."
"We hadn't thought of the matter
being handled in that manner."
Joe eyed him in scorn. "Oh, you
didn't, huh? What happens after I
give it to this guy? I just sit around
and wait for the cops to put the arm
on me?"
Brett-James grimaced in amusement.
"Mr. Prantera, this will probably
be difficult for you to comprehend,
but there are no police in this
era."
Joe gaped at him. "No police!
What happens if you gotta throw
some guy in stir?"
"If I understand your idiom correctly,
you mean prison. There are
no prisons in this era, Mr. Prantera."
Joe stared. "No cops, no jails. What
stops anybody? What stops anybody
from just going into some bank, like,
and collecting up all the bread?"
Brett-James cleared his throat.
"Mr. Prantera, there are no banks."
"No banks! You gotta have banks!"
"And no money to put in them.
We found it a rather antiquated
method of distribution well over a
century ago."
Joe had given up. Now he merely
stared.
Brett-James said reasonably, "We
found we were devoting as much
time to financial matters in all their
endless ramifications—including
bank robberies—as we were to productive
efforts. So we turned to more
efficient methods of distribution."
On the fourth day, Joe said, "O.K.,
let's get down to facts. Summa the
things you guys say don't stick together
so good. Now, first place,
where's this guy Temple-Tracy you
want knocked off?"
Reston-Farrell and Brett-James
were both present. The three of them
sat in the living room of the latter's
apartment, sipping a sparkling wine
which seemed to be the prevailing
beverage of the day. For Joe's taste
it was insipid stuff. Happily, rye was
available to those who wanted it.
Reston-Farrell said, "You mean,
where does he reside? Why, here in
this city."
"Well, that's handy, eh?" Joe
scratched himself thoughtfully. "You
got somebody can finger him for me?"
"Finger him?"
"Look, before I can give it to this
guy I gotta know some place where
he'll be at some time. Get it? Like Al
Rossi. My finger, he works in Rossi's
house, see? He lets me know every
Wednesday night, eight o'clock, Al
leaves the house all by hisself. O.K.,
so I can make plans, like, to give it
to him." Joe Prantera wound it up
reasonably. "You gotta have a finger."
Brett-James said, "Why not just go
to Temple-Tracy's apartment and, ah,
dispose of him?"
"Jest walk in, eh? You think I'm
stupid? How do I know how many
witnesses hangin' around? How do I
know if the guy's carryin' heat?"
"Heat?"
"A gun, a gun. Ya think I'm stupid?
I come to give it to him and he
gives it to me instead."
Dr. Reston-Farrell said, "Howard
Temple-Tracy lives alone. He customarily
receives visitors every afternoon,
largely potential followers. He
is attempting to recruit members to
an organization he is forming. It
would be quite simple for you to
enter his establishment and dispose
of him. I assure you, he does not possess
weapons."
Joe was indignant. "Just like that,
eh?" he said sarcastically. "Then what
happens? How do I get out of the
building? Where's my get car parked?
Where do I hide out? Where do I
dump the heat?"
"Dump the heat?"
"Get rid of the gun. You want I
should get caught with the gun on
me? I'd wind up in the gas chamber
so quick—"
"See here, Mr. Prantera," Brett-James
said softly. "We no longer have
capital punishment, you must realize."
"O.K. I still don't wanta get caught.
What
is
the rap these days, huh?"
Joe scowled. "You said they didn't
have no jails any more."
"This is difficult for you to understand,
I imagine," Reston-Farrell told
him, "but, you see, we no longer punish
people in this era."
That took a long, unbelieving moment
to sink in. "You mean, like, no
matter what they do? That's crazy.
Everybody'd be running around giving
it to everybody else."
"The motivation for crime has
been removed, Mr. Prantera," Reston-Farrell
attempted to explain. "A
person who commits a violence
against another is obviously in need
of medical care. And, consequently,
receives it."
"You mean, like, if I steal a car or
something, they just take me to a
doctor?" Joe Prantera was unbelieving.
"Why would anybody wish to steal
a car?" Reston-Farrell said easily.
"But if I
give it
to somebody?"
"You will be turned over to a medical
institution. Citizen Howard Temple-Tracy
is the last man you will
ever kill, Mr. Prantera."
A chillness was in the belly of Joe
Prantera. He said very slowly, very
dangerously, "You guys figure on me
getting caught, don't you?"
"Yes," Brett-James said evenly.
"Well then, figure something else.
You think I'm stupid?"
"Mr. Prantera," Dr. Reston-Farrell
said, "there has been as much progress
in the field of psychiatry in the
past two centuries as there has in
any other. Your treatment would be
brief and painless, believe me."
Joe said coldly, "And what happens
to you guys? How do you know I
won't rat on you?"
Brett-James said gently, "The moment
after you have accomplished
your mission, we plan to turn ourselves
over to the nearest institution
to have determined whether or not
we also need therapy."
"Now I'm beginning to wonder
about you guys," Joe said. "Look, all
over again, what'd'ya wanta give it to
this guy for?"
The doctor said, "We explained
the other day, Mr. Prantera. Citizen
Howard Temple-Tracy is a dangerous,
atavistic, evil genius. We are
afraid for our institutions if his plans
are allowed to mature."
"Well if you got things so good,
everybody's got it made, like, who'd
listen to him?"
The doctor nodded at the validity
of the question. "Mr. Prantera,
Homo
sapiens
is a unique animal. Physically
he matures at approximately the age
of thirteen. However, mental maturity
and adjustment is often not fully
realized until thirty or even more.
Indeed, it is sometimes never
achieved. Before such maturity is
reached, our youth are susceptible to
romantic appeal. Nationalism, chauvinism,
racism, the supposed glory of
the military, all seem romantic to the
immature. They rebel at the orderliness
of present society. They seek entertainment
in excitement. Citizen
Temple-Tracy is aware of this and
finds his recruits among the young."
"O.K., so this guy is dangerous.
You want him knocked off before he
screws everything up. But the way
things are, there's no way of making
a get. So you'll have to get some other
patsy. Not me."
"I am afraid you have no alternative,"
Brett-James said gently. "Without
us, what will you do? Mr. Prantera,
you do not even speak the language."
"What'd'ya mean? I don't understand
summa the big words you eggheads
use, but I get by O.K."
Brett-James said, "Amer-English is
no longer the language spoken by the
man in the street, Mr. Prantera. Only
students of such subjects any longer
speak such tongues as Amer-English,
French, Russian or the many others
that once confused the race with
their limitations as a means of communication."
"You mean there's no place in the
whole world where they talk American?"
Joe demanded, aghast.
Dr. Reston-Farrell controlled the
car. Joe Prantera sat in the seat next
to him and Warren Brett-James sat
in the back. Joe had, tucked in his
belt, a .45 caliber automatic, once displayed
in a museum. It had been
more easily procured than the ammunition
to fit it, but that problem too
had been solved.
The others were nervous, obviously
repelled by the very conception of
what they had planned.
Inwardly, Joe was amused. Now
that they had got in the clutch, the
others were on the verge of chickening
out. He knew it wouldn't have
taken much for them to cancel the
project. It wasn't any answer though.
If they allowed him to call it off today,
they'd talk themselves into it
again before the week was through.
Besides, already Joe was beginning
to feel the comfortable, pleasurable,
warm feeling that came to him on
occasions like this.
He said, "You're sure this guy talks
American, eh?"
Warren Brett-James said, "Quite
sure. He is a student of history."
"And he won't think it's funny I
talk American to him, eh?"
"He'll undoubtedly be intrigued."
They pulled up before a large
apartment building that overlooked
the area once known as Wilmington.
Joe was coolly efficient now. He
pulled out the automatic, held it
down below his knees and threw a
shell into the barrel. He eased the
hammer down, thumbed on the
safety, stuck the weapon back in his
belt and beneath the jacketlike garment
he wore.
He said, "O.K. See you guys later."
He left them and entered the building.
An elevator—he still wasn't used
to their speed in this era—whooshed
him to the penthouse duplex occupied
by Citizen Howard Temple-Tracy.
There were two persons in the reception
room but they left on Joe's
arrival, without bothering to look at
him more than glancingly.
He spotted the screen immediately
and went over and stood before it.
The screen lit and revealed a
heavy-set, dour of countenance man
seated at a desk. He looked into Joe
Prantera's face, scowled and said
something.
Joe said, "Joseph Salviati-Prantera
to interview Citizen Howard Temple-Tracy."
The other's shaggy eyebrows rose.
"Indeed," he said. "In Amer-English?"
Joe nodded.
"Enter," the other said.
A door had slid open on the other
side of the room. Joe walked through
it and into what was obviously an office.
Citizen Temple-Tracy sat at a
desk. There was only one other chair
in the room. Joe Prantera ignored it
and remained standing.
Citizen Temple-Tracy said, "What
can I do for you?"
Joe looked at him for a long, long
moment. Then he reached down to
his belt and brought forth the .45
automatic. He moistened his lips.
Joe said softly, "You know what
this here is?"
Temple-Tracy stared at the weapon.
"It's a handgun, circa, I would
say, about 1925 Old Calendar. What
in the world are you doing with it?"
Joe said, very slowly, "Chief, in the
line you're in these days you needa
heavy around with wunna these. Otherwise,
Chief, you're gunna wind up
in some gutter with a lotta holes in
you. What I'm doin', I'm askin' for a
job. You need a good man knows how
to handle wunna these, Chief."
Citizen Howard Temple-Tracy
eyed him appraisingly. "Perhaps," he
said, "you are right at that. In the near
future, I may well need an assistant
knowledgeable in the field of violence.
Tell me more about yourself.
You surprise me considerably."
"Sure, Chief. It's kinda a long
story, though. First off, I better tell
you you got some bad enemies, Chief.
Two guys special, named Brett-James
and Doc Reston-Farrell. I think one
of the first jobs I'm gunna hafta do
for you, Chief, is to give it to those
two."
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Analog
December
1960. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | a lawyer | a weapon | a disguise | a crime boss | 0 |
24247_0D8BR739_3 | What is Prantera referring to when he mentions a 'pressure cooker'? | Illustrated by van Dongen
A gun is an interesting weapon; it can be hired, of
course, and naturally doesn't care who hires it. Something
much the same can be said of the gunman, too....
GUN FOR HIRE
By
MACK
REYNOLDS
Joe Prantera
called
softly, "Al." The pleasurable,
comfortable,
warm feeling began
spreading over him, the
way it always did.
The older man stopped and
squinted, but not suspiciously, even
now.
The evening was dark, it was unlikely
that the other even saw the
circle of steel that was the mouth of
the shotgun barrel, now resting on
the car's window ledge.
"Who's it?" he growled.
Joe Prantera said softly, "Big Louis
sent me, Al."
And he pressed the trigger.
And at that moment, the universe
caved inward upon Joseph Marie
Prantera.
There was nausea and nausea upon
nausea.
There was a falling through all
space and through all time. There was
doubling and twisting and twitching
of every muscle and nerve.
There was pain, horror and tumultuous
fear.
And he came out of it as quickly
and completely as he'd gone in.
He was in, he thought, a hospital
and his first reaction was to think,
This here California. Everything different.
Then his second thought was
Something went wrong. Big Louis, he
ain't going to like this.
He brought his thinking to the
present. So far as he could remember,
he hadn't completely pulled the trigger.
That at least meant that whatever
the rap was it wouldn't be too
tough. With luck, the syndicate would
get him off with a couple of years at
Quentin.
A door slid open in the wall in a
way that Joe had never seen a door
operate before.
This here California.
The clothes on the newcomer were
wrong, too. For the first time, Joe
Prantera began to sense an alienness—a
something that was awfully
wrong.
The other spoke precisely and
slowly, the way a highly educated man
speaks a language which he reads
and writes fluently but has little occasion
to practice vocally. "You have recovered?"
Joe Prantera looked at the other
expressionlessly. Maybe the old duck
was one of these foreign doctors, like.
The newcomer said, "You have undoubtedly
been through a most harrowing
experience. If you have any
untoward symptoms, possibly I could
be of assistance."
Joe couldn't figure out how he
stood. For one thing, there should
have been some kind of police guard.
The other said, "Perhaps a bit of
stimulant?"
Joe said flatly, "I wanta lawyer."
The newcomer frowned at him. "A
lawyer?"
"I'm not sayin' nothin'. Not until I
get a mouthpiece."
The newcomer started off on another
tack. "My name is Lawrence
Reston-Farrell. If I am not mistaken,
you are Joseph Salviati-Prantera."
Salviati happened to be Joe's mother's
maiden name. But it was unlikely
this character could have known that.
Joe had been born in Naples and his
mother had died in childbirth. His
father hadn't brought him to the
States until the age of five and by that
time he had a stepmother.
"I wanta mouthpiece," Joe said
flatly, "or let me outta here."
Lawrence Reston-Farrell said, "You
are not being constrained. There are
clothes for you in the closet there."
Joe gingerly tried swinging his
feet to the floor and sitting up, while
the other stood watching him, strangely.
He came to his feet. With the exception
of a faint nausea, which
brought back memories of that extreme
condition he'd suffered during
... during what? He hadn't the
vaguest idea of what had happened.
He was dressed in a hospital-type
nightgown. He looked down at it and
snorted and made his way over to the
closet. It opened on his approach, the
door sliding back into the wall in
much the same manner as the room's
door had opened for Reston-Farrell.
Joe Prantera scowled and said,
"These ain't my clothes."
"No, I am afraid not."
"You think I'd be seen dead wearing
this stuff? What is this, some religious
crackpot hospital?"
Reston-Farrell said, "I am afraid,
Mr. Salviati-Prantera, that these are
the only garments available. I suggest
you look out the window there."
Joe gave him a long, chill look
and then stepped to the window. He
couldn't figure the other. Unless he
was a fruitcake. Maybe he was in
some kind of pressure cooker and
this was one of the fruitcakes.
He looked out, however, not on the
lawns and walks of a sanitarium but
upon a wide boulevard of what was
obviously a populous city.
And for a moment again, Joe Prantera
felt the depths of nausea.
This was not his world.
He stared for a long, long moment.
The cars didn't even have wheels, he
noted dully. He turned slowly and
faced the older man.
Reston-Farrell said compassionately,
"Try this, it's excellent cognac."
Joe Prantera stared at him, said finally,
flatly, "What's it all about?"
The other put down the unaccepted
glass. "We were afraid first
realization would be a shock to you,"
he said. "My colleague is in the adjoining
room. We will be glad to explain
to you if you will join us there."
"I wanta get out of here," Joe said.
"Where would you go?"
The fear of police, of Al Rossi's
vengeance, of the measures that
might be taken by Big Louis on his
failure, were now far away.
Reston-Farrell had approached the
door by which he had entered and it
reopened for him. He went through
it without looking back.
There was nothing else to do. Joe
dressed, then followed him.
In the adjoining room was a circular
table that would have accommodated
a dozen persons. Two were
seated there now, papers, books and
soiled coffee cups before them. There
had evidently been a long wait.
Reston-Farrell, the one Joe had already
met, was tall and drawn of face
and with a chainsmoker's nervousness.
The other was heavier and more
at ease. They were both, Joe estimated,
somewhere in their middle fifties.
They both looked like docs. He
wondered, all over again, if this was
some kind of pressure cooker.
But that didn't explain the view
from the window.
Reston-Farrell said, "May I present
my colleague, Citizen Warren Brett-James?
Warren, this is our guest from
... from yesteryear, Mr. Joseph Salviati-Prantera."
Brett-James nodded to him, friendly,
so far as Joe could see. He said
gently, "I think it would be Mr. Joseph
Prantera, wouldn't it? The maternal
linage was almost universally
ignored." His voice too gave the impression
he was speaking a language
not usually on his tongue.
Joe took an empty chair, hardly
bothering to note its alien qualities.
His body seemed to
fit
into the piece
of furniture, as though it had been
molded to his order.
Joe said, "I think maybe I'll take
that there drink, Doc."
Reston-Farrell said, "Of course,"
and then something else Joe didn't
get. Whatever the something else
was, a slot opened in the middle of
the table and a glass, so clear of texture
as to be all but invisible, was
elevated. It contained possibly three
ounces of golden fluid.
Joe didn't allow himself to think
of its means of delivery. He took up
the drink and bolted it. He put the
glass down and said carefully,
"What's it all about, huh?"
Warren Brett-James said soothingly,
"Prepare yourself for somewhat
of a shock, Mr. Prantera. You are no
longer in Los Angeles—"
"Ya think I'm stupid? I can see
that."
"I was about to say, Los Angeles of
1960. Mr. Prantera, we welcome you
to Nuevo Los Angeles."
"Ta where?"
"To Nuevo Los Angeles and to
the year—" Brett-James looked at his
companion. "What is the date, Old
Calendar?"
"2133," Reston-Farrell said. "2133
A.D. they would say."
Joe Prantera looked from one of
them to the other, scowling. "What
are you guys talking about?"
Warren Brett-James said softly,
"Mr. Prantera, you are no longer in
the year 1960, you are now in the
year 2133."
He said, uncomprehendingly, "You
mean I been, like, unconscious for—"
He let the sentence fall away as he
realized the impossibility.
Brett-James said gently, "Hardly
for one hundred and seventy years,
Mr. Prantera."
Reston-Farrell said, "I am afraid we
are confusing you. Briefly, we have
transported
you, I suppose one might
say, from your own era to ours."
Joe Prantera had never been exposed
to the concept of time travel.
He had simply never associated with
anyone who had ever even remotely
considered such an idea. Now he said,
"You mean, like, I been asleep all
that time?"
"Not exactly," Brett-James said,
frowning.
Reston-Farrell said, "Suffice to say,
you are now one hundred and seventy-three
years after the last memory you
have."
Joe Prantera's mind suddenly reverted
to those last memories and his
eyes narrowed dangerously. He felt
suddenly at bay. He said, "Maybe
you guys better let me in on what's
this all about."
Reston-Farrell said, "Mr. Prantera,
we have brought you from your era
to perform a task for us."
Joe stared at him, and then at the
other. He couldn't believe he was getting
through to them. Or, at least,
that they were to him.
Finally he said, "If I get this, you
want me to do a job for you."
"That is correct."
Joe said, "You guys know the kind
of jobs I do?"
"That is correct."
"Like hell you do. You think I'm
stupid? I never even seen you before."
Joe Prantera came abruptly to
his feet. "I'm gettin' outta here."
For the second time, Reston-Farrell
said, "Where would you go, Mr.
Prantera?"
Joe glared at him. Then sat down
again, as abruptly as he'd arisen.
"Let's start all over again. I got this
straight, you brought me, some
screwy way, all the way ... here.
O.K., I'll buy that. I seen what it looks
like out that window—" The real
comprehension was seeping through
to him even as he talked. "Everybody
I know, Jessie, Tony, the Kid, Big
Louis, everybody, they're dead. Even
Big Louis."
"Yes," Brett-James said, his voice
soft. "They are all dead, Mr. Prantera.
Their children are all dead, and their
grandchildren."
The two men of the future said
nothing more for long minutes while
Joe Prantera's mind whirled its confusion.
Finally he said, "What's this bit
about you wanting me to give it to
some guy."
"That is why we brought you here,
Mr. Prantera. You were ... you
are, a professional assassin."
"Hey, wait a minute, now."
Reston-Farrell went on, ignoring
the interruption. "There is small
point in denying your calling. Pray
remember that at the point when we
...
transported
you, you were about
to dispose of a contemporary named
Alphonso Annunziata-Rossi. A citizen,
I might say, whose demise would
probably have caused small dismay to
society."
They had him pegged all right. Joe
said, "But why me? Why don't you
get some heavy from now? Somebody
knows the ropes these days."
Brett-James said, "Mr. Prantera,
there are no professional assassins in
this age, nor have there been for over
a century and a half."
"Well, then do it yourself." Joe
Prantera's irritation over this whole
complicated mess was growing. And
already he was beginning to long for
the things he knew—for Jessie and
Tony and the others, for his favorite
bar, for the lasagne down at Papa
Giovanni's. Right now he could have
welcomed a calling down at the hands
of Big Louis.
Reston-Farrell had come to his feet
and walked to one of the large room's
windows. He looked out, as though
unseeing. Then, his back turned, he
said, "We have tried, but it is simply
not in us, Mr. Prantera."
"You mean you're yella?"
"No, if by that you mean afraid. It
is simply not within us to take the
life of a fellow creature—not to speak
of a fellow man."
Joe snapped: "Everything you guys
say sounds crazy. Let's start all over
again."
Brett-James said, "Let me do it,
Lawrence." He turned his eyes to Joe.
"Mr. Prantera, in your own era, did
you ever consider the future?"
Joe looked at him blankly.
"In your day you were confronted
with national and international, problems.
Just as we are today and just as
nations were a century or a millennium
ago."
"Sure, O.K., so we had problems. I
know whatcha mean—like wars, and
depressions and dictators and like
that."
"Yes, like that," Brett-James
nodded.
The heavy-set man paused a moment.
"Yes, like that," he repeated.
"That we confront you now indicates
that the problems of your day were
solved. Hadn't they been, the world
most surely would have destroyed itself.
Wars? Our pedagogues are hard
put to convince their students that
such ever existed. More than a century
and a half ago our society eliminated
the reasons for international
conflict. For that matter," he added
musingly, "we eliminated most international
boundaries. Depressions?
Shortly after your own period, man
awoke to the fact that he had achieved
to the point where it was possible to
produce an abundance for all with a
minimum of toil. Overnight, for all
practical purposes, the whole world
was industrialized, automated. The
second industrial revolution was accompanied
by revolutionary changes
in almost every field, certainly in every
science. Dictators? Your ancestors
found, Mr. Prantera, that it is
difficult for a man to be free so long
as others are still enslaved. Today the
democratic ethic has reached a pinnacle
never dreamed of in your own
era."
"O.K., O.K.," Joe Prantera growled.
"So everybody's got it made. What I
wanta know is what's all this about
me giving it ta somebody? If everything's
so great, how come you want
me to knock this guy off?"
Reston-Farrell bent forward and
thumped his right index finger twice
on the table. "The bacterium of hate—a
new strain—has found the human
race unprotected from its disease.
We had thought our vaccines
immunized us."
"What's that suppose to mean?"
Brett-James took up the ball again.
"Mr. Prantera, have you ever heard of
Ghengis Khan, of Tamerlane, Alexander,
Caesar?"
Joe Prantera scowled at him emptily.
"Or, more likely, of Napoleon, Hitler,
Stalin?"
"Sure I heard of Hitler and Stalin,"
Joe growled. "I ain't stupid."
The other nodded. "Such men are
unique. They have a drive ... a
drive to power which exceeds by far
the ambitions of the average man.
They are genii in their way, Mr. Prantera,
genii of evil. Such a genius of
evil has appeared on the current
scene."
"Now we're getting somewheres,"
Joe snorted. "So you got a guy what's
a little ambitious, like, eh? And you
guys ain't got the guts to give it to
him. O.K. What's in it for me?"
The two of them frowned, exchanged
glances. Reston-Farrell said,
"You know, that is one aspect we had
not considered."
Brett-James said to Joe Prantera,
"Had we not, ah, taken you at the
time we did, do you realize what
would have happened?"
"Sure," Joe grunted. "I woulda let
old Al Rossi have it right in the guts,
five times. Then I woulda took the
plane back to Chi."
Brett-James was shaking his head.
"No. You see, by coincidence, a police
squad car was coming down the
street just at that moment to arrest
Mr. Rossi. You would have been apprehended.
As I understand Californian
law of the period, your life
would have been forfeit, Mr. Prantera."
Joe winced. It didn't occur to him
to doubt their word.
Reston-Farrell said, "As to reward,
Mr. Prantera, we have already told
you there is ultra-abundance in this
age. Once this task has been performed,
we will sponsor your entry
into present day society. Competent
psychiatric therapy will soon remove
your present—"
"Waita minute, now. You figure on
gettin' me candled by some head
shrinker, eh? No thanks, Buster. I'm
going back to my own—"
Brett-James was shaking his head
again. "I am afraid there is no return,
Mr. Prantera. Time travel works but
in one direction,
with
the flow of the
time stream. There can be no return
to your own era."
Joe Prantera had been rocking
with the mental blows he had been
assimilating, but this was the final
haymaker. He was stuck in this
squaresville of a world.
Joe Prantera on a job was thorough.
Careful, painstaking, competent.
He spent the first three days of his
life in the year 2133 getting the feel
of things. Brett-James and Reston-Farrell
had been appointed to work
with him. Joe didn't meet any of the
others who belonged to the group
which had taken the measures to
bring him from the past. He didn't
want to meet them. The fewer persons
involved, the better.
He stayed in the apartment of
Reston-Farrell. Joe had been right,
Reston-Farrell was a medical doctor.
Brett-James evidently had something
to do with the process that had enabled
them to bring Joe from the
past. Joe didn't know how they'd
done it, and he didn't care. Joe was a
realist. He was here. The thing was
to adapt.
There didn't seem to be any hurry.
Once the deal was made, they left it
up to him to make the decisions.
They drove him around the town,
when he wished to check the traffic
arteries. They flew him about the
whole vicinity. From the air, Southern
California looked much the same
as it had in his own time. Oceans,
mountains, and to a lesser extent, deserts,
are fairly permanent even
against man's corroding efforts.
It was while he was flying with
Brett-James on the second day that
Joe said, "How about Mexico? Could
I make the get to Mexico?"
The physicist looked at him questioningly.
"Get?" he said.
Joe Prantera said impatiently, "The
getaway. After I give it to this Howard
Temple-Tracy guy, I gotta go on
the run, don't I?"
"I see." Brett-James cleared his
throat. "Mexico is no longer a separate
nation, Mr. Prantera. All North
America has been united into one
unit. Today, there are only eight nations
in the world."
"Where's the nearest?"
"South America."
"That's a helluva long way to go on
a get."
"We hadn't thought of the matter
being handled in that manner."
Joe eyed him in scorn. "Oh, you
didn't, huh? What happens after I
give it to this guy? I just sit around
and wait for the cops to put the arm
on me?"
Brett-James grimaced in amusement.
"Mr. Prantera, this will probably
be difficult for you to comprehend,
but there are no police in this
era."
Joe gaped at him. "No police!
What happens if you gotta throw
some guy in stir?"
"If I understand your idiom correctly,
you mean prison. There are
no prisons in this era, Mr. Prantera."
Joe stared. "No cops, no jails. What
stops anybody? What stops anybody
from just going into some bank, like,
and collecting up all the bread?"
Brett-James cleared his throat.
"Mr. Prantera, there are no banks."
"No banks! You gotta have banks!"
"And no money to put in them.
We found it a rather antiquated
method of distribution well over a
century ago."
Joe had given up. Now he merely
stared.
Brett-James said reasonably, "We
found we were devoting as much
time to financial matters in all their
endless ramifications—including
bank robberies—as we were to productive
efforts. So we turned to more
efficient methods of distribution."
On the fourth day, Joe said, "O.K.,
let's get down to facts. Summa the
things you guys say don't stick together
so good. Now, first place,
where's this guy Temple-Tracy you
want knocked off?"
Reston-Farrell and Brett-James
were both present. The three of them
sat in the living room of the latter's
apartment, sipping a sparkling wine
which seemed to be the prevailing
beverage of the day. For Joe's taste
it was insipid stuff. Happily, rye was
available to those who wanted it.
Reston-Farrell said, "You mean,
where does he reside? Why, here in
this city."
"Well, that's handy, eh?" Joe
scratched himself thoughtfully. "You
got somebody can finger him for me?"
"Finger him?"
"Look, before I can give it to this
guy I gotta know some place where
he'll be at some time. Get it? Like Al
Rossi. My finger, he works in Rossi's
house, see? He lets me know every
Wednesday night, eight o'clock, Al
leaves the house all by hisself. O.K.,
so I can make plans, like, to give it
to him." Joe Prantera wound it up
reasonably. "You gotta have a finger."
Brett-James said, "Why not just go
to Temple-Tracy's apartment and, ah,
dispose of him?"
"Jest walk in, eh? You think I'm
stupid? How do I know how many
witnesses hangin' around? How do I
know if the guy's carryin' heat?"
"Heat?"
"A gun, a gun. Ya think I'm stupid?
I come to give it to him and he
gives it to me instead."
Dr. Reston-Farrell said, "Howard
Temple-Tracy lives alone. He customarily
receives visitors every afternoon,
largely potential followers. He
is attempting to recruit members to
an organization he is forming. It
would be quite simple for you to
enter his establishment and dispose
of him. I assure you, he does not possess
weapons."
Joe was indignant. "Just like that,
eh?" he said sarcastically. "Then what
happens? How do I get out of the
building? Where's my get car parked?
Where do I hide out? Where do I
dump the heat?"
"Dump the heat?"
"Get rid of the gun. You want I
should get caught with the gun on
me? I'd wind up in the gas chamber
so quick—"
"See here, Mr. Prantera," Brett-James
said softly. "We no longer have
capital punishment, you must realize."
"O.K. I still don't wanta get caught.
What
is
the rap these days, huh?"
Joe scowled. "You said they didn't
have no jails any more."
"This is difficult for you to understand,
I imagine," Reston-Farrell told
him, "but, you see, we no longer punish
people in this era."
That took a long, unbelieving moment
to sink in. "You mean, like, no
matter what they do? That's crazy.
Everybody'd be running around giving
it to everybody else."
"The motivation for crime has
been removed, Mr. Prantera," Reston-Farrell
attempted to explain. "A
person who commits a violence
against another is obviously in need
of medical care. And, consequently,
receives it."
"You mean, like, if I steal a car or
something, they just take me to a
doctor?" Joe Prantera was unbelieving.
"Why would anybody wish to steal
a car?" Reston-Farrell said easily.
"But if I
give it
to somebody?"
"You will be turned over to a medical
institution. Citizen Howard Temple-Tracy
is the last man you will
ever kill, Mr. Prantera."
A chillness was in the belly of Joe
Prantera. He said very slowly, very
dangerously, "You guys figure on me
getting caught, don't you?"
"Yes," Brett-James said evenly.
"Well then, figure something else.
You think I'm stupid?"
"Mr. Prantera," Dr. Reston-Farrell
said, "there has been as much progress
in the field of psychiatry in the
past two centuries as there has in
any other. Your treatment would be
brief and painless, believe me."
Joe said coldly, "And what happens
to you guys? How do you know I
won't rat on you?"
Brett-James said gently, "The moment
after you have accomplished
your mission, we plan to turn ourselves
over to the nearest institution
to have determined whether or not
we also need therapy."
"Now I'm beginning to wonder
about you guys," Joe said. "Look, all
over again, what'd'ya wanta give it to
this guy for?"
The doctor said, "We explained
the other day, Mr. Prantera. Citizen
Howard Temple-Tracy is a dangerous,
atavistic, evil genius. We are
afraid for our institutions if his plans
are allowed to mature."
"Well if you got things so good,
everybody's got it made, like, who'd
listen to him?"
The doctor nodded at the validity
of the question. "Mr. Prantera,
Homo
sapiens
is a unique animal. Physically
he matures at approximately the age
of thirteen. However, mental maturity
and adjustment is often not fully
realized until thirty or even more.
Indeed, it is sometimes never
achieved. Before such maturity is
reached, our youth are susceptible to
romantic appeal. Nationalism, chauvinism,
racism, the supposed glory of
the military, all seem romantic to the
immature. They rebel at the orderliness
of present society. They seek entertainment
in excitement. Citizen
Temple-Tracy is aware of this and
finds his recruits among the young."
"O.K., so this guy is dangerous.
You want him knocked off before he
screws everything up. But the way
things are, there's no way of making
a get. So you'll have to get some other
patsy. Not me."
"I am afraid you have no alternative,"
Brett-James said gently. "Without
us, what will you do? Mr. Prantera,
you do not even speak the language."
"What'd'ya mean? I don't understand
summa the big words you eggheads
use, but I get by O.K."
Brett-James said, "Amer-English is
no longer the language spoken by the
man in the street, Mr. Prantera. Only
students of such subjects any longer
speak such tongues as Amer-English,
French, Russian or the many others
that once confused the race with
their limitations as a means of communication."
"You mean there's no place in the
whole world where they talk American?"
Joe demanded, aghast.
Dr. Reston-Farrell controlled the
car. Joe Prantera sat in the seat next
to him and Warren Brett-James sat
in the back. Joe had, tucked in his
belt, a .45 caliber automatic, once displayed
in a museum. It had been
more easily procured than the ammunition
to fit it, but that problem too
had been solved.
The others were nervous, obviously
repelled by the very conception of
what they had planned.
Inwardly, Joe was amused. Now
that they had got in the clutch, the
others were on the verge of chickening
out. He knew it wouldn't have
taken much for them to cancel the
project. It wasn't any answer though.
If they allowed him to call it off today,
they'd talk themselves into it
again before the week was through.
Besides, already Joe was beginning
to feel the comfortable, pleasurable,
warm feeling that came to him on
occasions like this.
He said, "You're sure this guy talks
American, eh?"
Warren Brett-James said, "Quite
sure. He is a student of history."
"And he won't think it's funny I
talk American to him, eh?"
"He'll undoubtedly be intrigued."
They pulled up before a large
apartment building that overlooked
the area once known as Wilmington.
Joe was coolly efficient now. He
pulled out the automatic, held it
down below his knees and threw a
shell into the barrel. He eased the
hammer down, thumbed on the
safety, stuck the weapon back in his
belt and beneath the jacketlike garment
he wore.
He said, "O.K. See you guys later."
He left them and entered the building.
An elevator—he still wasn't used
to their speed in this era—whooshed
him to the penthouse duplex occupied
by Citizen Howard Temple-Tracy.
There were two persons in the reception
room but they left on Joe's
arrival, without bothering to look at
him more than glancingly.
He spotted the screen immediately
and went over and stood before it.
The screen lit and revealed a
heavy-set, dour of countenance man
seated at a desk. He looked into Joe
Prantera's face, scowled and said
something.
Joe said, "Joseph Salviati-Prantera
to interview Citizen Howard Temple-Tracy."
The other's shaggy eyebrows rose.
"Indeed," he said. "In Amer-English?"
Joe nodded.
"Enter," the other said.
A door had slid open on the other
side of the room. Joe walked through
it and into what was obviously an office.
Citizen Temple-Tracy sat at a
desk. There was only one other chair
in the room. Joe Prantera ignored it
and remained standing.
Citizen Temple-Tracy said, "What
can I do for you?"
Joe looked at him for a long, long
moment. Then he reached down to
his belt and brought forth the .45
automatic. He moistened his lips.
Joe said softly, "You know what
this here is?"
Temple-Tracy stared at the weapon.
"It's a handgun, circa, I would
say, about 1925 Old Calendar. What
in the world are you doing with it?"
Joe said, very slowly, "Chief, in the
line you're in these days you needa
heavy around with wunna these. Otherwise,
Chief, you're gunna wind up
in some gutter with a lotta holes in
you. What I'm doin', I'm askin' for a
job. You need a good man knows how
to handle wunna these, Chief."
Citizen Howard Temple-Tracy
eyed him appraisingly. "Perhaps," he
said, "you are right at that. In the near
future, I may well need an assistant
knowledgeable in the field of violence.
Tell me more about yourself.
You surprise me considerably."
"Sure, Chief. It's kinda a long
story, though. First off, I better tell
you you got some bad enemies, Chief.
Two guys special, named Brett-James
and Doc Reston-Farrell. I think one
of the first jobs I'm gunna hafta do
for you, Chief, is to give it to those
two."
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Analog
December
1960. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | a courtroom | an interrogation room | a mental asylum | a set-up | 2 |
24247_0D8BR739_4 | What central theme of the story is revealed in the conclusion? | Illustrated by van Dongen
A gun is an interesting weapon; it can be hired, of
course, and naturally doesn't care who hires it. Something
much the same can be said of the gunman, too....
GUN FOR HIRE
By
MACK
REYNOLDS
Joe Prantera
called
softly, "Al." The pleasurable,
comfortable,
warm feeling began
spreading over him, the
way it always did.
The older man stopped and
squinted, but not suspiciously, even
now.
The evening was dark, it was unlikely
that the other even saw the
circle of steel that was the mouth of
the shotgun barrel, now resting on
the car's window ledge.
"Who's it?" he growled.
Joe Prantera said softly, "Big Louis
sent me, Al."
And he pressed the trigger.
And at that moment, the universe
caved inward upon Joseph Marie
Prantera.
There was nausea and nausea upon
nausea.
There was a falling through all
space and through all time. There was
doubling and twisting and twitching
of every muscle and nerve.
There was pain, horror and tumultuous
fear.
And he came out of it as quickly
and completely as he'd gone in.
He was in, he thought, a hospital
and his first reaction was to think,
This here California. Everything different.
Then his second thought was
Something went wrong. Big Louis, he
ain't going to like this.
He brought his thinking to the
present. So far as he could remember,
he hadn't completely pulled the trigger.
That at least meant that whatever
the rap was it wouldn't be too
tough. With luck, the syndicate would
get him off with a couple of years at
Quentin.
A door slid open in the wall in a
way that Joe had never seen a door
operate before.
This here California.
The clothes on the newcomer were
wrong, too. For the first time, Joe
Prantera began to sense an alienness—a
something that was awfully
wrong.
The other spoke precisely and
slowly, the way a highly educated man
speaks a language which he reads
and writes fluently but has little occasion
to practice vocally. "You have recovered?"
Joe Prantera looked at the other
expressionlessly. Maybe the old duck
was one of these foreign doctors, like.
The newcomer said, "You have undoubtedly
been through a most harrowing
experience. If you have any
untoward symptoms, possibly I could
be of assistance."
Joe couldn't figure out how he
stood. For one thing, there should
have been some kind of police guard.
The other said, "Perhaps a bit of
stimulant?"
Joe said flatly, "I wanta lawyer."
The newcomer frowned at him. "A
lawyer?"
"I'm not sayin' nothin'. Not until I
get a mouthpiece."
The newcomer started off on another
tack. "My name is Lawrence
Reston-Farrell. If I am not mistaken,
you are Joseph Salviati-Prantera."
Salviati happened to be Joe's mother's
maiden name. But it was unlikely
this character could have known that.
Joe had been born in Naples and his
mother had died in childbirth. His
father hadn't brought him to the
States until the age of five and by that
time he had a stepmother.
"I wanta mouthpiece," Joe said
flatly, "or let me outta here."
Lawrence Reston-Farrell said, "You
are not being constrained. There are
clothes for you in the closet there."
Joe gingerly tried swinging his
feet to the floor and sitting up, while
the other stood watching him, strangely.
He came to his feet. With the exception
of a faint nausea, which
brought back memories of that extreme
condition he'd suffered during
... during what? He hadn't the
vaguest idea of what had happened.
He was dressed in a hospital-type
nightgown. He looked down at it and
snorted and made his way over to the
closet. It opened on his approach, the
door sliding back into the wall in
much the same manner as the room's
door had opened for Reston-Farrell.
Joe Prantera scowled and said,
"These ain't my clothes."
"No, I am afraid not."
"You think I'd be seen dead wearing
this stuff? What is this, some religious
crackpot hospital?"
Reston-Farrell said, "I am afraid,
Mr. Salviati-Prantera, that these are
the only garments available. I suggest
you look out the window there."
Joe gave him a long, chill look
and then stepped to the window. He
couldn't figure the other. Unless he
was a fruitcake. Maybe he was in
some kind of pressure cooker and
this was one of the fruitcakes.
He looked out, however, not on the
lawns and walks of a sanitarium but
upon a wide boulevard of what was
obviously a populous city.
And for a moment again, Joe Prantera
felt the depths of nausea.
This was not his world.
He stared for a long, long moment.
The cars didn't even have wheels, he
noted dully. He turned slowly and
faced the older man.
Reston-Farrell said compassionately,
"Try this, it's excellent cognac."
Joe Prantera stared at him, said finally,
flatly, "What's it all about?"
The other put down the unaccepted
glass. "We were afraid first
realization would be a shock to you,"
he said. "My colleague is in the adjoining
room. We will be glad to explain
to you if you will join us there."
"I wanta get out of here," Joe said.
"Where would you go?"
The fear of police, of Al Rossi's
vengeance, of the measures that
might be taken by Big Louis on his
failure, were now far away.
Reston-Farrell had approached the
door by which he had entered and it
reopened for him. He went through
it without looking back.
There was nothing else to do. Joe
dressed, then followed him.
In the adjoining room was a circular
table that would have accommodated
a dozen persons. Two were
seated there now, papers, books and
soiled coffee cups before them. There
had evidently been a long wait.
Reston-Farrell, the one Joe had already
met, was tall and drawn of face
and with a chainsmoker's nervousness.
The other was heavier and more
at ease. They were both, Joe estimated,
somewhere in their middle fifties.
They both looked like docs. He
wondered, all over again, if this was
some kind of pressure cooker.
But that didn't explain the view
from the window.
Reston-Farrell said, "May I present
my colleague, Citizen Warren Brett-James?
Warren, this is our guest from
... from yesteryear, Mr. Joseph Salviati-Prantera."
Brett-James nodded to him, friendly,
so far as Joe could see. He said
gently, "I think it would be Mr. Joseph
Prantera, wouldn't it? The maternal
linage was almost universally
ignored." His voice too gave the impression
he was speaking a language
not usually on his tongue.
Joe took an empty chair, hardly
bothering to note its alien qualities.
His body seemed to
fit
into the piece
of furniture, as though it had been
molded to his order.
Joe said, "I think maybe I'll take
that there drink, Doc."
Reston-Farrell said, "Of course,"
and then something else Joe didn't
get. Whatever the something else
was, a slot opened in the middle of
the table and a glass, so clear of texture
as to be all but invisible, was
elevated. It contained possibly three
ounces of golden fluid.
Joe didn't allow himself to think
of its means of delivery. He took up
the drink and bolted it. He put the
glass down and said carefully,
"What's it all about, huh?"
Warren Brett-James said soothingly,
"Prepare yourself for somewhat
of a shock, Mr. Prantera. You are no
longer in Los Angeles—"
"Ya think I'm stupid? I can see
that."
"I was about to say, Los Angeles of
1960. Mr. Prantera, we welcome you
to Nuevo Los Angeles."
"Ta where?"
"To Nuevo Los Angeles and to
the year—" Brett-James looked at his
companion. "What is the date, Old
Calendar?"
"2133," Reston-Farrell said. "2133
A.D. they would say."
Joe Prantera looked from one of
them to the other, scowling. "What
are you guys talking about?"
Warren Brett-James said softly,
"Mr. Prantera, you are no longer in
the year 1960, you are now in the
year 2133."
He said, uncomprehendingly, "You
mean I been, like, unconscious for—"
He let the sentence fall away as he
realized the impossibility.
Brett-James said gently, "Hardly
for one hundred and seventy years,
Mr. Prantera."
Reston-Farrell said, "I am afraid we
are confusing you. Briefly, we have
transported
you, I suppose one might
say, from your own era to ours."
Joe Prantera had never been exposed
to the concept of time travel.
He had simply never associated with
anyone who had ever even remotely
considered such an idea. Now he said,
"You mean, like, I been asleep all
that time?"
"Not exactly," Brett-James said,
frowning.
Reston-Farrell said, "Suffice to say,
you are now one hundred and seventy-three
years after the last memory you
have."
Joe Prantera's mind suddenly reverted
to those last memories and his
eyes narrowed dangerously. He felt
suddenly at bay. He said, "Maybe
you guys better let me in on what's
this all about."
Reston-Farrell said, "Mr. Prantera,
we have brought you from your era
to perform a task for us."
Joe stared at him, and then at the
other. He couldn't believe he was getting
through to them. Or, at least,
that they were to him.
Finally he said, "If I get this, you
want me to do a job for you."
"That is correct."
Joe said, "You guys know the kind
of jobs I do?"
"That is correct."
"Like hell you do. You think I'm
stupid? I never even seen you before."
Joe Prantera came abruptly to
his feet. "I'm gettin' outta here."
For the second time, Reston-Farrell
said, "Where would you go, Mr.
Prantera?"
Joe glared at him. Then sat down
again, as abruptly as he'd arisen.
"Let's start all over again. I got this
straight, you brought me, some
screwy way, all the way ... here.
O.K., I'll buy that. I seen what it looks
like out that window—" The real
comprehension was seeping through
to him even as he talked. "Everybody
I know, Jessie, Tony, the Kid, Big
Louis, everybody, they're dead. Even
Big Louis."
"Yes," Brett-James said, his voice
soft. "They are all dead, Mr. Prantera.
Their children are all dead, and their
grandchildren."
The two men of the future said
nothing more for long minutes while
Joe Prantera's mind whirled its confusion.
Finally he said, "What's this bit
about you wanting me to give it to
some guy."
"That is why we brought you here,
Mr. Prantera. You were ... you
are, a professional assassin."
"Hey, wait a minute, now."
Reston-Farrell went on, ignoring
the interruption. "There is small
point in denying your calling. Pray
remember that at the point when we
...
transported
you, you were about
to dispose of a contemporary named
Alphonso Annunziata-Rossi. A citizen,
I might say, whose demise would
probably have caused small dismay to
society."
They had him pegged all right. Joe
said, "But why me? Why don't you
get some heavy from now? Somebody
knows the ropes these days."
Brett-James said, "Mr. Prantera,
there are no professional assassins in
this age, nor have there been for over
a century and a half."
"Well, then do it yourself." Joe
Prantera's irritation over this whole
complicated mess was growing. And
already he was beginning to long for
the things he knew—for Jessie and
Tony and the others, for his favorite
bar, for the lasagne down at Papa
Giovanni's. Right now he could have
welcomed a calling down at the hands
of Big Louis.
Reston-Farrell had come to his feet
and walked to one of the large room's
windows. He looked out, as though
unseeing. Then, his back turned, he
said, "We have tried, but it is simply
not in us, Mr. Prantera."
"You mean you're yella?"
"No, if by that you mean afraid. It
is simply not within us to take the
life of a fellow creature—not to speak
of a fellow man."
Joe snapped: "Everything you guys
say sounds crazy. Let's start all over
again."
Brett-James said, "Let me do it,
Lawrence." He turned his eyes to Joe.
"Mr. Prantera, in your own era, did
you ever consider the future?"
Joe looked at him blankly.
"In your day you were confronted
with national and international, problems.
Just as we are today and just as
nations were a century or a millennium
ago."
"Sure, O.K., so we had problems. I
know whatcha mean—like wars, and
depressions and dictators and like
that."
"Yes, like that," Brett-James
nodded.
The heavy-set man paused a moment.
"Yes, like that," he repeated.
"That we confront you now indicates
that the problems of your day were
solved. Hadn't they been, the world
most surely would have destroyed itself.
Wars? Our pedagogues are hard
put to convince their students that
such ever existed. More than a century
and a half ago our society eliminated
the reasons for international
conflict. For that matter," he added
musingly, "we eliminated most international
boundaries. Depressions?
Shortly after your own period, man
awoke to the fact that he had achieved
to the point where it was possible to
produce an abundance for all with a
minimum of toil. Overnight, for all
practical purposes, the whole world
was industrialized, automated. The
second industrial revolution was accompanied
by revolutionary changes
in almost every field, certainly in every
science. Dictators? Your ancestors
found, Mr. Prantera, that it is
difficult for a man to be free so long
as others are still enslaved. Today the
democratic ethic has reached a pinnacle
never dreamed of in your own
era."
"O.K., O.K.," Joe Prantera growled.
"So everybody's got it made. What I
wanta know is what's all this about
me giving it ta somebody? If everything's
so great, how come you want
me to knock this guy off?"
Reston-Farrell bent forward and
thumped his right index finger twice
on the table. "The bacterium of hate—a
new strain—has found the human
race unprotected from its disease.
We had thought our vaccines
immunized us."
"What's that suppose to mean?"
Brett-James took up the ball again.
"Mr. Prantera, have you ever heard of
Ghengis Khan, of Tamerlane, Alexander,
Caesar?"
Joe Prantera scowled at him emptily.
"Or, more likely, of Napoleon, Hitler,
Stalin?"
"Sure I heard of Hitler and Stalin,"
Joe growled. "I ain't stupid."
The other nodded. "Such men are
unique. They have a drive ... a
drive to power which exceeds by far
the ambitions of the average man.
They are genii in their way, Mr. Prantera,
genii of evil. Such a genius of
evil has appeared on the current
scene."
"Now we're getting somewheres,"
Joe snorted. "So you got a guy what's
a little ambitious, like, eh? And you
guys ain't got the guts to give it to
him. O.K. What's in it for me?"
The two of them frowned, exchanged
glances. Reston-Farrell said,
"You know, that is one aspect we had
not considered."
Brett-James said to Joe Prantera,
"Had we not, ah, taken you at the
time we did, do you realize what
would have happened?"
"Sure," Joe grunted. "I woulda let
old Al Rossi have it right in the guts,
five times. Then I woulda took the
plane back to Chi."
Brett-James was shaking his head.
"No. You see, by coincidence, a police
squad car was coming down the
street just at that moment to arrest
Mr. Rossi. You would have been apprehended.
As I understand Californian
law of the period, your life
would have been forfeit, Mr. Prantera."
Joe winced. It didn't occur to him
to doubt their word.
Reston-Farrell said, "As to reward,
Mr. Prantera, we have already told
you there is ultra-abundance in this
age. Once this task has been performed,
we will sponsor your entry
into present day society. Competent
psychiatric therapy will soon remove
your present—"
"Waita minute, now. You figure on
gettin' me candled by some head
shrinker, eh? No thanks, Buster. I'm
going back to my own—"
Brett-James was shaking his head
again. "I am afraid there is no return,
Mr. Prantera. Time travel works but
in one direction,
with
the flow of the
time stream. There can be no return
to your own era."
Joe Prantera had been rocking
with the mental blows he had been
assimilating, but this was the final
haymaker. He was stuck in this
squaresville of a world.
Joe Prantera on a job was thorough.
Careful, painstaking, competent.
He spent the first three days of his
life in the year 2133 getting the feel
of things. Brett-James and Reston-Farrell
had been appointed to work
with him. Joe didn't meet any of the
others who belonged to the group
which had taken the measures to
bring him from the past. He didn't
want to meet them. The fewer persons
involved, the better.
He stayed in the apartment of
Reston-Farrell. Joe had been right,
Reston-Farrell was a medical doctor.
Brett-James evidently had something
to do with the process that had enabled
them to bring Joe from the
past. Joe didn't know how they'd
done it, and he didn't care. Joe was a
realist. He was here. The thing was
to adapt.
There didn't seem to be any hurry.
Once the deal was made, they left it
up to him to make the decisions.
They drove him around the town,
when he wished to check the traffic
arteries. They flew him about the
whole vicinity. From the air, Southern
California looked much the same
as it had in his own time. Oceans,
mountains, and to a lesser extent, deserts,
are fairly permanent even
against man's corroding efforts.
It was while he was flying with
Brett-James on the second day that
Joe said, "How about Mexico? Could
I make the get to Mexico?"
The physicist looked at him questioningly.
"Get?" he said.
Joe Prantera said impatiently, "The
getaway. After I give it to this Howard
Temple-Tracy guy, I gotta go on
the run, don't I?"
"I see." Brett-James cleared his
throat. "Mexico is no longer a separate
nation, Mr. Prantera. All North
America has been united into one
unit. Today, there are only eight nations
in the world."
"Where's the nearest?"
"South America."
"That's a helluva long way to go on
a get."
"We hadn't thought of the matter
being handled in that manner."
Joe eyed him in scorn. "Oh, you
didn't, huh? What happens after I
give it to this guy? I just sit around
and wait for the cops to put the arm
on me?"
Brett-James grimaced in amusement.
"Mr. Prantera, this will probably
be difficult for you to comprehend,
but there are no police in this
era."
Joe gaped at him. "No police!
What happens if you gotta throw
some guy in stir?"
"If I understand your idiom correctly,
you mean prison. There are
no prisons in this era, Mr. Prantera."
Joe stared. "No cops, no jails. What
stops anybody? What stops anybody
from just going into some bank, like,
and collecting up all the bread?"
Brett-James cleared his throat.
"Mr. Prantera, there are no banks."
"No banks! You gotta have banks!"
"And no money to put in them.
We found it a rather antiquated
method of distribution well over a
century ago."
Joe had given up. Now he merely
stared.
Brett-James said reasonably, "We
found we were devoting as much
time to financial matters in all their
endless ramifications—including
bank robberies—as we were to productive
efforts. So we turned to more
efficient methods of distribution."
On the fourth day, Joe said, "O.K.,
let's get down to facts. Summa the
things you guys say don't stick together
so good. Now, first place,
where's this guy Temple-Tracy you
want knocked off?"
Reston-Farrell and Brett-James
were both present. The three of them
sat in the living room of the latter's
apartment, sipping a sparkling wine
which seemed to be the prevailing
beverage of the day. For Joe's taste
it was insipid stuff. Happily, rye was
available to those who wanted it.
Reston-Farrell said, "You mean,
where does he reside? Why, here in
this city."
"Well, that's handy, eh?" Joe
scratched himself thoughtfully. "You
got somebody can finger him for me?"
"Finger him?"
"Look, before I can give it to this
guy I gotta know some place where
he'll be at some time. Get it? Like Al
Rossi. My finger, he works in Rossi's
house, see? He lets me know every
Wednesday night, eight o'clock, Al
leaves the house all by hisself. O.K.,
so I can make plans, like, to give it
to him." Joe Prantera wound it up
reasonably. "You gotta have a finger."
Brett-James said, "Why not just go
to Temple-Tracy's apartment and, ah,
dispose of him?"
"Jest walk in, eh? You think I'm
stupid? How do I know how many
witnesses hangin' around? How do I
know if the guy's carryin' heat?"
"Heat?"
"A gun, a gun. Ya think I'm stupid?
I come to give it to him and he
gives it to me instead."
Dr. Reston-Farrell said, "Howard
Temple-Tracy lives alone. He customarily
receives visitors every afternoon,
largely potential followers. He
is attempting to recruit members to
an organization he is forming. It
would be quite simple for you to
enter his establishment and dispose
of him. I assure you, he does not possess
weapons."
Joe was indignant. "Just like that,
eh?" he said sarcastically. "Then what
happens? How do I get out of the
building? Where's my get car parked?
Where do I hide out? Where do I
dump the heat?"
"Dump the heat?"
"Get rid of the gun. You want I
should get caught with the gun on
me? I'd wind up in the gas chamber
so quick—"
"See here, Mr. Prantera," Brett-James
said softly. "We no longer have
capital punishment, you must realize."
"O.K. I still don't wanta get caught.
What
is
the rap these days, huh?"
Joe scowled. "You said they didn't
have no jails any more."
"This is difficult for you to understand,
I imagine," Reston-Farrell told
him, "but, you see, we no longer punish
people in this era."
That took a long, unbelieving moment
to sink in. "You mean, like, no
matter what they do? That's crazy.
Everybody'd be running around giving
it to everybody else."
"The motivation for crime has
been removed, Mr. Prantera," Reston-Farrell
attempted to explain. "A
person who commits a violence
against another is obviously in need
of medical care. And, consequently,
receives it."
"You mean, like, if I steal a car or
something, they just take me to a
doctor?" Joe Prantera was unbelieving.
"Why would anybody wish to steal
a car?" Reston-Farrell said easily.
"But if I
give it
to somebody?"
"You will be turned over to a medical
institution. Citizen Howard Temple-Tracy
is the last man you will
ever kill, Mr. Prantera."
A chillness was in the belly of Joe
Prantera. He said very slowly, very
dangerously, "You guys figure on me
getting caught, don't you?"
"Yes," Brett-James said evenly.
"Well then, figure something else.
You think I'm stupid?"
"Mr. Prantera," Dr. Reston-Farrell
said, "there has been as much progress
in the field of psychiatry in the
past two centuries as there has in
any other. Your treatment would be
brief and painless, believe me."
Joe said coldly, "And what happens
to you guys? How do you know I
won't rat on you?"
Brett-James said gently, "The moment
after you have accomplished
your mission, we plan to turn ourselves
over to the nearest institution
to have determined whether or not
we also need therapy."
"Now I'm beginning to wonder
about you guys," Joe said. "Look, all
over again, what'd'ya wanta give it to
this guy for?"
The doctor said, "We explained
the other day, Mr. Prantera. Citizen
Howard Temple-Tracy is a dangerous,
atavistic, evil genius. We are
afraid for our institutions if his plans
are allowed to mature."
"Well if you got things so good,
everybody's got it made, like, who'd
listen to him?"
The doctor nodded at the validity
of the question. "Mr. Prantera,
Homo
sapiens
is a unique animal. Physically
he matures at approximately the age
of thirteen. However, mental maturity
and adjustment is often not fully
realized until thirty or even more.
Indeed, it is sometimes never
achieved. Before such maturity is
reached, our youth are susceptible to
romantic appeal. Nationalism, chauvinism,
racism, the supposed glory of
the military, all seem romantic to the
immature. They rebel at the orderliness
of present society. They seek entertainment
in excitement. Citizen
Temple-Tracy is aware of this and
finds his recruits among the young."
"O.K., so this guy is dangerous.
You want him knocked off before he
screws everything up. But the way
things are, there's no way of making
a get. So you'll have to get some other
patsy. Not me."
"I am afraid you have no alternative,"
Brett-James said gently. "Without
us, what will you do? Mr. Prantera,
you do not even speak the language."
"What'd'ya mean? I don't understand
summa the big words you eggheads
use, but I get by O.K."
Brett-James said, "Amer-English is
no longer the language spoken by the
man in the street, Mr. Prantera. Only
students of such subjects any longer
speak such tongues as Amer-English,
French, Russian or the many others
that once confused the race with
their limitations as a means of communication."
"You mean there's no place in the
whole world where they talk American?"
Joe demanded, aghast.
Dr. Reston-Farrell controlled the
car. Joe Prantera sat in the seat next
to him and Warren Brett-James sat
in the back. Joe had, tucked in his
belt, a .45 caliber automatic, once displayed
in a museum. It had been
more easily procured than the ammunition
to fit it, but that problem too
had been solved.
The others were nervous, obviously
repelled by the very conception of
what they had planned.
Inwardly, Joe was amused. Now
that they had got in the clutch, the
others were on the verge of chickening
out. He knew it wouldn't have
taken much for them to cancel the
project. It wasn't any answer though.
If they allowed him to call it off today,
they'd talk themselves into it
again before the week was through.
Besides, already Joe was beginning
to feel the comfortable, pleasurable,
warm feeling that came to him on
occasions like this.
He said, "You're sure this guy talks
American, eh?"
Warren Brett-James said, "Quite
sure. He is a student of history."
"And he won't think it's funny I
talk American to him, eh?"
"He'll undoubtedly be intrigued."
They pulled up before a large
apartment building that overlooked
the area once known as Wilmington.
Joe was coolly efficient now. He
pulled out the automatic, held it
down below his knees and threw a
shell into the barrel. He eased the
hammer down, thumbed on the
safety, stuck the weapon back in his
belt and beneath the jacketlike garment
he wore.
He said, "O.K. See you guys later."
He left them and entered the building.
An elevator—he still wasn't used
to their speed in this era—whooshed
him to the penthouse duplex occupied
by Citizen Howard Temple-Tracy.
There were two persons in the reception
room but they left on Joe's
arrival, without bothering to look at
him more than glancingly.
He spotted the screen immediately
and went over and stood before it.
The screen lit and revealed a
heavy-set, dour of countenance man
seated at a desk. He looked into Joe
Prantera's face, scowled and said
something.
Joe said, "Joseph Salviati-Prantera
to interview Citizen Howard Temple-Tracy."
The other's shaggy eyebrows rose.
"Indeed," he said. "In Amer-English?"
Joe nodded.
"Enter," the other said.
A door had slid open on the other
side of the room. Joe walked through
it and into what was obviously an office.
Citizen Temple-Tracy sat at a
desk. There was only one other chair
in the room. Joe Prantera ignored it
and remained standing.
Citizen Temple-Tracy said, "What
can I do for you?"
Joe looked at him for a long, long
moment. Then he reached down to
his belt and brought forth the .45
automatic. He moistened his lips.
Joe said softly, "You know what
this here is?"
Temple-Tracy stared at the weapon.
"It's a handgun, circa, I would
say, about 1925 Old Calendar. What
in the world are you doing with it?"
Joe said, very slowly, "Chief, in the
line you're in these days you needa
heavy around with wunna these. Otherwise,
Chief, you're gunna wind up
in some gutter with a lotta holes in
you. What I'm doin', I'm askin' for a
job. You need a good man knows how
to handle wunna these, Chief."
Citizen Howard Temple-Tracy
eyed him appraisingly. "Perhaps," he
said, "you are right at that. In the near
future, I may well need an assistant
knowledgeable in the field of violence.
Tell me more about yourself.
You surprise me considerably."
"Sure, Chief. It's kinda a long
story, though. First off, I better tell
you you got some bad enemies, Chief.
Two guys special, named Brett-James
and Doc Reston-Farrell. I think one
of the first jobs I'm gunna hafta do
for you, Chief, is to give it to those
two."
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Analog
December
1960. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | The more good you do for others, the more opportunity for them to criticize you | If someone is willing to take a life, you cannot trust them to make moral decisions | When cornered, threatened creatures will do anything to survive | The prosperity of a nation is more important than any individual life | 1 |
24247_0D8BR739_5 | How does Prantera initially gain trust with Temple-Tracy? | Illustrated by van Dongen
A gun is an interesting weapon; it can be hired, of
course, and naturally doesn't care who hires it. Something
much the same can be said of the gunman, too....
GUN FOR HIRE
By
MACK
REYNOLDS
Joe Prantera
called
softly, "Al." The pleasurable,
comfortable,
warm feeling began
spreading over him, the
way it always did.
The older man stopped and
squinted, but not suspiciously, even
now.
The evening was dark, it was unlikely
that the other even saw the
circle of steel that was the mouth of
the shotgun barrel, now resting on
the car's window ledge.
"Who's it?" he growled.
Joe Prantera said softly, "Big Louis
sent me, Al."
And he pressed the trigger.
And at that moment, the universe
caved inward upon Joseph Marie
Prantera.
There was nausea and nausea upon
nausea.
There was a falling through all
space and through all time. There was
doubling and twisting and twitching
of every muscle and nerve.
There was pain, horror and tumultuous
fear.
And he came out of it as quickly
and completely as he'd gone in.
He was in, he thought, a hospital
and his first reaction was to think,
This here California. Everything different.
Then his second thought was
Something went wrong. Big Louis, he
ain't going to like this.
He brought his thinking to the
present. So far as he could remember,
he hadn't completely pulled the trigger.
That at least meant that whatever
the rap was it wouldn't be too
tough. With luck, the syndicate would
get him off with a couple of years at
Quentin.
A door slid open in the wall in a
way that Joe had never seen a door
operate before.
This here California.
The clothes on the newcomer were
wrong, too. For the first time, Joe
Prantera began to sense an alienness—a
something that was awfully
wrong.
The other spoke precisely and
slowly, the way a highly educated man
speaks a language which he reads
and writes fluently but has little occasion
to practice vocally. "You have recovered?"
Joe Prantera looked at the other
expressionlessly. Maybe the old duck
was one of these foreign doctors, like.
The newcomer said, "You have undoubtedly
been through a most harrowing
experience. If you have any
untoward symptoms, possibly I could
be of assistance."
Joe couldn't figure out how he
stood. For one thing, there should
have been some kind of police guard.
The other said, "Perhaps a bit of
stimulant?"
Joe said flatly, "I wanta lawyer."
The newcomer frowned at him. "A
lawyer?"
"I'm not sayin' nothin'. Not until I
get a mouthpiece."
The newcomer started off on another
tack. "My name is Lawrence
Reston-Farrell. If I am not mistaken,
you are Joseph Salviati-Prantera."
Salviati happened to be Joe's mother's
maiden name. But it was unlikely
this character could have known that.
Joe had been born in Naples and his
mother had died in childbirth. His
father hadn't brought him to the
States until the age of five and by that
time he had a stepmother.
"I wanta mouthpiece," Joe said
flatly, "or let me outta here."
Lawrence Reston-Farrell said, "You
are not being constrained. There are
clothes for you in the closet there."
Joe gingerly tried swinging his
feet to the floor and sitting up, while
the other stood watching him, strangely.
He came to his feet. With the exception
of a faint nausea, which
brought back memories of that extreme
condition he'd suffered during
... during what? He hadn't the
vaguest idea of what had happened.
He was dressed in a hospital-type
nightgown. He looked down at it and
snorted and made his way over to the
closet. It opened on his approach, the
door sliding back into the wall in
much the same manner as the room's
door had opened for Reston-Farrell.
Joe Prantera scowled and said,
"These ain't my clothes."
"No, I am afraid not."
"You think I'd be seen dead wearing
this stuff? What is this, some religious
crackpot hospital?"
Reston-Farrell said, "I am afraid,
Mr. Salviati-Prantera, that these are
the only garments available. I suggest
you look out the window there."
Joe gave him a long, chill look
and then stepped to the window. He
couldn't figure the other. Unless he
was a fruitcake. Maybe he was in
some kind of pressure cooker and
this was one of the fruitcakes.
He looked out, however, not on the
lawns and walks of a sanitarium but
upon a wide boulevard of what was
obviously a populous city.
And for a moment again, Joe Prantera
felt the depths of nausea.
This was not his world.
He stared for a long, long moment.
The cars didn't even have wheels, he
noted dully. He turned slowly and
faced the older man.
Reston-Farrell said compassionately,
"Try this, it's excellent cognac."
Joe Prantera stared at him, said finally,
flatly, "What's it all about?"
The other put down the unaccepted
glass. "We were afraid first
realization would be a shock to you,"
he said. "My colleague is in the adjoining
room. We will be glad to explain
to you if you will join us there."
"I wanta get out of here," Joe said.
"Where would you go?"
The fear of police, of Al Rossi's
vengeance, of the measures that
might be taken by Big Louis on his
failure, were now far away.
Reston-Farrell had approached the
door by which he had entered and it
reopened for him. He went through
it without looking back.
There was nothing else to do. Joe
dressed, then followed him.
In the adjoining room was a circular
table that would have accommodated
a dozen persons. Two were
seated there now, papers, books and
soiled coffee cups before them. There
had evidently been a long wait.
Reston-Farrell, the one Joe had already
met, was tall and drawn of face
and with a chainsmoker's nervousness.
The other was heavier and more
at ease. They were both, Joe estimated,
somewhere in their middle fifties.
They both looked like docs. He
wondered, all over again, if this was
some kind of pressure cooker.
But that didn't explain the view
from the window.
Reston-Farrell said, "May I present
my colleague, Citizen Warren Brett-James?
Warren, this is our guest from
... from yesteryear, Mr. Joseph Salviati-Prantera."
Brett-James nodded to him, friendly,
so far as Joe could see. He said
gently, "I think it would be Mr. Joseph
Prantera, wouldn't it? The maternal
linage was almost universally
ignored." His voice too gave the impression
he was speaking a language
not usually on his tongue.
Joe took an empty chair, hardly
bothering to note its alien qualities.
His body seemed to
fit
into the piece
of furniture, as though it had been
molded to his order.
Joe said, "I think maybe I'll take
that there drink, Doc."
Reston-Farrell said, "Of course,"
and then something else Joe didn't
get. Whatever the something else
was, a slot opened in the middle of
the table and a glass, so clear of texture
as to be all but invisible, was
elevated. It contained possibly three
ounces of golden fluid.
Joe didn't allow himself to think
of its means of delivery. He took up
the drink and bolted it. He put the
glass down and said carefully,
"What's it all about, huh?"
Warren Brett-James said soothingly,
"Prepare yourself for somewhat
of a shock, Mr. Prantera. You are no
longer in Los Angeles—"
"Ya think I'm stupid? I can see
that."
"I was about to say, Los Angeles of
1960. Mr. Prantera, we welcome you
to Nuevo Los Angeles."
"Ta where?"
"To Nuevo Los Angeles and to
the year—" Brett-James looked at his
companion. "What is the date, Old
Calendar?"
"2133," Reston-Farrell said. "2133
A.D. they would say."
Joe Prantera looked from one of
them to the other, scowling. "What
are you guys talking about?"
Warren Brett-James said softly,
"Mr. Prantera, you are no longer in
the year 1960, you are now in the
year 2133."
He said, uncomprehendingly, "You
mean I been, like, unconscious for—"
He let the sentence fall away as he
realized the impossibility.
Brett-James said gently, "Hardly
for one hundred and seventy years,
Mr. Prantera."
Reston-Farrell said, "I am afraid we
are confusing you. Briefly, we have
transported
you, I suppose one might
say, from your own era to ours."
Joe Prantera had never been exposed
to the concept of time travel.
He had simply never associated with
anyone who had ever even remotely
considered such an idea. Now he said,
"You mean, like, I been asleep all
that time?"
"Not exactly," Brett-James said,
frowning.
Reston-Farrell said, "Suffice to say,
you are now one hundred and seventy-three
years after the last memory you
have."
Joe Prantera's mind suddenly reverted
to those last memories and his
eyes narrowed dangerously. He felt
suddenly at bay. He said, "Maybe
you guys better let me in on what's
this all about."
Reston-Farrell said, "Mr. Prantera,
we have brought you from your era
to perform a task for us."
Joe stared at him, and then at the
other. He couldn't believe he was getting
through to them. Or, at least,
that they were to him.
Finally he said, "If I get this, you
want me to do a job for you."
"That is correct."
Joe said, "You guys know the kind
of jobs I do?"
"That is correct."
"Like hell you do. You think I'm
stupid? I never even seen you before."
Joe Prantera came abruptly to
his feet. "I'm gettin' outta here."
For the second time, Reston-Farrell
said, "Where would you go, Mr.
Prantera?"
Joe glared at him. Then sat down
again, as abruptly as he'd arisen.
"Let's start all over again. I got this
straight, you brought me, some
screwy way, all the way ... here.
O.K., I'll buy that. I seen what it looks
like out that window—" The real
comprehension was seeping through
to him even as he talked. "Everybody
I know, Jessie, Tony, the Kid, Big
Louis, everybody, they're dead. Even
Big Louis."
"Yes," Brett-James said, his voice
soft. "They are all dead, Mr. Prantera.
Their children are all dead, and their
grandchildren."
The two men of the future said
nothing more for long minutes while
Joe Prantera's mind whirled its confusion.
Finally he said, "What's this bit
about you wanting me to give it to
some guy."
"That is why we brought you here,
Mr. Prantera. You were ... you
are, a professional assassin."
"Hey, wait a minute, now."
Reston-Farrell went on, ignoring
the interruption. "There is small
point in denying your calling. Pray
remember that at the point when we
...
transported
you, you were about
to dispose of a contemporary named
Alphonso Annunziata-Rossi. A citizen,
I might say, whose demise would
probably have caused small dismay to
society."
They had him pegged all right. Joe
said, "But why me? Why don't you
get some heavy from now? Somebody
knows the ropes these days."
Brett-James said, "Mr. Prantera,
there are no professional assassins in
this age, nor have there been for over
a century and a half."
"Well, then do it yourself." Joe
Prantera's irritation over this whole
complicated mess was growing. And
already he was beginning to long for
the things he knew—for Jessie and
Tony and the others, for his favorite
bar, for the lasagne down at Papa
Giovanni's. Right now he could have
welcomed a calling down at the hands
of Big Louis.
Reston-Farrell had come to his feet
and walked to one of the large room's
windows. He looked out, as though
unseeing. Then, his back turned, he
said, "We have tried, but it is simply
not in us, Mr. Prantera."
"You mean you're yella?"
"No, if by that you mean afraid. It
is simply not within us to take the
life of a fellow creature—not to speak
of a fellow man."
Joe snapped: "Everything you guys
say sounds crazy. Let's start all over
again."
Brett-James said, "Let me do it,
Lawrence." He turned his eyes to Joe.
"Mr. Prantera, in your own era, did
you ever consider the future?"
Joe looked at him blankly.
"In your day you were confronted
with national and international, problems.
Just as we are today and just as
nations were a century or a millennium
ago."
"Sure, O.K., so we had problems. I
know whatcha mean—like wars, and
depressions and dictators and like
that."
"Yes, like that," Brett-James
nodded.
The heavy-set man paused a moment.
"Yes, like that," he repeated.
"That we confront you now indicates
that the problems of your day were
solved. Hadn't they been, the world
most surely would have destroyed itself.
Wars? Our pedagogues are hard
put to convince their students that
such ever existed. More than a century
and a half ago our society eliminated
the reasons for international
conflict. For that matter," he added
musingly, "we eliminated most international
boundaries. Depressions?
Shortly after your own period, man
awoke to the fact that he had achieved
to the point where it was possible to
produce an abundance for all with a
minimum of toil. Overnight, for all
practical purposes, the whole world
was industrialized, automated. The
second industrial revolution was accompanied
by revolutionary changes
in almost every field, certainly in every
science. Dictators? Your ancestors
found, Mr. Prantera, that it is
difficult for a man to be free so long
as others are still enslaved. Today the
democratic ethic has reached a pinnacle
never dreamed of in your own
era."
"O.K., O.K.," Joe Prantera growled.
"So everybody's got it made. What I
wanta know is what's all this about
me giving it ta somebody? If everything's
so great, how come you want
me to knock this guy off?"
Reston-Farrell bent forward and
thumped his right index finger twice
on the table. "The bacterium of hate—a
new strain—has found the human
race unprotected from its disease.
We had thought our vaccines
immunized us."
"What's that suppose to mean?"
Brett-James took up the ball again.
"Mr. Prantera, have you ever heard of
Ghengis Khan, of Tamerlane, Alexander,
Caesar?"
Joe Prantera scowled at him emptily.
"Or, more likely, of Napoleon, Hitler,
Stalin?"
"Sure I heard of Hitler and Stalin,"
Joe growled. "I ain't stupid."
The other nodded. "Such men are
unique. They have a drive ... a
drive to power which exceeds by far
the ambitions of the average man.
They are genii in their way, Mr. Prantera,
genii of evil. Such a genius of
evil has appeared on the current
scene."
"Now we're getting somewheres,"
Joe snorted. "So you got a guy what's
a little ambitious, like, eh? And you
guys ain't got the guts to give it to
him. O.K. What's in it for me?"
The two of them frowned, exchanged
glances. Reston-Farrell said,
"You know, that is one aspect we had
not considered."
Brett-James said to Joe Prantera,
"Had we not, ah, taken you at the
time we did, do you realize what
would have happened?"
"Sure," Joe grunted. "I woulda let
old Al Rossi have it right in the guts,
five times. Then I woulda took the
plane back to Chi."
Brett-James was shaking his head.
"No. You see, by coincidence, a police
squad car was coming down the
street just at that moment to arrest
Mr. Rossi. You would have been apprehended.
As I understand Californian
law of the period, your life
would have been forfeit, Mr. Prantera."
Joe winced. It didn't occur to him
to doubt their word.
Reston-Farrell said, "As to reward,
Mr. Prantera, we have already told
you there is ultra-abundance in this
age. Once this task has been performed,
we will sponsor your entry
into present day society. Competent
psychiatric therapy will soon remove
your present—"
"Waita minute, now. You figure on
gettin' me candled by some head
shrinker, eh? No thanks, Buster. I'm
going back to my own—"
Brett-James was shaking his head
again. "I am afraid there is no return,
Mr. Prantera. Time travel works but
in one direction,
with
the flow of the
time stream. There can be no return
to your own era."
Joe Prantera had been rocking
with the mental blows he had been
assimilating, but this was the final
haymaker. He was stuck in this
squaresville of a world.
Joe Prantera on a job was thorough.
Careful, painstaking, competent.
He spent the first three days of his
life in the year 2133 getting the feel
of things. Brett-James and Reston-Farrell
had been appointed to work
with him. Joe didn't meet any of the
others who belonged to the group
which had taken the measures to
bring him from the past. He didn't
want to meet them. The fewer persons
involved, the better.
He stayed in the apartment of
Reston-Farrell. Joe had been right,
Reston-Farrell was a medical doctor.
Brett-James evidently had something
to do with the process that had enabled
them to bring Joe from the
past. Joe didn't know how they'd
done it, and he didn't care. Joe was a
realist. He was here. The thing was
to adapt.
There didn't seem to be any hurry.
Once the deal was made, they left it
up to him to make the decisions.
They drove him around the town,
when he wished to check the traffic
arteries. They flew him about the
whole vicinity. From the air, Southern
California looked much the same
as it had in his own time. Oceans,
mountains, and to a lesser extent, deserts,
are fairly permanent even
against man's corroding efforts.
It was while he was flying with
Brett-James on the second day that
Joe said, "How about Mexico? Could
I make the get to Mexico?"
The physicist looked at him questioningly.
"Get?" he said.
Joe Prantera said impatiently, "The
getaway. After I give it to this Howard
Temple-Tracy guy, I gotta go on
the run, don't I?"
"I see." Brett-James cleared his
throat. "Mexico is no longer a separate
nation, Mr. Prantera. All North
America has been united into one
unit. Today, there are only eight nations
in the world."
"Where's the nearest?"
"South America."
"That's a helluva long way to go on
a get."
"We hadn't thought of the matter
being handled in that manner."
Joe eyed him in scorn. "Oh, you
didn't, huh? What happens after I
give it to this guy? I just sit around
and wait for the cops to put the arm
on me?"
Brett-James grimaced in amusement.
"Mr. Prantera, this will probably
be difficult for you to comprehend,
but there are no police in this
era."
Joe gaped at him. "No police!
What happens if you gotta throw
some guy in stir?"
"If I understand your idiom correctly,
you mean prison. There are
no prisons in this era, Mr. Prantera."
Joe stared. "No cops, no jails. What
stops anybody? What stops anybody
from just going into some bank, like,
and collecting up all the bread?"
Brett-James cleared his throat.
"Mr. Prantera, there are no banks."
"No banks! You gotta have banks!"
"And no money to put in them.
We found it a rather antiquated
method of distribution well over a
century ago."
Joe had given up. Now he merely
stared.
Brett-James said reasonably, "We
found we were devoting as much
time to financial matters in all their
endless ramifications—including
bank robberies—as we were to productive
efforts. So we turned to more
efficient methods of distribution."
On the fourth day, Joe said, "O.K.,
let's get down to facts. Summa the
things you guys say don't stick together
so good. Now, first place,
where's this guy Temple-Tracy you
want knocked off?"
Reston-Farrell and Brett-James
were both present. The three of them
sat in the living room of the latter's
apartment, sipping a sparkling wine
which seemed to be the prevailing
beverage of the day. For Joe's taste
it was insipid stuff. Happily, rye was
available to those who wanted it.
Reston-Farrell said, "You mean,
where does he reside? Why, here in
this city."
"Well, that's handy, eh?" Joe
scratched himself thoughtfully. "You
got somebody can finger him for me?"
"Finger him?"
"Look, before I can give it to this
guy I gotta know some place where
he'll be at some time. Get it? Like Al
Rossi. My finger, he works in Rossi's
house, see? He lets me know every
Wednesday night, eight o'clock, Al
leaves the house all by hisself. O.K.,
so I can make plans, like, to give it
to him." Joe Prantera wound it up
reasonably. "You gotta have a finger."
Brett-James said, "Why not just go
to Temple-Tracy's apartment and, ah,
dispose of him?"
"Jest walk in, eh? You think I'm
stupid? How do I know how many
witnesses hangin' around? How do I
know if the guy's carryin' heat?"
"Heat?"
"A gun, a gun. Ya think I'm stupid?
I come to give it to him and he
gives it to me instead."
Dr. Reston-Farrell said, "Howard
Temple-Tracy lives alone. He customarily
receives visitors every afternoon,
largely potential followers. He
is attempting to recruit members to
an organization he is forming. It
would be quite simple for you to
enter his establishment and dispose
of him. I assure you, he does not possess
weapons."
Joe was indignant. "Just like that,
eh?" he said sarcastically. "Then what
happens? How do I get out of the
building? Where's my get car parked?
Where do I hide out? Where do I
dump the heat?"
"Dump the heat?"
"Get rid of the gun. You want I
should get caught with the gun on
me? I'd wind up in the gas chamber
so quick—"
"See here, Mr. Prantera," Brett-James
said softly. "We no longer have
capital punishment, you must realize."
"O.K. I still don't wanta get caught.
What
is
the rap these days, huh?"
Joe scowled. "You said they didn't
have no jails any more."
"This is difficult for you to understand,
I imagine," Reston-Farrell told
him, "but, you see, we no longer punish
people in this era."
That took a long, unbelieving moment
to sink in. "You mean, like, no
matter what they do? That's crazy.
Everybody'd be running around giving
it to everybody else."
"The motivation for crime has
been removed, Mr. Prantera," Reston-Farrell
attempted to explain. "A
person who commits a violence
against another is obviously in need
of medical care. And, consequently,
receives it."
"You mean, like, if I steal a car or
something, they just take me to a
doctor?" Joe Prantera was unbelieving.
"Why would anybody wish to steal
a car?" Reston-Farrell said easily.
"But if I
give it
to somebody?"
"You will be turned over to a medical
institution. Citizen Howard Temple-Tracy
is the last man you will
ever kill, Mr. Prantera."
A chillness was in the belly of Joe
Prantera. He said very slowly, very
dangerously, "You guys figure on me
getting caught, don't you?"
"Yes," Brett-James said evenly.
"Well then, figure something else.
You think I'm stupid?"
"Mr. Prantera," Dr. Reston-Farrell
said, "there has been as much progress
in the field of psychiatry in the
past two centuries as there has in
any other. Your treatment would be
brief and painless, believe me."
Joe said coldly, "And what happens
to you guys? How do you know I
won't rat on you?"
Brett-James said gently, "The moment
after you have accomplished
your mission, we plan to turn ourselves
over to the nearest institution
to have determined whether or not
we also need therapy."
"Now I'm beginning to wonder
about you guys," Joe said. "Look, all
over again, what'd'ya wanta give it to
this guy for?"
The doctor said, "We explained
the other day, Mr. Prantera. Citizen
Howard Temple-Tracy is a dangerous,
atavistic, evil genius. We are
afraid for our institutions if his plans
are allowed to mature."
"Well if you got things so good,
everybody's got it made, like, who'd
listen to him?"
The doctor nodded at the validity
of the question. "Mr. Prantera,
Homo
sapiens
is a unique animal. Physically
he matures at approximately the age
of thirteen. However, mental maturity
and adjustment is often not fully
realized until thirty or even more.
Indeed, it is sometimes never
achieved. Before such maturity is
reached, our youth are susceptible to
romantic appeal. Nationalism, chauvinism,
racism, the supposed glory of
the military, all seem romantic to the
immature. They rebel at the orderliness
of present society. They seek entertainment
in excitement. Citizen
Temple-Tracy is aware of this and
finds his recruits among the young."
"O.K., so this guy is dangerous.
You want him knocked off before he
screws everything up. But the way
things are, there's no way of making
a get. So you'll have to get some other
patsy. Not me."
"I am afraid you have no alternative,"
Brett-James said gently. "Without
us, what will you do? Mr. Prantera,
you do not even speak the language."
"What'd'ya mean? I don't understand
summa the big words you eggheads
use, but I get by O.K."
Brett-James said, "Amer-English is
no longer the language spoken by the
man in the street, Mr. Prantera. Only
students of such subjects any longer
speak such tongues as Amer-English,
French, Russian or the many others
that once confused the race with
their limitations as a means of communication."
"You mean there's no place in the
whole world where they talk American?"
Joe demanded, aghast.
Dr. Reston-Farrell controlled the
car. Joe Prantera sat in the seat next
to him and Warren Brett-James sat
in the back. Joe had, tucked in his
belt, a .45 caliber automatic, once displayed
in a museum. It had been
more easily procured than the ammunition
to fit it, but that problem too
had been solved.
The others were nervous, obviously
repelled by the very conception of
what they had planned.
Inwardly, Joe was amused. Now
that they had got in the clutch, the
others were on the verge of chickening
out. He knew it wouldn't have
taken much for them to cancel the
project. It wasn't any answer though.
If they allowed him to call it off today,
they'd talk themselves into it
again before the week was through.
Besides, already Joe was beginning
to feel the comfortable, pleasurable,
warm feeling that came to him on
occasions like this.
He said, "You're sure this guy talks
American, eh?"
Warren Brett-James said, "Quite
sure. He is a student of history."
"And he won't think it's funny I
talk American to him, eh?"
"He'll undoubtedly be intrigued."
They pulled up before a large
apartment building that overlooked
the area once known as Wilmington.
Joe was coolly efficient now. He
pulled out the automatic, held it
down below his knees and threw a
shell into the barrel. He eased the
hammer down, thumbed on the
safety, stuck the weapon back in his
belt and beneath the jacketlike garment
he wore.
He said, "O.K. See you guys later."
He left them and entered the building.
An elevator—he still wasn't used
to their speed in this era—whooshed
him to the penthouse duplex occupied
by Citizen Howard Temple-Tracy.
There were two persons in the reception
room but they left on Joe's
arrival, without bothering to look at
him more than glancingly.
He spotted the screen immediately
and went over and stood before it.
The screen lit and revealed a
heavy-set, dour of countenance man
seated at a desk. He looked into Joe
Prantera's face, scowled and said
something.
Joe said, "Joseph Salviati-Prantera
to interview Citizen Howard Temple-Tracy."
The other's shaggy eyebrows rose.
"Indeed," he said. "In Amer-English?"
Joe nodded.
"Enter," the other said.
A door had slid open on the other
side of the room. Joe walked through
it and into what was obviously an office.
Citizen Temple-Tracy sat at a
desk. There was only one other chair
in the room. Joe Prantera ignored it
and remained standing.
Citizen Temple-Tracy said, "What
can I do for you?"
Joe looked at him for a long, long
moment. Then he reached down to
his belt and brought forth the .45
automatic. He moistened his lips.
Joe said softly, "You know what
this here is?"
Temple-Tracy stared at the weapon.
"It's a handgun, circa, I would
say, about 1925 Old Calendar. What
in the world are you doing with it?"
Joe said, very slowly, "Chief, in the
line you're in these days you needa
heavy around with wunna these. Otherwise,
Chief, you're gunna wind up
in some gutter with a lotta holes in
you. What I'm doin', I'm askin' for a
job. You need a good man knows how
to handle wunna these, Chief."
Citizen Howard Temple-Tracy
eyed him appraisingly. "Perhaps," he
said, "you are right at that. In the near
future, I may well need an assistant
knowledgeable in the field of violence.
Tell me more about yourself.
You surprise me considerably."
"Sure, Chief. It's kinda a long
story, though. First off, I better tell
you you got some bad enemies, Chief.
Two guys special, named Brett-James
and Doc Reston-Farrell. I think one
of the first jobs I'm gunna hafta do
for you, Chief, is to give it to those
two."
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Analog
December
1960. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | Giving him information about his opponents | Speaking to him in Amer-English | Revealing his potential assassins | Giving him a 1925 Old Calendar | 1 |
24247_0D8BR739_6 | Why are Reston-Farrell and Brett-James not willing to assassinate Temple-Tracy themselves? | Illustrated by van Dongen
A gun is an interesting weapon; it can be hired, of
course, and naturally doesn't care who hires it. Something
much the same can be said of the gunman, too....
GUN FOR HIRE
By
MACK
REYNOLDS
Joe Prantera
called
softly, "Al." The pleasurable,
comfortable,
warm feeling began
spreading over him, the
way it always did.
The older man stopped and
squinted, but not suspiciously, even
now.
The evening was dark, it was unlikely
that the other even saw the
circle of steel that was the mouth of
the shotgun barrel, now resting on
the car's window ledge.
"Who's it?" he growled.
Joe Prantera said softly, "Big Louis
sent me, Al."
And he pressed the trigger.
And at that moment, the universe
caved inward upon Joseph Marie
Prantera.
There was nausea and nausea upon
nausea.
There was a falling through all
space and through all time. There was
doubling and twisting and twitching
of every muscle and nerve.
There was pain, horror and tumultuous
fear.
And he came out of it as quickly
and completely as he'd gone in.
He was in, he thought, a hospital
and his first reaction was to think,
This here California. Everything different.
Then his second thought was
Something went wrong. Big Louis, he
ain't going to like this.
He brought his thinking to the
present. So far as he could remember,
he hadn't completely pulled the trigger.
That at least meant that whatever
the rap was it wouldn't be too
tough. With luck, the syndicate would
get him off with a couple of years at
Quentin.
A door slid open in the wall in a
way that Joe had never seen a door
operate before.
This here California.
The clothes on the newcomer were
wrong, too. For the first time, Joe
Prantera began to sense an alienness—a
something that was awfully
wrong.
The other spoke precisely and
slowly, the way a highly educated man
speaks a language which he reads
and writes fluently but has little occasion
to practice vocally. "You have recovered?"
Joe Prantera looked at the other
expressionlessly. Maybe the old duck
was one of these foreign doctors, like.
The newcomer said, "You have undoubtedly
been through a most harrowing
experience. If you have any
untoward symptoms, possibly I could
be of assistance."
Joe couldn't figure out how he
stood. For one thing, there should
have been some kind of police guard.
The other said, "Perhaps a bit of
stimulant?"
Joe said flatly, "I wanta lawyer."
The newcomer frowned at him. "A
lawyer?"
"I'm not sayin' nothin'. Not until I
get a mouthpiece."
The newcomer started off on another
tack. "My name is Lawrence
Reston-Farrell. If I am not mistaken,
you are Joseph Salviati-Prantera."
Salviati happened to be Joe's mother's
maiden name. But it was unlikely
this character could have known that.
Joe had been born in Naples and his
mother had died in childbirth. His
father hadn't brought him to the
States until the age of five and by that
time he had a stepmother.
"I wanta mouthpiece," Joe said
flatly, "or let me outta here."
Lawrence Reston-Farrell said, "You
are not being constrained. There are
clothes for you in the closet there."
Joe gingerly tried swinging his
feet to the floor and sitting up, while
the other stood watching him, strangely.
He came to his feet. With the exception
of a faint nausea, which
brought back memories of that extreme
condition he'd suffered during
... during what? He hadn't the
vaguest idea of what had happened.
He was dressed in a hospital-type
nightgown. He looked down at it and
snorted and made his way over to the
closet. It opened on his approach, the
door sliding back into the wall in
much the same manner as the room's
door had opened for Reston-Farrell.
Joe Prantera scowled and said,
"These ain't my clothes."
"No, I am afraid not."
"You think I'd be seen dead wearing
this stuff? What is this, some religious
crackpot hospital?"
Reston-Farrell said, "I am afraid,
Mr. Salviati-Prantera, that these are
the only garments available. I suggest
you look out the window there."
Joe gave him a long, chill look
and then stepped to the window. He
couldn't figure the other. Unless he
was a fruitcake. Maybe he was in
some kind of pressure cooker and
this was one of the fruitcakes.
He looked out, however, not on the
lawns and walks of a sanitarium but
upon a wide boulevard of what was
obviously a populous city.
And for a moment again, Joe Prantera
felt the depths of nausea.
This was not his world.
He stared for a long, long moment.
The cars didn't even have wheels, he
noted dully. He turned slowly and
faced the older man.
Reston-Farrell said compassionately,
"Try this, it's excellent cognac."
Joe Prantera stared at him, said finally,
flatly, "What's it all about?"
The other put down the unaccepted
glass. "We were afraid first
realization would be a shock to you,"
he said. "My colleague is in the adjoining
room. We will be glad to explain
to you if you will join us there."
"I wanta get out of here," Joe said.
"Where would you go?"
The fear of police, of Al Rossi's
vengeance, of the measures that
might be taken by Big Louis on his
failure, were now far away.
Reston-Farrell had approached the
door by which he had entered and it
reopened for him. He went through
it without looking back.
There was nothing else to do. Joe
dressed, then followed him.
In the adjoining room was a circular
table that would have accommodated
a dozen persons. Two were
seated there now, papers, books and
soiled coffee cups before them. There
had evidently been a long wait.
Reston-Farrell, the one Joe had already
met, was tall and drawn of face
and with a chainsmoker's nervousness.
The other was heavier and more
at ease. They were both, Joe estimated,
somewhere in their middle fifties.
They both looked like docs. He
wondered, all over again, if this was
some kind of pressure cooker.
But that didn't explain the view
from the window.
Reston-Farrell said, "May I present
my colleague, Citizen Warren Brett-James?
Warren, this is our guest from
... from yesteryear, Mr. Joseph Salviati-Prantera."
Brett-James nodded to him, friendly,
so far as Joe could see. He said
gently, "I think it would be Mr. Joseph
Prantera, wouldn't it? The maternal
linage was almost universally
ignored." His voice too gave the impression
he was speaking a language
not usually on his tongue.
Joe took an empty chair, hardly
bothering to note its alien qualities.
His body seemed to
fit
into the piece
of furniture, as though it had been
molded to his order.
Joe said, "I think maybe I'll take
that there drink, Doc."
Reston-Farrell said, "Of course,"
and then something else Joe didn't
get. Whatever the something else
was, a slot opened in the middle of
the table and a glass, so clear of texture
as to be all but invisible, was
elevated. It contained possibly three
ounces of golden fluid.
Joe didn't allow himself to think
of its means of delivery. He took up
the drink and bolted it. He put the
glass down and said carefully,
"What's it all about, huh?"
Warren Brett-James said soothingly,
"Prepare yourself for somewhat
of a shock, Mr. Prantera. You are no
longer in Los Angeles—"
"Ya think I'm stupid? I can see
that."
"I was about to say, Los Angeles of
1960. Mr. Prantera, we welcome you
to Nuevo Los Angeles."
"Ta where?"
"To Nuevo Los Angeles and to
the year—" Brett-James looked at his
companion. "What is the date, Old
Calendar?"
"2133," Reston-Farrell said. "2133
A.D. they would say."
Joe Prantera looked from one of
them to the other, scowling. "What
are you guys talking about?"
Warren Brett-James said softly,
"Mr. Prantera, you are no longer in
the year 1960, you are now in the
year 2133."
He said, uncomprehendingly, "You
mean I been, like, unconscious for—"
He let the sentence fall away as he
realized the impossibility.
Brett-James said gently, "Hardly
for one hundred and seventy years,
Mr. Prantera."
Reston-Farrell said, "I am afraid we
are confusing you. Briefly, we have
transported
you, I suppose one might
say, from your own era to ours."
Joe Prantera had never been exposed
to the concept of time travel.
He had simply never associated with
anyone who had ever even remotely
considered such an idea. Now he said,
"You mean, like, I been asleep all
that time?"
"Not exactly," Brett-James said,
frowning.
Reston-Farrell said, "Suffice to say,
you are now one hundred and seventy-three
years after the last memory you
have."
Joe Prantera's mind suddenly reverted
to those last memories and his
eyes narrowed dangerously. He felt
suddenly at bay. He said, "Maybe
you guys better let me in on what's
this all about."
Reston-Farrell said, "Mr. Prantera,
we have brought you from your era
to perform a task for us."
Joe stared at him, and then at the
other. He couldn't believe he was getting
through to them. Or, at least,
that they were to him.
Finally he said, "If I get this, you
want me to do a job for you."
"That is correct."
Joe said, "You guys know the kind
of jobs I do?"
"That is correct."
"Like hell you do. You think I'm
stupid? I never even seen you before."
Joe Prantera came abruptly to
his feet. "I'm gettin' outta here."
For the second time, Reston-Farrell
said, "Where would you go, Mr.
Prantera?"
Joe glared at him. Then sat down
again, as abruptly as he'd arisen.
"Let's start all over again. I got this
straight, you brought me, some
screwy way, all the way ... here.
O.K., I'll buy that. I seen what it looks
like out that window—" The real
comprehension was seeping through
to him even as he talked. "Everybody
I know, Jessie, Tony, the Kid, Big
Louis, everybody, they're dead. Even
Big Louis."
"Yes," Brett-James said, his voice
soft. "They are all dead, Mr. Prantera.
Their children are all dead, and their
grandchildren."
The two men of the future said
nothing more for long minutes while
Joe Prantera's mind whirled its confusion.
Finally he said, "What's this bit
about you wanting me to give it to
some guy."
"That is why we brought you here,
Mr. Prantera. You were ... you
are, a professional assassin."
"Hey, wait a minute, now."
Reston-Farrell went on, ignoring
the interruption. "There is small
point in denying your calling. Pray
remember that at the point when we
...
transported
you, you were about
to dispose of a contemporary named
Alphonso Annunziata-Rossi. A citizen,
I might say, whose demise would
probably have caused small dismay to
society."
They had him pegged all right. Joe
said, "But why me? Why don't you
get some heavy from now? Somebody
knows the ropes these days."
Brett-James said, "Mr. Prantera,
there are no professional assassins in
this age, nor have there been for over
a century and a half."
"Well, then do it yourself." Joe
Prantera's irritation over this whole
complicated mess was growing. And
already he was beginning to long for
the things he knew—for Jessie and
Tony and the others, for his favorite
bar, for the lasagne down at Papa
Giovanni's. Right now he could have
welcomed a calling down at the hands
of Big Louis.
Reston-Farrell had come to his feet
and walked to one of the large room's
windows. He looked out, as though
unseeing. Then, his back turned, he
said, "We have tried, but it is simply
not in us, Mr. Prantera."
"You mean you're yella?"
"No, if by that you mean afraid. It
is simply not within us to take the
life of a fellow creature—not to speak
of a fellow man."
Joe snapped: "Everything you guys
say sounds crazy. Let's start all over
again."
Brett-James said, "Let me do it,
Lawrence." He turned his eyes to Joe.
"Mr. Prantera, in your own era, did
you ever consider the future?"
Joe looked at him blankly.
"In your day you were confronted
with national and international, problems.
Just as we are today and just as
nations were a century or a millennium
ago."
"Sure, O.K., so we had problems. I
know whatcha mean—like wars, and
depressions and dictators and like
that."
"Yes, like that," Brett-James
nodded.
The heavy-set man paused a moment.
"Yes, like that," he repeated.
"That we confront you now indicates
that the problems of your day were
solved. Hadn't they been, the world
most surely would have destroyed itself.
Wars? Our pedagogues are hard
put to convince their students that
such ever existed. More than a century
and a half ago our society eliminated
the reasons for international
conflict. For that matter," he added
musingly, "we eliminated most international
boundaries. Depressions?
Shortly after your own period, man
awoke to the fact that he had achieved
to the point where it was possible to
produce an abundance for all with a
minimum of toil. Overnight, for all
practical purposes, the whole world
was industrialized, automated. The
second industrial revolution was accompanied
by revolutionary changes
in almost every field, certainly in every
science. Dictators? Your ancestors
found, Mr. Prantera, that it is
difficult for a man to be free so long
as others are still enslaved. Today the
democratic ethic has reached a pinnacle
never dreamed of in your own
era."
"O.K., O.K.," Joe Prantera growled.
"So everybody's got it made. What I
wanta know is what's all this about
me giving it ta somebody? If everything's
so great, how come you want
me to knock this guy off?"
Reston-Farrell bent forward and
thumped his right index finger twice
on the table. "The bacterium of hate—a
new strain—has found the human
race unprotected from its disease.
We had thought our vaccines
immunized us."
"What's that suppose to mean?"
Brett-James took up the ball again.
"Mr. Prantera, have you ever heard of
Ghengis Khan, of Tamerlane, Alexander,
Caesar?"
Joe Prantera scowled at him emptily.
"Or, more likely, of Napoleon, Hitler,
Stalin?"
"Sure I heard of Hitler and Stalin,"
Joe growled. "I ain't stupid."
The other nodded. "Such men are
unique. They have a drive ... a
drive to power which exceeds by far
the ambitions of the average man.
They are genii in their way, Mr. Prantera,
genii of evil. Such a genius of
evil has appeared on the current
scene."
"Now we're getting somewheres,"
Joe snorted. "So you got a guy what's
a little ambitious, like, eh? And you
guys ain't got the guts to give it to
him. O.K. What's in it for me?"
The two of them frowned, exchanged
glances. Reston-Farrell said,
"You know, that is one aspect we had
not considered."
Brett-James said to Joe Prantera,
"Had we not, ah, taken you at the
time we did, do you realize what
would have happened?"
"Sure," Joe grunted. "I woulda let
old Al Rossi have it right in the guts,
five times. Then I woulda took the
plane back to Chi."
Brett-James was shaking his head.
"No. You see, by coincidence, a police
squad car was coming down the
street just at that moment to arrest
Mr. Rossi. You would have been apprehended.
As I understand Californian
law of the period, your life
would have been forfeit, Mr. Prantera."
Joe winced. It didn't occur to him
to doubt their word.
Reston-Farrell said, "As to reward,
Mr. Prantera, we have already told
you there is ultra-abundance in this
age. Once this task has been performed,
we will sponsor your entry
into present day society. Competent
psychiatric therapy will soon remove
your present—"
"Waita minute, now. You figure on
gettin' me candled by some head
shrinker, eh? No thanks, Buster. I'm
going back to my own—"
Brett-James was shaking his head
again. "I am afraid there is no return,
Mr. Prantera. Time travel works but
in one direction,
with
the flow of the
time stream. There can be no return
to your own era."
Joe Prantera had been rocking
with the mental blows he had been
assimilating, but this was the final
haymaker. He was stuck in this
squaresville of a world.
Joe Prantera on a job was thorough.
Careful, painstaking, competent.
He spent the first three days of his
life in the year 2133 getting the feel
of things. Brett-James and Reston-Farrell
had been appointed to work
with him. Joe didn't meet any of the
others who belonged to the group
which had taken the measures to
bring him from the past. He didn't
want to meet them. The fewer persons
involved, the better.
He stayed in the apartment of
Reston-Farrell. Joe had been right,
Reston-Farrell was a medical doctor.
Brett-James evidently had something
to do with the process that had enabled
them to bring Joe from the
past. Joe didn't know how they'd
done it, and he didn't care. Joe was a
realist. He was here. The thing was
to adapt.
There didn't seem to be any hurry.
Once the deal was made, they left it
up to him to make the decisions.
They drove him around the town,
when he wished to check the traffic
arteries. They flew him about the
whole vicinity. From the air, Southern
California looked much the same
as it had in his own time. Oceans,
mountains, and to a lesser extent, deserts,
are fairly permanent even
against man's corroding efforts.
It was while he was flying with
Brett-James on the second day that
Joe said, "How about Mexico? Could
I make the get to Mexico?"
The physicist looked at him questioningly.
"Get?" he said.
Joe Prantera said impatiently, "The
getaway. After I give it to this Howard
Temple-Tracy guy, I gotta go on
the run, don't I?"
"I see." Brett-James cleared his
throat. "Mexico is no longer a separate
nation, Mr. Prantera. All North
America has been united into one
unit. Today, there are only eight nations
in the world."
"Where's the nearest?"
"South America."
"That's a helluva long way to go on
a get."
"We hadn't thought of the matter
being handled in that manner."
Joe eyed him in scorn. "Oh, you
didn't, huh? What happens after I
give it to this guy? I just sit around
and wait for the cops to put the arm
on me?"
Brett-James grimaced in amusement.
"Mr. Prantera, this will probably
be difficult for you to comprehend,
but there are no police in this
era."
Joe gaped at him. "No police!
What happens if you gotta throw
some guy in stir?"
"If I understand your idiom correctly,
you mean prison. There are
no prisons in this era, Mr. Prantera."
Joe stared. "No cops, no jails. What
stops anybody? What stops anybody
from just going into some bank, like,
and collecting up all the bread?"
Brett-James cleared his throat.
"Mr. Prantera, there are no banks."
"No banks! You gotta have banks!"
"And no money to put in them.
We found it a rather antiquated
method of distribution well over a
century ago."
Joe had given up. Now he merely
stared.
Brett-James said reasonably, "We
found we were devoting as much
time to financial matters in all their
endless ramifications—including
bank robberies—as we were to productive
efforts. So we turned to more
efficient methods of distribution."
On the fourth day, Joe said, "O.K.,
let's get down to facts. Summa the
things you guys say don't stick together
so good. Now, first place,
where's this guy Temple-Tracy you
want knocked off?"
Reston-Farrell and Brett-James
were both present. The three of them
sat in the living room of the latter's
apartment, sipping a sparkling wine
which seemed to be the prevailing
beverage of the day. For Joe's taste
it was insipid stuff. Happily, rye was
available to those who wanted it.
Reston-Farrell said, "You mean,
where does he reside? Why, here in
this city."
"Well, that's handy, eh?" Joe
scratched himself thoughtfully. "You
got somebody can finger him for me?"
"Finger him?"
"Look, before I can give it to this
guy I gotta know some place where
he'll be at some time. Get it? Like Al
Rossi. My finger, he works in Rossi's
house, see? He lets me know every
Wednesday night, eight o'clock, Al
leaves the house all by hisself. O.K.,
so I can make plans, like, to give it
to him." Joe Prantera wound it up
reasonably. "You gotta have a finger."
Brett-James said, "Why not just go
to Temple-Tracy's apartment and, ah,
dispose of him?"
"Jest walk in, eh? You think I'm
stupid? How do I know how many
witnesses hangin' around? How do I
know if the guy's carryin' heat?"
"Heat?"
"A gun, a gun. Ya think I'm stupid?
I come to give it to him and he
gives it to me instead."
Dr. Reston-Farrell said, "Howard
Temple-Tracy lives alone. He customarily
receives visitors every afternoon,
largely potential followers. He
is attempting to recruit members to
an organization he is forming. It
would be quite simple for you to
enter his establishment and dispose
of him. I assure you, he does not possess
weapons."
Joe was indignant. "Just like that,
eh?" he said sarcastically. "Then what
happens? How do I get out of the
building? Where's my get car parked?
Where do I hide out? Where do I
dump the heat?"
"Dump the heat?"
"Get rid of the gun. You want I
should get caught with the gun on
me? I'd wind up in the gas chamber
so quick—"
"See here, Mr. Prantera," Brett-James
said softly. "We no longer have
capital punishment, you must realize."
"O.K. I still don't wanta get caught.
What
is
the rap these days, huh?"
Joe scowled. "You said they didn't
have no jails any more."
"This is difficult for you to understand,
I imagine," Reston-Farrell told
him, "but, you see, we no longer punish
people in this era."
That took a long, unbelieving moment
to sink in. "You mean, like, no
matter what they do? That's crazy.
Everybody'd be running around giving
it to everybody else."
"The motivation for crime has
been removed, Mr. Prantera," Reston-Farrell
attempted to explain. "A
person who commits a violence
against another is obviously in need
of medical care. And, consequently,
receives it."
"You mean, like, if I steal a car or
something, they just take me to a
doctor?" Joe Prantera was unbelieving.
"Why would anybody wish to steal
a car?" Reston-Farrell said easily.
"But if I
give it
to somebody?"
"You will be turned over to a medical
institution. Citizen Howard Temple-Tracy
is the last man you will
ever kill, Mr. Prantera."
A chillness was in the belly of Joe
Prantera. He said very slowly, very
dangerously, "You guys figure on me
getting caught, don't you?"
"Yes," Brett-James said evenly.
"Well then, figure something else.
You think I'm stupid?"
"Mr. Prantera," Dr. Reston-Farrell
said, "there has been as much progress
in the field of psychiatry in the
past two centuries as there has in
any other. Your treatment would be
brief and painless, believe me."
Joe said coldly, "And what happens
to you guys? How do you know I
won't rat on you?"
Brett-James said gently, "The moment
after you have accomplished
your mission, we plan to turn ourselves
over to the nearest institution
to have determined whether or not
we also need therapy."
"Now I'm beginning to wonder
about you guys," Joe said. "Look, all
over again, what'd'ya wanta give it to
this guy for?"
The doctor said, "We explained
the other day, Mr. Prantera. Citizen
Howard Temple-Tracy is a dangerous,
atavistic, evil genius. We are
afraid for our institutions if his plans
are allowed to mature."
"Well if you got things so good,
everybody's got it made, like, who'd
listen to him?"
The doctor nodded at the validity
of the question. "Mr. Prantera,
Homo
sapiens
is a unique animal. Physically
he matures at approximately the age
of thirteen. However, mental maturity
and adjustment is often not fully
realized until thirty or even more.
Indeed, it is sometimes never
achieved. Before such maturity is
reached, our youth are susceptible to
romantic appeal. Nationalism, chauvinism,
racism, the supposed glory of
the military, all seem romantic to the
immature. They rebel at the orderliness
of present society. They seek entertainment
in excitement. Citizen
Temple-Tracy is aware of this and
finds his recruits among the young."
"O.K., so this guy is dangerous.
You want him knocked off before he
screws everything up. But the way
things are, there's no way of making
a get. So you'll have to get some other
patsy. Not me."
"I am afraid you have no alternative,"
Brett-James said gently. "Without
us, what will you do? Mr. Prantera,
you do not even speak the language."
"What'd'ya mean? I don't understand
summa the big words you eggheads
use, but I get by O.K."
Brett-James said, "Amer-English is
no longer the language spoken by the
man in the street, Mr. Prantera. Only
students of such subjects any longer
speak such tongues as Amer-English,
French, Russian or the many others
that once confused the race with
their limitations as a means of communication."
"You mean there's no place in the
whole world where they talk American?"
Joe demanded, aghast.
Dr. Reston-Farrell controlled the
car. Joe Prantera sat in the seat next
to him and Warren Brett-James sat
in the back. Joe had, tucked in his
belt, a .45 caliber automatic, once displayed
in a museum. It had been
more easily procured than the ammunition
to fit it, but that problem too
had been solved.
The others were nervous, obviously
repelled by the very conception of
what they had planned.
Inwardly, Joe was amused. Now
that they had got in the clutch, the
others were on the verge of chickening
out. He knew it wouldn't have
taken much for them to cancel the
project. It wasn't any answer though.
If they allowed him to call it off today,
they'd talk themselves into it
again before the week was through.
Besides, already Joe was beginning
to feel the comfortable, pleasurable,
warm feeling that came to him on
occasions like this.
He said, "You're sure this guy talks
American, eh?"
Warren Brett-James said, "Quite
sure. He is a student of history."
"And he won't think it's funny I
talk American to him, eh?"
"He'll undoubtedly be intrigued."
They pulled up before a large
apartment building that overlooked
the area once known as Wilmington.
Joe was coolly efficient now. He
pulled out the automatic, held it
down below his knees and threw a
shell into the barrel. He eased the
hammer down, thumbed on the
safety, stuck the weapon back in his
belt and beneath the jacketlike garment
he wore.
He said, "O.K. See you guys later."
He left them and entered the building.
An elevator—he still wasn't used
to their speed in this era—whooshed
him to the penthouse duplex occupied
by Citizen Howard Temple-Tracy.
There were two persons in the reception
room but they left on Joe's
arrival, without bothering to look at
him more than glancingly.
He spotted the screen immediately
and went over and stood before it.
The screen lit and revealed a
heavy-set, dour of countenance man
seated at a desk. He looked into Joe
Prantera's face, scowled and said
something.
Joe said, "Joseph Salviati-Prantera
to interview Citizen Howard Temple-Tracy."
The other's shaggy eyebrows rose.
"Indeed," he said. "In Amer-English?"
Joe nodded.
"Enter," the other said.
A door had slid open on the other
side of the room. Joe walked through
it and into what was obviously an office.
Citizen Temple-Tracy sat at a
desk. There was only one other chair
in the room. Joe Prantera ignored it
and remained standing.
Citizen Temple-Tracy said, "What
can I do for you?"
Joe looked at him for a long, long
moment. Then he reached down to
his belt and brought forth the .45
automatic. He moistened his lips.
Joe said softly, "You know what
this here is?"
Temple-Tracy stared at the weapon.
"It's a handgun, circa, I would
say, about 1925 Old Calendar. What
in the world are you doing with it?"
Joe said, very slowly, "Chief, in the
line you're in these days you needa
heavy around with wunna these. Otherwise,
Chief, you're gunna wind up
in some gutter with a lotta holes in
you. What I'm doin', I'm askin' for a
job. You need a good man knows how
to handle wunna these, Chief."
Citizen Howard Temple-Tracy
eyed him appraisingly. "Perhaps," he
said, "you are right at that. In the near
future, I may well need an assistant
knowledgeable in the field of violence.
Tell me more about yourself.
You surprise me considerably."
"Sure, Chief. It's kinda a long
story, though. First off, I better tell
you you got some bad enemies, Chief.
Two guys special, named Brett-James
and Doc Reston-Farrell. I think one
of the first jobs I'm gunna hafta do
for you, Chief, is to give it to those
two."
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Analog
December
1960. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | They would feel such guilt after taking a fellow human's life as to cause them long-lasting anguish | They are fearful of Temple-Tracy's followers using him as a martyr to strengthen their cause | They are afraid of what might happen if they are forced to receive psychiatric treatment | They do not possess hatred in their genetic sequence and are incapable of committing vile acts | 3 |
24247_0D8BR739_7 | All of the following motivate Prantera to accept the proposal from Brett-James and Reston-Ferrell EXCEPT: | Illustrated by van Dongen
A gun is an interesting weapon; it can be hired, of
course, and naturally doesn't care who hires it. Something
much the same can be said of the gunman, too....
GUN FOR HIRE
By
MACK
REYNOLDS
Joe Prantera
called
softly, "Al." The pleasurable,
comfortable,
warm feeling began
spreading over him, the
way it always did.
The older man stopped and
squinted, but not suspiciously, even
now.
The evening was dark, it was unlikely
that the other even saw the
circle of steel that was the mouth of
the shotgun barrel, now resting on
the car's window ledge.
"Who's it?" he growled.
Joe Prantera said softly, "Big Louis
sent me, Al."
And he pressed the trigger.
And at that moment, the universe
caved inward upon Joseph Marie
Prantera.
There was nausea and nausea upon
nausea.
There was a falling through all
space and through all time. There was
doubling and twisting and twitching
of every muscle and nerve.
There was pain, horror and tumultuous
fear.
And he came out of it as quickly
and completely as he'd gone in.
He was in, he thought, a hospital
and his first reaction was to think,
This here California. Everything different.
Then his second thought was
Something went wrong. Big Louis, he
ain't going to like this.
He brought his thinking to the
present. So far as he could remember,
he hadn't completely pulled the trigger.
That at least meant that whatever
the rap was it wouldn't be too
tough. With luck, the syndicate would
get him off with a couple of years at
Quentin.
A door slid open in the wall in a
way that Joe had never seen a door
operate before.
This here California.
The clothes on the newcomer were
wrong, too. For the first time, Joe
Prantera began to sense an alienness—a
something that was awfully
wrong.
The other spoke precisely and
slowly, the way a highly educated man
speaks a language which he reads
and writes fluently but has little occasion
to practice vocally. "You have recovered?"
Joe Prantera looked at the other
expressionlessly. Maybe the old duck
was one of these foreign doctors, like.
The newcomer said, "You have undoubtedly
been through a most harrowing
experience. If you have any
untoward symptoms, possibly I could
be of assistance."
Joe couldn't figure out how he
stood. For one thing, there should
have been some kind of police guard.
The other said, "Perhaps a bit of
stimulant?"
Joe said flatly, "I wanta lawyer."
The newcomer frowned at him. "A
lawyer?"
"I'm not sayin' nothin'. Not until I
get a mouthpiece."
The newcomer started off on another
tack. "My name is Lawrence
Reston-Farrell. If I am not mistaken,
you are Joseph Salviati-Prantera."
Salviati happened to be Joe's mother's
maiden name. But it was unlikely
this character could have known that.
Joe had been born in Naples and his
mother had died in childbirth. His
father hadn't brought him to the
States until the age of five and by that
time he had a stepmother.
"I wanta mouthpiece," Joe said
flatly, "or let me outta here."
Lawrence Reston-Farrell said, "You
are not being constrained. There are
clothes for you in the closet there."
Joe gingerly tried swinging his
feet to the floor and sitting up, while
the other stood watching him, strangely.
He came to his feet. With the exception
of a faint nausea, which
brought back memories of that extreme
condition he'd suffered during
... during what? He hadn't the
vaguest idea of what had happened.
He was dressed in a hospital-type
nightgown. He looked down at it and
snorted and made his way over to the
closet. It opened on his approach, the
door sliding back into the wall in
much the same manner as the room's
door had opened for Reston-Farrell.
Joe Prantera scowled and said,
"These ain't my clothes."
"No, I am afraid not."
"You think I'd be seen dead wearing
this stuff? What is this, some religious
crackpot hospital?"
Reston-Farrell said, "I am afraid,
Mr. Salviati-Prantera, that these are
the only garments available. I suggest
you look out the window there."
Joe gave him a long, chill look
and then stepped to the window. He
couldn't figure the other. Unless he
was a fruitcake. Maybe he was in
some kind of pressure cooker and
this was one of the fruitcakes.
He looked out, however, not on the
lawns and walks of a sanitarium but
upon a wide boulevard of what was
obviously a populous city.
And for a moment again, Joe Prantera
felt the depths of nausea.
This was not his world.
He stared for a long, long moment.
The cars didn't even have wheels, he
noted dully. He turned slowly and
faced the older man.
Reston-Farrell said compassionately,
"Try this, it's excellent cognac."
Joe Prantera stared at him, said finally,
flatly, "What's it all about?"
The other put down the unaccepted
glass. "We were afraid first
realization would be a shock to you,"
he said. "My colleague is in the adjoining
room. We will be glad to explain
to you if you will join us there."
"I wanta get out of here," Joe said.
"Where would you go?"
The fear of police, of Al Rossi's
vengeance, of the measures that
might be taken by Big Louis on his
failure, were now far away.
Reston-Farrell had approached the
door by which he had entered and it
reopened for him. He went through
it without looking back.
There was nothing else to do. Joe
dressed, then followed him.
In the adjoining room was a circular
table that would have accommodated
a dozen persons. Two were
seated there now, papers, books and
soiled coffee cups before them. There
had evidently been a long wait.
Reston-Farrell, the one Joe had already
met, was tall and drawn of face
and with a chainsmoker's nervousness.
The other was heavier and more
at ease. They were both, Joe estimated,
somewhere in their middle fifties.
They both looked like docs. He
wondered, all over again, if this was
some kind of pressure cooker.
But that didn't explain the view
from the window.
Reston-Farrell said, "May I present
my colleague, Citizen Warren Brett-James?
Warren, this is our guest from
... from yesteryear, Mr. Joseph Salviati-Prantera."
Brett-James nodded to him, friendly,
so far as Joe could see. He said
gently, "I think it would be Mr. Joseph
Prantera, wouldn't it? The maternal
linage was almost universally
ignored." His voice too gave the impression
he was speaking a language
not usually on his tongue.
Joe took an empty chair, hardly
bothering to note its alien qualities.
His body seemed to
fit
into the piece
of furniture, as though it had been
molded to his order.
Joe said, "I think maybe I'll take
that there drink, Doc."
Reston-Farrell said, "Of course,"
and then something else Joe didn't
get. Whatever the something else
was, a slot opened in the middle of
the table and a glass, so clear of texture
as to be all but invisible, was
elevated. It contained possibly three
ounces of golden fluid.
Joe didn't allow himself to think
of its means of delivery. He took up
the drink and bolted it. He put the
glass down and said carefully,
"What's it all about, huh?"
Warren Brett-James said soothingly,
"Prepare yourself for somewhat
of a shock, Mr. Prantera. You are no
longer in Los Angeles—"
"Ya think I'm stupid? I can see
that."
"I was about to say, Los Angeles of
1960. Mr. Prantera, we welcome you
to Nuevo Los Angeles."
"Ta where?"
"To Nuevo Los Angeles and to
the year—" Brett-James looked at his
companion. "What is the date, Old
Calendar?"
"2133," Reston-Farrell said. "2133
A.D. they would say."
Joe Prantera looked from one of
them to the other, scowling. "What
are you guys talking about?"
Warren Brett-James said softly,
"Mr. Prantera, you are no longer in
the year 1960, you are now in the
year 2133."
He said, uncomprehendingly, "You
mean I been, like, unconscious for—"
He let the sentence fall away as he
realized the impossibility.
Brett-James said gently, "Hardly
for one hundred and seventy years,
Mr. Prantera."
Reston-Farrell said, "I am afraid we
are confusing you. Briefly, we have
transported
you, I suppose one might
say, from your own era to ours."
Joe Prantera had never been exposed
to the concept of time travel.
He had simply never associated with
anyone who had ever even remotely
considered such an idea. Now he said,
"You mean, like, I been asleep all
that time?"
"Not exactly," Brett-James said,
frowning.
Reston-Farrell said, "Suffice to say,
you are now one hundred and seventy-three
years after the last memory you
have."
Joe Prantera's mind suddenly reverted
to those last memories and his
eyes narrowed dangerously. He felt
suddenly at bay. He said, "Maybe
you guys better let me in on what's
this all about."
Reston-Farrell said, "Mr. Prantera,
we have brought you from your era
to perform a task for us."
Joe stared at him, and then at the
other. He couldn't believe he was getting
through to them. Or, at least,
that they were to him.
Finally he said, "If I get this, you
want me to do a job for you."
"That is correct."
Joe said, "You guys know the kind
of jobs I do?"
"That is correct."
"Like hell you do. You think I'm
stupid? I never even seen you before."
Joe Prantera came abruptly to
his feet. "I'm gettin' outta here."
For the second time, Reston-Farrell
said, "Where would you go, Mr.
Prantera?"
Joe glared at him. Then sat down
again, as abruptly as he'd arisen.
"Let's start all over again. I got this
straight, you brought me, some
screwy way, all the way ... here.
O.K., I'll buy that. I seen what it looks
like out that window—" The real
comprehension was seeping through
to him even as he talked. "Everybody
I know, Jessie, Tony, the Kid, Big
Louis, everybody, they're dead. Even
Big Louis."
"Yes," Brett-James said, his voice
soft. "They are all dead, Mr. Prantera.
Their children are all dead, and their
grandchildren."
The two men of the future said
nothing more for long minutes while
Joe Prantera's mind whirled its confusion.
Finally he said, "What's this bit
about you wanting me to give it to
some guy."
"That is why we brought you here,
Mr. Prantera. You were ... you
are, a professional assassin."
"Hey, wait a minute, now."
Reston-Farrell went on, ignoring
the interruption. "There is small
point in denying your calling. Pray
remember that at the point when we
...
transported
you, you were about
to dispose of a contemporary named
Alphonso Annunziata-Rossi. A citizen,
I might say, whose demise would
probably have caused small dismay to
society."
They had him pegged all right. Joe
said, "But why me? Why don't you
get some heavy from now? Somebody
knows the ropes these days."
Brett-James said, "Mr. Prantera,
there are no professional assassins in
this age, nor have there been for over
a century and a half."
"Well, then do it yourself." Joe
Prantera's irritation over this whole
complicated mess was growing. And
already he was beginning to long for
the things he knew—for Jessie and
Tony and the others, for his favorite
bar, for the lasagne down at Papa
Giovanni's. Right now he could have
welcomed a calling down at the hands
of Big Louis.
Reston-Farrell had come to his feet
and walked to one of the large room's
windows. He looked out, as though
unseeing. Then, his back turned, he
said, "We have tried, but it is simply
not in us, Mr. Prantera."
"You mean you're yella?"
"No, if by that you mean afraid. It
is simply not within us to take the
life of a fellow creature—not to speak
of a fellow man."
Joe snapped: "Everything you guys
say sounds crazy. Let's start all over
again."
Brett-James said, "Let me do it,
Lawrence." He turned his eyes to Joe.
"Mr. Prantera, in your own era, did
you ever consider the future?"
Joe looked at him blankly.
"In your day you were confronted
with national and international, problems.
Just as we are today and just as
nations were a century or a millennium
ago."
"Sure, O.K., so we had problems. I
know whatcha mean—like wars, and
depressions and dictators and like
that."
"Yes, like that," Brett-James
nodded.
The heavy-set man paused a moment.
"Yes, like that," he repeated.
"That we confront you now indicates
that the problems of your day were
solved. Hadn't they been, the world
most surely would have destroyed itself.
Wars? Our pedagogues are hard
put to convince their students that
such ever existed. More than a century
and a half ago our society eliminated
the reasons for international
conflict. For that matter," he added
musingly, "we eliminated most international
boundaries. Depressions?
Shortly after your own period, man
awoke to the fact that he had achieved
to the point where it was possible to
produce an abundance for all with a
minimum of toil. Overnight, for all
practical purposes, the whole world
was industrialized, automated. The
second industrial revolution was accompanied
by revolutionary changes
in almost every field, certainly in every
science. Dictators? Your ancestors
found, Mr. Prantera, that it is
difficult for a man to be free so long
as others are still enslaved. Today the
democratic ethic has reached a pinnacle
never dreamed of in your own
era."
"O.K., O.K.," Joe Prantera growled.
"So everybody's got it made. What I
wanta know is what's all this about
me giving it ta somebody? If everything's
so great, how come you want
me to knock this guy off?"
Reston-Farrell bent forward and
thumped his right index finger twice
on the table. "The bacterium of hate—a
new strain—has found the human
race unprotected from its disease.
We had thought our vaccines
immunized us."
"What's that suppose to mean?"
Brett-James took up the ball again.
"Mr. Prantera, have you ever heard of
Ghengis Khan, of Tamerlane, Alexander,
Caesar?"
Joe Prantera scowled at him emptily.
"Or, more likely, of Napoleon, Hitler,
Stalin?"
"Sure I heard of Hitler and Stalin,"
Joe growled. "I ain't stupid."
The other nodded. "Such men are
unique. They have a drive ... a
drive to power which exceeds by far
the ambitions of the average man.
They are genii in their way, Mr. Prantera,
genii of evil. Such a genius of
evil has appeared on the current
scene."
"Now we're getting somewheres,"
Joe snorted. "So you got a guy what's
a little ambitious, like, eh? And you
guys ain't got the guts to give it to
him. O.K. What's in it for me?"
The two of them frowned, exchanged
glances. Reston-Farrell said,
"You know, that is one aspect we had
not considered."
Brett-James said to Joe Prantera,
"Had we not, ah, taken you at the
time we did, do you realize what
would have happened?"
"Sure," Joe grunted. "I woulda let
old Al Rossi have it right in the guts,
five times. Then I woulda took the
plane back to Chi."
Brett-James was shaking his head.
"No. You see, by coincidence, a police
squad car was coming down the
street just at that moment to arrest
Mr. Rossi. You would have been apprehended.
As I understand Californian
law of the period, your life
would have been forfeit, Mr. Prantera."
Joe winced. It didn't occur to him
to doubt their word.
Reston-Farrell said, "As to reward,
Mr. Prantera, we have already told
you there is ultra-abundance in this
age. Once this task has been performed,
we will sponsor your entry
into present day society. Competent
psychiatric therapy will soon remove
your present—"
"Waita minute, now. You figure on
gettin' me candled by some head
shrinker, eh? No thanks, Buster. I'm
going back to my own—"
Brett-James was shaking his head
again. "I am afraid there is no return,
Mr. Prantera. Time travel works but
in one direction,
with
the flow of the
time stream. There can be no return
to your own era."
Joe Prantera had been rocking
with the mental blows he had been
assimilating, but this was the final
haymaker. He was stuck in this
squaresville of a world.
Joe Prantera on a job was thorough.
Careful, painstaking, competent.
He spent the first three days of his
life in the year 2133 getting the feel
of things. Brett-James and Reston-Farrell
had been appointed to work
with him. Joe didn't meet any of the
others who belonged to the group
which had taken the measures to
bring him from the past. He didn't
want to meet them. The fewer persons
involved, the better.
He stayed in the apartment of
Reston-Farrell. Joe had been right,
Reston-Farrell was a medical doctor.
Brett-James evidently had something
to do with the process that had enabled
them to bring Joe from the
past. Joe didn't know how they'd
done it, and he didn't care. Joe was a
realist. He was here. The thing was
to adapt.
There didn't seem to be any hurry.
Once the deal was made, they left it
up to him to make the decisions.
They drove him around the town,
when he wished to check the traffic
arteries. They flew him about the
whole vicinity. From the air, Southern
California looked much the same
as it had in his own time. Oceans,
mountains, and to a lesser extent, deserts,
are fairly permanent even
against man's corroding efforts.
It was while he was flying with
Brett-James on the second day that
Joe said, "How about Mexico? Could
I make the get to Mexico?"
The physicist looked at him questioningly.
"Get?" he said.
Joe Prantera said impatiently, "The
getaway. After I give it to this Howard
Temple-Tracy guy, I gotta go on
the run, don't I?"
"I see." Brett-James cleared his
throat. "Mexico is no longer a separate
nation, Mr. Prantera. All North
America has been united into one
unit. Today, there are only eight nations
in the world."
"Where's the nearest?"
"South America."
"That's a helluva long way to go on
a get."
"We hadn't thought of the matter
being handled in that manner."
Joe eyed him in scorn. "Oh, you
didn't, huh? What happens after I
give it to this guy? I just sit around
and wait for the cops to put the arm
on me?"
Brett-James grimaced in amusement.
"Mr. Prantera, this will probably
be difficult for you to comprehend,
but there are no police in this
era."
Joe gaped at him. "No police!
What happens if you gotta throw
some guy in stir?"
"If I understand your idiom correctly,
you mean prison. There are
no prisons in this era, Mr. Prantera."
Joe stared. "No cops, no jails. What
stops anybody? What stops anybody
from just going into some bank, like,
and collecting up all the bread?"
Brett-James cleared his throat.
"Mr. Prantera, there are no banks."
"No banks! You gotta have banks!"
"And no money to put in them.
We found it a rather antiquated
method of distribution well over a
century ago."
Joe had given up. Now he merely
stared.
Brett-James said reasonably, "We
found we were devoting as much
time to financial matters in all their
endless ramifications—including
bank robberies—as we were to productive
efforts. So we turned to more
efficient methods of distribution."
On the fourth day, Joe said, "O.K.,
let's get down to facts. Summa the
things you guys say don't stick together
so good. Now, first place,
where's this guy Temple-Tracy you
want knocked off?"
Reston-Farrell and Brett-James
were both present. The three of them
sat in the living room of the latter's
apartment, sipping a sparkling wine
which seemed to be the prevailing
beverage of the day. For Joe's taste
it was insipid stuff. Happily, rye was
available to those who wanted it.
Reston-Farrell said, "You mean,
where does he reside? Why, here in
this city."
"Well, that's handy, eh?" Joe
scratched himself thoughtfully. "You
got somebody can finger him for me?"
"Finger him?"
"Look, before I can give it to this
guy I gotta know some place where
he'll be at some time. Get it? Like Al
Rossi. My finger, he works in Rossi's
house, see? He lets me know every
Wednesday night, eight o'clock, Al
leaves the house all by hisself. O.K.,
so I can make plans, like, to give it
to him." Joe Prantera wound it up
reasonably. "You gotta have a finger."
Brett-James said, "Why not just go
to Temple-Tracy's apartment and, ah,
dispose of him?"
"Jest walk in, eh? You think I'm
stupid? How do I know how many
witnesses hangin' around? How do I
know if the guy's carryin' heat?"
"Heat?"
"A gun, a gun. Ya think I'm stupid?
I come to give it to him and he
gives it to me instead."
Dr. Reston-Farrell said, "Howard
Temple-Tracy lives alone. He customarily
receives visitors every afternoon,
largely potential followers. He
is attempting to recruit members to
an organization he is forming. It
would be quite simple for you to
enter his establishment and dispose
of him. I assure you, he does not possess
weapons."
Joe was indignant. "Just like that,
eh?" he said sarcastically. "Then what
happens? How do I get out of the
building? Where's my get car parked?
Where do I hide out? Where do I
dump the heat?"
"Dump the heat?"
"Get rid of the gun. You want I
should get caught with the gun on
me? I'd wind up in the gas chamber
so quick—"
"See here, Mr. Prantera," Brett-James
said softly. "We no longer have
capital punishment, you must realize."
"O.K. I still don't wanta get caught.
What
is
the rap these days, huh?"
Joe scowled. "You said they didn't
have no jails any more."
"This is difficult for you to understand,
I imagine," Reston-Farrell told
him, "but, you see, we no longer punish
people in this era."
That took a long, unbelieving moment
to sink in. "You mean, like, no
matter what they do? That's crazy.
Everybody'd be running around giving
it to everybody else."
"The motivation for crime has
been removed, Mr. Prantera," Reston-Farrell
attempted to explain. "A
person who commits a violence
against another is obviously in need
of medical care. And, consequently,
receives it."
"You mean, like, if I steal a car or
something, they just take me to a
doctor?" Joe Prantera was unbelieving.
"Why would anybody wish to steal
a car?" Reston-Farrell said easily.
"But if I
give it
to somebody?"
"You will be turned over to a medical
institution. Citizen Howard Temple-Tracy
is the last man you will
ever kill, Mr. Prantera."
A chillness was in the belly of Joe
Prantera. He said very slowly, very
dangerously, "You guys figure on me
getting caught, don't you?"
"Yes," Brett-James said evenly.
"Well then, figure something else.
You think I'm stupid?"
"Mr. Prantera," Dr. Reston-Farrell
said, "there has been as much progress
in the field of psychiatry in the
past two centuries as there has in
any other. Your treatment would be
brief and painless, believe me."
Joe said coldly, "And what happens
to you guys? How do you know I
won't rat on you?"
Brett-James said gently, "The moment
after you have accomplished
your mission, we plan to turn ourselves
over to the nearest institution
to have determined whether or not
we also need therapy."
"Now I'm beginning to wonder
about you guys," Joe said. "Look, all
over again, what'd'ya wanta give it to
this guy for?"
The doctor said, "We explained
the other day, Mr. Prantera. Citizen
Howard Temple-Tracy is a dangerous,
atavistic, evil genius. We are
afraid for our institutions if his plans
are allowed to mature."
"Well if you got things so good,
everybody's got it made, like, who'd
listen to him?"
The doctor nodded at the validity
of the question. "Mr. Prantera,
Homo
sapiens
is a unique animal. Physically
he matures at approximately the age
of thirteen. However, mental maturity
and adjustment is often not fully
realized until thirty or even more.
Indeed, it is sometimes never
achieved. Before such maturity is
reached, our youth are susceptible to
romantic appeal. Nationalism, chauvinism,
racism, the supposed glory of
the military, all seem romantic to the
immature. They rebel at the orderliness
of present society. They seek entertainment
in excitement. Citizen
Temple-Tracy is aware of this and
finds his recruits among the young."
"O.K., so this guy is dangerous.
You want him knocked off before he
screws everything up. But the way
things are, there's no way of making
a get. So you'll have to get some other
patsy. Not me."
"I am afraid you have no alternative,"
Brett-James said gently. "Without
us, what will you do? Mr. Prantera,
you do not even speak the language."
"What'd'ya mean? I don't understand
summa the big words you eggheads
use, but I get by O.K."
Brett-James said, "Amer-English is
no longer the language spoken by the
man in the street, Mr. Prantera. Only
students of such subjects any longer
speak such tongues as Amer-English,
French, Russian or the many others
that once confused the race with
their limitations as a means of communication."
"You mean there's no place in the
whole world where they talk American?"
Joe demanded, aghast.
Dr. Reston-Farrell controlled the
car. Joe Prantera sat in the seat next
to him and Warren Brett-James sat
in the back. Joe had, tucked in his
belt, a .45 caliber automatic, once displayed
in a museum. It had been
more easily procured than the ammunition
to fit it, but that problem too
had been solved.
The others were nervous, obviously
repelled by the very conception of
what they had planned.
Inwardly, Joe was amused. Now
that they had got in the clutch, the
others were on the verge of chickening
out. He knew it wouldn't have
taken much for them to cancel the
project. It wasn't any answer though.
If they allowed him to call it off today,
they'd talk themselves into it
again before the week was through.
Besides, already Joe was beginning
to feel the comfortable, pleasurable,
warm feeling that came to him on
occasions like this.
He said, "You're sure this guy talks
American, eh?"
Warren Brett-James said, "Quite
sure. He is a student of history."
"And he won't think it's funny I
talk American to him, eh?"
"He'll undoubtedly be intrigued."
They pulled up before a large
apartment building that overlooked
the area once known as Wilmington.
Joe was coolly efficient now. He
pulled out the automatic, held it
down below his knees and threw a
shell into the barrel. He eased the
hammer down, thumbed on the
safety, stuck the weapon back in his
belt and beneath the jacketlike garment
he wore.
He said, "O.K. See you guys later."
He left them and entered the building.
An elevator—he still wasn't used
to their speed in this era—whooshed
him to the penthouse duplex occupied
by Citizen Howard Temple-Tracy.
There were two persons in the reception
room but they left on Joe's
arrival, without bothering to look at
him more than glancingly.
He spotted the screen immediately
and went over and stood before it.
The screen lit and revealed a
heavy-set, dour of countenance man
seated at a desk. He looked into Joe
Prantera's face, scowled and said
something.
Joe said, "Joseph Salviati-Prantera
to interview Citizen Howard Temple-Tracy."
The other's shaggy eyebrows rose.
"Indeed," he said. "In Amer-English?"
Joe nodded.
"Enter," the other said.
A door had slid open on the other
side of the room. Joe walked through
it and into what was obviously an office.
Citizen Temple-Tracy sat at a
desk. There was only one other chair
in the room. Joe Prantera ignored it
and remained standing.
Citizen Temple-Tracy said, "What
can I do for you?"
Joe looked at him for a long, long
moment. Then he reached down to
his belt and brought forth the .45
automatic. He moistened his lips.
Joe said softly, "You know what
this here is?"
Temple-Tracy stared at the weapon.
"It's a handgun, circa, I would
say, about 1925 Old Calendar. What
in the world are you doing with it?"
Joe said, very slowly, "Chief, in the
line you're in these days you needa
heavy around with wunna these. Otherwise,
Chief, you're gunna wind up
in some gutter with a lotta holes in
you. What I'm doin', I'm askin' for a
job. You need a good man knows how
to handle wunna these, Chief."
Citizen Howard Temple-Tracy
eyed him appraisingly. "Perhaps," he
said, "you are right at that. In the near
future, I may well need an assistant
knowledgeable in the field of violence.
Tell me more about yourself.
You surprise me considerably."
"Sure, Chief. It's kinda a long
story, though. First off, I better tell
you you got some bad enemies, Chief.
Two guys special, named Brett-James
and Doc Reston-Farrell. I think one
of the first jobs I'm gunna hafta do
for you, Chief, is to give it to those
two."
THE END
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Analog
December
1960. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | He does not need to worry about Temple-Tracy's followers seeking revenge | He does not have to fear being arrested by the police | He is unlikely to encounter someone with weapons during the job | He does not have a chance of being sent back to 1960 | 0 |
26843_ZRFZ1ACC_1 | Which term best describes the narrator's attitude toward writing up the first trip to Mars? | THE DOPE
on Mars
By JACK SHARKEY
Somebody had to get the human
angle on this trip ... but what
was humane about sending me?
Illustrated by WOOD
My
agent was the one who
got me the job of going
along to write up the first
trip to Mars. He was always getting
me things like that—appearances
on TV shows, or mentions in writers'
magazines. If he didn't sell
much of my stuff, at least he sold
me
.
"It'll be the biggest break a
writer ever got," he told me, two
days before blastoff. "Oh, sure
there'll be scientific reports on the
trip, but the public doesn't want
them; they want the
human
slant
on things."
"But, Louie," I said weakly, "I'll
probably be locked up for the
whole trip. If there are fights or accidents,
they won't tell
me
about
them."
"Nonsense," said Louie, sipping
carefully at a paper cup of scalding
coffee. "It'll be just like the
public going along vicariously.
They'll
identify
with you."
"But, Louie," I said, wiping the
dampness from my palms on the
knees of my trousers as I sat there,
"how'll I go about it? A story? An
article? A
you-are-there
type of report?
What?"
Louie shrugged. "So keep a
diary. It'll be more intimate, like."
"But what if nothing happens?"
I insisted hopelessly.
Louie smiled. "So you fake it."
I got up from the chair in his office
and stepped to the door.
"That's dishonest," I pointed out.
"Creative is the word," Louie
said.
So I went on the first trip to
Mars. And I kept a diary. This is
it. And it is honest. Honest it is.
October 1, 1960
They picked
the launching
date from the March, 1959, New
York
Times
, which stated that this
was the most likely time for launching.
Trip time is supposed to take
260 days (that's one way), so
we're aimed toward where Mars
will be (had
better
be, or else).
There are five of us on board. A
pilot, co-pilot, navigator and biochemist.
And, of course, me. I've
met all but the pilot (he's very
busy today), and they seem friendly
enough.
Dwight Kroger, the biochemist,
is rather old to take the "rigors of
the journey," as he puts it, but the
government had a choice between
sending a green scientist who could
stand the trip or an accomplished
man who would probably not survive,
so they picked Kroger. We've
blasted off, though, and he's still
with us. He looks a damn sight better
than I feel. He's kind of balding,
and very iron-gray-haired and
skinny, but his skin is tan as an Indian's,
and right now he's telling
jokes in the washroom with the co-pilot.
Jones (that's the co-pilot; I
didn't quite catch his first name) is
scarlet-faced, barrel-chested and
gives the general appearance of belonging
under the spreading chestnut
tree, not in a metal bullet flinging
itself out into airless space.
Come to think of it, who
does
belong
where we are?
The navigator's name is Lloyd
Streeter, but I haven't seen his face
yet. He has a little cubicle behind
the pilot's compartment, with all
kinds of maps and rulers and things.
He keeps bent low over a welded-to-the-wall
(they call it the bulkhead,
for some reason or other)
table, scratching away with a ballpoint
pen on the maps, and now
and then calling numbers over a
microphone to the pilot. His hair
is red and curly, and he looks as
though he'd be tall if he ever gets
to stand up. There are freckles on
the backs of his hands, so I think
he's probably got them on his face,
too. So far, all he's said is, "Scram,
I'm busy."
Kroger tells me that the pilot's
name is Patrick Desmond, but that
I can call him Pat when I get to
know him better. So far, he's still
Captain Desmond to me. I haven't
the vaguest idea what he looks like.
He was already on board when I
got here, with my typewriter and
ream of paper, so we didn't meet.
My compartment is small but
clean. I mean clean now. It wasn't
during blastoff. The inertial gravities
didn't bother me so much as
the gyroscopic spin they put on the
ship so we have a sort of artificial
gravity to hold us against the
curved floor. It's that constant
whirly feeling that gets me. I get
sick on merry-go-rounds, too.
They're having pork for dinner
today. Not me.
October 2, 1960
Feeling much
better today.
Kroger gave me a box of Dramamine
pills. He says they'll help my
stomach. So far, so good.
Lloyd came by, also. "You play
chess?" he asked.
"A little," I admitted.
"How about a game sometime?"
"Sure," I said. "Do you have a
board?"
He didn't.
Lloyd went away then, but the
interview wasn't wasted. I learned
that he
is
tall and
does
have a
freckled face. Maybe we can build
a chessboard. With my paper and
his ballpoint pen and ruler, it should
be easy. Don't know what we'll use
for pieces, though.
Jones (I still haven't learned his
first name) has been up with the
pilot all day. He passed my room
on the way to the galley (the
kitchen) for a cup of dark brown
coffee (they like it thick) and told
me that we were almost past the
Moon. I asked to look, but he said
not yet; the instrument panel is
Top Secret. They'd have to cover
it so I could look out the viewing
screen, and they still need it for
steering or something.
I still haven't met the pilot.
October 3, 1960
Well, I've
met the pilot. He is
kind of squat, with a vulturish neck
and close-set jet-black eyes that
make him look rather mean, but he
was pleasant enough, and said I
could call him Pat. I still don't
know Jones' first name, though Pat
spoke to him, and it sounded like
Flants. That can't be right.
Also, I am one of the first five
men in the history of the world to
see the opposite side of the Moon,
with a bluish blurred crescent beyond
it that Pat said was the Earth.
The back of the Moon isn't much
different from the front. As to the
space in front of the ship, well, it's
all black with white dots in it, and
none of the dots move, except in a
circle that Pat says is a "torque"
result from the gyroscopic spin
we're in. Actually, he explained to
me, the screen is supposed to keep
the image of space locked into
place no matter how much we spin.
But there's some kind of a "drag."
I told him I hoped it didn't mean
we'd land on Mars upside down. He
just stared at me.
I can't say I was too impressed
with that 16 x 19 view of outer
space. It's been done much better
in the movies. There's just no awesomeness
to it, no sense of depth or
immensity. It's as impressive as a
piece of velvet with salt sprinkled
on it.
Lloyd and I made a chessboard
out of a carton. Right now we're using
buttons for men. He's one of
these fast players who don't stop
and think out their moves. And so
far I haven't won a game.
It looks like a long trip.
October 4, 1960
I won
a game. Lloyd mistook my
queen-button for my bishop-button
and left his king in jeopardy, and
I checkmated him next move. He
said chess was a waste of time
and he had important work to do
and he went away.
I went to the galley for coffee
and had a talk about moss with
Kroger. He said there was a good
chance of lichen on Mars, and I
misunderstood and said, "A good
chance of liking
what
on Mars?"
and Kroger finished his coffee and
went up front.
When I got back to my compartment,
Lloyd had taken away the
chessboard and all his buttons. He
told me later he needed it to back
up a star map.
Pat slept mostly all day in his
compartment, and Jones sat and
watched the screen revolve. There
wasn't much to do, so I wrote a
poem, sort of.
Mary, Mary, quite contrary,
How does your garden grow?
With Martian rime, Venusian slime,
And a radioactive hoe.
I showed it to Kroger. He says
it may prove to be environmentally
accurate, but that I should stick to
prose.
October 5, 1960
Learned Jones'
first name.
He wrote something in the ship's
log, and I saw his signature. His
name is Fleance, like in "Macbeth."
He prefers to be called Jones. Pat
uses his first name as a gag. Some
fun.
And only 255 days to go.
April 1, 1961
I've skipped
over the last 177
days or so, because there's nothing
much new. I brought some books
with me on the trip, books that I'd
always meant to read and never
had the time. So now I know all
about
Vanity Fair
,
Pride and Prejudice
,
War and Peace
,
Gone with
the Wind
, and
Babbitt
.
They didn't take as long as I
thought they would, except for
Vanity Fair
. It must have been a
riot when it first came out. I mean,
all those sly digs at the aristocracy,
with copious interpolations by Mr.
Thackeray in case you didn't get
it when he'd pulled a particularly
good gag. Some fun.
And only 78 days to go.
June 1, 1961
Only 17 days
to go. I saw Mars
on the screen today. It seems to be
descending from overhead, but Pat
says that that's the "torque" doing
it. Actually, it's we who are coming
in sideways.
We've all grown beards, too. Pat
said it was against regulations, but
what the hell. We have a contest.
Longest whiskers on landing gets a
prize.
I asked Pat what the prize was
and he told me to go to hell.
June 18, 1961
Mars has
the whole screen
filled. Looks like Death Valley. No
sign of canals, but Pat says that's
because of the dust storm down below.
It's nice to have a "down below"
again. We're going to land, so
I have to go to my bunk. It's all
foam rubber, nylon braid supports
and magnesium tubing. Might as
well be cement for all the good it
did me at takeoff. Earth seems awfully
far away.
June 19, 1961
Well, we're down.
We have
to wear gas masks with oxygen
hook-ups. Kroger says the air is
breathable, but thin, and it has too
much dust in it to be any fun to
inhale. He's all for going out and
looking for lichen, but Pat says he's
got to set up camp, then get instructions
from Earth. So we just have
to wait. The air is very cold, but the
Sun is hot as hell when it hits you.
The sky is a blinding pink, or maybe
more of a pale fuchsia. Kroger
says it's the dust. The sand underfoot
is kind of rose-colored, and not
really gritty. The particles are
round and smooth.
No lichen so far. Kroger says
maybe in the canals, if there are
any canals. Lloyd wants to play
chess again.
Jones won the beard contest. Pat
gave him a cigar he'd smuggled on
board (no smoking was allowed on
the ship), and Jones threw it away.
He doesn't smoke.
June 20, 1961
Got lost today.
Pat told me
not to go too far from camp, so,
when I took a stroll, I made sure
every so often that I could still see
the rocket behind me. Walked for
maybe an hour; then the oxygen
gauge got past the halfway mark,
so I started back toward the rocket.
After maybe ten steps, the rocket
disappeared. One minute it was
standing there, tall and silvery, the
next instant it was gone.
Turned on my radio pack and
got hold of Pat. Told him what happened,
and he told Kroger. Kroger
said I had been following a mirage,
to step back a bit. I did, and I could
see the ship again. Kroger said to
try and walk toward where the ship
seemed to be, even when it wasn't
in view, and meantime they'd come
out after me in the jeep, following
my footprints.
Started walking back, and the
ship vanished again. It reappeared,
disappeared, but I kept going. Finally
saw the real ship, and Lloyd
and Jones waving their arms at me.
They were shouting through their
masks, but I couldn't hear them.
The air is too thin to carry sound
well.
All at once, something gleamed
in their hands, and they started
shooting at me with their rifles.
That's when I heard the noise behind
me. I was too scared to turn
around, but finally Jones and Lloyd
came running over, and I got up
enough nerve to look. There was
nothing there, but on the sand,
paralleling mine, were footprints.
At least I think they were footprints.
Twice as long as mine, and
three times as wide, but kind of
featureless because the sand's loose
and dry. They doubled back on
themselves, spaced considerably
farther apart.
"What was it?" I asked Lloyd
when he got to me.
"Damned if I know," he said. "It
was red and scaly, and I think it
had a tail. It was two heads taller
than you." He shuddered. "Ran off
when we fired."
"Where," said Jones, "are Pat and
Kroger?"
I didn't know. I hadn't seen
them, nor the jeep, on my trip back.
So we followed the wheel tracks for
a while, and they veered off from
my trail and followed another, very
much like the one that had been
paralleling mine when Jones and
Lloyd had taken a shot at the scaly
thing.
"We'd better get them on the
radio," said Jones, turning back
toward the ship.
There wasn't anything on the
radio but static.
Pat and Kroger haven't come
back yet, either.
June 21, 1961
We're not
alone here. More of
the scaly things have come toward
the camp, but a few rifle shots send
them away. They hop like kangaroos
when they're startled. Their
attitudes aren't menacing, but their
appearance is. And Jones says,
"Who knows what's 'menacing' in
an alien?"
We're going to look for Kroger
and Pat today. Jones says we'd better
before another windstorm blows
away the jeep tracks. Fortunately,
the jeep has a leaky oil pan, so we
always have the smears to follow,
unless they get covered up, too.
We're taking extra oxygen, shells,
and rifles. Food, too, of course.
And we're locking up the ship.
It's later
, now. We found the
jeep, but no Kroger or Pat. Lots of
those big tracks nearby. We're taking
the jeep to follow the aliens'
tracks. There's some moss around
here, on reddish brown rocks that
stick up through the sand, just on
the shady side, though. Kroger
must be happy to have found his
lichen.
The trail ended at the brink of
a deep crevice in the ground. Seems
to be an earthquake-type split in
solid rock, with the sand sifting
over this and the far edge like pink
silk cataracts. The bottom is in the
shade and can't be seen. The crack
seems to extend to our left and
right as far as we can look.
There looks like a trail down the
inside of the crevice, but the Sun's
setting, so we're waiting till tomorrow
to go down.
Going down was Jones' idea,
not mine.
June 22, 1961
Well, we're
at the bottom, and
there's water here, a shallow stream
about thirty feet wide that runs
along the center of the canal (we've
decided we're in a canal). No sign
of Pat or Kroger yet, but the sand
here is hard-packed and damp, and
there are normal-size footprints
mingled with the alien ones, sharp
and clear. The aliens seem to have
six or seven toes. It varies from
print to print. And they're barefoot,
too, or else they have the damnedest-looking
shoes in creation.
The constant shower of sand
near the cliff walls is annoying, but
it's sandless (shower-wise) near
the stream, so we're following the
footprints along the bank. Also, the
air's better down here. Still thin,
but not so bad as on the surface.
We're going without masks to save
oxygen for the return trip (Jones
assures me there'll
be
a return
trip), and the air's only a little bit
sandy, but handkerchiefs over nose
and mouth solve this.
We look like desperadoes, what
with the rifles and covered faces. I
said as much to Lloyd and he told
me to shut up. Moss all over the
cliff walls. Swell luck for Kroger.
We've found
Kroger and Pat,
with the help of the aliens. Or maybe
I should call them the Martians.
Either way, it's better than what
Jones calls them.
They took away our rifles and
brought us right to Kroger and Pat,
without our even asking. Jones is
mad at the way they got the rifles so
easily. When we came upon them
(a group of maybe ten, huddling
behind a boulder in ambush), he
fired, but the shots either bounced
off their scales or stuck in their
thick hides. Anyway, they took the
rifles away and threw them into the
stream, and picked us all up and
took us into a hole in the cliff wall.
The hole went on practically forever,
but it didn't get dark. Kroger
tells me that there are phosphorescent
bacteria living in the mold on
the walls. The air has a fresh-dug-grave
smell, but it's richer in oxygen
than even at the stream.
We're in a small cave that is just
off a bigger cave where lots of tunnels
come together. I can't remember
which one we came in through,
and neither can anyone else. Jones
asked me what the hell I kept writing
in the diary for, did I want to
make it a gift to Martian archeologists?
But I said where there's life
there's hope, and now he won't talk
to me. I congratulated Kroger on
the lichen I'd seen, but he just said
a short and unscientific word and
went to sleep.
There's a Martian guarding the
entrance to our cave. I don't know
what they intend to do with us.
Feed us, I hope. So far, they've just
left us here, and we're out of rations.
Kroger tried talking to the guard
once, but he (or it) made a whistling
kind of sound and flashed a
mouthful of teeth. Kroger says the
teeth are in multiple rows, like a
tiger shark's. I'd rather he hadn't
told me.
June 23, 1961, I think
We're either
in a docket or a
zoo. I can't tell which. There's a
rather square platform surrounded
on all four sides by running water,
maybe twenty feet across, and
we're on it. Martians keep coming
to the far edge of the water and
looking at us and whistling at each
other. A little Martian came near
the edge of the water and a larger
Martian whistled like crazy and
dragged it away.
"Water must be dangerous to
them," said Kroger.
"We shoulda brought water pistols,"
Jones muttered.
Pat said maybe we can swim to
safety. Kroger told Pat he was
crazy, that the little island we're on
here underground is bordered by a
fast river that goes into the planet.
We'd end up drowned in some grotto
in the heart of the planet, says
Kroger.
"What the hell," says Pat, "it's
better than starving."
It is not.
June 24, 1961, probably
I'm hungry
. So is everybody
else. Right now I could eat a dinner
raw, in a centrifuge, and keep it
down. A Martian threw a stone at
Jones today, and Jones threw one
back at him and broke off a couple
of scales. The Martian whistled
furiously and went away. When the
crowd thinned out, same as it did
yesterday (must be some sort of
sleeping cycle here), Kroger talked
Lloyd into swimming across the
river and getting the red scales.
Lloyd started at the upstream part
of the current, and was about a hundred
yards below this underground
island before he made the far side.
Sure is a swift current.
But he got the scales, walked
very far upstream of us, and swam
back with them. The stream sides
are steep, like in a fjord, and we
had to lift him out of the swirling
cold water, with the scales gripped
in his fist. Or what was left of the
scales. They had melted down in
the water and left his hand all
sticky.
Kroger took the gummy things,
studied them in the uncertain light,
then tasted them and grinned.
The Martians are made of sugar.
Later, same day
. Kroger
said that the Martian metabolism
must be like Terran (Earth-type)
metabolism, only with no pancreas
to make insulin. They store their
energy on the
outside
of their
bodies, in the form of scales. He's
watched them more closely and
seen that they have long rubbery
tubes for tongues, and that they
now and then suck up water from
the stream while they're watching
us, being careful not to get their lips
(all sugar, of course) wet. He
guesses that their "blood" must be
almost pure water, and that it
washes away (from the inside, of
course) the sugar they need for
energy.
I asked him where the sugar
came from, and he said probably
their bodies isolated carbon from
something (he thought it might be
the moss) and combined it with
the hydrogen and oxygen in the
water (even
I
knew the formula for
water) to make sugar, a common
carbohydrate.
Like plants, on Earth, he said.
Except, instead of using special
cells on leaves to form carbohydrates
with the help of sunpower,
as Earth plants do in photosynthesis
(Kroger spelled that word
for me), they used the
shape
of the
scales like prisms, to isolate the
spectra (another Kroger word)
necessary to form the sugar.
"I don't get it," I said politely,
when he'd finished his spiel.
"Simple," he said, as though he
were addressing me by name.
"They have a twofold reason to fear
water. One: by complete solvency
in that medium, they lose all energy
and die. Two: even partial sprinkling
alters the shape of the scales,
and they are unable to use sunpower
to form more sugar, and still die,
if a bit slower."
"Oh," I said, taking it down verbatim.
"So now what do we do?"
"We remove our boots," said
Kroger, sitting on the ground and
doing so, "and then we cross this
stream, fill the boots with water,
and
spray
our way to freedom."
"Which tunnel do we take?"
asked Pat, his eyes aglow at the
thought of escape.
Kroger shrugged. "We'll have to
chance taking any that seem to
slope upward. In any event, we can
always follow it back and start
again."
"I dunno," said Jones. "Remember
those
teeth
of theirs. They must
be for biting something more substantial
than moss, Kroger."
"We'll risk it," said Pat. "It's better
to go down fighting than to die
of starvation."
The hell it is.
June 24, 1961, for sure
The Martians
have coal
mines.
That's
what they use those
teeth for. We passed through one
and surprised a lot of them chewing
gritty hunks of anthracite out
of the walls. They came running at
us, whistling with those tubelike
tongues, and drooling dry coal dust,
but Pat swung one of his boots in
an arc that splashed all over the
ground in front of them, and they
turned tail (literally) and clattered
off down another tunnel,
sounding like a locomotive whistle
gone berserk.
We made the surface in another
hour, back in the canal, and were
lucky enough to find our own trail
to follow toward the place above
which the jeep still waited.
Jones got the rifles out of the
stream (the Martians had probably
thought they were beyond recovery
there) and we found the jeep. It
was nearly buried in sand, but we
got it cleaned off and running, and
got back to the ship quickly. First
thing we did on arriving was to
break out the stores and have a
celebration feast just outside the
door of the ship.
It was pork again, and I got sick.
June 25, 1961
We're going back
. Pat says
that a week is all we were allowed
to stay and that it's urgent to return
and tell what we've learned
about Mars (we know there are
Martians, and they're made of
sugar).
"Why," I said, "can't we just tell
it on the radio?"
"Because," said Pat, "if we tell
them now, by the time we get back
we'll be yesterday's news. This way
we may be lucky and get a parade."
"Maybe even money," said
Kroger, whose mind wasn't always
on science.
"But they'll ask why we didn't
radio the info, sir," said Jones uneasily.
"The radio," said Pat, nodding to
Lloyd, "was unfortunately broken
shortly after landing."
Lloyd blinked, then nodded
back and walked around the
rocket. I heard a crunching sound
and the shattering of glass, not unlike
the noise made when one
drives a rifle butt through a radio.
Well, it's time for takeoff.
This time
it wasn't so bad. I
thought I was getting my space-legs,
but Pat says there's less gravity on
Mars, so escape velocity didn't
have to be so fast, hence a smoother
(relatively) trip on our shock-absorbing
bunks.
Lloyd wants to play chess again.
I'll be careful not to win this time.
However, if I don't win, maybe this
time
I'll
be the one to quit.
Kroger is busy in his cramped
lab space trying to classify the little
moss he was able to gather, and
Jones and Pat are up front watching
the white specks revolve on that
black velvet again.
Guess I'll take a nap.
June 26, 1961
Hell's bells
. Kroger says
there are two baby Martians loose
on board ship. Pat told him he
was nuts, but there are certain
signs he's right. Like the missing
charcoal in the air-filtration-and-reclaiming
(AFAR) system. And
the water gauges are going down.
But the clincher is those two sugar
crystals Lloyd had grabbed up
when we were in that zoo. They're
gone.
Pat has declared a state of emergency.
Quick thinking, that's Pat.
Lloyd, before he remembered and
turned scarlet, suggested we radio
Earth for instructions. We can't.
Here we are, somewhere in a
void headed for Earth, with enough
air and water left for maybe three
days—if the Martians don't take
any more.
Kroger is thrilled that he is
learning something, maybe, about
Martian reproductive processes.
When he told Pat, Pat put it to a
vote whether or not to jettison
Kroger through the airlock. However,
it was decided that responsibility
was pretty well divided.
Lloyd had gotten the crystals,
Kroger had only studied them, and
Jones had brought them aboard.
So Kroger stays, but meanwhile
the air is getting worse. Pat suggested
Kroger put us all into a state
of suspended animation till landing
time, eight months away. Kroger
said, "How?"
June 27, 1961
Air is foul
and I'm very
thirsty. Kroger says that at least—when
the Martians get bigger—they'll
have to show themselves.
Pat says what do we do
then
? We
can't afford the water we need to
melt them down. Besides, the
melted crystals might
all
turn into
little Martians.
Jones says he'll go down spitting.
Pat says why not dismantle interior
of rocket to find out where
they're holing up? Fine idea.
How do you dismantle riveted
metal plates?
June 28, 1961
The AFAR system
is no more
and the water gauges are still dropping.
Kroger suggests baking bread,
then slicing it, then toasting it till
it turns to carbon, and we can use
the carbon in the AFAR system.
We'll have to try it, I guess.
The Martians
ate the bread.
Jones came forward to tell us the
loaves were cooling, and when he
got back they were gone. However,
he did find a few of the red crystals
on the galley deck (floor). They're
good-sized crystals, too. Which
means so are the Martians.
Kroger says the Martians must
be intelligent, otherwise they
couldn't have guessed at the carbohydrates
present in the bread after
a lifelong diet of anthracite. Pat
says let's jettison Kroger.
This time the vote went against
Kroger, but he got a last-minute reprieve
by suggesting the crystals
be pulverized and mixed with sulphuric
acid. He says this'll produce
carbon.
I certainly hope so.
So does Kroger.
Brief reprieve
for us. The
acid-sugar combination not only
produces carbon but water vapor,
and the gauge has gone up a notch.
That means that we have a quart
of water in the tanks for drinking.
However, the air's a bit better,
and we voted to let Kroger stay inside
the rocket.
Meantime, we have to catch
those Martians.
June 29, 1961
Worse and worse
. Lloyd
caught one of the Martians in the
firing chamber. We had to flood
the chamber with acid to subdue
the creature, which carbonized
nicely. So now we have plenty of
air and water again, but besides
having another Martian still on
the loose, we now don't have
enough acid left in the fuel tanks
to make a landing.
Pat says at least our vector will
carry us to Earth and we can die
on our home planet, which is better
than perishing in space.
The hell it is.
March 3, 1962
Earth in sight
. The other
Martian is still with us. He's where
we can't get at him without blow-torches,
but he can't get at the carbon
in the AFAR system, either,
which is a help. However, his tail
is prehensile, and now and then it
snakes out through an air duct and
yanks food right off the table from
under our noses.
Kroger says watch out.
We
are
made of carbohydrates, too. I'd
rather not have known.
March 4, 1962
Earth fills
the screen in the
control room. Pat says if we're
lucky, he might be able to use the
bit of fuel we have left to set us
in a descending spiral into one of
the oceans. The rocket is tighter
than a submarine, he insists, and
it will float till we're rescued, if
the plates don't crack under the impact.
We all agreed to try it. Not that
we thought it had a good chance of
working, but none of us had a better
idea.
I guess
you know the rest of
the story, about how that destroyer
spotted us and got us and
my diary aboard, and towed the
rocket to San Francisco. News of
the "captured Martian" leaked out,
and we all became nine-day wonders
until the dismantling of the
rocket.
Kroger says he must have dissolved
in the water, and wonders
what
that
would do. There are
about a thousand of those crystal-scales
on a Martian.
So last week we found out, when
those red-scaled things began clambering
out of the sea on every coastal
region on Earth. Kroger tried
to explain to me about salinity osmosis
and hydrostatic pressure and
crystalline life, but in no time at all
he lost me.
The point is, bullets won't stop
these things, and wherever a crystal
falls, a new Martian springs up
in a few weeks. It looks like the
five of us have abetted an invasion
from Mars.
Needless to say, we're no longer
heroes.
I haven't heard from Pat or
Lloyd for a week. Jones was picked
up attacking a candy factory yesterday,
and Kroger and I were allowed
to sign on for the flight to
Venus scheduled within the next
few days—because of our experience.
Kroger says there's only enough
fuel for a one-way trip. I don't care.
I've always wanted to travel with
the President.
—JACK SHARKEY
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Galaxy Magazine
June 1960.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | ambivalent | apprehensive | resentful | downtrodden | 1 |
26843_ZRFZ1ACC_2 | After they landed, how were the crewmen viewed by the general public? | THE DOPE
on Mars
By JACK SHARKEY
Somebody had to get the human
angle on this trip ... but what
was humane about sending me?
Illustrated by WOOD
My
agent was the one who
got me the job of going
along to write up the first
trip to Mars. He was always getting
me things like that—appearances
on TV shows, or mentions in writers'
magazines. If he didn't sell
much of my stuff, at least he sold
me
.
"It'll be the biggest break a
writer ever got," he told me, two
days before blastoff. "Oh, sure
there'll be scientific reports on the
trip, but the public doesn't want
them; they want the
human
slant
on things."
"But, Louie," I said weakly, "I'll
probably be locked up for the
whole trip. If there are fights or accidents,
they won't tell
me
about
them."
"Nonsense," said Louie, sipping
carefully at a paper cup of scalding
coffee. "It'll be just like the
public going along vicariously.
They'll
identify
with you."
"But, Louie," I said, wiping the
dampness from my palms on the
knees of my trousers as I sat there,
"how'll I go about it? A story? An
article? A
you-are-there
type of report?
What?"
Louie shrugged. "So keep a
diary. It'll be more intimate, like."
"But what if nothing happens?"
I insisted hopelessly.
Louie smiled. "So you fake it."
I got up from the chair in his office
and stepped to the door.
"That's dishonest," I pointed out.
"Creative is the word," Louie
said.
So I went on the first trip to
Mars. And I kept a diary. This is
it. And it is honest. Honest it is.
October 1, 1960
They picked
the launching
date from the March, 1959, New
York
Times
, which stated that this
was the most likely time for launching.
Trip time is supposed to take
260 days (that's one way), so
we're aimed toward where Mars
will be (had
better
be, or else).
There are five of us on board. A
pilot, co-pilot, navigator and biochemist.
And, of course, me. I've
met all but the pilot (he's very
busy today), and they seem friendly
enough.
Dwight Kroger, the biochemist,
is rather old to take the "rigors of
the journey," as he puts it, but the
government had a choice between
sending a green scientist who could
stand the trip or an accomplished
man who would probably not survive,
so they picked Kroger. We've
blasted off, though, and he's still
with us. He looks a damn sight better
than I feel. He's kind of balding,
and very iron-gray-haired and
skinny, but his skin is tan as an Indian's,
and right now he's telling
jokes in the washroom with the co-pilot.
Jones (that's the co-pilot; I
didn't quite catch his first name) is
scarlet-faced, barrel-chested and
gives the general appearance of belonging
under the spreading chestnut
tree, not in a metal bullet flinging
itself out into airless space.
Come to think of it, who
does
belong
where we are?
The navigator's name is Lloyd
Streeter, but I haven't seen his face
yet. He has a little cubicle behind
the pilot's compartment, with all
kinds of maps and rulers and things.
He keeps bent low over a welded-to-the-wall
(they call it the bulkhead,
for some reason or other)
table, scratching away with a ballpoint
pen on the maps, and now
and then calling numbers over a
microphone to the pilot. His hair
is red and curly, and he looks as
though he'd be tall if he ever gets
to stand up. There are freckles on
the backs of his hands, so I think
he's probably got them on his face,
too. So far, all he's said is, "Scram,
I'm busy."
Kroger tells me that the pilot's
name is Patrick Desmond, but that
I can call him Pat when I get to
know him better. So far, he's still
Captain Desmond to me. I haven't
the vaguest idea what he looks like.
He was already on board when I
got here, with my typewriter and
ream of paper, so we didn't meet.
My compartment is small but
clean. I mean clean now. It wasn't
during blastoff. The inertial gravities
didn't bother me so much as
the gyroscopic spin they put on the
ship so we have a sort of artificial
gravity to hold us against the
curved floor. It's that constant
whirly feeling that gets me. I get
sick on merry-go-rounds, too.
They're having pork for dinner
today. Not me.
October 2, 1960
Feeling much
better today.
Kroger gave me a box of Dramamine
pills. He says they'll help my
stomach. So far, so good.
Lloyd came by, also. "You play
chess?" he asked.
"A little," I admitted.
"How about a game sometime?"
"Sure," I said. "Do you have a
board?"
He didn't.
Lloyd went away then, but the
interview wasn't wasted. I learned
that he
is
tall and
does
have a
freckled face. Maybe we can build
a chessboard. With my paper and
his ballpoint pen and ruler, it should
be easy. Don't know what we'll use
for pieces, though.
Jones (I still haven't learned his
first name) has been up with the
pilot all day. He passed my room
on the way to the galley (the
kitchen) for a cup of dark brown
coffee (they like it thick) and told
me that we were almost past the
Moon. I asked to look, but he said
not yet; the instrument panel is
Top Secret. They'd have to cover
it so I could look out the viewing
screen, and they still need it for
steering or something.
I still haven't met the pilot.
October 3, 1960
Well, I've
met the pilot. He is
kind of squat, with a vulturish neck
and close-set jet-black eyes that
make him look rather mean, but he
was pleasant enough, and said I
could call him Pat. I still don't
know Jones' first name, though Pat
spoke to him, and it sounded like
Flants. That can't be right.
Also, I am one of the first five
men in the history of the world to
see the opposite side of the Moon,
with a bluish blurred crescent beyond
it that Pat said was the Earth.
The back of the Moon isn't much
different from the front. As to the
space in front of the ship, well, it's
all black with white dots in it, and
none of the dots move, except in a
circle that Pat says is a "torque"
result from the gyroscopic spin
we're in. Actually, he explained to
me, the screen is supposed to keep
the image of space locked into
place no matter how much we spin.
But there's some kind of a "drag."
I told him I hoped it didn't mean
we'd land on Mars upside down. He
just stared at me.
I can't say I was too impressed
with that 16 x 19 view of outer
space. It's been done much better
in the movies. There's just no awesomeness
to it, no sense of depth or
immensity. It's as impressive as a
piece of velvet with salt sprinkled
on it.
Lloyd and I made a chessboard
out of a carton. Right now we're using
buttons for men. He's one of
these fast players who don't stop
and think out their moves. And so
far I haven't won a game.
It looks like a long trip.
October 4, 1960
I won
a game. Lloyd mistook my
queen-button for my bishop-button
and left his king in jeopardy, and
I checkmated him next move. He
said chess was a waste of time
and he had important work to do
and he went away.
I went to the galley for coffee
and had a talk about moss with
Kroger. He said there was a good
chance of lichen on Mars, and I
misunderstood and said, "A good
chance of liking
what
on Mars?"
and Kroger finished his coffee and
went up front.
When I got back to my compartment,
Lloyd had taken away the
chessboard and all his buttons. He
told me later he needed it to back
up a star map.
Pat slept mostly all day in his
compartment, and Jones sat and
watched the screen revolve. There
wasn't much to do, so I wrote a
poem, sort of.
Mary, Mary, quite contrary,
How does your garden grow?
With Martian rime, Venusian slime,
And a radioactive hoe.
I showed it to Kroger. He says
it may prove to be environmentally
accurate, but that I should stick to
prose.
October 5, 1960
Learned Jones'
first name.
He wrote something in the ship's
log, and I saw his signature. His
name is Fleance, like in "Macbeth."
He prefers to be called Jones. Pat
uses his first name as a gag. Some
fun.
And only 255 days to go.
April 1, 1961
I've skipped
over the last 177
days or so, because there's nothing
much new. I brought some books
with me on the trip, books that I'd
always meant to read and never
had the time. So now I know all
about
Vanity Fair
,
Pride and Prejudice
,
War and Peace
,
Gone with
the Wind
, and
Babbitt
.
They didn't take as long as I
thought they would, except for
Vanity Fair
. It must have been a
riot when it first came out. I mean,
all those sly digs at the aristocracy,
with copious interpolations by Mr.
Thackeray in case you didn't get
it when he'd pulled a particularly
good gag. Some fun.
And only 78 days to go.
June 1, 1961
Only 17 days
to go. I saw Mars
on the screen today. It seems to be
descending from overhead, but Pat
says that that's the "torque" doing
it. Actually, it's we who are coming
in sideways.
We've all grown beards, too. Pat
said it was against regulations, but
what the hell. We have a contest.
Longest whiskers on landing gets a
prize.
I asked Pat what the prize was
and he told me to go to hell.
June 18, 1961
Mars has
the whole screen
filled. Looks like Death Valley. No
sign of canals, but Pat says that's
because of the dust storm down below.
It's nice to have a "down below"
again. We're going to land, so
I have to go to my bunk. It's all
foam rubber, nylon braid supports
and magnesium tubing. Might as
well be cement for all the good it
did me at takeoff. Earth seems awfully
far away.
June 19, 1961
Well, we're down.
We have
to wear gas masks with oxygen
hook-ups. Kroger says the air is
breathable, but thin, and it has too
much dust in it to be any fun to
inhale. He's all for going out and
looking for lichen, but Pat says he's
got to set up camp, then get instructions
from Earth. So we just have
to wait. The air is very cold, but the
Sun is hot as hell when it hits you.
The sky is a blinding pink, or maybe
more of a pale fuchsia. Kroger
says it's the dust. The sand underfoot
is kind of rose-colored, and not
really gritty. The particles are
round and smooth.
No lichen so far. Kroger says
maybe in the canals, if there are
any canals. Lloyd wants to play
chess again.
Jones won the beard contest. Pat
gave him a cigar he'd smuggled on
board (no smoking was allowed on
the ship), and Jones threw it away.
He doesn't smoke.
June 20, 1961
Got lost today.
Pat told me
not to go too far from camp, so,
when I took a stroll, I made sure
every so often that I could still see
the rocket behind me. Walked for
maybe an hour; then the oxygen
gauge got past the halfway mark,
so I started back toward the rocket.
After maybe ten steps, the rocket
disappeared. One minute it was
standing there, tall and silvery, the
next instant it was gone.
Turned on my radio pack and
got hold of Pat. Told him what happened,
and he told Kroger. Kroger
said I had been following a mirage,
to step back a bit. I did, and I could
see the ship again. Kroger said to
try and walk toward where the ship
seemed to be, even when it wasn't
in view, and meantime they'd come
out after me in the jeep, following
my footprints.
Started walking back, and the
ship vanished again. It reappeared,
disappeared, but I kept going. Finally
saw the real ship, and Lloyd
and Jones waving their arms at me.
They were shouting through their
masks, but I couldn't hear them.
The air is too thin to carry sound
well.
All at once, something gleamed
in their hands, and they started
shooting at me with their rifles.
That's when I heard the noise behind
me. I was too scared to turn
around, but finally Jones and Lloyd
came running over, and I got up
enough nerve to look. There was
nothing there, but on the sand,
paralleling mine, were footprints.
At least I think they were footprints.
Twice as long as mine, and
three times as wide, but kind of
featureless because the sand's loose
and dry. They doubled back on
themselves, spaced considerably
farther apart.
"What was it?" I asked Lloyd
when he got to me.
"Damned if I know," he said. "It
was red and scaly, and I think it
had a tail. It was two heads taller
than you." He shuddered. "Ran off
when we fired."
"Where," said Jones, "are Pat and
Kroger?"
I didn't know. I hadn't seen
them, nor the jeep, on my trip back.
So we followed the wheel tracks for
a while, and they veered off from
my trail and followed another, very
much like the one that had been
paralleling mine when Jones and
Lloyd had taken a shot at the scaly
thing.
"We'd better get them on the
radio," said Jones, turning back
toward the ship.
There wasn't anything on the
radio but static.
Pat and Kroger haven't come
back yet, either.
June 21, 1961
We're not
alone here. More of
the scaly things have come toward
the camp, but a few rifle shots send
them away. They hop like kangaroos
when they're startled. Their
attitudes aren't menacing, but their
appearance is. And Jones says,
"Who knows what's 'menacing' in
an alien?"
We're going to look for Kroger
and Pat today. Jones says we'd better
before another windstorm blows
away the jeep tracks. Fortunately,
the jeep has a leaky oil pan, so we
always have the smears to follow,
unless they get covered up, too.
We're taking extra oxygen, shells,
and rifles. Food, too, of course.
And we're locking up the ship.
It's later
, now. We found the
jeep, but no Kroger or Pat. Lots of
those big tracks nearby. We're taking
the jeep to follow the aliens'
tracks. There's some moss around
here, on reddish brown rocks that
stick up through the sand, just on
the shady side, though. Kroger
must be happy to have found his
lichen.
The trail ended at the brink of
a deep crevice in the ground. Seems
to be an earthquake-type split in
solid rock, with the sand sifting
over this and the far edge like pink
silk cataracts. The bottom is in the
shade and can't be seen. The crack
seems to extend to our left and
right as far as we can look.
There looks like a trail down the
inside of the crevice, but the Sun's
setting, so we're waiting till tomorrow
to go down.
Going down was Jones' idea,
not mine.
June 22, 1961
Well, we're
at the bottom, and
there's water here, a shallow stream
about thirty feet wide that runs
along the center of the canal (we've
decided we're in a canal). No sign
of Pat or Kroger yet, but the sand
here is hard-packed and damp, and
there are normal-size footprints
mingled with the alien ones, sharp
and clear. The aliens seem to have
six or seven toes. It varies from
print to print. And they're barefoot,
too, or else they have the damnedest-looking
shoes in creation.
The constant shower of sand
near the cliff walls is annoying, but
it's sandless (shower-wise) near
the stream, so we're following the
footprints along the bank. Also, the
air's better down here. Still thin,
but not so bad as on the surface.
We're going without masks to save
oxygen for the return trip (Jones
assures me there'll
be
a return
trip), and the air's only a little bit
sandy, but handkerchiefs over nose
and mouth solve this.
We look like desperadoes, what
with the rifles and covered faces. I
said as much to Lloyd and he told
me to shut up. Moss all over the
cliff walls. Swell luck for Kroger.
We've found
Kroger and Pat,
with the help of the aliens. Or maybe
I should call them the Martians.
Either way, it's better than what
Jones calls them.
They took away our rifles and
brought us right to Kroger and Pat,
without our even asking. Jones is
mad at the way they got the rifles so
easily. When we came upon them
(a group of maybe ten, huddling
behind a boulder in ambush), he
fired, but the shots either bounced
off their scales or stuck in their
thick hides. Anyway, they took the
rifles away and threw them into the
stream, and picked us all up and
took us into a hole in the cliff wall.
The hole went on practically forever,
but it didn't get dark. Kroger
tells me that there are phosphorescent
bacteria living in the mold on
the walls. The air has a fresh-dug-grave
smell, but it's richer in oxygen
than even at the stream.
We're in a small cave that is just
off a bigger cave where lots of tunnels
come together. I can't remember
which one we came in through,
and neither can anyone else. Jones
asked me what the hell I kept writing
in the diary for, did I want to
make it a gift to Martian archeologists?
But I said where there's life
there's hope, and now he won't talk
to me. I congratulated Kroger on
the lichen I'd seen, but he just said
a short and unscientific word and
went to sleep.
There's a Martian guarding the
entrance to our cave. I don't know
what they intend to do with us.
Feed us, I hope. So far, they've just
left us here, and we're out of rations.
Kroger tried talking to the guard
once, but he (or it) made a whistling
kind of sound and flashed a
mouthful of teeth. Kroger says the
teeth are in multiple rows, like a
tiger shark's. I'd rather he hadn't
told me.
June 23, 1961, I think
We're either
in a docket or a
zoo. I can't tell which. There's a
rather square platform surrounded
on all four sides by running water,
maybe twenty feet across, and
we're on it. Martians keep coming
to the far edge of the water and
looking at us and whistling at each
other. A little Martian came near
the edge of the water and a larger
Martian whistled like crazy and
dragged it away.
"Water must be dangerous to
them," said Kroger.
"We shoulda brought water pistols,"
Jones muttered.
Pat said maybe we can swim to
safety. Kroger told Pat he was
crazy, that the little island we're on
here underground is bordered by a
fast river that goes into the planet.
We'd end up drowned in some grotto
in the heart of the planet, says
Kroger.
"What the hell," says Pat, "it's
better than starving."
It is not.
June 24, 1961, probably
I'm hungry
. So is everybody
else. Right now I could eat a dinner
raw, in a centrifuge, and keep it
down. A Martian threw a stone at
Jones today, and Jones threw one
back at him and broke off a couple
of scales. The Martian whistled
furiously and went away. When the
crowd thinned out, same as it did
yesterday (must be some sort of
sleeping cycle here), Kroger talked
Lloyd into swimming across the
river and getting the red scales.
Lloyd started at the upstream part
of the current, and was about a hundred
yards below this underground
island before he made the far side.
Sure is a swift current.
But he got the scales, walked
very far upstream of us, and swam
back with them. The stream sides
are steep, like in a fjord, and we
had to lift him out of the swirling
cold water, with the scales gripped
in his fist. Or what was left of the
scales. They had melted down in
the water and left his hand all
sticky.
Kroger took the gummy things,
studied them in the uncertain light,
then tasted them and grinned.
The Martians are made of sugar.
Later, same day
. Kroger
said that the Martian metabolism
must be like Terran (Earth-type)
metabolism, only with no pancreas
to make insulin. They store their
energy on the
outside
of their
bodies, in the form of scales. He's
watched them more closely and
seen that they have long rubbery
tubes for tongues, and that they
now and then suck up water from
the stream while they're watching
us, being careful not to get their lips
(all sugar, of course) wet. He
guesses that their "blood" must be
almost pure water, and that it
washes away (from the inside, of
course) the sugar they need for
energy.
I asked him where the sugar
came from, and he said probably
their bodies isolated carbon from
something (he thought it might be
the moss) and combined it with
the hydrogen and oxygen in the
water (even
I
knew the formula for
water) to make sugar, a common
carbohydrate.
Like plants, on Earth, he said.
Except, instead of using special
cells on leaves to form carbohydrates
with the help of sunpower,
as Earth plants do in photosynthesis
(Kroger spelled that word
for me), they used the
shape
of the
scales like prisms, to isolate the
spectra (another Kroger word)
necessary to form the sugar.
"I don't get it," I said politely,
when he'd finished his spiel.
"Simple," he said, as though he
were addressing me by name.
"They have a twofold reason to fear
water. One: by complete solvency
in that medium, they lose all energy
and die. Two: even partial sprinkling
alters the shape of the scales,
and they are unable to use sunpower
to form more sugar, and still die,
if a bit slower."
"Oh," I said, taking it down verbatim.
"So now what do we do?"
"We remove our boots," said
Kroger, sitting on the ground and
doing so, "and then we cross this
stream, fill the boots with water,
and
spray
our way to freedom."
"Which tunnel do we take?"
asked Pat, his eyes aglow at the
thought of escape.
Kroger shrugged. "We'll have to
chance taking any that seem to
slope upward. In any event, we can
always follow it back and start
again."
"I dunno," said Jones. "Remember
those
teeth
of theirs. They must
be for biting something more substantial
than moss, Kroger."
"We'll risk it," said Pat. "It's better
to go down fighting than to die
of starvation."
The hell it is.
June 24, 1961, for sure
The Martians
have coal
mines.
That's
what they use those
teeth for. We passed through one
and surprised a lot of them chewing
gritty hunks of anthracite out
of the walls. They came running at
us, whistling with those tubelike
tongues, and drooling dry coal dust,
but Pat swung one of his boots in
an arc that splashed all over the
ground in front of them, and they
turned tail (literally) and clattered
off down another tunnel,
sounding like a locomotive whistle
gone berserk.
We made the surface in another
hour, back in the canal, and were
lucky enough to find our own trail
to follow toward the place above
which the jeep still waited.
Jones got the rifles out of the
stream (the Martians had probably
thought they were beyond recovery
there) and we found the jeep. It
was nearly buried in sand, but we
got it cleaned off and running, and
got back to the ship quickly. First
thing we did on arriving was to
break out the stores and have a
celebration feast just outside the
door of the ship.
It was pork again, and I got sick.
June 25, 1961
We're going back
. Pat says
that a week is all we were allowed
to stay and that it's urgent to return
and tell what we've learned
about Mars (we know there are
Martians, and they're made of
sugar).
"Why," I said, "can't we just tell
it on the radio?"
"Because," said Pat, "if we tell
them now, by the time we get back
we'll be yesterday's news. This way
we may be lucky and get a parade."
"Maybe even money," said
Kroger, whose mind wasn't always
on science.
"But they'll ask why we didn't
radio the info, sir," said Jones uneasily.
"The radio," said Pat, nodding to
Lloyd, "was unfortunately broken
shortly after landing."
Lloyd blinked, then nodded
back and walked around the
rocket. I heard a crunching sound
and the shattering of glass, not unlike
the noise made when one
drives a rifle butt through a radio.
Well, it's time for takeoff.
This time
it wasn't so bad. I
thought I was getting my space-legs,
but Pat says there's less gravity on
Mars, so escape velocity didn't
have to be so fast, hence a smoother
(relatively) trip on our shock-absorbing
bunks.
Lloyd wants to play chess again.
I'll be careful not to win this time.
However, if I don't win, maybe this
time
I'll
be the one to quit.
Kroger is busy in his cramped
lab space trying to classify the little
moss he was able to gather, and
Jones and Pat are up front watching
the white specks revolve on that
black velvet again.
Guess I'll take a nap.
June 26, 1961
Hell's bells
. Kroger says
there are two baby Martians loose
on board ship. Pat told him he
was nuts, but there are certain
signs he's right. Like the missing
charcoal in the air-filtration-and-reclaiming
(AFAR) system. And
the water gauges are going down.
But the clincher is those two sugar
crystals Lloyd had grabbed up
when we were in that zoo. They're
gone.
Pat has declared a state of emergency.
Quick thinking, that's Pat.
Lloyd, before he remembered and
turned scarlet, suggested we radio
Earth for instructions. We can't.
Here we are, somewhere in a
void headed for Earth, with enough
air and water left for maybe three
days—if the Martians don't take
any more.
Kroger is thrilled that he is
learning something, maybe, about
Martian reproductive processes.
When he told Pat, Pat put it to a
vote whether or not to jettison
Kroger through the airlock. However,
it was decided that responsibility
was pretty well divided.
Lloyd had gotten the crystals,
Kroger had only studied them, and
Jones had brought them aboard.
So Kroger stays, but meanwhile
the air is getting worse. Pat suggested
Kroger put us all into a state
of suspended animation till landing
time, eight months away. Kroger
said, "How?"
June 27, 1961
Air is foul
and I'm very
thirsty. Kroger says that at least—when
the Martians get bigger—they'll
have to show themselves.
Pat says what do we do
then
? We
can't afford the water we need to
melt them down. Besides, the
melted crystals might
all
turn into
little Martians.
Jones says he'll go down spitting.
Pat says why not dismantle interior
of rocket to find out where
they're holing up? Fine idea.
How do you dismantle riveted
metal plates?
June 28, 1961
The AFAR system
is no more
and the water gauges are still dropping.
Kroger suggests baking bread,
then slicing it, then toasting it till
it turns to carbon, and we can use
the carbon in the AFAR system.
We'll have to try it, I guess.
The Martians
ate the bread.
Jones came forward to tell us the
loaves were cooling, and when he
got back they were gone. However,
he did find a few of the red crystals
on the galley deck (floor). They're
good-sized crystals, too. Which
means so are the Martians.
Kroger says the Martians must
be intelligent, otherwise they
couldn't have guessed at the carbohydrates
present in the bread after
a lifelong diet of anthracite. Pat
says let's jettison Kroger.
This time the vote went against
Kroger, but he got a last-minute reprieve
by suggesting the crystals
be pulverized and mixed with sulphuric
acid. He says this'll produce
carbon.
I certainly hope so.
So does Kroger.
Brief reprieve
for us. The
acid-sugar combination not only
produces carbon but water vapor,
and the gauge has gone up a notch.
That means that we have a quart
of water in the tanks for drinking.
However, the air's a bit better,
and we voted to let Kroger stay inside
the rocket.
Meantime, we have to catch
those Martians.
June 29, 1961
Worse and worse
. Lloyd
caught one of the Martians in the
firing chamber. We had to flood
the chamber with acid to subdue
the creature, which carbonized
nicely. So now we have plenty of
air and water again, but besides
having another Martian still on
the loose, we now don't have
enough acid left in the fuel tanks
to make a landing.
Pat says at least our vector will
carry us to Earth and we can die
on our home planet, which is better
than perishing in space.
The hell it is.
March 3, 1962
Earth in sight
. The other
Martian is still with us. He's where
we can't get at him without blow-torches,
but he can't get at the carbon
in the AFAR system, either,
which is a help. However, his tail
is prehensile, and now and then it
snakes out through an air duct and
yanks food right off the table from
under our noses.
Kroger says watch out.
We
are
made of carbohydrates, too. I'd
rather not have known.
March 4, 1962
Earth fills
the screen in the
control room. Pat says if we're
lucky, he might be able to use the
bit of fuel we have left to set us
in a descending spiral into one of
the oceans. The rocket is tighter
than a submarine, he insists, and
it will float till we're rescued, if
the plates don't crack under the impact.
We all agreed to try it. Not that
we thought it had a good chance of
working, but none of us had a better
idea.
I guess
you know the rest of
the story, about how that destroyer
spotted us and got us and
my diary aboard, and towed the
rocket to San Francisco. News of
the "captured Martian" leaked out,
and we all became nine-day wonders
until the dismantling of the
rocket.
Kroger says he must have dissolved
in the water, and wonders
what
that
would do. There are
about a thousand of those crystal-scales
on a Martian.
So last week we found out, when
those red-scaled things began clambering
out of the sea on every coastal
region on Earth. Kroger tried
to explain to me about salinity osmosis
and hydrostatic pressure and
crystalline life, but in no time at all
he lost me.
The point is, bullets won't stop
these things, and wherever a crystal
falls, a new Martian springs up
in a few weeks. It looks like the
five of us have abetted an invasion
from Mars.
Needless to say, we're no longer
heroes.
I haven't heard from Pat or
Lloyd for a week. Jones was picked
up attacking a candy factory yesterday,
and Kroger and I were allowed
to sign on for the flight to
Venus scheduled within the next
few days—because of our experience.
Kroger says there's only enough
fuel for a one-way trip. I don't care.
I've always wanted to travel with
the President.
—JACK SHARKEY
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Galaxy Magazine
June 1960.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | with admiration | with curiosity | with fear | with disdain | 0 |
26843_ZRFZ1ACC_3 | What is the central theme of the story? | THE DOPE
on Mars
By JACK SHARKEY
Somebody had to get the human
angle on this trip ... but what
was humane about sending me?
Illustrated by WOOD
My
agent was the one who
got me the job of going
along to write up the first
trip to Mars. He was always getting
me things like that—appearances
on TV shows, or mentions in writers'
magazines. If he didn't sell
much of my stuff, at least he sold
me
.
"It'll be the biggest break a
writer ever got," he told me, two
days before blastoff. "Oh, sure
there'll be scientific reports on the
trip, but the public doesn't want
them; they want the
human
slant
on things."
"But, Louie," I said weakly, "I'll
probably be locked up for the
whole trip. If there are fights or accidents,
they won't tell
me
about
them."
"Nonsense," said Louie, sipping
carefully at a paper cup of scalding
coffee. "It'll be just like the
public going along vicariously.
They'll
identify
with you."
"But, Louie," I said, wiping the
dampness from my palms on the
knees of my trousers as I sat there,
"how'll I go about it? A story? An
article? A
you-are-there
type of report?
What?"
Louie shrugged. "So keep a
diary. It'll be more intimate, like."
"But what if nothing happens?"
I insisted hopelessly.
Louie smiled. "So you fake it."
I got up from the chair in his office
and stepped to the door.
"That's dishonest," I pointed out.
"Creative is the word," Louie
said.
So I went on the first trip to
Mars. And I kept a diary. This is
it. And it is honest. Honest it is.
October 1, 1960
They picked
the launching
date from the March, 1959, New
York
Times
, which stated that this
was the most likely time for launching.
Trip time is supposed to take
260 days (that's one way), so
we're aimed toward where Mars
will be (had
better
be, or else).
There are five of us on board. A
pilot, co-pilot, navigator and biochemist.
And, of course, me. I've
met all but the pilot (he's very
busy today), and they seem friendly
enough.
Dwight Kroger, the biochemist,
is rather old to take the "rigors of
the journey," as he puts it, but the
government had a choice between
sending a green scientist who could
stand the trip or an accomplished
man who would probably not survive,
so they picked Kroger. We've
blasted off, though, and he's still
with us. He looks a damn sight better
than I feel. He's kind of balding,
and very iron-gray-haired and
skinny, but his skin is tan as an Indian's,
and right now he's telling
jokes in the washroom with the co-pilot.
Jones (that's the co-pilot; I
didn't quite catch his first name) is
scarlet-faced, barrel-chested and
gives the general appearance of belonging
under the spreading chestnut
tree, not in a metal bullet flinging
itself out into airless space.
Come to think of it, who
does
belong
where we are?
The navigator's name is Lloyd
Streeter, but I haven't seen his face
yet. He has a little cubicle behind
the pilot's compartment, with all
kinds of maps and rulers and things.
He keeps bent low over a welded-to-the-wall
(they call it the bulkhead,
for some reason or other)
table, scratching away with a ballpoint
pen on the maps, and now
and then calling numbers over a
microphone to the pilot. His hair
is red and curly, and he looks as
though he'd be tall if he ever gets
to stand up. There are freckles on
the backs of his hands, so I think
he's probably got them on his face,
too. So far, all he's said is, "Scram,
I'm busy."
Kroger tells me that the pilot's
name is Patrick Desmond, but that
I can call him Pat when I get to
know him better. So far, he's still
Captain Desmond to me. I haven't
the vaguest idea what he looks like.
He was already on board when I
got here, with my typewriter and
ream of paper, so we didn't meet.
My compartment is small but
clean. I mean clean now. It wasn't
during blastoff. The inertial gravities
didn't bother me so much as
the gyroscopic spin they put on the
ship so we have a sort of artificial
gravity to hold us against the
curved floor. It's that constant
whirly feeling that gets me. I get
sick on merry-go-rounds, too.
They're having pork for dinner
today. Not me.
October 2, 1960
Feeling much
better today.
Kroger gave me a box of Dramamine
pills. He says they'll help my
stomach. So far, so good.
Lloyd came by, also. "You play
chess?" he asked.
"A little," I admitted.
"How about a game sometime?"
"Sure," I said. "Do you have a
board?"
He didn't.
Lloyd went away then, but the
interview wasn't wasted. I learned
that he
is
tall and
does
have a
freckled face. Maybe we can build
a chessboard. With my paper and
his ballpoint pen and ruler, it should
be easy. Don't know what we'll use
for pieces, though.
Jones (I still haven't learned his
first name) has been up with the
pilot all day. He passed my room
on the way to the galley (the
kitchen) for a cup of dark brown
coffee (they like it thick) and told
me that we were almost past the
Moon. I asked to look, but he said
not yet; the instrument panel is
Top Secret. They'd have to cover
it so I could look out the viewing
screen, and they still need it for
steering or something.
I still haven't met the pilot.
October 3, 1960
Well, I've
met the pilot. He is
kind of squat, with a vulturish neck
and close-set jet-black eyes that
make him look rather mean, but he
was pleasant enough, and said I
could call him Pat. I still don't
know Jones' first name, though Pat
spoke to him, and it sounded like
Flants. That can't be right.
Also, I am one of the first five
men in the history of the world to
see the opposite side of the Moon,
with a bluish blurred crescent beyond
it that Pat said was the Earth.
The back of the Moon isn't much
different from the front. As to the
space in front of the ship, well, it's
all black with white dots in it, and
none of the dots move, except in a
circle that Pat says is a "torque"
result from the gyroscopic spin
we're in. Actually, he explained to
me, the screen is supposed to keep
the image of space locked into
place no matter how much we spin.
But there's some kind of a "drag."
I told him I hoped it didn't mean
we'd land on Mars upside down. He
just stared at me.
I can't say I was too impressed
with that 16 x 19 view of outer
space. It's been done much better
in the movies. There's just no awesomeness
to it, no sense of depth or
immensity. It's as impressive as a
piece of velvet with salt sprinkled
on it.
Lloyd and I made a chessboard
out of a carton. Right now we're using
buttons for men. He's one of
these fast players who don't stop
and think out their moves. And so
far I haven't won a game.
It looks like a long trip.
October 4, 1960
I won
a game. Lloyd mistook my
queen-button for my bishop-button
and left his king in jeopardy, and
I checkmated him next move. He
said chess was a waste of time
and he had important work to do
and he went away.
I went to the galley for coffee
and had a talk about moss with
Kroger. He said there was a good
chance of lichen on Mars, and I
misunderstood and said, "A good
chance of liking
what
on Mars?"
and Kroger finished his coffee and
went up front.
When I got back to my compartment,
Lloyd had taken away the
chessboard and all his buttons. He
told me later he needed it to back
up a star map.
Pat slept mostly all day in his
compartment, and Jones sat and
watched the screen revolve. There
wasn't much to do, so I wrote a
poem, sort of.
Mary, Mary, quite contrary,
How does your garden grow?
With Martian rime, Venusian slime,
And a radioactive hoe.
I showed it to Kroger. He says
it may prove to be environmentally
accurate, but that I should stick to
prose.
October 5, 1960
Learned Jones'
first name.
He wrote something in the ship's
log, and I saw his signature. His
name is Fleance, like in "Macbeth."
He prefers to be called Jones. Pat
uses his first name as a gag. Some
fun.
And only 255 days to go.
April 1, 1961
I've skipped
over the last 177
days or so, because there's nothing
much new. I brought some books
with me on the trip, books that I'd
always meant to read and never
had the time. So now I know all
about
Vanity Fair
,
Pride and Prejudice
,
War and Peace
,
Gone with
the Wind
, and
Babbitt
.
They didn't take as long as I
thought they would, except for
Vanity Fair
. It must have been a
riot when it first came out. I mean,
all those sly digs at the aristocracy,
with copious interpolations by Mr.
Thackeray in case you didn't get
it when he'd pulled a particularly
good gag. Some fun.
And only 78 days to go.
June 1, 1961
Only 17 days
to go. I saw Mars
on the screen today. It seems to be
descending from overhead, but Pat
says that that's the "torque" doing
it. Actually, it's we who are coming
in sideways.
We've all grown beards, too. Pat
said it was against regulations, but
what the hell. We have a contest.
Longest whiskers on landing gets a
prize.
I asked Pat what the prize was
and he told me to go to hell.
June 18, 1961
Mars has
the whole screen
filled. Looks like Death Valley. No
sign of canals, but Pat says that's
because of the dust storm down below.
It's nice to have a "down below"
again. We're going to land, so
I have to go to my bunk. It's all
foam rubber, nylon braid supports
and magnesium tubing. Might as
well be cement for all the good it
did me at takeoff. Earth seems awfully
far away.
June 19, 1961
Well, we're down.
We have
to wear gas masks with oxygen
hook-ups. Kroger says the air is
breathable, but thin, and it has too
much dust in it to be any fun to
inhale. He's all for going out and
looking for lichen, but Pat says he's
got to set up camp, then get instructions
from Earth. So we just have
to wait. The air is very cold, but the
Sun is hot as hell when it hits you.
The sky is a blinding pink, or maybe
more of a pale fuchsia. Kroger
says it's the dust. The sand underfoot
is kind of rose-colored, and not
really gritty. The particles are
round and smooth.
No lichen so far. Kroger says
maybe in the canals, if there are
any canals. Lloyd wants to play
chess again.
Jones won the beard contest. Pat
gave him a cigar he'd smuggled on
board (no smoking was allowed on
the ship), and Jones threw it away.
He doesn't smoke.
June 20, 1961
Got lost today.
Pat told me
not to go too far from camp, so,
when I took a stroll, I made sure
every so often that I could still see
the rocket behind me. Walked for
maybe an hour; then the oxygen
gauge got past the halfway mark,
so I started back toward the rocket.
After maybe ten steps, the rocket
disappeared. One minute it was
standing there, tall and silvery, the
next instant it was gone.
Turned on my radio pack and
got hold of Pat. Told him what happened,
and he told Kroger. Kroger
said I had been following a mirage,
to step back a bit. I did, and I could
see the ship again. Kroger said to
try and walk toward where the ship
seemed to be, even when it wasn't
in view, and meantime they'd come
out after me in the jeep, following
my footprints.
Started walking back, and the
ship vanished again. It reappeared,
disappeared, but I kept going. Finally
saw the real ship, and Lloyd
and Jones waving their arms at me.
They were shouting through their
masks, but I couldn't hear them.
The air is too thin to carry sound
well.
All at once, something gleamed
in their hands, and they started
shooting at me with their rifles.
That's when I heard the noise behind
me. I was too scared to turn
around, but finally Jones and Lloyd
came running over, and I got up
enough nerve to look. There was
nothing there, but on the sand,
paralleling mine, were footprints.
At least I think they were footprints.
Twice as long as mine, and
three times as wide, but kind of
featureless because the sand's loose
and dry. They doubled back on
themselves, spaced considerably
farther apart.
"What was it?" I asked Lloyd
when he got to me.
"Damned if I know," he said. "It
was red and scaly, and I think it
had a tail. It was two heads taller
than you." He shuddered. "Ran off
when we fired."
"Where," said Jones, "are Pat and
Kroger?"
I didn't know. I hadn't seen
them, nor the jeep, on my trip back.
So we followed the wheel tracks for
a while, and they veered off from
my trail and followed another, very
much like the one that had been
paralleling mine when Jones and
Lloyd had taken a shot at the scaly
thing.
"We'd better get them on the
radio," said Jones, turning back
toward the ship.
There wasn't anything on the
radio but static.
Pat and Kroger haven't come
back yet, either.
June 21, 1961
We're not
alone here. More of
the scaly things have come toward
the camp, but a few rifle shots send
them away. They hop like kangaroos
when they're startled. Their
attitudes aren't menacing, but their
appearance is. And Jones says,
"Who knows what's 'menacing' in
an alien?"
We're going to look for Kroger
and Pat today. Jones says we'd better
before another windstorm blows
away the jeep tracks. Fortunately,
the jeep has a leaky oil pan, so we
always have the smears to follow,
unless they get covered up, too.
We're taking extra oxygen, shells,
and rifles. Food, too, of course.
And we're locking up the ship.
It's later
, now. We found the
jeep, but no Kroger or Pat. Lots of
those big tracks nearby. We're taking
the jeep to follow the aliens'
tracks. There's some moss around
here, on reddish brown rocks that
stick up through the sand, just on
the shady side, though. Kroger
must be happy to have found his
lichen.
The trail ended at the brink of
a deep crevice in the ground. Seems
to be an earthquake-type split in
solid rock, with the sand sifting
over this and the far edge like pink
silk cataracts. The bottom is in the
shade and can't be seen. The crack
seems to extend to our left and
right as far as we can look.
There looks like a trail down the
inside of the crevice, but the Sun's
setting, so we're waiting till tomorrow
to go down.
Going down was Jones' idea,
not mine.
June 22, 1961
Well, we're
at the bottom, and
there's water here, a shallow stream
about thirty feet wide that runs
along the center of the canal (we've
decided we're in a canal). No sign
of Pat or Kroger yet, but the sand
here is hard-packed and damp, and
there are normal-size footprints
mingled with the alien ones, sharp
and clear. The aliens seem to have
six or seven toes. It varies from
print to print. And they're barefoot,
too, or else they have the damnedest-looking
shoes in creation.
The constant shower of sand
near the cliff walls is annoying, but
it's sandless (shower-wise) near
the stream, so we're following the
footprints along the bank. Also, the
air's better down here. Still thin,
but not so bad as on the surface.
We're going without masks to save
oxygen for the return trip (Jones
assures me there'll
be
a return
trip), and the air's only a little bit
sandy, but handkerchiefs over nose
and mouth solve this.
We look like desperadoes, what
with the rifles and covered faces. I
said as much to Lloyd and he told
me to shut up. Moss all over the
cliff walls. Swell luck for Kroger.
We've found
Kroger and Pat,
with the help of the aliens. Or maybe
I should call them the Martians.
Either way, it's better than what
Jones calls them.
They took away our rifles and
brought us right to Kroger and Pat,
without our even asking. Jones is
mad at the way they got the rifles so
easily. When we came upon them
(a group of maybe ten, huddling
behind a boulder in ambush), he
fired, but the shots either bounced
off their scales or stuck in their
thick hides. Anyway, they took the
rifles away and threw them into the
stream, and picked us all up and
took us into a hole in the cliff wall.
The hole went on practically forever,
but it didn't get dark. Kroger
tells me that there are phosphorescent
bacteria living in the mold on
the walls. The air has a fresh-dug-grave
smell, but it's richer in oxygen
than even at the stream.
We're in a small cave that is just
off a bigger cave where lots of tunnels
come together. I can't remember
which one we came in through,
and neither can anyone else. Jones
asked me what the hell I kept writing
in the diary for, did I want to
make it a gift to Martian archeologists?
But I said where there's life
there's hope, and now he won't talk
to me. I congratulated Kroger on
the lichen I'd seen, but he just said
a short and unscientific word and
went to sleep.
There's a Martian guarding the
entrance to our cave. I don't know
what they intend to do with us.
Feed us, I hope. So far, they've just
left us here, and we're out of rations.
Kroger tried talking to the guard
once, but he (or it) made a whistling
kind of sound and flashed a
mouthful of teeth. Kroger says the
teeth are in multiple rows, like a
tiger shark's. I'd rather he hadn't
told me.
June 23, 1961, I think
We're either
in a docket or a
zoo. I can't tell which. There's a
rather square platform surrounded
on all four sides by running water,
maybe twenty feet across, and
we're on it. Martians keep coming
to the far edge of the water and
looking at us and whistling at each
other. A little Martian came near
the edge of the water and a larger
Martian whistled like crazy and
dragged it away.
"Water must be dangerous to
them," said Kroger.
"We shoulda brought water pistols,"
Jones muttered.
Pat said maybe we can swim to
safety. Kroger told Pat he was
crazy, that the little island we're on
here underground is bordered by a
fast river that goes into the planet.
We'd end up drowned in some grotto
in the heart of the planet, says
Kroger.
"What the hell," says Pat, "it's
better than starving."
It is not.
June 24, 1961, probably
I'm hungry
. So is everybody
else. Right now I could eat a dinner
raw, in a centrifuge, and keep it
down. A Martian threw a stone at
Jones today, and Jones threw one
back at him and broke off a couple
of scales. The Martian whistled
furiously and went away. When the
crowd thinned out, same as it did
yesterday (must be some sort of
sleeping cycle here), Kroger talked
Lloyd into swimming across the
river and getting the red scales.
Lloyd started at the upstream part
of the current, and was about a hundred
yards below this underground
island before he made the far side.
Sure is a swift current.
But he got the scales, walked
very far upstream of us, and swam
back with them. The stream sides
are steep, like in a fjord, and we
had to lift him out of the swirling
cold water, with the scales gripped
in his fist. Or what was left of the
scales. They had melted down in
the water and left his hand all
sticky.
Kroger took the gummy things,
studied them in the uncertain light,
then tasted them and grinned.
The Martians are made of sugar.
Later, same day
. Kroger
said that the Martian metabolism
must be like Terran (Earth-type)
metabolism, only with no pancreas
to make insulin. They store their
energy on the
outside
of their
bodies, in the form of scales. He's
watched them more closely and
seen that they have long rubbery
tubes for tongues, and that they
now and then suck up water from
the stream while they're watching
us, being careful not to get their lips
(all sugar, of course) wet. He
guesses that their "blood" must be
almost pure water, and that it
washes away (from the inside, of
course) the sugar they need for
energy.
I asked him where the sugar
came from, and he said probably
their bodies isolated carbon from
something (he thought it might be
the moss) and combined it with
the hydrogen and oxygen in the
water (even
I
knew the formula for
water) to make sugar, a common
carbohydrate.
Like plants, on Earth, he said.
Except, instead of using special
cells on leaves to form carbohydrates
with the help of sunpower,
as Earth plants do in photosynthesis
(Kroger spelled that word
for me), they used the
shape
of the
scales like prisms, to isolate the
spectra (another Kroger word)
necessary to form the sugar.
"I don't get it," I said politely,
when he'd finished his spiel.
"Simple," he said, as though he
were addressing me by name.
"They have a twofold reason to fear
water. One: by complete solvency
in that medium, they lose all energy
and die. Two: even partial sprinkling
alters the shape of the scales,
and they are unable to use sunpower
to form more sugar, and still die,
if a bit slower."
"Oh," I said, taking it down verbatim.
"So now what do we do?"
"We remove our boots," said
Kroger, sitting on the ground and
doing so, "and then we cross this
stream, fill the boots with water,
and
spray
our way to freedom."
"Which tunnel do we take?"
asked Pat, his eyes aglow at the
thought of escape.
Kroger shrugged. "We'll have to
chance taking any that seem to
slope upward. In any event, we can
always follow it back and start
again."
"I dunno," said Jones. "Remember
those
teeth
of theirs. They must
be for biting something more substantial
than moss, Kroger."
"We'll risk it," said Pat. "It's better
to go down fighting than to die
of starvation."
The hell it is.
June 24, 1961, for sure
The Martians
have coal
mines.
That's
what they use those
teeth for. We passed through one
and surprised a lot of them chewing
gritty hunks of anthracite out
of the walls. They came running at
us, whistling with those tubelike
tongues, and drooling dry coal dust,
but Pat swung one of his boots in
an arc that splashed all over the
ground in front of them, and they
turned tail (literally) and clattered
off down another tunnel,
sounding like a locomotive whistle
gone berserk.
We made the surface in another
hour, back in the canal, and were
lucky enough to find our own trail
to follow toward the place above
which the jeep still waited.
Jones got the rifles out of the
stream (the Martians had probably
thought they were beyond recovery
there) and we found the jeep. It
was nearly buried in sand, but we
got it cleaned off and running, and
got back to the ship quickly. First
thing we did on arriving was to
break out the stores and have a
celebration feast just outside the
door of the ship.
It was pork again, and I got sick.
June 25, 1961
We're going back
. Pat says
that a week is all we were allowed
to stay and that it's urgent to return
and tell what we've learned
about Mars (we know there are
Martians, and they're made of
sugar).
"Why," I said, "can't we just tell
it on the radio?"
"Because," said Pat, "if we tell
them now, by the time we get back
we'll be yesterday's news. This way
we may be lucky and get a parade."
"Maybe even money," said
Kroger, whose mind wasn't always
on science.
"But they'll ask why we didn't
radio the info, sir," said Jones uneasily.
"The radio," said Pat, nodding to
Lloyd, "was unfortunately broken
shortly after landing."
Lloyd blinked, then nodded
back and walked around the
rocket. I heard a crunching sound
and the shattering of glass, not unlike
the noise made when one
drives a rifle butt through a radio.
Well, it's time for takeoff.
This time
it wasn't so bad. I
thought I was getting my space-legs,
but Pat says there's less gravity on
Mars, so escape velocity didn't
have to be so fast, hence a smoother
(relatively) trip on our shock-absorbing
bunks.
Lloyd wants to play chess again.
I'll be careful not to win this time.
However, if I don't win, maybe this
time
I'll
be the one to quit.
Kroger is busy in his cramped
lab space trying to classify the little
moss he was able to gather, and
Jones and Pat are up front watching
the white specks revolve on that
black velvet again.
Guess I'll take a nap.
June 26, 1961
Hell's bells
. Kroger says
there are two baby Martians loose
on board ship. Pat told him he
was nuts, but there are certain
signs he's right. Like the missing
charcoal in the air-filtration-and-reclaiming
(AFAR) system. And
the water gauges are going down.
But the clincher is those two sugar
crystals Lloyd had grabbed up
when we were in that zoo. They're
gone.
Pat has declared a state of emergency.
Quick thinking, that's Pat.
Lloyd, before he remembered and
turned scarlet, suggested we radio
Earth for instructions. We can't.
Here we are, somewhere in a
void headed for Earth, with enough
air and water left for maybe three
days—if the Martians don't take
any more.
Kroger is thrilled that he is
learning something, maybe, about
Martian reproductive processes.
When he told Pat, Pat put it to a
vote whether or not to jettison
Kroger through the airlock. However,
it was decided that responsibility
was pretty well divided.
Lloyd had gotten the crystals,
Kroger had only studied them, and
Jones had brought them aboard.
So Kroger stays, but meanwhile
the air is getting worse. Pat suggested
Kroger put us all into a state
of suspended animation till landing
time, eight months away. Kroger
said, "How?"
June 27, 1961
Air is foul
and I'm very
thirsty. Kroger says that at least—when
the Martians get bigger—they'll
have to show themselves.
Pat says what do we do
then
? We
can't afford the water we need to
melt them down. Besides, the
melted crystals might
all
turn into
little Martians.
Jones says he'll go down spitting.
Pat says why not dismantle interior
of rocket to find out where
they're holing up? Fine idea.
How do you dismantle riveted
metal plates?
June 28, 1961
The AFAR system
is no more
and the water gauges are still dropping.
Kroger suggests baking bread,
then slicing it, then toasting it till
it turns to carbon, and we can use
the carbon in the AFAR system.
We'll have to try it, I guess.
The Martians
ate the bread.
Jones came forward to tell us the
loaves were cooling, and when he
got back they were gone. However,
he did find a few of the red crystals
on the galley deck (floor). They're
good-sized crystals, too. Which
means so are the Martians.
Kroger says the Martians must
be intelligent, otherwise they
couldn't have guessed at the carbohydrates
present in the bread after
a lifelong diet of anthracite. Pat
says let's jettison Kroger.
This time the vote went against
Kroger, but he got a last-minute reprieve
by suggesting the crystals
be pulverized and mixed with sulphuric
acid. He says this'll produce
carbon.
I certainly hope so.
So does Kroger.
Brief reprieve
for us. The
acid-sugar combination not only
produces carbon but water vapor,
and the gauge has gone up a notch.
That means that we have a quart
of water in the tanks for drinking.
However, the air's a bit better,
and we voted to let Kroger stay inside
the rocket.
Meantime, we have to catch
those Martians.
June 29, 1961
Worse and worse
. Lloyd
caught one of the Martians in the
firing chamber. We had to flood
the chamber with acid to subdue
the creature, which carbonized
nicely. So now we have plenty of
air and water again, but besides
having another Martian still on
the loose, we now don't have
enough acid left in the fuel tanks
to make a landing.
Pat says at least our vector will
carry us to Earth and we can die
on our home planet, which is better
than perishing in space.
The hell it is.
March 3, 1962
Earth in sight
. The other
Martian is still with us. He's where
we can't get at him without blow-torches,
but he can't get at the carbon
in the AFAR system, either,
which is a help. However, his tail
is prehensile, and now and then it
snakes out through an air duct and
yanks food right off the table from
under our noses.
Kroger says watch out.
We
are
made of carbohydrates, too. I'd
rather not have known.
March 4, 1962
Earth fills
the screen in the
control room. Pat says if we're
lucky, he might be able to use the
bit of fuel we have left to set us
in a descending spiral into one of
the oceans. The rocket is tighter
than a submarine, he insists, and
it will float till we're rescued, if
the plates don't crack under the impact.
We all agreed to try it. Not that
we thought it had a good chance of
working, but none of us had a better
idea.
I guess
you know the rest of
the story, about how that destroyer
spotted us and got us and
my diary aboard, and towed the
rocket to San Francisco. News of
the "captured Martian" leaked out,
and we all became nine-day wonders
until the dismantling of the
rocket.
Kroger says he must have dissolved
in the water, and wonders
what
that
would do. There are
about a thousand of those crystal-scales
on a Martian.
So last week we found out, when
those red-scaled things began clambering
out of the sea on every coastal
region on Earth. Kroger tried
to explain to me about salinity osmosis
and hydrostatic pressure and
crystalline life, but in no time at all
he lost me.
The point is, bullets won't stop
these things, and wherever a crystal
falls, a new Martian springs up
in a few weeks. It looks like the
five of us have abetted an invasion
from Mars.
Needless to say, we're no longer
heroes.
I haven't heard from Pat or
Lloyd for a week. Jones was picked
up attacking a candy factory yesterday,
and Kroger and I were allowed
to sign on for the flight to
Venus scheduled within the next
few days—because of our experience.
Kroger says there's only enough
fuel for a one-way trip. I don't care.
I've always wanted to travel with
the President.
—JACK SHARKEY
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Galaxy Magazine
June 1960.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | Curiosity can cross dangerous boundaries, and lack of curiosity can blind one's self to those boundaries | Whatever we are addicted to will end up consuming us, if we allow it | Working together as a team is more advantageous than taking an individualistic approach | People, in general, are only interested in content if they find relevance or opportunity for personal gain | 0 |
26843_ZRFZ1ACC_4 | What is the Martians' orientation toward water? | THE DOPE
on Mars
By JACK SHARKEY
Somebody had to get the human
angle on this trip ... but what
was humane about sending me?
Illustrated by WOOD
My
agent was the one who
got me the job of going
along to write up the first
trip to Mars. He was always getting
me things like that—appearances
on TV shows, or mentions in writers'
magazines. If he didn't sell
much of my stuff, at least he sold
me
.
"It'll be the biggest break a
writer ever got," he told me, two
days before blastoff. "Oh, sure
there'll be scientific reports on the
trip, but the public doesn't want
them; they want the
human
slant
on things."
"But, Louie," I said weakly, "I'll
probably be locked up for the
whole trip. If there are fights or accidents,
they won't tell
me
about
them."
"Nonsense," said Louie, sipping
carefully at a paper cup of scalding
coffee. "It'll be just like the
public going along vicariously.
They'll
identify
with you."
"But, Louie," I said, wiping the
dampness from my palms on the
knees of my trousers as I sat there,
"how'll I go about it? A story? An
article? A
you-are-there
type of report?
What?"
Louie shrugged. "So keep a
diary. It'll be more intimate, like."
"But what if nothing happens?"
I insisted hopelessly.
Louie smiled. "So you fake it."
I got up from the chair in his office
and stepped to the door.
"That's dishonest," I pointed out.
"Creative is the word," Louie
said.
So I went on the first trip to
Mars. And I kept a diary. This is
it. And it is honest. Honest it is.
October 1, 1960
They picked
the launching
date from the March, 1959, New
York
Times
, which stated that this
was the most likely time for launching.
Trip time is supposed to take
260 days (that's one way), so
we're aimed toward where Mars
will be (had
better
be, or else).
There are five of us on board. A
pilot, co-pilot, navigator and biochemist.
And, of course, me. I've
met all but the pilot (he's very
busy today), and they seem friendly
enough.
Dwight Kroger, the biochemist,
is rather old to take the "rigors of
the journey," as he puts it, but the
government had a choice between
sending a green scientist who could
stand the trip or an accomplished
man who would probably not survive,
so they picked Kroger. We've
blasted off, though, and he's still
with us. He looks a damn sight better
than I feel. He's kind of balding,
and very iron-gray-haired and
skinny, but his skin is tan as an Indian's,
and right now he's telling
jokes in the washroom with the co-pilot.
Jones (that's the co-pilot; I
didn't quite catch his first name) is
scarlet-faced, barrel-chested and
gives the general appearance of belonging
under the spreading chestnut
tree, not in a metal bullet flinging
itself out into airless space.
Come to think of it, who
does
belong
where we are?
The navigator's name is Lloyd
Streeter, but I haven't seen his face
yet. He has a little cubicle behind
the pilot's compartment, with all
kinds of maps and rulers and things.
He keeps bent low over a welded-to-the-wall
(they call it the bulkhead,
for some reason or other)
table, scratching away with a ballpoint
pen on the maps, and now
and then calling numbers over a
microphone to the pilot. His hair
is red and curly, and he looks as
though he'd be tall if he ever gets
to stand up. There are freckles on
the backs of his hands, so I think
he's probably got them on his face,
too. So far, all he's said is, "Scram,
I'm busy."
Kroger tells me that the pilot's
name is Patrick Desmond, but that
I can call him Pat when I get to
know him better. So far, he's still
Captain Desmond to me. I haven't
the vaguest idea what he looks like.
He was already on board when I
got here, with my typewriter and
ream of paper, so we didn't meet.
My compartment is small but
clean. I mean clean now. It wasn't
during blastoff. The inertial gravities
didn't bother me so much as
the gyroscopic spin they put on the
ship so we have a sort of artificial
gravity to hold us against the
curved floor. It's that constant
whirly feeling that gets me. I get
sick on merry-go-rounds, too.
They're having pork for dinner
today. Not me.
October 2, 1960
Feeling much
better today.
Kroger gave me a box of Dramamine
pills. He says they'll help my
stomach. So far, so good.
Lloyd came by, also. "You play
chess?" he asked.
"A little," I admitted.
"How about a game sometime?"
"Sure," I said. "Do you have a
board?"
He didn't.
Lloyd went away then, but the
interview wasn't wasted. I learned
that he
is
tall and
does
have a
freckled face. Maybe we can build
a chessboard. With my paper and
his ballpoint pen and ruler, it should
be easy. Don't know what we'll use
for pieces, though.
Jones (I still haven't learned his
first name) has been up with the
pilot all day. He passed my room
on the way to the galley (the
kitchen) for a cup of dark brown
coffee (they like it thick) and told
me that we were almost past the
Moon. I asked to look, but he said
not yet; the instrument panel is
Top Secret. They'd have to cover
it so I could look out the viewing
screen, and they still need it for
steering or something.
I still haven't met the pilot.
October 3, 1960
Well, I've
met the pilot. He is
kind of squat, with a vulturish neck
and close-set jet-black eyes that
make him look rather mean, but he
was pleasant enough, and said I
could call him Pat. I still don't
know Jones' first name, though Pat
spoke to him, and it sounded like
Flants. That can't be right.
Also, I am one of the first five
men in the history of the world to
see the opposite side of the Moon,
with a bluish blurred crescent beyond
it that Pat said was the Earth.
The back of the Moon isn't much
different from the front. As to the
space in front of the ship, well, it's
all black with white dots in it, and
none of the dots move, except in a
circle that Pat says is a "torque"
result from the gyroscopic spin
we're in. Actually, he explained to
me, the screen is supposed to keep
the image of space locked into
place no matter how much we spin.
But there's some kind of a "drag."
I told him I hoped it didn't mean
we'd land on Mars upside down. He
just stared at me.
I can't say I was too impressed
with that 16 x 19 view of outer
space. It's been done much better
in the movies. There's just no awesomeness
to it, no sense of depth or
immensity. It's as impressive as a
piece of velvet with salt sprinkled
on it.
Lloyd and I made a chessboard
out of a carton. Right now we're using
buttons for men. He's one of
these fast players who don't stop
and think out their moves. And so
far I haven't won a game.
It looks like a long trip.
October 4, 1960
I won
a game. Lloyd mistook my
queen-button for my bishop-button
and left his king in jeopardy, and
I checkmated him next move. He
said chess was a waste of time
and he had important work to do
and he went away.
I went to the galley for coffee
and had a talk about moss with
Kroger. He said there was a good
chance of lichen on Mars, and I
misunderstood and said, "A good
chance of liking
what
on Mars?"
and Kroger finished his coffee and
went up front.
When I got back to my compartment,
Lloyd had taken away the
chessboard and all his buttons. He
told me later he needed it to back
up a star map.
Pat slept mostly all day in his
compartment, and Jones sat and
watched the screen revolve. There
wasn't much to do, so I wrote a
poem, sort of.
Mary, Mary, quite contrary,
How does your garden grow?
With Martian rime, Venusian slime,
And a radioactive hoe.
I showed it to Kroger. He says
it may prove to be environmentally
accurate, but that I should stick to
prose.
October 5, 1960
Learned Jones'
first name.
He wrote something in the ship's
log, and I saw his signature. His
name is Fleance, like in "Macbeth."
He prefers to be called Jones. Pat
uses his first name as a gag. Some
fun.
And only 255 days to go.
April 1, 1961
I've skipped
over the last 177
days or so, because there's nothing
much new. I brought some books
with me on the trip, books that I'd
always meant to read and never
had the time. So now I know all
about
Vanity Fair
,
Pride and Prejudice
,
War and Peace
,
Gone with
the Wind
, and
Babbitt
.
They didn't take as long as I
thought they would, except for
Vanity Fair
. It must have been a
riot when it first came out. I mean,
all those sly digs at the aristocracy,
with copious interpolations by Mr.
Thackeray in case you didn't get
it when he'd pulled a particularly
good gag. Some fun.
And only 78 days to go.
June 1, 1961
Only 17 days
to go. I saw Mars
on the screen today. It seems to be
descending from overhead, but Pat
says that that's the "torque" doing
it. Actually, it's we who are coming
in sideways.
We've all grown beards, too. Pat
said it was against regulations, but
what the hell. We have a contest.
Longest whiskers on landing gets a
prize.
I asked Pat what the prize was
and he told me to go to hell.
June 18, 1961
Mars has
the whole screen
filled. Looks like Death Valley. No
sign of canals, but Pat says that's
because of the dust storm down below.
It's nice to have a "down below"
again. We're going to land, so
I have to go to my bunk. It's all
foam rubber, nylon braid supports
and magnesium tubing. Might as
well be cement for all the good it
did me at takeoff. Earth seems awfully
far away.
June 19, 1961
Well, we're down.
We have
to wear gas masks with oxygen
hook-ups. Kroger says the air is
breathable, but thin, and it has too
much dust in it to be any fun to
inhale. He's all for going out and
looking for lichen, but Pat says he's
got to set up camp, then get instructions
from Earth. So we just have
to wait. The air is very cold, but the
Sun is hot as hell when it hits you.
The sky is a blinding pink, or maybe
more of a pale fuchsia. Kroger
says it's the dust. The sand underfoot
is kind of rose-colored, and not
really gritty. The particles are
round and smooth.
No lichen so far. Kroger says
maybe in the canals, if there are
any canals. Lloyd wants to play
chess again.
Jones won the beard contest. Pat
gave him a cigar he'd smuggled on
board (no smoking was allowed on
the ship), and Jones threw it away.
He doesn't smoke.
June 20, 1961
Got lost today.
Pat told me
not to go too far from camp, so,
when I took a stroll, I made sure
every so often that I could still see
the rocket behind me. Walked for
maybe an hour; then the oxygen
gauge got past the halfway mark,
so I started back toward the rocket.
After maybe ten steps, the rocket
disappeared. One minute it was
standing there, tall and silvery, the
next instant it was gone.
Turned on my radio pack and
got hold of Pat. Told him what happened,
and he told Kroger. Kroger
said I had been following a mirage,
to step back a bit. I did, and I could
see the ship again. Kroger said to
try and walk toward where the ship
seemed to be, even when it wasn't
in view, and meantime they'd come
out after me in the jeep, following
my footprints.
Started walking back, and the
ship vanished again. It reappeared,
disappeared, but I kept going. Finally
saw the real ship, and Lloyd
and Jones waving their arms at me.
They were shouting through their
masks, but I couldn't hear them.
The air is too thin to carry sound
well.
All at once, something gleamed
in their hands, and they started
shooting at me with their rifles.
That's when I heard the noise behind
me. I was too scared to turn
around, but finally Jones and Lloyd
came running over, and I got up
enough nerve to look. There was
nothing there, but on the sand,
paralleling mine, were footprints.
At least I think they were footprints.
Twice as long as mine, and
three times as wide, but kind of
featureless because the sand's loose
and dry. They doubled back on
themselves, spaced considerably
farther apart.
"What was it?" I asked Lloyd
when he got to me.
"Damned if I know," he said. "It
was red and scaly, and I think it
had a tail. It was two heads taller
than you." He shuddered. "Ran off
when we fired."
"Where," said Jones, "are Pat and
Kroger?"
I didn't know. I hadn't seen
them, nor the jeep, on my trip back.
So we followed the wheel tracks for
a while, and they veered off from
my trail and followed another, very
much like the one that had been
paralleling mine when Jones and
Lloyd had taken a shot at the scaly
thing.
"We'd better get them on the
radio," said Jones, turning back
toward the ship.
There wasn't anything on the
radio but static.
Pat and Kroger haven't come
back yet, either.
June 21, 1961
We're not
alone here. More of
the scaly things have come toward
the camp, but a few rifle shots send
them away. They hop like kangaroos
when they're startled. Their
attitudes aren't menacing, but their
appearance is. And Jones says,
"Who knows what's 'menacing' in
an alien?"
We're going to look for Kroger
and Pat today. Jones says we'd better
before another windstorm blows
away the jeep tracks. Fortunately,
the jeep has a leaky oil pan, so we
always have the smears to follow,
unless they get covered up, too.
We're taking extra oxygen, shells,
and rifles. Food, too, of course.
And we're locking up the ship.
It's later
, now. We found the
jeep, but no Kroger or Pat. Lots of
those big tracks nearby. We're taking
the jeep to follow the aliens'
tracks. There's some moss around
here, on reddish brown rocks that
stick up through the sand, just on
the shady side, though. Kroger
must be happy to have found his
lichen.
The trail ended at the brink of
a deep crevice in the ground. Seems
to be an earthquake-type split in
solid rock, with the sand sifting
over this and the far edge like pink
silk cataracts. The bottom is in the
shade and can't be seen. The crack
seems to extend to our left and
right as far as we can look.
There looks like a trail down the
inside of the crevice, but the Sun's
setting, so we're waiting till tomorrow
to go down.
Going down was Jones' idea,
not mine.
June 22, 1961
Well, we're
at the bottom, and
there's water here, a shallow stream
about thirty feet wide that runs
along the center of the canal (we've
decided we're in a canal). No sign
of Pat or Kroger yet, but the sand
here is hard-packed and damp, and
there are normal-size footprints
mingled with the alien ones, sharp
and clear. The aliens seem to have
six or seven toes. It varies from
print to print. And they're barefoot,
too, or else they have the damnedest-looking
shoes in creation.
The constant shower of sand
near the cliff walls is annoying, but
it's sandless (shower-wise) near
the stream, so we're following the
footprints along the bank. Also, the
air's better down here. Still thin,
but not so bad as on the surface.
We're going without masks to save
oxygen for the return trip (Jones
assures me there'll
be
a return
trip), and the air's only a little bit
sandy, but handkerchiefs over nose
and mouth solve this.
We look like desperadoes, what
with the rifles and covered faces. I
said as much to Lloyd and he told
me to shut up. Moss all over the
cliff walls. Swell luck for Kroger.
We've found
Kroger and Pat,
with the help of the aliens. Or maybe
I should call them the Martians.
Either way, it's better than what
Jones calls them.
They took away our rifles and
brought us right to Kroger and Pat,
without our even asking. Jones is
mad at the way they got the rifles so
easily. When we came upon them
(a group of maybe ten, huddling
behind a boulder in ambush), he
fired, but the shots either bounced
off their scales or stuck in their
thick hides. Anyway, they took the
rifles away and threw them into the
stream, and picked us all up and
took us into a hole in the cliff wall.
The hole went on practically forever,
but it didn't get dark. Kroger
tells me that there are phosphorescent
bacteria living in the mold on
the walls. The air has a fresh-dug-grave
smell, but it's richer in oxygen
than even at the stream.
We're in a small cave that is just
off a bigger cave where lots of tunnels
come together. I can't remember
which one we came in through,
and neither can anyone else. Jones
asked me what the hell I kept writing
in the diary for, did I want to
make it a gift to Martian archeologists?
But I said where there's life
there's hope, and now he won't talk
to me. I congratulated Kroger on
the lichen I'd seen, but he just said
a short and unscientific word and
went to sleep.
There's a Martian guarding the
entrance to our cave. I don't know
what they intend to do with us.
Feed us, I hope. So far, they've just
left us here, and we're out of rations.
Kroger tried talking to the guard
once, but he (or it) made a whistling
kind of sound and flashed a
mouthful of teeth. Kroger says the
teeth are in multiple rows, like a
tiger shark's. I'd rather he hadn't
told me.
June 23, 1961, I think
We're either
in a docket or a
zoo. I can't tell which. There's a
rather square platform surrounded
on all four sides by running water,
maybe twenty feet across, and
we're on it. Martians keep coming
to the far edge of the water and
looking at us and whistling at each
other. A little Martian came near
the edge of the water and a larger
Martian whistled like crazy and
dragged it away.
"Water must be dangerous to
them," said Kroger.
"We shoulda brought water pistols,"
Jones muttered.
Pat said maybe we can swim to
safety. Kroger told Pat he was
crazy, that the little island we're on
here underground is bordered by a
fast river that goes into the planet.
We'd end up drowned in some grotto
in the heart of the planet, says
Kroger.
"What the hell," says Pat, "it's
better than starving."
It is not.
June 24, 1961, probably
I'm hungry
. So is everybody
else. Right now I could eat a dinner
raw, in a centrifuge, and keep it
down. A Martian threw a stone at
Jones today, and Jones threw one
back at him and broke off a couple
of scales. The Martian whistled
furiously and went away. When the
crowd thinned out, same as it did
yesterday (must be some sort of
sleeping cycle here), Kroger talked
Lloyd into swimming across the
river and getting the red scales.
Lloyd started at the upstream part
of the current, and was about a hundred
yards below this underground
island before he made the far side.
Sure is a swift current.
But he got the scales, walked
very far upstream of us, and swam
back with them. The stream sides
are steep, like in a fjord, and we
had to lift him out of the swirling
cold water, with the scales gripped
in his fist. Or what was left of the
scales. They had melted down in
the water and left his hand all
sticky.
Kroger took the gummy things,
studied them in the uncertain light,
then tasted them and grinned.
The Martians are made of sugar.
Later, same day
. Kroger
said that the Martian metabolism
must be like Terran (Earth-type)
metabolism, only with no pancreas
to make insulin. They store their
energy on the
outside
of their
bodies, in the form of scales. He's
watched them more closely and
seen that they have long rubbery
tubes for tongues, and that they
now and then suck up water from
the stream while they're watching
us, being careful not to get their lips
(all sugar, of course) wet. He
guesses that their "blood" must be
almost pure water, and that it
washes away (from the inside, of
course) the sugar they need for
energy.
I asked him where the sugar
came from, and he said probably
their bodies isolated carbon from
something (he thought it might be
the moss) and combined it with
the hydrogen and oxygen in the
water (even
I
knew the formula for
water) to make sugar, a common
carbohydrate.
Like plants, on Earth, he said.
Except, instead of using special
cells on leaves to form carbohydrates
with the help of sunpower,
as Earth plants do in photosynthesis
(Kroger spelled that word
for me), they used the
shape
of the
scales like prisms, to isolate the
spectra (another Kroger word)
necessary to form the sugar.
"I don't get it," I said politely,
when he'd finished his spiel.
"Simple," he said, as though he
were addressing me by name.
"They have a twofold reason to fear
water. One: by complete solvency
in that medium, they lose all energy
and die. Two: even partial sprinkling
alters the shape of the scales,
and they are unable to use sunpower
to form more sugar, and still die,
if a bit slower."
"Oh," I said, taking it down verbatim.
"So now what do we do?"
"We remove our boots," said
Kroger, sitting on the ground and
doing so, "and then we cross this
stream, fill the boots with water,
and
spray
our way to freedom."
"Which tunnel do we take?"
asked Pat, his eyes aglow at the
thought of escape.
Kroger shrugged. "We'll have to
chance taking any that seem to
slope upward. In any event, we can
always follow it back and start
again."
"I dunno," said Jones. "Remember
those
teeth
of theirs. They must
be for biting something more substantial
than moss, Kroger."
"We'll risk it," said Pat. "It's better
to go down fighting than to die
of starvation."
The hell it is.
June 24, 1961, for sure
The Martians
have coal
mines.
That's
what they use those
teeth for. We passed through one
and surprised a lot of them chewing
gritty hunks of anthracite out
of the walls. They came running at
us, whistling with those tubelike
tongues, and drooling dry coal dust,
but Pat swung one of his boots in
an arc that splashed all over the
ground in front of them, and they
turned tail (literally) and clattered
off down another tunnel,
sounding like a locomotive whistle
gone berserk.
We made the surface in another
hour, back in the canal, and were
lucky enough to find our own trail
to follow toward the place above
which the jeep still waited.
Jones got the rifles out of the
stream (the Martians had probably
thought they were beyond recovery
there) and we found the jeep. It
was nearly buried in sand, but we
got it cleaned off and running, and
got back to the ship quickly. First
thing we did on arriving was to
break out the stores and have a
celebration feast just outside the
door of the ship.
It was pork again, and I got sick.
June 25, 1961
We're going back
. Pat says
that a week is all we were allowed
to stay and that it's urgent to return
and tell what we've learned
about Mars (we know there are
Martians, and they're made of
sugar).
"Why," I said, "can't we just tell
it on the radio?"
"Because," said Pat, "if we tell
them now, by the time we get back
we'll be yesterday's news. This way
we may be lucky and get a parade."
"Maybe even money," said
Kroger, whose mind wasn't always
on science.
"But they'll ask why we didn't
radio the info, sir," said Jones uneasily.
"The radio," said Pat, nodding to
Lloyd, "was unfortunately broken
shortly after landing."
Lloyd blinked, then nodded
back and walked around the
rocket. I heard a crunching sound
and the shattering of glass, not unlike
the noise made when one
drives a rifle butt through a radio.
Well, it's time for takeoff.
This time
it wasn't so bad. I
thought I was getting my space-legs,
but Pat says there's less gravity on
Mars, so escape velocity didn't
have to be so fast, hence a smoother
(relatively) trip on our shock-absorbing
bunks.
Lloyd wants to play chess again.
I'll be careful not to win this time.
However, if I don't win, maybe this
time
I'll
be the one to quit.
Kroger is busy in his cramped
lab space trying to classify the little
moss he was able to gather, and
Jones and Pat are up front watching
the white specks revolve on that
black velvet again.
Guess I'll take a nap.
June 26, 1961
Hell's bells
. Kroger says
there are two baby Martians loose
on board ship. Pat told him he
was nuts, but there are certain
signs he's right. Like the missing
charcoal in the air-filtration-and-reclaiming
(AFAR) system. And
the water gauges are going down.
But the clincher is those two sugar
crystals Lloyd had grabbed up
when we were in that zoo. They're
gone.
Pat has declared a state of emergency.
Quick thinking, that's Pat.
Lloyd, before he remembered and
turned scarlet, suggested we radio
Earth for instructions. We can't.
Here we are, somewhere in a
void headed for Earth, with enough
air and water left for maybe three
days—if the Martians don't take
any more.
Kroger is thrilled that he is
learning something, maybe, about
Martian reproductive processes.
When he told Pat, Pat put it to a
vote whether or not to jettison
Kroger through the airlock. However,
it was decided that responsibility
was pretty well divided.
Lloyd had gotten the crystals,
Kroger had only studied them, and
Jones had brought them aboard.
So Kroger stays, but meanwhile
the air is getting worse. Pat suggested
Kroger put us all into a state
of suspended animation till landing
time, eight months away. Kroger
said, "How?"
June 27, 1961
Air is foul
and I'm very
thirsty. Kroger says that at least—when
the Martians get bigger—they'll
have to show themselves.
Pat says what do we do
then
? We
can't afford the water we need to
melt them down. Besides, the
melted crystals might
all
turn into
little Martians.
Jones says he'll go down spitting.
Pat says why not dismantle interior
of rocket to find out where
they're holing up? Fine idea.
How do you dismantle riveted
metal plates?
June 28, 1961
The AFAR system
is no more
and the water gauges are still dropping.
Kroger suggests baking bread,
then slicing it, then toasting it till
it turns to carbon, and we can use
the carbon in the AFAR system.
We'll have to try it, I guess.
The Martians
ate the bread.
Jones came forward to tell us the
loaves were cooling, and when he
got back they were gone. However,
he did find a few of the red crystals
on the galley deck (floor). They're
good-sized crystals, too. Which
means so are the Martians.
Kroger says the Martians must
be intelligent, otherwise they
couldn't have guessed at the carbohydrates
present in the bread after
a lifelong diet of anthracite. Pat
says let's jettison Kroger.
This time the vote went against
Kroger, but he got a last-minute reprieve
by suggesting the crystals
be pulverized and mixed with sulphuric
acid. He says this'll produce
carbon.
I certainly hope so.
So does Kroger.
Brief reprieve
for us. The
acid-sugar combination not only
produces carbon but water vapor,
and the gauge has gone up a notch.
That means that we have a quart
of water in the tanks for drinking.
However, the air's a bit better,
and we voted to let Kroger stay inside
the rocket.
Meantime, we have to catch
those Martians.
June 29, 1961
Worse and worse
. Lloyd
caught one of the Martians in the
firing chamber. We had to flood
the chamber with acid to subdue
the creature, which carbonized
nicely. So now we have plenty of
air and water again, but besides
having another Martian still on
the loose, we now don't have
enough acid left in the fuel tanks
to make a landing.
Pat says at least our vector will
carry us to Earth and we can die
on our home planet, which is better
than perishing in space.
The hell it is.
March 3, 1962
Earth in sight
. The other
Martian is still with us. He's where
we can't get at him without blow-torches,
but he can't get at the carbon
in the AFAR system, either,
which is a help. However, his tail
is prehensile, and now and then it
snakes out through an air duct and
yanks food right off the table from
under our noses.
Kroger says watch out.
We
are
made of carbohydrates, too. I'd
rather not have known.
March 4, 1962
Earth fills
the screen in the
control room. Pat says if we're
lucky, he might be able to use the
bit of fuel we have left to set us
in a descending spiral into one of
the oceans. The rocket is tighter
than a submarine, he insists, and
it will float till we're rescued, if
the plates don't crack under the impact.
We all agreed to try it. Not that
we thought it had a good chance of
working, but none of us had a better
idea.
I guess
you know the rest of
the story, about how that destroyer
spotted us and got us and
my diary aboard, and towed the
rocket to San Francisco. News of
the "captured Martian" leaked out,
and we all became nine-day wonders
until the dismantling of the
rocket.
Kroger says he must have dissolved
in the water, and wonders
what
that
would do. There are
about a thousand of those crystal-scales
on a Martian.
So last week we found out, when
those red-scaled things began clambering
out of the sea on every coastal
region on Earth. Kroger tried
to explain to me about salinity osmosis
and hydrostatic pressure and
crystalline life, but in no time at all
he lost me.
The point is, bullets won't stop
these things, and wherever a crystal
falls, a new Martian springs up
in a few weeks. It looks like the
five of us have abetted an invasion
from Mars.
Needless to say, we're no longer
heroes.
I haven't heard from Pat or
Lloyd for a week. Jones was picked
up attacking a candy factory yesterday,
and Kroger and I were allowed
to sign on for the flight to
Venus scheduled within the next
few days—because of our experience.
Kroger says there's only enough
fuel for a one-way trip. I don't care.
I've always wanted to travel with
the President.
—JACK SHARKEY
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Galaxy Magazine
June 1960.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | They fear it due to its ability to disintegrate their bodies | They utilize it to grow an army within their population | They desire it to fuel their underground Martian ecosystem | They are both curious and reluctant to understand its potential | 0 |
26843_ZRFZ1ACC_5 | Who is the 'dope' on Mars? | THE DOPE
on Mars
By JACK SHARKEY
Somebody had to get the human
angle on this trip ... but what
was humane about sending me?
Illustrated by WOOD
My
agent was the one who
got me the job of going
along to write up the first
trip to Mars. He was always getting
me things like that—appearances
on TV shows, or mentions in writers'
magazines. If he didn't sell
much of my stuff, at least he sold
me
.
"It'll be the biggest break a
writer ever got," he told me, two
days before blastoff. "Oh, sure
there'll be scientific reports on the
trip, but the public doesn't want
them; they want the
human
slant
on things."
"But, Louie," I said weakly, "I'll
probably be locked up for the
whole trip. If there are fights or accidents,
they won't tell
me
about
them."
"Nonsense," said Louie, sipping
carefully at a paper cup of scalding
coffee. "It'll be just like the
public going along vicariously.
They'll
identify
with you."
"But, Louie," I said, wiping the
dampness from my palms on the
knees of my trousers as I sat there,
"how'll I go about it? A story? An
article? A
you-are-there
type of report?
What?"
Louie shrugged. "So keep a
diary. It'll be more intimate, like."
"But what if nothing happens?"
I insisted hopelessly.
Louie smiled. "So you fake it."
I got up from the chair in his office
and stepped to the door.
"That's dishonest," I pointed out.
"Creative is the word," Louie
said.
So I went on the first trip to
Mars. And I kept a diary. This is
it. And it is honest. Honest it is.
October 1, 1960
They picked
the launching
date from the March, 1959, New
York
Times
, which stated that this
was the most likely time for launching.
Trip time is supposed to take
260 days (that's one way), so
we're aimed toward where Mars
will be (had
better
be, or else).
There are five of us on board. A
pilot, co-pilot, navigator and biochemist.
And, of course, me. I've
met all but the pilot (he's very
busy today), and they seem friendly
enough.
Dwight Kroger, the biochemist,
is rather old to take the "rigors of
the journey," as he puts it, but the
government had a choice between
sending a green scientist who could
stand the trip or an accomplished
man who would probably not survive,
so they picked Kroger. We've
blasted off, though, and he's still
with us. He looks a damn sight better
than I feel. He's kind of balding,
and very iron-gray-haired and
skinny, but his skin is tan as an Indian's,
and right now he's telling
jokes in the washroom with the co-pilot.
Jones (that's the co-pilot; I
didn't quite catch his first name) is
scarlet-faced, barrel-chested and
gives the general appearance of belonging
under the spreading chestnut
tree, not in a metal bullet flinging
itself out into airless space.
Come to think of it, who
does
belong
where we are?
The navigator's name is Lloyd
Streeter, but I haven't seen his face
yet. He has a little cubicle behind
the pilot's compartment, with all
kinds of maps and rulers and things.
He keeps bent low over a welded-to-the-wall
(they call it the bulkhead,
for some reason or other)
table, scratching away with a ballpoint
pen on the maps, and now
and then calling numbers over a
microphone to the pilot. His hair
is red and curly, and he looks as
though he'd be tall if he ever gets
to stand up. There are freckles on
the backs of his hands, so I think
he's probably got them on his face,
too. So far, all he's said is, "Scram,
I'm busy."
Kroger tells me that the pilot's
name is Patrick Desmond, but that
I can call him Pat when I get to
know him better. So far, he's still
Captain Desmond to me. I haven't
the vaguest idea what he looks like.
He was already on board when I
got here, with my typewriter and
ream of paper, so we didn't meet.
My compartment is small but
clean. I mean clean now. It wasn't
during blastoff. The inertial gravities
didn't bother me so much as
the gyroscopic spin they put on the
ship so we have a sort of artificial
gravity to hold us against the
curved floor. It's that constant
whirly feeling that gets me. I get
sick on merry-go-rounds, too.
They're having pork for dinner
today. Not me.
October 2, 1960
Feeling much
better today.
Kroger gave me a box of Dramamine
pills. He says they'll help my
stomach. So far, so good.
Lloyd came by, also. "You play
chess?" he asked.
"A little," I admitted.
"How about a game sometime?"
"Sure," I said. "Do you have a
board?"
He didn't.
Lloyd went away then, but the
interview wasn't wasted. I learned
that he
is
tall and
does
have a
freckled face. Maybe we can build
a chessboard. With my paper and
his ballpoint pen and ruler, it should
be easy. Don't know what we'll use
for pieces, though.
Jones (I still haven't learned his
first name) has been up with the
pilot all day. He passed my room
on the way to the galley (the
kitchen) for a cup of dark brown
coffee (they like it thick) and told
me that we were almost past the
Moon. I asked to look, but he said
not yet; the instrument panel is
Top Secret. They'd have to cover
it so I could look out the viewing
screen, and they still need it for
steering or something.
I still haven't met the pilot.
October 3, 1960
Well, I've
met the pilot. He is
kind of squat, with a vulturish neck
and close-set jet-black eyes that
make him look rather mean, but he
was pleasant enough, and said I
could call him Pat. I still don't
know Jones' first name, though Pat
spoke to him, and it sounded like
Flants. That can't be right.
Also, I am one of the first five
men in the history of the world to
see the opposite side of the Moon,
with a bluish blurred crescent beyond
it that Pat said was the Earth.
The back of the Moon isn't much
different from the front. As to the
space in front of the ship, well, it's
all black with white dots in it, and
none of the dots move, except in a
circle that Pat says is a "torque"
result from the gyroscopic spin
we're in. Actually, he explained to
me, the screen is supposed to keep
the image of space locked into
place no matter how much we spin.
But there's some kind of a "drag."
I told him I hoped it didn't mean
we'd land on Mars upside down. He
just stared at me.
I can't say I was too impressed
with that 16 x 19 view of outer
space. It's been done much better
in the movies. There's just no awesomeness
to it, no sense of depth or
immensity. It's as impressive as a
piece of velvet with salt sprinkled
on it.
Lloyd and I made a chessboard
out of a carton. Right now we're using
buttons for men. He's one of
these fast players who don't stop
and think out their moves. And so
far I haven't won a game.
It looks like a long trip.
October 4, 1960
I won
a game. Lloyd mistook my
queen-button for my bishop-button
and left his king in jeopardy, and
I checkmated him next move. He
said chess was a waste of time
and he had important work to do
and he went away.
I went to the galley for coffee
and had a talk about moss with
Kroger. He said there was a good
chance of lichen on Mars, and I
misunderstood and said, "A good
chance of liking
what
on Mars?"
and Kroger finished his coffee and
went up front.
When I got back to my compartment,
Lloyd had taken away the
chessboard and all his buttons. He
told me later he needed it to back
up a star map.
Pat slept mostly all day in his
compartment, and Jones sat and
watched the screen revolve. There
wasn't much to do, so I wrote a
poem, sort of.
Mary, Mary, quite contrary,
How does your garden grow?
With Martian rime, Venusian slime,
And a radioactive hoe.
I showed it to Kroger. He says
it may prove to be environmentally
accurate, but that I should stick to
prose.
October 5, 1960
Learned Jones'
first name.
He wrote something in the ship's
log, and I saw his signature. His
name is Fleance, like in "Macbeth."
He prefers to be called Jones. Pat
uses his first name as a gag. Some
fun.
And only 255 days to go.
April 1, 1961
I've skipped
over the last 177
days or so, because there's nothing
much new. I brought some books
with me on the trip, books that I'd
always meant to read and never
had the time. So now I know all
about
Vanity Fair
,
Pride and Prejudice
,
War and Peace
,
Gone with
the Wind
, and
Babbitt
.
They didn't take as long as I
thought they would, except for
Vanity Fair
. It must have been a
riot when it first came out. I mean,
all those sly digs at the aristocracy,
with copious interpolations by Mr.
Thackeray in case you didn't get
it when he'd pulled a particularly
good gag. Some fun.
And only 78 days to go.
June 1, 1961
Only 17 days
to go. I saw Mars
on the screen today. It seems to be
descending from overhead, but Pat
says that that's the "torque" doing
it. Actually, it's we who are coming
in sideways.
We've all grown beards, too. Pat
said it was against regulations, but
what the hell. We have a contest.
Longest whiskers on landing gets a
prize.
I asked Pat what the prize was
and he told me to go to hell.
June 18, 1961
Mars has
the whole screen
filled. Looks like Death Valley. No
sign of canals, but Pat says that's
because of the dust storm down below.
It's nice to have a "down below"
again. We're going to land, so
I have to go to my bunk. It's all
foam rubber, nylon braid supports
and magnesium tubing. Might as
well be cement for all the good it
did me at takeoff. Earth seems awfully
far away.
June 19, 1961
Well, we're down.
We have
to wear gas masks with oxygen
hook-ups. Kroger says the air is
breathable, but thin, and it has too
much dust in it to be any fun to
inhale. He's all for going out and
looking for lichen, but Pat says he's
got to set up camp, then get instructions
from Earth. So we just have
to wait. The air is very cold, but the
Sun is hot as hell when it hits you.
The sky is a blinding pink, or maybe
more of a pale fuchsia. Kroger
says it's the dust. The sand underfoot
is kind of rose-colored, and not
really gritty. The particles are
round and smooth.
No lichen so far. Kroger says
maybe in the canals, if there are
any canals. Lloyd wants to play
chess again.
Jones won the beard contest. Pat
gave him a cigar he'd smuggled on
board (no smoking was allowed on
the ship), and Jones threw it away.
He doesn't smoke.
June 20, 1961
Got lost today.
Pat told me
not to go too far from camp, so,
when I took a stroll, I made sure
every so often that I could still see
the rocket behind me. Walked for
maybe an hour; then the oxygen
gauge got past the halfway mark,
so I started back toward the rocket.
After maybe ten steps, the rocket
disappeared. One minute it was
standing there, tall and silvery, the
next instant it was gone.
Turned on my radio pack and
got hold of Pat. Told him what happened,
and he told Kroger. Kroger
said I had been following a mirage,
to step back a bit. I did, and I could
see the ship again. Kroger said to
try and walk toward where the ship
seemed to be, even when it wasn't
in view, and meantime they'd come
out after me in the jeep, following
my footprints.
Started walking back, and the
ship vanished again. It reappeared,
disappeared, but I kept going. Finally
saw the real ship, and Lloyd
and Jones waving their arms at me.
They were shouting through their
masks, but I couldn't hear them.
The air is too thin to carry sound
well.
All at once, something gleamed
in their hands, and they started
shooting at me with their rifles.
That's when I heard the noise behind
me. I was too scared to turn
around, but finally Jones and Lloyd
came running over, and I got up
enough nerve to look. There was
nothing there, but on the sand,
paralleling mine, were footprints.
At least I think they were footprints.
Twice as long as mine, and
three times as wide, but kind of
featureless because the sand's loose
and dry. They doubled back on
themselves, spaced considerably
farther apart.
"What was it?" I asked Lloyd
when he got to me.
"Damned if I know," he said. "It
was red and scaly, and I think it
had a tail. It was two heads taller
than you." He shuddered. "Ran off
when we fired."
"Where," said Jones, "are Pat and
Kroger?"
I didn't know. I hadn't seen
them, nor the jeep, on my trip back.
So we followed the wheel tracks for
a while, and they veered off from
my trail and followed another, very
much like the one that had been
paralleling mine when Jones and
Lloyd had taken a shot at the scaly
thing.
"We'd better get them on the
radio," said Jones, turning back
toward the ship.
There wasn't anything on the
radio but static.
Pat and Kroger haven't come
back yet, either.
June 21, 1961
We're not
alone here. More of
the scaly things have come toward
the camp, but a few rifle shots send
them away. They hop like kangaroos
when they're startled. Their
attitudes aren't menacing, but their
appearance is. And Jones says,
"Who knows what's 'menacing' in
an alien?"
We're going to look for Kroger
and Pat today. Jones says we'd better
before another windstorm blows
away the jeep tracks. Fortunately,
the jeep has a leaky oil pan, so we
always have the smears to follow,
unless they get covered up, too.
We're taking extra oxygen, shells,
and rifles. Food, too, of course.
And we're locking up the ship.
It's later
, now. We found the
jeep, but no Kroger or Pat. Lots of
those big tracks nearby. We're taking
the jeep to follow the aliens'
tracks. There's some moss around
here, on reddish brown rocks that
stick up through the sand, just on
the shady side, though. Kroger
must be happy to have found his
lichen.
The trail ended at the brink of
a deep crevice in the ground. Seems
to be an earthquake-type split in
solid rock, with the sand sifting
over this and the far edge like pink
silk cataracts. The bottom is in the
shade and can't be seen. The crack
seems to extend to our left and
right as far as we can look.
There looks like a trail down the
inside of the crevice, but the Sun's
setting, so we're waiting till tomorrow
to go down.
Going down was Jones' idea,
not mine.
June 22, 1961
Well, we're
at the bottom, and
there's water here, a shallow stream
about thirty feet wide that runs
along the center of the canal (we've
decided we're in a canal). No sign
of Pat or Kroger yet, but the sand
here is hard-packed and damp, and
there are normal-size footprints
mingled with the alien ones, sharp
and clear. The aliens seem to have
six or seven toes. It varies from
print to print. And they're barefoot,
too, or else they have the damnedest-looking
shoes in creation.
The constant shower of sand
near the cliff walls is annoying, but
it's sandless (shower-wise) near
the stream, so we're following the
footprints along the bank. Also, the
air's better down here. Still thin,
but not so bad as on the surface.
We're going without masks to save
oxygen for the return trip (Jones
assures me there'll
be
a return
trip), and the air's only a little bit
sandy, but handkerchiefs over nose
and mouth solve this.
We look like desperadoes, what
with the rifles and covered faces. I
said as much to Lloyd and he told
me to shut up. Moss all over the
cliff walls. Swell luck for Kroger.
We've found
Kroger and Pat,
with the help of the aliens. Or maybe
I should call them the Martians.
Either way, it's better than what
Jones calls them.
They took away our rifles and
brought us right to Kroger and Pat,
without our even asking. Jones is
mad at the way they got the rifles so
easily. When we came upon them
(a group of maybe ten, huddling
behind a boulder in ambush), he
fired, but the shots either bounced
off their scales or stuck in their
thick hides. Anyway, they took the
rifles away and threw them into the
stream, and picked us all up and
took us into a hole in the cliff wall.
The hole went on practically forever,
but it didn't get dark. Kroger
tells me that there are phosphorescent
bacteria living in the mold on
the walls. The air has a fresh-dug-grave
smell, but it's richer in oxygen
than even at the stream.
We're in a small cave that is just
off a bigger cave where lots of tunnels
come together. I can't remember
which one we came in through,
and neither can anyone else. Jones
asked me what the hell I kept writing
in the diary for, did I want to
make it a gift to Martian archeologists?
But I said where there's life
there's hope, and now he won't talk
to me. I congratulated Kroger on
the lichen I'd seen, but he just said
a short and unscientific word and
went to sleep.
There's a Martian guarding the
entrance to our cave. I don't know
what they intend to do with us.
Feed us, I hope. So far, they've just
left us here, and we're out of rations.
Kroger tried talking to the guard
once, but he (or it) made a whistling
kind of sound and flashed a
mouthful of teeth. Kroger says the
teeth are in multiple rows, like a
tiger shark's. I'd rather he hadn't
told me.
June 23, 1961, I think
We're either
in a docket or a
zoo. I can't tell which. There's a
rather square platform surrounded
on all four sides by running water,
maybe twenty feet across, and
we're on it. Martians keep coming
to the far edge of the water and
looking at us and whistling at each
other. A little Martian came near
the edge of the water and a larger
Martian whistled like crazy and
dragged it away.
"Water must be dangerous to
them," said Kroger.
"We shoulda brought water pistols,"
Jones muttered.
Pat said maybe we can swim to
safety. Kroger told Pat he was
crazy, that the little island we're on
here underground is bordered by a
fast river that goes into the planet.
We'd end up drowned in some grotto
in the heart of the planet, says
Kroger.
"What the hell," says Pat, "it's
better than starving."
It is not.
June 24, 1961, probably
I'm hungry
. So is everybody
else. Right now I could eat a dinner
raw, in a centrifuge, and keep it
down. A Martian threw a stone at
Jones today, and Jones threw one
back at him and broke off a couple
of scales. The Martian whistled
furiously and went away. When the
crowd thinned out, same as it did
yesterday (must be some sort of
sleeping cycle here), Kroger talked
Lloyd into swimming across the
river and getting the red scales.
Lloyd started at the upstream part
of the current, and was about a hundred
yards below this underground
island before he made the far side.
Sure is a swift current.
But he got the scales, walked
very far upstream of us, and swam
back with them. The stream sides
are steep, like in a fjord, and we
had to lift him out of the swirling
cold water, with the scales gripped
in his fist. Or what was left of the
scales. They had melted down in
the water and left his hand all
sticky.
Kroger took the gummy things,
studied them in the uncertain light,
then tasted them and grinned.
The Martians are made of sugar.
Later, same day
. Kroger
said that the Martian metabolism
must be like Terran (Earth-type)
metabolism, only with no pancreas
to make insulin. They store their
energy on the
outside
of their
bodies, in the form of scales. He's
watched them more closely and
seen that they have long rubbery
tubes for tongues, and that they
now and then suck up water from
the stream while they're watching
us, being careful not to get their lips
(all sugar, of course) wet. He
guesses that their "blood" must be
almost pure water, and that it
washes away (from the inside, of
course) the sugar they need for
energy.
I asked him where the sugar
came from, and he said probably
their bodies isolated carbon from
something (he thought it might be
the moss) and combined it with
the hydrogen and oxygen in the
water (even
I
knew the formula for
water) to make sugar, a common
carbohydrate.
Like plants, on Earth, he said.
Except, instead of using special
cells on leaves to form carbohydrates
with the help of sunpower,
as Earth plants do in photosynthesis
(Kroger spelled that word
for me), they used the
shape
of the
scales like prisms, to isolate the
spectra (another Kroger word)
necessary to form the sugar.
"I don't get it," I said politely,
when he'd finished his spiel.
"Simple," he said, as though he
were addressing me by name.
"They have a twofold reason to fear
water. One: by complete solvency
in that medium, they lose all energy
and die. Two: even partial sprinkling
alters the shape of the scales,
and they are unable to use sunpower
to form more sugar, and still die,
if a bit slower."
"Oh," I said, taking it down verbatim.
"So now what do we do?"
"We remove our boots," said
Kroger, sitting on the ground and
doing so, "and then we cross this
stream, fill the boots with water,
and
spray
our way to freedom."
"Which tunnel do we take?"
asked Pat, his eyes aglow at the
thought of escape.
Kroger shrugged. "We'll have to
chance taking any that seem to
slope upward. In any event, we can
always follow it back and start
again."
"I dunno," said Jones. "Remember
those
teeth
of theirs. They must
be for biting something more substantial
than moss, Kroger."
"We'll risk it," said Pat. "It's better
to go down fighting than to die
of starvation."
The hell it is.
June 24, 1961, for sure
The Martians
have coal
mines.
That's
what they use those
teeth for. We passed through one
and surprised a lot of them chewing
gritty hunks of anthracite out
of the walls. They came running at
us, whistling with those tubelike
tongues, and drooling dry coal dust,
but Pat swung one of his boots in
an arc that splashed all over the
ground in front of them, and they
turned tail (literally) and clattered
off down another tunnel,
sounding like a locomotive whistle
gone berserk.
We made the surface in another
hour, back in the canal, and were
lucky enough to find our own trail
to follow toward the place above
which the jeep still waited.
Jones got the rifles out of the
stream (the Martians had probably
thought they were beyond recovery
there) and we found the jeep. It
was nearly buried in sand, but we
got it cleaned off and running, and
got back to the ship quickly. First
thing we did on arriving was to
break out the stores and have a
celebration feast just outside the
door of the ship.
It was pork again, and I got sick.
June 25, 1961
We're going back
. Pat says
that a week is all we were allowed
to stay and that it's urgent to return
and tell what we've learned
about Mars (we know there are
Martians, and they're made of
sugar).
"Why," I said, "can't we just tell
it on the radio?"
"Because," said Pat, "if we tell
them now, by the time we get back
we'll be yesterday's news. This way
we may be lucky and get a parade."
"Maybe even money," said
Kroger, whose mind wasn't always
on science.
"But they'll ask why we didn't
radio the info, sir," said Jones uneasily.
"The radio," said Pat, nodding to
Lloyd, "was unfortunately broken
shortly after landing."
Lloyd blinked, then nodded
back and walked around the
rocket. I heard a crunching sound
and the shattering of glass, not unlike
the noise made when one
drives a rifle butt through a radio.
Well, it's time for takeoff.
This time
it wasn't so bad. I
thought I was getting my space-legs,
but Pat says there's less gravity on
Mars, so escape velocity didn't
have to be so fast, hence a smoother
(relatively) trip on our shock-absorbing
bunks.
Lloyd wants to play chess again.
I'll be careful not to win this time.
However, if I don't win, maybe this
time
I'll
be the one to quit.
Kroger is busy in his cramped
lab space trying to classify the little
moss he was able to gather, and
Jones and Pat are up front watching
the white specks revolve on that
black velvet again.
Guess I'll take a nap.
June 26, 1961
Hell's bells
. Kroger says
there are two baby Martians loose
on board ship. Pat told him he
was nuts, but there are certain
signs he's right. Like the missing
charcoal in the air-filtration-and-reclaiming
(AFAR) system. And
the water gauges are going down.
But the clincher is those two sugar
crystals Lloyd had grabbed up
when we were in that zoo. They're
gone.
Pat has declared a state of emergency.
Quick thinking, that's Pat.
Lloyd, before he remembered and
turned scarlet, suggested we radio
Earth for instructions. We can't.
Here we are, somewhere in a
void headed for Earth, with enough
air and water left for maybe three
days—if the Martians don't take
any more.
Kroger is thrilled that he is
learning something, maybe, about
Martian reproductive processes.
When he told Pat, Pat put it to a
vote whether or not to jettison
Kroger through the airlock. However,
it was decided that responsibility
was pretty well divided.
Lloyd had gotten the crystals,
Kroger had only studied them, and
Jones had brought them aboard.
So Kroger stays, but meanwhile
the air is getting worse. Pat suggested
Kroger put us all into a state
of suspended animation till landing
time, eight months away. Kroger
said, "How?"
June 27, 1961
Air is foul
and I'm very
thirsty. Kroger says that at least—when
the Martians get bigger—they'll
have to show themselves.
Pat says what do we do
then
? We
can't afford the water we need to
melt them down. Besides, the
melted crystals might
all
turn into
little Martians.
Jones says he'll go down spitting.
Pat says why not dismantle interior
of rocket to find out where
they're holing up? Fine idea.
How do you dismantle riveted
metal plates?
June 28, 1961
The AFAR system
is no more
and the water gauges are still dropping.
Kroger suggests baking bread,
then slicing it, then toasting it till
it turns to carbon, and we can use
the carbon in the AFAR system.
We'll have to try it, I guess.
The Martians
ate the bread.
Jones came forward to tell us the
loaves were cooling, and when he
got back they were gone. However,
he did find a few of the red crystals
on the galley deck (floor). They're
good-sized crystals, too. Which
means so are the Martians.
Kroger says the Martians must
be intelligent, otherwise they
couldn't have guessed at the carbohydrates
present in the bread after
a lifelong diet of anthracite. Pat
says let's jettison Kroger.
This time the vote went against
Kroger, but he got a last-minute reprieve
by suggesting the crystals
be pulverized and mixed with sulphuric
acid. He says this'll produce
carbon.
I certainly hope so.
So does Kroger.
Brief reprieve
for us. The
acid-sugar combination not only
produces carbon but water vapor,
and the gauge has gone up a notch.
That means that we have a quart
of water in the tanks for drinking.
However, the air's a bit better,
and we voted to let Kroger stay inside
the rocket.
Meantime, we have to catch
those Martians.
June 29, 1961
Worse and worse
. Lloyd
caught one of the Martians in the
firing chamber. We had to flood
the chamber with acid to subdue
the creature, which carbonized
nicely. So now we have plenty of
air and water again, but besides
having another Martian still on
the loose, we now don't have
enough acid left in the fuel tanks
to make a landing.
Pat says at least our vector will
carry us to Earth and we can die
on our home planet, which is better
than perishing in space.
The hell it is.
March 3, 1962
Earth in sight
. The other
Martian is still with us. He's where
we can't get at him without blow-torches,
but he can't get at the carbon
in the AFAR system, either,
which is a help. However, his tail
is prehensile, and now and then it
snakes out through an air duct and
yanks food right off the table from
under our noses.
Kroger says watch out.
We
are
made of carbohydrates, too. I'd
rather not have known.
March 4, 1962
Earth fills
the screen in the
control room. Pat says if we're
lucky, he might be able to use the
bit of fuel we have left to set us
in a descending spiral into one of
the oceans. The rocket is tighter
than a submarine, he insists, and
it will float till we're rescued, if
the plates don't crack under the impact.
We all agreed to try it. Not that
we thought it had a good chance of
working, but none of us had a better
idea.
I guess
you know the rest of
the story, about how that destroyer
spotted us and got us and
my diary aboard, and towed the
rocket to San Francisco. News of
the "captured Martian" leaked out,
and we all became nine-day wonders
until the dismantling of the
rocket.
Kroger says he must have dissolved
in the water, and wonders
what
that
would do. There are
about a thousand of those crystal-scales
on a Martian.
So last week we found out, when
those red-scaled things began clambering
out of the sea on every coastal
region on Earth. Kroger tried
to explain to me about salinity osmosis
and hydrostatic pressure and
crystalline life, but in no time at all
he lost me.
The point is, bullets won't stop
these things, and wherever a crystal
falls, a new Martian springs up
in a few weeks. It looks like the
five of us have abetted an invasion
from Mars.
Needless to say, we're no longer
heroes.
I haven't heard from Pat or
Lloyd for a week. Jones was picked
up attacking a candy factory yesterday,
and Kroger and I were allowed
to sign on for the flight to
Venus scheduled within the next
few days—because of our experience.
Kroger says there's only enough
fuel for a one-way trip. I don't care.
I've always wanted to travel with
the President.
—JACK SHARKEY
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Galaxy Magazine
June 1960.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | Kroger, the biochemist | Jones, the co-pilot | The narrator | Desmond, the pilot | 2 |
26843_ZRFZ1ACC_6 | What does the last line indicate about modern society, in general? | THE DOPE
on Mars
By JACK SHARKEY
Somebody had to get the human
angle on this trip ... but what
was humane about sending me?
Illustrated by WOOD
My
agent was the one who
got me the job of going
along to write up the first
trip to Mars. He was always getting
me things like that—appearances
on TV shows, or mentions in writers'
magazines. If he didn't sell
much of my stuff, at least he sold
me
.
"It'll be the biggest break a
writer ever got," he told me, two
days before blastoff. "Oh, sure
there'll be scientific reports on the
trip, but the public doesn't want
them; they want the
human
slant
on things."
"But, Louie," I said weakly, "I'll
probably be locked up for the
whole trip. If there are fights or accidents,
they won't tell
me
about
them."
"Nonsense," said Louie, sipping
carefully at a paper cup of scalding
coffee. "It'll be just like the
public going along vicariously.
They'll
identify
with you."
"But, Louie," I said, wiping the
dampness from my palms on the
knees of my trousers as I sat there,
"how'll I go about it? A story? An
article? A
you-are-there
type of report?
What?"
Louie shrugged. "So keep a
diary. It'll be more intimate, like."
"But what if nothing happens?"
I insisted hopelessly.
Louie smiled. "So you fake it."
I got up from the chair in his office
and stepped to the door.
"That's dishonest," I pointed out.
"Creative is the word," Louie
said.
So I went on the first trip to
Mars. And I kept a diary. This is
it. And it is honest. Honest it is.
October 1, 1960
They picked
the launching
date from the March, 1959, New
York
Times
, which stated that this
was the most likely time for launching.
Trip time is supposed to take
260 days (that's one way), so
we're aimed toward where Mars
will be (had
better
be, or else).
There are five of us on board. A
pilot, co-pilot, navigator and biochemist.
And, of course, me. I've
met all but the pilot (he's very
busy today), and they seem friendly
enough.
Dwight Kroger, the biochemist,
is rather old to take the "rigors of
the journey," as he puts it, but the
government had a choice between
sending a green scientist who could
stand the trip or an accomplished
man who would probably not survive,
so they picked Kroger. We've
blasted off, though, and he's still
with us. He looks a damn sight better
than I feel. He's kind of balding,
and very iron-gray-haired and
skinny, but his skin is tan as an Indian's,
and right now he's telling
jokes in the washroom with the co-pilot.
Jones (that's the co-pilot; I
didn't quite catch his first name) is
scarlet-faced, barrel-chested and
gives the general appearance of belonging
under the spreading chestnut
tree, not in a metal bullet flinging
itself out into airless space.
Come to think of it, who
does
belong
where we are?
The navigator's name is Lloyd
Streeter, but I haven't seen his face
yet. He has a little cubicle behind
the pilot's compartment, with all
kinds of maps and rulers and things.
He keeps bent low over a welded-to-the-wall
(they call it the bulkhead,
for some reason or other)
table, scratching away with a ballpoint
pen on the maps, and now
and then calling numbers over a
microphone to the pilot. His hair
is red and curly, and he looks as
though he'd be tall if he ever gets
to stand up. There are freckles on
the backs of his hands, so I think
he's probably got them on his face,
too. So far, all he's said is, "Scram,
I'm busy."
Kroger tells me that the pilot's
name is Patrick Desmond, but that
I can call him Pat when I get to
know him better. So far, he's still
Captain Desmond to me. I haven't
the vaguest idea what he looks like.
He was already on board when I
got here, with my typewriter and
ream of paper, so we didn't meet.
My compartment is small but
clean. I mean clean now. It wasn't
during blastoff. The inertial gravities
didn't bother me so much as
the gyroscopic spin they put on the
ship so we have a sort of artificial
gravity to hold us against the
curved floor. It's that constant
whirly feeling that gets me. I get
sick on merry-go-rounds, too.
They're having pork for dinner
today. Not me.
October 2, 1960
Feeling much
better today.
Kroger gave me a box of Dramamine
pills. He says they'll help my
stomach. So far, so good.
Lloyd came by, also. "You play
chess?" he asked.
"A little," I admitted.
"How about a game sometime?"
"Sure," I said. "Do you have a
board?"
He didn't.
Lloyd went away then, but the
interview wasn't wasted. I learned
that he
is
tall and
does
have a
freckled face. Maybe we can build
a chessboard. With my paper and
his ballpoint pen and ruler, it should
be easy. Don't know what we'll use
for pieces, though.
Jones (I still haven't learned his
first name) has been up with the
pilot all day. He passed my room
on the way to the galley (the
kitchen) for a cup of dark brown
coffee (they like it thick) and told
me that we were almost past the
Moon. I asked to look, but he said
not yet; the instrument panel is
Top Secret. They'd have to cover
it so I could look out the viewing
screen, and they still need it for
steering or something.
I still haven't met the pilot.
October 3, 1960
Well, I've
met the pilot. He is
kind of squat, with a vulturish neck
and close-set jet-black eyes that
make him look rather mean, but he
was pleasant enough, and said I
could call him Pat. I still don't
know Jones' first name, though Pat
spoke to him, and it sounded like
Flants. That can't be right.
Also, I am one of the first five
men in the history of the world to
see the opposite side of the Moon,
with a bluish blurred crescent beyond
it that Pat said was the Earth.
The back of the Moon isn't much
different from the front. As to the
space in front of the ship, well, it's
all black with white dots in it, and
none of the dots move, except in a
circle that Pat says is a "torque"
result from the gyroscopic spin
we're in. Actually, he explained to
me, the screen is supposed to keep
the image of space locked into
place no matter how much we spin.
But there's some kind of a "drag."
I told him I hoped it didn't mean
we'd land on Mars upside down. He
just stared at me.
I can't say I was too impressed
with that 16 x 19 view of outer
space. It's been done much better
in the movies. There's just no awesomeness
to it, no sense of depth or
immensity. It's as impressive as a
piece of velvet with salt sprinkled
on it.
Lloyd and I made a chessboard
out of a carton. Right now we're using
buttons for men. He's one of
these fast players who don't stop
and think out their moves. And so
far I haven't won a game.
It looks like a long trip.
October 4, 1960
I won
a game. Lloyd mistook my
queen-button for my bishop-button
and left his king in jeopardy, and
I checkmated him next move. He
said chess was a waste of time
and he had important work to do
and he went away.
I went to the galley for coffee
and had a talk about moss with
Kroger. He said there was a good
chance of lichen on Mars, and I
misunderstood and said, "A good
chance of liking
what
on Mars?"
and Kroger finished his coffee and
went up front.
When I got back to my compartment,
Lloyd had taken away the
chessboard and all his buttons. He
told me later he needed it to back
up a star map.
Pat slept mostly all day in his
compartment, and Jones sat and
watched the screen revolve. There
wasn't much to do, so I wrote a
poem, sort of.
Mary, Mary, quite contrary,
How does your garden grow?
With Martian rime, Venusian slime,
And a radioactive hoe.
I showed it to Kroger. He says
it may prove to be environmentally
accurate, but that I should stick to
prose.
October 5, 1960
Learned Jones'
first name.
He wrote something in the ship's
log, and I saw his signature. His
name is Fleance, like in "Macbeth."
He prefers to be called Jones. Pat
uses his first name as a gag. Some
fun.
And only 255 days to go.
April 1, 1961
I've skipped
over the last 177
days or so, because there's nothing
much new. I brought some books
with me on the trip, books that I'd
always meant to read and never
had the time. So now I know all
about
Vanity Fair
,
Pride and Prejudice
,
War and Peace
,
Gone with
the Wind
, and
Babbitt
.
They didn't take as long as I
thought they would, except for
Vanity Fair
. It must have been a
riot when it first came out. I mean,
all those sly digs at the aristocracy,
with copious interpolations by Mr.
Thackeray in case you didn't get
it when he'd pulled a particularly
good gag. Some fun.
And only 78 days to go.
June 1, 1961
Only 17 days
to go. I saw Mars
on the screen today. It seems to be
descending from overhead, but Pat
says that that's the "torque" doing
it. Actually, it's we who are coming
in sideways.
We've all grown beards, too. Pat
said it was against regulations, but
what the hell. We have a contest.
Longest whiskers on landing gets a
prize.
I asked Pat what the prize was
and he told me to go to hell.
June 18, 1961
Mars has
the whole screen
filled. Looks like Death Valley. No
sign of canals, but Pat says that's
because of the dust storm down below.
It's nice to have a "down below"
again. We're going to land, so
I have to go to my bunk. It's all
foam rubber, nylon braid supports
and magnesium tubing. Might as
well be cement for all the good it
did me at takeoff. Earth seems awfully
far away.
June 19, 1961
Well, we're down.
We have
to wear gas masks with oxygen
hook-ups. Kroger says the air is
breathable, but thin, and it has too
much dust in it to be any fun to
inhale. He's all for going out and
looking for lichen, but Pat says he's
got to set up camp, then get instructions
from Earth. So we just have
to wait. The air is very cold, but the
Sun is hot as hell when it hits you.
The sky is a blinding pink, or maybe
more of a pale fuchsia. Kroger
says it's the dust. The sand underfoot
is kind of rose-colored, and not
really gritty. The particles are
round and smooth.
No lichen so far. Kroger says
maybe in the canals, if there are
any canals. Lloyd wants to play
chess again.
Jones won the beard contest. Pat
gave him a cigar he'd smuggled on
board (no smoking was allowed on
the ship), and Jones threw it away.
He doesn't smoke.
June 20, 1961
Got lost today.
Pat told me
not to go too far from camp, so,
when I took a stroll, I made sure
every so often that I could still see
the rocket behind me. Walked for
maybe an hour; then the oxygen
gauge got past the halfway mark,
so I started back toward the rocket.
After maybe ten steps, the rocket
disappeared. One minute it was
standing there, tall and silvery, the
next instant it was gone.
Turned on my radio pack and
got hold of Pat. Told him what happened,
and he told Kroger. Kroger
said I had been following a mirage,
to step back a bit. I did, and I could
see the ship again. Kroger said to
try and walk toward where the ship
seemed to be, even when it wasn't
in view, and meantime they'd come
out after me in the jeep, following
my footprints.
Started walking back, and the
ship vanished again. It reappeared,
disappeared, but I kept going. Finally
saw the real ship, and Lloyd
and Jones waving their arms at me.
They were shouting through their
masks, but I couldn't hear them.
The air is too thin to carry sound
well.
All at once, something gleamed
in their hands, and they started
shooting at me with their rifles.
That's when I heard the noise behind
me. I was too scared to turn
around, but finally Jones and Lloyd
came running over, and I got up
enough nerve to look. There was
nothing there, but on the sand,
paralleling mine, were footprints.
At least I think they were footprints.
Twice as long as mine, and
three times as wide, but kind of
featureless because the sand's loose
and dry. They doubled back on
themselves, spaced considerably
farther apart.
"What was it?" I asked Lloyd
when he got to me.
"Damned if I know," he said. "It
was red and scaly, and I think it
had a tail. It was two heads taller
than you." He shuddered. "Ran off
when we fired."
"Where," said Jones, "are Pat and
Kroger?"
I didn't know. I hadn't seen
them, nor the jeep, on my trip back.
So we followed the wheel tracks for
a while, and they veered off from
my trail and followed another, very
much like the one that had been
paralleling mine when Jones and
Lloyd had taken a shot at the scaly
thing.
"We'd better get them on the
radio," said Jones, turning back
toward the ship.
There wasn't anything on the
radio but static.
Pat and Kroger haven't come
back yet, either.
June 21, 1961
We're not
alone here. More of
the scaly things have come toward
the camp, but a few rifle shots send
them away. They hop like kangaroos
when they're startled. Their
attitudes aren't menacing, but their
appearance is. And Jones says,
"Who knows what's 'menacing' in
an alien?"
We're going to look for Kroger
and Pat today. Jones says we'd better
before another windstorm blows
away the jeep tracks. Fortunately,
the jeep has a leaky oil pan, so we
always have the smears to follow,
unless they get covered up, too.
We're taking extra oxygen, shells,
and rifles. Food, too, of course.
And we're locking up the ship.
It's later
, now. We found the
jeep, but no Kroger or Pat. Lots of
those big tracks nearby. We're taking
the jeep to follow the aliens'
tracks. There's some moss around
here, on reddish brown rocks that
stick up through the sand, just on
the shady side, though. Kroger
must be happy to have found his
lichen.
The trail ended at the brink of
a deep crevice in the ground. Seems
to be an earthquake-type split in
solid rock, with the sand sifting
over this and the far edge like pink
silk cataracts. The bottom is in the
shade and can't be seen. The crack
seems to extend to our left and
right as far as we can look.
There looks like a trail down the
inside of the crevice, but the Sun's
setting, so we're waiting till tomorrow
to go down.
Going down was Jones' idea,
not mine.
June 22, 1961
Well, we're
at the bottom, and
there's water here, a shallow stream
about thirty feet wide that runs
along the center of the canal (we've
decided we're in a canal). No sign
of Pat or Kroger yet, but the sand
here is hard-packed and damp, and
there are normal-size footprints
mingled with the alien ones, sharp
and clear. The aliens seem to have
six or seven toes. It varies from
print to print. And they're barefoot,
too, or else they have the damnedest-looking
shoes in creation.
The constant shower of sand
near the cliff walls is annoying, but
it's sandless (shower-wise) near
the stream, so we're following the
footprints along the bank. Also, the
air's better down here. Still thin,
but not so bad as on the surface.
We're going without masks to save
oxygen for the return trip (Jones
assures me there'll
be
a return
trip), and the air's only a little bit
sandy, but handkerchiefs over nose
and mouth solve this.
We look like desperadoes, what
with the rifles and covered faces. I
said as much to Lloyd and he told
me to shut up. Moss all over the
cliff walls. Swell luck for Kroger.
We've found
Kroger and Pat,
with the help of the aliens. Or maybe
I should call them the Martians.
Either way, it's better than what
Jones calls them.
They took away our rifles and
brought us right to Kroger and Pat,
without our even asking. Jones is
mad at the way they got the rifles so
easily. When we came upon them
(a group of maybe ten, huddling
behind a boulder in ambush), he
fired, but the shots either bounced
off their scales or stuck in their
thick hides. Anyway, they took the
rifles away and threw them into the
stream, and picked us all up and
took us into a hole in the cliff wall.
The hole went on practically forever,
but it didn't get dark. Kroger
tells me that there are phosphorescent
bacteria living in the mold on
the walls. The air has a fresh-dug-grave
smell, but it's richer in oxygen
than even at the stream.
We're in a small cave that is just
off a bigger cave where lots of tunnels
come together. I can't remember
which one we came in through,
and neither can anyone else. Jones
asked me what the hell I kept writing
in the diary for, did I want to
make it a gift to Martian archeologists?
But I said where there's life
there's hope, and now he won't talk
to me. I congratulated Kroger on
the lichen I'd seen, but he just said
a short and unscientific word and
went to sleep.
There's a Martian guarding the
entrance to our cave. I don't know
what they intend to do with us.
Feed us, I hope. So far, they've just
left us here, and we're out of rations.
Kroger tried talking to the guard
once, but he (or it) made a whistling
kind of sound and flashed a
mouthful of teeth. Kroger says the
teeth are in multiple rows, like a
tiger shark's. I'd rather he hadn't
told me.
June 23, 1961, I think
We're either
in a docket or a
zoo. I can't tell which. There's a
rather square platform surrounded
on all four sides by running water,
maybe twenty feet across, and
we're on it. Martians keep coming
to the far edge of the water and
looking at us and whistling at each
other. A little Martian came near
the edge of the water and a larger
Martian whistled like crazy and
dragged it away.
"Water must be dangerous to
them," said Kroger.
"We shoulda brought water pistols,"
Jones muttered.
Pat said maybe we can swim to
safety. Kroger told Pat he was
crazy, that the little island we're on
here underground is bordered by a
fast river that goes into the planet.
We'd end up drowned in some grotto
in the heart of the planet, says
Kroger.
"What the hell," says Pat, "it's
better than starving."
It is not.
June 24, 1961, probably
I'm hungry
. So is everybody
else. Right now I could eat a dinner
raw, in a centrifuge, and keep it
down. A Martian threw a stone at
Jones today, and Jones threw one
back at him and broke off a couple
of scales. The Martian whistled
furiously and went away. When the
crowd thinned out, same as it did
yesterday (must be some sort of
sleeping cycle here), Kroger talked
Lloyd into swimming across the
river and getting the red scales.
Lloyd started at the upstream part
of the current, and was about a hundred
yards below this underground
island before he made the far side.
Sure is a swift current.
But he got the scales, walked
very far upstream of us, and swam
back with them. The stream sides
are steep, like in a fjord, and we
had to lift him out of the swirling
cold water, with the scales gripped
in his fist. Or what was left of the
scales. They had melted down in
the water and left his hand all
sticky.
Kroger took the gummy things,
studied them in the uncertain light,
then tasted them and grinned.
The Martians are made of sugar.
Later, same day
. Kroger
said that the Martian metabolism
must be like Terran (Earth-type)
metabolism, only with no pancreas
to make insulin. They store their
energy on the
outside
of their
bodies, in the form of scales. He's
watched them more closely and
seen that they have long rubbery
tubes for tongues, and that they
now and then suck up water from
the stream while they're watching
us, being careful not to get their lips
(all sugar, of course) wet. He
guesses that their "blood" must be
almost pure water, and that it
washes away (from the inside, of
course) the sugar they need for
energy.
I asked him where the sugar
came from, and he said probably
their bodies isolated carbon from
something (he thought it might be
the moss) and combined it with
the hydrogen and oxygen in the
water (even
I
knew the formula for
water) to make sugar, a common
carbohydrate.
Like plants, on Earth, he said.
Except, instead of using special
cells on leaves to form carbohydrates
with the help of sunpower,
as Earth plants do in photosynthesis
(Kroger spelled that word
for me), they used the
shape
of the
scales like prisms, to isolate the
spectra (another Kroger word)
necessary to form the sugar.
"I don't get it," I said politely,
when he'd finished his spiel.
"Simple," he said, as though he
were addressing me by name.
"They have a twofold reason to fear
water. One: by complete solvency
in that medium, they lose all energy
and die. Two: even partial sprinkling
alters the shape of the scales,
and they are unable to use sunpower
to form more sugar, and still die,
if a bit slower."
"Oh," I said, taking it down verbatim.
"So now what do we do?"
"We remove our boots," said
Kroger, sitting on the ground and
doing so, "and then we cross this
stream, fill the boots with water,
and
spray
our way to freedom."
"Which tunnel do we take?"
asked Pat, his eyes aglow at the
thought of escape.
Kroger shrugged. "We'll have to
chance taking any that seem to
slope upward. In any event, we can
always follow it back and start
again."
"I dunno," said Jones. "Remember
those
teeth
of theirs. They must
be for biting something more substantial
than moss, Kroger."
"We'll risk it," said Pat. "It's better
to go down fighting than to die
of starvation."
The hell it is.
June 24, 1961, for sure
The Martians
have coal
mines.
That's
what they use those
teeth for. We passed through one
and surprised a lot of them chewing
gritty hunks of anthracite out
of the walls. They came running at
us, whistling with those tubelike
tongues, and drooling dry coal dust,
but Pat swung one of his boots in
an arc that splashed all over the
ground in front of them, and they
turned tail (literally) and clattered
off down another tunnel,
sounding like a locomotive whistle
gone berserk.
We made the surface in another
hour, back in the canal, and were
lucky enough to find our own trail
to follow toward the place above
which the jeep still waited.
Jones got the rifles out of the
stream (the Martians had probably
thought they were beyond recovery
there) and we found the jeep. It
was nearly buried in sand, but we
got it cleaned off and running, and
got back to the ship quickly. First
thing we did on arriving was to
break out the stores and have a
celebration feast just outside the
door of the ship.
It was pork again, and I got sick.
June 25, 1961
We're going back
. Pat says
that a week is all we were allowed
to stay and that it's urgent to return
and tell what we've learned
about Mars (we know there are
Martians, and they're made of
sugar).
"Why," I said, "can't we just tell
it on the radio?"
"Because," said Pat, "if we tell
them now, by the time we get back
we'll be yesterday's news. This way
we may be lucky and get a parade."
"Maybe even money," said
Kroger, whose mind wasn't always
on science.
"But they'll ask why we didn't
radio the info, sir," said Jones uneasily.
"The radio," said Pat, nodding to
Lloyd, "was unfortunately broken
shortly after landing."
Lloyd blinked, then nodded
back and walked around the
rocket. I heard a crunching sound
and the shattering of glass, not unlike
the noise made when one
drives a rifle butt through a radio.
Well, it's time for takeoff.
This time
it wasn't so bad. I
thought I was getting my space-legs,
but Pat says there's less gravity on
Mars, so escape velocity didn't
have to be so fast, hence a smoother
(relatively) trip on our shock-absorbing
bunks.
Lloyd wants to play chess again.
I'll be careful not to win this time.
However, if I don't win, maybe this
time
I'll
be the one to quit.
Kroger is busy in his cramped
lab space trying to classify the little
moss he was able to gather, and
Jones and Pat are up front watching
the white specks revolve on that
black velvet again.
Guess I'll take a nap.
June 26, 1961
Hell's bells
. Kroger says
there are two baby Martians loose
on board ship. Pat told him he
was nuts, but there are certain
signs he's right. Like the missing
charcoal in the air-filtration-and-reclaiming
(AFAR) system. And
the water gauges are going down.
But the clincher is those two sugar
crystals Lloyd had grabbed up
when we were in that zoo. They're
gone.
Pat has declared a state of emergency.
Quick thinking, that's Pat.
Lloyd, before he remembered and
turned scarlet, suggested we radio
Earth for instructions. We can't.
Here we are, somewhere in a
void headed for Earth, with enough
air and water left for maybe three
days—if the Martians don't take
any more.
Kroger is thrilled that he is
learning something, maybe, about
Martian reproductive processes.
When he told Pat, Pat put it to a
vote whether or not to jettison
Kroger through the airlock. However,
it was decided that responsibility
was pretty well divided.
Lloyd had gotten the crystals,
Kroger had only studied them, and
Jones had brought them aboard.
So Kroger stays, but meanwhile
the air is getting worse. Pat suggested
Kroger put us all into a state
of suspended animation till landing
time, eight months away. Kroger
said, "How?"
June 27, 1961
Air is foul
and I'm very
thirsty. Kroger says that at least—when
the Martians get bigger—they'll
have to show themselves.
Pat says what do we do
then
? We
can't afford the water we need to
melt them down. Besides, the
melted crystals might
all
turn into
little Martians.
Jones says he'll go down spitting.
Pat says why not dismantle interior
of rocket to find out where
they're holing up? Fine idea.
How do you dismantle riveted
metal plates?
June 28, 1961
The AFAR system
is no more
and the water gauges are still dropping.
Kroger suggests baking bread,
then slicing it, then toasting it till
it turns to carbon, and we can use
the carbon in the AFAR system.
We'll have to try it, I guess.
The Martians
ate the bread.
Jones came forward to tell us the
loaves were cooling, and when he
got back they were gone. However,
he did find a few of the red crystals
on the galley deck (floor). They're
good-sized crystals, too. Which
means so are the Martians.
Kroger says the Martians must
be intelligent, otherwise they
couldn't have guessed at the carbohydrates
present in the bread after
a lifelong diet of anthracite. Pat
says let's jettison Kroger.
This time the vote went against
Kroger, but he got a last-minute reprieve
by suggesting the crystals
be pulverized and mixed with sulphuric
acid. He says this'll produce
carbon.
I certainly hope so.
So does Kroger.
Brief reprieve
for us. The
acid-sugar combination not only
produces carbon but water vapor,
and the gauge has gone up a notch.
That means that we have a quart
of water in the tanks for drinking.
However, the air's a bit better,
and we voted to let Kroger stay inside
the rocket.
Meantime, we have to catch
those Martians.
June 29, 1961
Worse and worse
. Lloyd
caught one of the Martians in the
firing chamber. We had to flood
the chamber with acid to subdue
the creature, which carbonized
nicely. So now we have plenty of
air and water again, but besides
having another Martian still on
the loose, we now don't have
enough acid left in the fuel tanks
to make a landing.
Pat says at least our vector will
carry us to Earth and we can die
on our home planet, which is better
than perishing in space.
The hell it is.
March 3, 1962
Earth in sight
. The other
Martian is still with us. He's where
we can't get at him without blow-torches,
but he can't get at the carbon
in the AFAR system, either,
which is a help. However, his tail
is prehensile, and now and then it
snakes out through an air duct and
yanks food right off the table from
under our noses.
Kroger says watch out.
We
are
made of carbohydrates, too. I'd
rather not have known.
March 4, 1962
Earth fills
the screen in the
control room. Pat says if we're
lucky, he might be able to use the
bit of fuel we have left to set us
in a descending spiral into one of
the oceans. The rocket is tighter
than a submarine, he insists, and
it will float till we're rescued, if
the plates don't crack under the impact.
We all agreed to try it. Not that
we thought it had a good chance of
working, but none of us had a better
idea.
I guess
you know the rest of
the story, about how that destroyer
spotted us and got us and
my diary aboard, and towed the
rocket to San Francisco. News of
the "captured Martian" leaked out,
and we all became nine-day wonders
until the dismantling of the
rocket.
Kroger says he must have dissolved
in the water, and wonders
what
that
would do. There are
about a thousand of those crystal-scales
on a Martian.
So last week we found out, when
those red-scaled things began clambering
out of the sea on every coastal
region on Earth. Kroger tried
to explain to me about salinity osmosis
and hydrostatic pressure and
crystalline life, but in no time at all
he lost me.
The point is, bullets won't stop
these things, and wherever a crystal
falls, a new Martian springs up
in a few weeks. It looks like the
five of us have abetted an invasion
from Mars.
Needless to say, we're no longer
heroes.
I haven't heard from Pat or
Lloyd for a week. Jones was picked
up attacking a candy factory yesterday,
and Kroger and I were allowed
to sign on for the flight to
Venus scheduled within the next
few days—because of our experience.
Kroger says there's only enough
fuel for a one-way trip. I don't care.
I've always wanted to travel with
the President.
—JACK SHARKEY
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Galaxy Magazine
June 1960.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
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26843_ZRFZ1ACC_7 | What's ironic about the narrator's and Kroger's decision to sign on for the flight scheduled to Venus? | THE DOPE
on Mars
By JACK SHARKEY
Somebody had to get the human
angle on this trip ... but what
was humane about sending me?
Illustrated by WOOD
My
agent was the one who
got me the job of going
along to write up the first
trip to Mars. He was always getting
me things like that—appearances
on TV shows, or mentions in writers'
magazines. If he didn't sell
much of my stuff, at least he sold
me
.
"It'll be the biggest break a
writer ever got," he told me, two
days before blastoff. "Oh, sure
there'll be scientific reports on the
trip, but the public doesn't want
them; they want the
human
slant
on things."
"But, Louie," I said weakly, "I'll
probably be locked up for the
whole trip. If there are fights or accidents,
they won't tell
me
about
them."
"Nonsense," said Louie, sipping
carefully at a paper cup of scalding
coffee. "It'll be just like the
public going along vicariously.
They'll
identify
with you."
"But, Louie," I said, wiping the
dampness from my palms on the
knees of my trousers as I sat there,
"how'll I go about it? A story? An
article? A
you-are-there
type of report?
What?"
Louie shrugged. "So keep a
diary. It'll be more intimate, like."
"But what if nothing happens?"
I insisted hopelessly.
Louie smiled. "So you fake it."
I got up from the chair in his office
and stepped to the door.
"That's dishonest," I pointed out.
"Creative is the word," Louie
said.
So I went on the first trip to
Mars. And I kept a diary. This is
it. And it is honest. Honest it is.
October 1, 1960
They picked
the launching
date from the March, 1959, New
York
Times
, which stated that this
was the most likely time for launching.
Trip time is supposed to take
260 days (that's one way), so
we're aimed toward where Mars
will be (had
better
be, or else).
There are five of us on board. A
pilot, co-pilot, navigator and biochemist.
And, of course, me. I've
met all but the pilot (he's very
busy today), and they seem friendly
enough.
Dwight Kroger, the biochemist,
is rather old to take the "rigors of
the journey," as he puts it, but the
government had a choice between
sending a green scientist who could
stand the trip or an accomplished
man who would probably not survive,
so they picked Kroger. We've
blasted off, though, and he's still
with us. He looks a damn sight better
than I feel. He's kind of balding,
and very iron-gray-haired and
skinny, but his skin is tan as an Indian's,
and right now he's telling
jokes in the washroom with the co-pilot.
Jones (that's the co-pilot; I
didn't quite catch his first name) is
scarlet-faced, barrel-chested and
gives the general appearance of belonging
under the spreading chestnut
tree, not in a metal bullet flinging
itself out into airless space.
Come to think of it, who
does
belong
where we are?
The navigator's name is Lloyd
Streeter, but I haven't seen his face
yet. He has a little cubicle behind
the pilot's compartment, with all
kinds of maps and rulers and things.
He keeps bent low over a welded-to-the-wall
(they call it the bulkhead,
for some reason or other)
table, scratching away with a ballpoint
pen on the maps, and now
and then calling numbers over a
microphone to the pilot. His hair
is red and curly, and he looks as
though he'd be tall if he ever gets
to stand up. There are freckles on
the backs of his hands, so I think
he's probably got them on his face,
too. So far, all he's said is, "Scram,
I'm busy."
Kroger tells me that the pilot's
name is Patrick Desmond, but that
I can call him Pat when I get to
know him better. So far, he's still
Captain Desmond to me. I haven't
the vaguest idea what he looks like.
He was already on board when I
got here, with my typewriter and
ream of paper, so we didn't meet.
My compartment is small but
clean. I mean clean now. It wasn't
during blastoff. The inertial gravities
didn't bother me so much as
the gyroscopic spin they put on the
ship so we have a sort of artificial
gravity to hold us against the
curved floor. It's that constant
whirly feeling that gets me. I get
sick on merry-go-rounds, too.
They're having pork for dinner
today. Not me.
October 2, 1960
Feeling much
better today.
Kroger gave me a box of Dramamine
pills. He says they'll help my
stomach. So far, so good.
Lloyd came by, also. "You play
chess?" he asked.
"A little," I admitted.
"How about a game sometime?"
"Sure," I said. "Do you have a
board?"
He didn't.
Lloyd went away then, but the
interview wasn't wasted. I learned
that he
is
tall and
does
have a
freckled face. Maybe we can build
a chessboard. With my paper and
his ballpoint pen and ruler, it should
be easy. Don't know what we'll use
for pieces, though.
Jones (I still haven't learned his
first name) has been up with the
pilot all day. He passed my room
on the way to the galley (the
kitchen) for a cup of dark brown
coffee (they like it thick) and told
me that we were almost past the
Moon. I asked to look, but he said
not yet; the instrument panel is
Top Secret. They'd have to cover
it so I could look out the viewing
screen, and they still need it for
steering or something.
I still haven't met the pilot.
October 3, 1960
Well, I've
met the pilot. He is
kind of squat, with a vulturish neck
and close-set jet-black eyes that
make him look rather mean, but he
was pleasant enough, and said I
could call him Pat. I still don't
know Jones' first name, though Pat
spoke to him, and it sounded like
Flants. That can't be right.
Also, I am one of the first five
men in the history of the world to
see the opposite side of the Moon,
with a bluish blurred crescent beyond
it that Pat said was the Earth.
The back of the Moon isn't much
different from the front. As to the
space in front of the ship, well, it's
all black with white dots in it, and
none of the dots move, except in a
circle that Pat says is a "torque"
result from the gyroscopic spin
we're in. Actually, he explained to
me, the screen is supposed to keep
the image of space locked into
place no matter how much we spin.
But there's some kind of a "drag."
I told him I hoped it didn't mean
we'd land on Mars upside down. He
just stared at me.
I can't say I was too impressed
with that 16 x 19 view of outer
space. It's been done much better
in the movies. There's just no awesomeness
to it, no sense of depth or
immensity. It's as impressive as a
piece of velvet with salt sprinkled
on it.
Lloyd and I made a chessboard
out of a carton. Right now we're using
buttons for men. He's one of
these fast players who don't stop
and think out their moves. And so
far I haven't won a game.
It looks like a long trip.
October 4, 1960
I won
a game. Lloyd mistook my
queen-button for my bishop-button
and left his king in jeopardy, and
I checkmated him next move. He
said chess was a waste of time
and he had important work to do
and he went away.
I went to the galley for coffee
and had a talk about moss with
Kroger. He said there was a good
chance of lichen on Mars, and I
misunderstood and said, "A good
chance of liking
what
on Mars?"
and Kroger finished his coffee and
went up front.
When I got back to my compartment,
Lloyd had taken away the
chessboard and all his buttons. He
told me later he needed it to back
up a star map.
Pat slept mostly all day in his
compartment, and Jones sat and
watched the screen revolve. There
wasn't much to do, so I wrote a
poem, sort of.
Mary, Mary, quite contrary,
How does your garden grow?
With Martian rime, Venusian slime,
And a radioactive hoe.
I showed it to Kroger. He says
it may prove to be environmentally
accurate, but that I should stick to
prose.
October 5, 1960
Learned Jones'
first name.
He wrote something in the ship's
log, and I saw his signature. His
name is Fleance, like in "Macbeth."
He prefers to be called Jones. Pat
uses his first name as a gag. Some
fun.
And only 255 days to go.
April 1, 1961
I've skipped
over the last 177
days or so, because there's nothing
much new. I brought some books
with me on the trip, books that I'd
always meant to read and never
had the time. So now I know all
about
Vanity Fair
,
Pride and Prejudice
,
War and Peace
,
Gone with
the Wind
, and
Babbitt
.
They didn't take as long as I
thought they would, except for
Vanity Fair
. It must have been a
riot when it first came out. I mean,
all those sly digs at the aristocracy,
with copious interpolations by Mr.
Thackeray in case you didn't get
it when he'd pulled a particularly
good gag. Some fun.
And only 78 days to go.
June 1, 1961
Only 17 days
to go. I saw Mars
on the screen today. It seems to be
descending from overhead, but Pat
says that that's the "torque" doing
it. Actually, it's we who are coming
in sideways.
We've all grown beards, too. Pat
said it was against regulations, but
what the hell. We have a contest.
Longest whiskers on landing gets a
prize.
I asked Pat what the prize was
and he told me to go to hell.
June 18, 1961
Mars has
the whole screen
filled. Looks like Death Valley. No
sign of canals, but Pat says that's
because of the dust storm down below.
It's nice to have a "down below"
again. We're going to land, so
I have to go to my bunk. It's all
foam rubber, nylon braid supports
and magnesium tubing. Might as
well be cement for all the good it
did me at takeoff. Earth seems awfully
far away.
June 19, 1961
Well, we're down.
We have
to wear gas masks with oxygen
hook-ups. Kroger says the air is
breathable, but thin, and it has too
much dust in it to be any fun to
inhale. He's all for going out and
looking for lichen, but Pat says he's
got to set up camp, then get instructions
from Earth. So we just have
to wait. The air is very cold, but the
Sun is hot as hell when it hits you.
The sky is a blinding pink, or maybe
more of a pale fuchsia. Kroger
says it's the dust. The sand underfoot
is kind of rose-colored, and not
really gritty. The particles are
round and smooth.
No lichen so far. Kroger says
maybe in the canals, if there are
any canals. Lloyd wants to play
chess again.
Jones won the beard contest. Pat
gave him a cigar he'd smuggled on
board (no smoking was allowed on
the ship), and Jones threw it away.
He doesn't smoke.
June 20, 1961
Got lost today.
Pat told me
not to go too far from camp, so,
when I took a stroll, I made sure
every so often that I could still see
the rocket behind me. Walked for
maybe an hour; then the oxygen
gauge got past the halfway mark,
so I started back toward the rocket.
After maybe ten steps, the rocket
disappeared. One minute it was
standing there, tall and silvery, the
next instant it was gone.
Turned on my radio pack and
got hold of Pat. Told him what happened,
and he told Kroger. Kroger
said I had been following a mirage,
to step back a bit. I did, and I could
see the ship again. Kroger said to
try and walk toward where the ship
seemed to be, even when it wasn't
in view, and meantime they'd come
out after me in the jeep, following
my footprints.
Started walking back, and the
ship vanished again. It reappeared,
disappeared, but I kept going. Finally
saw the real ship, and Lloyd
and Jones waving their arms at me.
They were shouting through their
masks, but I couldn't hear them.
The air is too thin to carry sound
well.
All at once, something gleamed
in their hands, and they started
shooting at me with their rifles.
That's when I heard the noise behind
me. I was too scared to turn
around, but finally Jones and Lloyd
came running over, and I got up
enough nerve to look. There was
nothing there, but on the sand,
paralleling mine, were footprints.
At least I think they were footprints.
Twice as long as mine, and
three times as wide, but kind of
featureless because the sand's loose
and dry. They doubled back on
themselves, spaced considerably
farther apart.
"What was it?" I asked Lloyd
when he got to me.
"Damned if I know," he said. "It
was red and scaly, and I think it
had a tail. It was two heads taller
than you." He shuddered. "Ran off
when we fired."
"Where," said Jones, "are Pat and
Kroger?"
I didn't know. I hadn't seen
them, nor the jeep, on my trip back.
So we followed the wheel tracks for
a while, and they veered off from
my trail and followed another, very
much like the one that had been
paralleling mine when Jones and
Lloyd had taken a shot at the scaly
thing.
"We'd better get them on the
radio," said Jones, turning back
toward the ship.
There wasn't anything on the
radio but static.
Pat and Kroger haven't come
back yet, either.
June 21, 1961
We're not
alone here. More of
the scaly things have come toward
the camp, but a few rifle shots send
them away. They hop like kangaroos
when they're startled. Their
attitudes aren't menacing, but their
appearance is. And Jones says,
"Who knows what's 'menacing' in
an alien?"
We're going to look for Kroger
and Pat today. Jones says we'd better
before another windstorm blows
away the jeep tracks. Fortunately,
the jeep has a leaky oil pan, so we
always have the smears to follow,
unless they get covered up, too.
We're taking extra oxygen, shells,
and rifles. Food, too, of course.
And we're locking up the ship.
It's later
, now. We found the
jeep, but no Kroger or Pat. Lots of
those big tracks nearby. We're taking
the jeep to follow the aliens'
tracks. There's some moss around
here, on reddish brown rocks that
stick up through the sand, just on
the shady side, though. Kroger
must be happy to have found his
lichen.
The trail ended at the brink of
a deep crevice in the ground. Seems
to be an earthquake-type split in
solid rock, with the sand sifting
over this and the far edge like pink
silk cataracts. The bottom is in the
shade and can't be seen. The crack
seems to extend to our left and
right as far as we can look.
There looks like a trail down the
inside of the crevice, but the Sun's
setting, so we're waiting till tomorrow
to go down.
Going down was Jones' idea,
not mine.
June 22, 1961
Well, we're
at the bottom, and
there's water here, a shallow stream
about thirty feet wide that runs
along the center of the canal (we've
decided we're in a canal). No sign
of Pat or Kroger yet, but the sand
here is hard-packed and damp, and
there are normal-size footprints
mingled with the alien ones, sharp
and clear. The aliens seem to have
six or seven toes. It varies from
print to print. And they're barefoot,
too, or else they have the damnedest-looking
shoes in creation.
The constant shower of sand
near the cliff walls is annoying, but
it's sandless (shower-wise) near
the stream, so we're following the
footprints along the bank. Also, the
air's better down here. Still thin,
but not so bad as on the surface.
We're going without masks to save
oxygen for the return trip (Jones
assures me there'll
be
a return
trip), and the air's only a little bit
sandy, but handkerchiefs over nose
and mouth solve this.
We look like desperadoes, what
with the rifles and covered faces. I
said as much to Lloyd and he told
me to shut up. Moss all over the
cliff walls. Swell luck for Kroger.
We've found
Kroger and Pat,
with the help of the aliens. Or maybe
I should call them the Martians.
Either way, it's better than what
Jones calls them.
They took away our rifles and
brought us right to Kroger and Pat,
without our even asking. Jones is
mad at the way they got the rifles so
easily. When we came upon them
(a group of maybe ten, huddling
behind a boulder in ambush), he
fired, but the shots either bounced
off their scales or stuck in their
thick hides. Anyway, they took the
rifles away and threw them into the
stream, and picked us all up and
took us into a hole in the cliff wall.
The hole went on practically forever,
but it didn't get dark. Kroger
tells me that there are phosphorescent
bacteria living in the mold on
the walls. The air has a fresh-dug-grave
smell, but it's richer in oxygen
than even at the stream.
We're in a small cave that is just
off a bigger cave where lots of tunnels
come together. I can't remember
which one we came in through,
and neither can anyone else. Jones
asked me what the hell I kept writing
in the diary for, did I want to
make it a gift to Martian archeologists?
But I said where there's life
there's hope, and now he won't talk
to me. I congratulated Kroger on
the lichen I'd seen, but he just said
a short and unscientific word and
went to sleep.
There's a Martian guarding the
entrance to our cave. I don't know
what they intend to do with us.
Feed us, I hope. So far, they've just
left us here, and we're out of rations.
Kroger tried talking to the guard
once, but he (or it) made a whistling
kind of sound and flashed a
mouthful of teeth. Kroger says the
teeth are in multiple rows, like a
tiger shark's. I'd rather he hadn't
told me.
June 23, 1961, I think
We're either
in a docket or a
zoo. I can't tell which. There's a
rather square platform surrounded
on all four sides by running water,
maybe twenty feet across, and
we're on it. Martians keep coming
to the far edge of the water and
looking at us and whistling at each
other. A little Martian came near
the edge of the water and a larger
Martian whistled like crazy and
dragged it away.
"Water must be dangerous to
them," said Kroger.
"We shoulda brought water pistols,"
Jones muttered.
Pat said maybe we can swim to
safety. Kroger told Pat he was
crazy, that the little island we're on
here underground is bordered by a
fast river that goes into the planet.
We'd end up drowned in some grotto
in the heart of the planet, says
Kroger.
"What the hell," says Pat, "it's
better than starving."
It is not.
June 24, 1961, probably
I'm hungry
. So is everybody
else. Right now I could eat a dinner
raw, in a centrifuge, and keep it
down. A Martian threw a stone at
Jones today, and Jones threw one
back at him and broke off a couple
of scales. The Martian whistled
furiously and went away. When the
crowd thinned out, same as it did
yesterday (must be some sort of
sleeping cycle here), Kroger talked
Lloyd into swimming across the
river and getting the red scales.
Lloyd started at the upstream part
of the current, and was about a hundred
yards below this underground
island before he made the far side.
Sure is a swift current.
But he got the scales, walked
very far upstream of us, and swam
back with them. The stream sides
are steep, like in a fjord, and we
had to lift him out of the swirling
cold water, with the scales gripped
in his fist. Or what was left of the
scales. They had melted down in
the water and left his hand all
sticky.
Kroger took the gummy things,
studied them in the uncertain light,
then tasted them and grinned.
The Martians are made of sugar.
Later, same day
. Kroger
said that the Martian metabolism
must be like Terran (Earth-type)
metabolism, only with no pancreas
to make insulin. They store their
energy on the
outside
of their
bodies, in the form of scales. He's
watched them more closely and
seen that they have long rubbery
tubes for tongues, and that they
now and then suck up water from
the stream while they're watching
us, being careful not to get their lips
(all sugar, of course) wet. He
guesses that their "blood" must be
almost pure water, and that it
washes away (from the inside, of
course) the sugar they need for
energy.
I asked him where the sugar
came from, and he said probably
their bodies isolated carbon from
something (he thought it might be
the moss) and combined it with
the hydrogen and oxygen in the
water (even
I
knew the formula for
water) to make sugar, a common
carbohydrate.
Like plants, on Earth, he said.
Except, instead of using special
cells on leaves to form carbohydrates
with the help of sunpower,
as Earth plants do in photosynthesis
(Kroger spelled that word
for me), they used the
shape
of the
scales like prisms, to isolate the
spectra (another Kroger word)
necessary to form the sugar.
"I don't get it," I said politely,
when he'd finished his spiel.
"Simple," he said, as though he
were addressing me by name.
"They have a twofold reason to fear
water. One: by complete solvency
in that medium, they lose all energy
and die. Two: even partial sprinkling
alters the shape of the scales,
and they are unable to use sunpower
to form more sugar, and still die,
if a bit slower."
"Oh," I said, taking it down verbatim.
"So now what do we do?"
"We remove our boots," said
Kroger, sitting on the ground and
doing so, "and then we cross this
stream, fill the boots with water,
and
spray
our way to freedom."
"Which tunnel do we take?"
asked Pat, his eyes aglow at the
thought of escape.
Kroger shrugged. "We'll have to
chance taking any that seem to
slope upward. In any event, we can
always follow it back and start
again."
"I dunno," said Jones. "Remember
those
teeth
of theirs. They must
be for biting something more substantial
than moss, Kroger."
"We'll risk it," said Pat. "It's better
to go down fighting than to die
of starvation."
The hell it is.
June 24, 1961, for sure
The Martians
have coal
mines.
That's
what they use those
teeth for. We passed through one
and surprised a lot of them chewing
gritty hunks of anthracite out
of the walls. They came running at
us, whistling with those tubelike
tongues, and drooling dry coal dust,
but Pat swung one of his boots in
an arc that splashed all over the
ground in front of them, and they
turned tail (literally) and clattered
off down another tunnel,
sounding like a locomotive whistle
gone berserk.
We made the surface in another
hour, back in the canal, and were
lucky enough to find our own trail
to follow toward the place above
which the jeep still waited.
Jones got the rifles out of the
stream (the Martians had probably
thought they were beyond recovery
there) and we found the jeep. It
was nearly buried in sand, but we
got it cleaned off and running, and
got back to the ship quickly. First
thing we did on arriving was to
break out the stores and have a
celebration feast just outside the
door of the ship.
It was pork again, and I got sick.
June 25, 1961
We're going back
. Pat says
that a week is all we were allowed
to stay and that it's urgent to return
and tell what we've learned
about Mars (we know there are
Martians, and they're made of
sugar).
"Why," I said, "can't we just tell
it on the radio?"
"Because," said Pat, "if we tell
them now, by the time we get back
we'll be yesterday's news. This way
we may be lucky and get a parade."
"Maybe even money," said
Kroger, whose mind wasn't always
on science.
"But they'll ask why we didn't
radio the info, sir," said Jones uneasily.
"The radio," said Pat, nodding to
Lloyd, "was unfortunately broken
shortly after landing."
Lloyd blinked, then nodded
back and walked around the
rocket. I heard a crunching sound
and the shattering of glass, not unlike
the noise made when one
drives a rifle butt through a radio.
Well, it's time for takeoff.
This time
it wasn't so bad. I
thought I was getting my space-legs,
but Pat says there's less gravity on
Mars, so escape velocity didn't
have to be so fast, hence a smoother
(relatively) trip on our shock-absorbing
bunks.
Lloyd wants to play chess again.
I'll be careful not to win this time.
However, if I don't win, maybe this
time
I'll
be the one to quit.
Kroger is busy in his cramped
lab space trying to classify the little
moss he was able to gather, and
Jones and Pat are up front watching
the white specks revolve on that
black velvet again.
Guess I'll take a nap.
June 26, 1961
Hell's bells
. Kroger says
there are two baby Martians loose
on board ship. Pat told him he
was nuts, but there are certain
signs he's right. Like the missing
charcoal in the air-filtration-and-reclaiming
(AFAR) system. And
the water gauges are going down.
But the clincher is those two sugar
crystals Lloyd had grabbed up
when we were in that zoo. They're
gone.
Pat has declared a state of emergency.
Quick thinking, that's Pat.
Lloyd, before he remembered and
turned scarlet, suggested we radio
Earth for instructions. We can't.
Here we are, somewhere in a
void headed for Earth, with enough
air and water left for maybe three
days—if the Martians don't take
any more.
Kroger is thrilled that he is
learning something, maybe, about
Martian reproductive processes.
When he told Pat, Pat put it to a
vote whether or not to jettison
Kroger through the airlock. However,
it was decided that responsibility
was pretty well divided.
Lloyd had gotten the crystals,
Kroger had only studied them, and
Jones had brought them aboard.
So Kroger stays, but meanwhile
the air is getting worse. Pat suggested
Kroger put us all into a state
of suspended animation till landing
time, eight months away. Kroger
said, "How?"
June 27, 1961
Air is foul
and I'm very
thirsty. Kroger says that at least—when
the Martians get bigger—they'll
have to show themselves.
Pat says what do we do
then
? We
can't afford the water we need to
melt them down. Besides, the
melted crystals might
all
turn into
little Martians.
Jones says he'll go down spitting.
Pat says why not dismantle interior
of rocket to find out where
they're holing up? Fine idea.
How do you dismantle riveted
metal plates?
June 28, 1961
The AFAR system
is no more
and the water gauges are still dropping.
Kroger suggests baking bread,
then slicing it, then toasting it till
it turns to carbon, and we can use
the carbon in the AFAR system.
We'll have to try it, I guess.
The Martians
ate the bread.
Jones came forward to tell us the
loaves were cooling, and when he
got back they were gone. However,
he did find a few of the red crystals
on the galley deck (floor). They're
good-sized crystals, too. Which
means so are the Martians.
Kroger says the Martians must
be intelligent, otherwise they
couldn't have guessed at the carbohydrates
present in the bread after
a lifelong diet of anthracite. Pat
says let's jettison Kroger.
This time the vote went against
Kroger, but he got a last-minute reprieve
by suggesting the crystals
be pulverized and mixed with sulphuric
acid. He says this'll produce
carbon.
I certainly hope so.
So does Kroger.
Brief reprieve
for us. The
acid-sugar combination not only
produces carbon but water vapor,
and the gauge has gone up a notch.
That means that we have a quart
of water in the tanks for drinking.
However, the air's a bit better,
and we voted to let Kroger stay inside
the rocket.
Meantime, we have to catch
those Martians.
June 29, 1961
Worse and worse
. Lloyd
caught one of the Martians in the
firing chamber. We had to flood
the chamber with acid to subdue
the creature, which carbonized
nicely. So now we have plenty of
air and water again, but besides
having another Martian still on
the loose, we now don't have
enough acid left in the fuel tanks
to make a landing.
Pat says at least our vector will
carry us to Earth and we can die
on our home planet, which is better
than perishing in space.
The hell it is.
March 3, 1962
Earth in sight
. The other
Martian is still with us. He's where
we can't get at him without blow-torches,
but he can't get at the carbon
in the AFAR system, either,
which is a help. However, his tail
is prehensile, and now and then it
snakes out through an air duct and
yanks food right off the table from
under our noses.
Kroger says watch out.
We
are
made of carbohydrates, too. I'd
rather not have known.
March 4, 1962
Earth fills
the screen in the
control room. Pat says if we're
lucky, he might be able to use the
bit of fuel we have left to set us
in a descending spiral into one of
the oceans. The rocket is tighter
than a submarine, he insists, and
it will float till we're rescued, if
the plates don't crack under the impact.
We all agreed to try it. Not that
we thought it had a good chance of
working, but none of us had a better
idea.
I guess
you know the rest of
the story, about how that destroyer
spotted us and got us and
my diary aboard, and towed the
rocket to San Francisco. News of
the "captured Martian" leaked out,
and we all became nine-day wonders
until the dismantling of the
rocket.
Kroger says he must have dissolved
in the water, and wonders
what
that
would do. There are
about a thousand of those crystal-scales
on a Martian.
So last week we found out, when
those red-scaled things began clambering
out of the sea on every coastal
region on Earth. Kroger tried
to explain to me about salinity osmosis
and hydrostatic pressure and
crystalline life, but in no time at all
he lost me.
The point is, bullets won't stop
these things, and wherever a crystal
falls, a new Martian springs up
in a few weeks. It looks like the
five of us have abetted an invasion
from Mars.
Needless to say, we're no longer
heroes.
I haven't heard from Pat or
Lloyd for a week. Jones was picked
up attacking a candy factory yesterday,
and Kroger and I were allowed
to sign on for the flight to
Venus scheduled within the next
few days—because of our experience.
Kroger says there's only enough
fuel for a one-way trip. I don't care.
I've always wanted to travel with
the President.
—JACK SHARKEY
Transcriber's Note:
This etext was produced from
Galaxy Magazine
June 1960.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
typographical errors have been corrected without note. | The narrator is going to fabricate more events to make his story sound appealing to the general public | They have the least amount of technical experience compared to the other members of the Martian crew | They were permitted to attend due to their 'experience,' but their experience created a major crisis on Earth | The narrator's deadpan tone is not likely to convey the true excitement of the Venusian journey | 2 |
26569_ZA7RADIT_1 | What is the symbolism of the title? | Transcriber’s note:
This story was published in
Galaxy
magazine, June 1960.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.
[p
135
]
By CHARLES V. DE VET
monkey on his back
Under the cloud of cast-off identities
lay the shape of another man—
was it himself?
Illustrated by DILLON
HE was walking endlessly
down a long, glass-walled
corridor. Bright sunlight
slanted in through one wall, on the
blue knapsack across his shoulders.
Who he was, and what he was doing
here, was clouded. The truth lurked
in some corner of his consciousness,
but it was not reached by surface
awareness.
The corridor opened at last into
a large high-domed room, much
like a railway station or an air terminal.
He walked straight ahead.
At the sight of him a man leaning
negligently against a stone pillar,
to his right but within vision,
straightened and barked an order
to him, “Halt!” He lengthened his
stride but gave no other sign.
[p
136
]
Two men hurried through a
doorway of a small anteroom to his
left, calling to him. He turned away
and began to run.
Shouts and the sound of charging
feet came from behind him. He
cut to the right, running toward the
escalator to the second floor. Another
pair of men were hurrying
down, two steps at a stride. With
no break in pace he veered into an
opening beside the escalator.
At the first turn he saw that the
aisle merely circled the stairway,
coming out into the depot again on
the other side. It was a trap. He
glanced quickly around him.
At the rear of the space was a
row of lockers for traveler use. He
slipped a coin into a pay slot,
opened the zipper on his bag and
pulled out a flat briefcase. It took
him only a few seconds to push the
case into the compartment, lock it
and slide the key along the floor
beneath the locker.
There was nothing to do after
that—except wait.
The men pursuing him came
hurtling around the turn in the
aisle. He kicked his knapsack to
one side, spreading his feet wide
with an instinctive motion.
Until that instant he had intended
to fight. Now he swiftly
reassessed the odds. There were
five of them, he saw. He should be
able to incapacitate two or three
and break out. But the fact that
they had been expecting him meant
that others would very probably
be waiting outside. His best course
now was to sham ignorance. He
relaxed.
He offered no resistance as they
reached him.
They were not gentle men. A tall
ruffian, copper-brown face damp
with perspiration and body oil,
grabbed him by the jacket and
slammed him back against the
lockers. As he shifted his weight
to keep his footing someone drove
a fist into his face. He started to
raise his hands; and a hard flat
object crashed against the side of
his skull.
The starch went out of his legs.
“D
O you make anything out of
it?” the psychoanalyst Milton
Bergstrom, asked.
John Zarwell shook his head.
“Did I talk while I was under?”
“Oh, yes. You were supposed to.
That way I follow pretty well what
you’re reenacting.”
“How does it tie in with what I
told you before?”
Bergstrom’s neat-boned, fair-skinned
face betrayed no emotion
other than an introspective stillness
of his normally alert gaze. “I see
no connection,” he decided, his
words once again precise and meticulous.
“We don’t have enough to
go on. Do you feel able to try another
comanalysis this afternoon
yet?”
“I don’t see why not.” Zarwell
[p
137
]
opened the collar of his shirt. The
day was hot, and the room had no
air conditioning, still a rare luxury
on St. Martin’s. The office window
was open, but it let in no freshness,
only the mildly rank odor that pervaded
all the planet’s habitable
area.
“Good.” Bergstrom rose. “The
serum is quite harmless, John.” He
maintained a professional diversionary
chatter as he administered
the drug. “A scopolamine derivative
that’s been well tested.”
The floor beneath Zarwell’s feet
assumed abruptly the near transfluent
consistency of a damp
sponge. It rose in a foot-high wave
and rolled gently toward the far
wall.
Bergstrom continued talking,
with practiced urbanity. “When
psychiatry was a less exact science,”
his voice went on, seeming to come
from a great distance, “a doctor
had to spend weeks, sometimes
months or years interviewing a
patient. If he was skilled enough,
he could sort the relevancies from
the vast amount of chaff. We are
able now, with the help of the
serum, to confine our discourses to
matters cogent to the patient’s
trouble.”
The floor continued its transmutation,
and Zarwell sank deep into
viscous depths. “Lie back and relax.
Don’t …”
The words tumbled down from
above. They faded, were gone.
ZARWELL found himself
<!-- original does not use drop cap here, it just capitalises the first two words -->
standing on a vast plain. There was
no sky above, and no horizon in the
distance. He was in a place without
space or dimension. There was
nothing here except himself—and
the gun that he held in his hand.
A weapon beautiful in its efficient
simplicity.
He should know all about the
instrument, its purpose and workings,
but he could not bring his
thoughts into rational focus. His
forehead creased with his mental
effort.
Abruptly the unreality about
him shifted perspective. He was
approaching—not walking, but
merely shortening the space between
them—the man who held
the gun. The man who was himself.
The other “himself” drifted
nearer also, as though drawn by a
mutual attraction.
The man with the gun raised his
weapon and pressed the trigger.
With the action the perspective
shifted again. He was watching the
face of the man he shot jerk and
twitch, expand and contract. The
face was unharmed, yet it was no
longer the same. No longer his own
features.
The stranger face smiled approvingly
at him.
“O
DD,” Bergstrom said.
<!-- original does not use drop cap here, it just capitalises the first two words -->
He brought his hands up and joined
the tips of his fingers against his
chest. “But it’s another piece in the
[p
138
]
jig-saw. In time it will fit into
place.” He paused. “It means no
more to you than the first, I suppose?”
“No,” Zarwell answered.
He was not a talking man, Bergstrom
reflected. It was more than
reticence, however. The man had
a hard granite core, only partially
concealed by his present perplexity.
He was a man who could handle
himself well in an emergency.
Bergstrom shrugged, dismissing
his strayed thoughts. “I expected
as much. A quite normal first phase
of treatment.” He straightened a
paper on his desk. “I think that will
be enough for today. Twice in one
sitting is about all we ever try.
Otherwise some particular episode
might cause undue mental stress,
and set up a block.” He glanced
down at his appointment pad. “Tomorrow
at two, then?”
Zarwell grunted acknowledgment
and pushed himself to his
feet, apparently unaware that his
shirt clung damply to his body.
THE sun was still high when
Zarwell left the analyst’s office.
The white marble of the city’s
buildings shimmered in the afternoon
heat, squat and austere as
giant tree trunks, pock-marked and
gray-mottled with windows. Zarwell
was careful not to rest his hand
on the flesh searing surface of the
stone.
The evening meal hour was approaching
when he reached the
Flats, on the way to his apartment.
The streets of the old section were
near-deserted. The only sounds he
heard as he passed were the occasional
cry of a baby, chronically
uncomfortable in the day’s heat,
and the lowing of imported cattle
waiting in a nearby shed to be
shipped to the country.
All St. Martin’s has a distinctive
smell, as of an arid dried-out
swamp, with a faint taint of fish.
But in the Flats the odor changes.
Here is the smell of factories, warehouses,
and trading marts; the smell
of stale cooking drifting from the
homes of the laborers and lower
class techmen who live there.
Zarwell passed a group of
smaller children playing a desultory
game of lic-lic for pieces of
candy and cigarettes. Slowly he
climbed the stairs of a stone flat.
He prepared a supper for himself
and ate it without either enjoyment
or distaste. He lay down, fully
clothed, on his bed. The visit to the
analyst had done nothing to dispel
his ennui.
[p
139
]
The next morning when Zarwell
awoke he lay for a moment, unmoving.
The feeling was there
again, like a scene waiting only to
be gazed at directly to be perceived.
It was as though a great wisdom
lay at the edge of understanding.
If he rested quietly it would
all come to him. Yet always, when
his mind lost its sleep-induced
[p
140
]
lethargy, the moment of near understanding
slipped away.
This morning, however, the sense
of disorientation did not pass with
full wakefulness. He achieved no
understanding, but the strangeness
did not leave as he sat up.
He gazed about him. The room
did not seem to be his own. The
furnishings, and the clothing he observed
in a closet, might have belonged
to a stranger.
He pulled himself from his blankets,
his body moving with mechanical
reaction. The slippers into
which he put his feet were larger
than he had expected them to be.
He walked about the small apartment.
The place was familiar, but
only as it would have been if he
had studied it from blueprints, not
as though he lived there.
The feeling was still with him
when he returned to the psychoanalyst.
THE scene this time was more
kaleidoscopic, less personal.
A village was being ravaged.
Men struggled and died in the
streets. Zarwell moved among
them, seldom taking part in the
individual clashes, yet a moving
force in the
conflict
.
The background changed. He
understood that he was on a different
world.
Here a city burned. Its resistance
was nearing its end. Zarwell was
riding a shaggy pony outside a high
wall surrounding the stricken metropolis.
He moved in and joined a
party of short, bearded men, directing
them as they battered at the
wall with a huge log mounted on a
many-wheeled truck.
The log broke a breach in the
concrete and the besiegers charged
through, carrying back the defenders
who sought vainly to plug the
gap. Soon there would be rioting
in the streets again, plundering and
killing.
Zarwell was not the leader of the
invaders, only a lesser figure in the
rebellion. But he had played a leading
part in the planning of the
strategy that led to the city’s fall.
The job had been well done.
Time passed, without visible
break in the panorama. Now Zarwell
was fleeing, pursued by the
same bearded men who had been
his comrades before. Still he moved
with the same firm purpose, vigilant,
resourceful, and well prepared
for the eventuality that had befallen.
He made his escape without
difficulty.
He alighted from a space ship on
still another world—another shift
in time—and the atmosphere of
conflict engulfed him.
Weary but resigned he accepted
it, and did what he had to do …
BERGSTROM was regarding
<!-- original does not use drop cap here, it just capitalises the first two words -->
him with speculative scrutiny.
“You’ve had quite a past, apparently,”
he observed.
[p
141
]
Zarwell smiled with mild embarrassment.
“At least in my dreams.”
“Dreams?” Bergstrom’s eyes
widened in surprise. “Oh, I beg your
pardon. I must have forgotten to
explain. This work is so routine to
me that sometimes I forget it’s all
new to a patient. Actually what you
experienced under the drug were
not dreams. They were recollections
of real episodes from your
past.”
Zarwell’s expression became
wary. He watched Bergstrom
closely. After a minute, however,
he seemed satisfied, and he let himself
settle back against the cushion
of his chair. “I remember nothing
of what I saw,” he observed.
“That’s why you’re here, you
know,” Bergstrom answered. “To
help you remember.”
“But everything under the drug
is so …”
“Haphazard? That’s true. The
recall episodes are always purely
random, with no chronological sequence.
Our problem will be to reassemble
them in proper order
later. Or some particular scene may
trigger a complete memory return.
“It is my considered opinion,”
Bergstrom went on, “that your lost
memory will turn out to be no ordinary
amnesia. I believe we will find
that your mind has been tampered
with.”
“Nothing I’ve seen under the
drug fits into the past I do remember.”
“That’s what makes me so certain,”
Bergstrom said confidently.
“You don’t remember what we
have shown to be true. Conversely
then, what you think you remember
must be false. It must have been
implanted there. But we can go
into that later. For today I think
we have done enough. This episode
was quite prolonged.”
“I won’t have any time off again
until next week end,” Zarwell reminded
him.
“That’s right.” Bergstrom
thought for a moment. “We
shouldn’t let this hang too long.
Could you come here after work
tomorrow?”
“I suppose I could.”
“Fine,” Bergstrom said with satisfaction.
“I’ll admit I’m considerably
more than casually interested
in your case by this time.”
A WORK truck picked Zarwell
up the next morning and he
rode with a tech crew to the edge of
the reclam area. Beside the belt
bringing ocean muck from the converter
plant at the seashore his
bulldozer was waiting.
He took his place behind the
drive wheel and began working dirt
down between windbreakers anchored
in the rock. Along a makeshift
road into the badlands trucks
brought crushed lime and phosphorus
to supplement the ocean
sediment. The progress of life from
the sea to the land was a mechanical
[p
142
]
process of this growing world.
Nearly two hundred years ago,
when Earth established a colony on
St. Martin’s, the land surface of the
planet had been barren. Only its
seas thrived with animal and vegetable
life. The necessary machinery
and technicians had been supplied
by Earth, and the long struggle began
to fit the world for human
needs. When Zarwell arrived, six
months before, the vitalized area
already extended three hundred
miles along the coast, and sixty
miles inland. And every day the
progress continued. A large percentage
of the energy and resources
of the world were devoted to that
essential expansion.
The reclam crews filled and
sodded the sterile rock, planted
binding grasses, grain and trees, and
diverted rivers to keep it fertile.
When there were no rivers to divert
they blasted out springs and lakes
in the foothills to make their own.
Biologists developed the necessary
germ and insect life from what they
found in the sea. Where that failed,
they imported microorganisms
from Earth.
Three rubber-tracked crawlers
picked their way down from the
mountains until they joined the
road passing the belt. They were
loaded with ore that would be
smelted into metal for depleted
Earth, or for other colonies short
of minerals. It was St. Martin’s only
export thus far.
Zarwell pulled his sun helmet
lower, to better guard his hot, dry
features. The wind blew continuously
on St. Martin’s, but it furnished
small relief from the heat.
After its three-thousand-mile journey
across scorched sterile rock, it
sucked the moisture from a man’s
body, bringing a membrane-shrinking
dryness to the nostrils as it was
breathed in. With it came also the
cloying taste of limestone in a
worker’s mouth.
Zarwell gazed idly about at the
other laborers. Fully three-quarters
of them were beri-rabza ridden. A
cure for the skin fungus had not
yet been found; the men’s faces
and hands were scabbed and red.
The colony had grown to near self-sufficiency,
would soon have a moderate
prosperity, yet they still
lacked adequate medical and research
facilities.
Not all the world’s citizens were
content.
Bergstrom was waiting in his office
when Zarwell arrived that
evening.
HE was lying motionless on a
hard cot, with his eyes closed,
yet with his every sense sharply
quickened. Tentatively he tightened
small muscles in his arms and
legs. Across his wrists and thighs
he felt straps binding him to the
cot.
“So that’s our big, bad man,” a
coarse voice above him observed
[p
143
]
caustically. “He doesn’t look so
tough now, does he?”
“It might have been better to
kill him right away,” a second, less
confident voice said. “It’s supposed
to be impossible to hold him.”
“Don’t be stupid. We just do
what we’re told. We’ll hold him.”
“What do you think they’ll do
with him?”
“Execute him, I suppose,” the
harsh voice said matter-of-factly.
“They’re probably just curious to
see what he looks like first. They’ll
be disappointed.”
Zarwell opened his eyes a slit to
observe his surroundings.
It was a mistake. “He’s out of
it,” the first speaker said, and Zarwell
allowed his eyes to open fully.
The voice, he saw, belonged to
the big man who had bruised him
against the locker at the spaceport.
Irrelevantly he wondered how he
knew now that it had been a spaceport.
His captor’s broad face jeered
down at Zarwell. “Have a good
sleep?” he asked with mock solicitude.
Zarwell did not deign to acknowledge
that he heard.
The big man turned. “You can
tell the Chief he’s awake,” he said.
Zarwell followed his gaze to where
a younger man, with a blond lock of
hair on his forehead, stood behind
him. The youth nodded and went
out, while the other pulled a chair
up to the side of Zarwell’s cot.
While their attention was away
from him Zarwell had unobtrusively
loosened his bonds as much as
possible with arm leverage. As the
big man drew his chair nearer, he
made the hand farthest from him
tight and compact and worked it
free of the leather loop. He waited.
The big man belched. “You’re
supposed to be great stuff in a situation
like this,” he said, his smoke-tan
face splitting in a grin that revealed
large square teeth. “How
about giving me a sample?”
“You’re a yellow-livered bastard,”
Zarwell told him.
The grin faded from the oily face
as the man stood up. He leaned over
the cot—and Zarwell’s left hand
shot up and locked about his throat,
joined almost immediately by the
right.
The man’s mouth opened and he
tried to yell as he threw himself
frantically backward. He clawed at
the hands about his neck. When
that failed to break the grip he suddenly
reversed his weight and
drove his fist at Zarwell’s head.
Zarwell pulled the struggling
body down against his chest and
held it there until all agitated
movement ceased. He sat up then,
letting the body slide to the floor.
The straps about his thighs came
loose with little effort.
THE analyst dabbed at his upper
lip with a handkerchief. “The
episodes are beginning to tie together,”
he said, with an attempt at
[p
144
]
nonchalance. “The next couple
should do it.”
Zarwell did not answer. His
memory seemed on the point of
complete return, and he sat quietly,
hopefully. However, nothing more
came and he returned his attention
to his more immediate problem.
Opening a button on his shirt, he
pulled back a strip of plastic cloth
just below his rib cage and took
out a small flat pistol. He held it
in the palm of his hand. He knew
now why he always carried it.
Bergstrom had his bad moment.
“You’re not going to …” he began
at the sight of the gun. He tried
again. “You must be joking.”
“I have very little sense of humor,”
Zarwell corrected him.
“You’d be foolish!”
Bergstrom obviously realized
how close he was to death. Yet
surprisingly, after the first start,
he showed little fear. Zarwell had
thought the man a bit soft, too
adjusted to a life of ease and some
prestige to meet danger calmly.
Curiosity restrained his trigger finger.
“Why would I be foolish?” he
asked. “Your Meninger oath of inviolable
confidence?”
Bergstrom shook his head. “I
know it’s been broken before. But
you need me. You’re not through,
you know. If you killed me you’d
still have to trust some other
analyst.”
“Is that the best you can do?”
“No.” Bergstrom was angry now.
“But use that logical mind you’re
supposed to have! Scenes before
this have shown what kind of man
you are. Just because this last happened
here on St. Martin’s makes
little difference. If I was going to
turn you in to the police, I’d have
done it before this.”
Zarwell debated with himself the
truth of what the other had said.
“Why didn’t you turn me in?” he
asked.
“Because you’re no mad-dog
killer!” Now that the crisis seemed
to be past, Bergstrom spoke more
calmly, even allowed himself to
relax. “You’re still pretty much in
the fog about yourself. I read more
in those comanalyses than you did.
I even know who you are!”
Zarwell’s eyebrows raised.
“Who am I?” he asked, very interested
now. Without attention he
put his pistol away in a trouser
pocket.
Bergstrom brushed the question
aside with one hand. “Your name
makes little difference. You’ve used
many. But you are an idealist. Your
killings were necessary to bring
justice to the places you visited. By
now you’re almost a legend among
the human worlds. I’d like to talk
more with you on that later.”
While Zarwell considered, Bergstrom
pressed his advantage. “One
more scene might do it,” he said.
“Should we try again—if you trust
me, that is?”
[p
145
]
Zarwell made his decision quickly.
“Go ahead,” he answered.
ALL Zarwell’s attention seemed
on the cigar he lit as he rode
down the escalator, but he surveyed
the terminal carefully over the rim
of his hand. He spied no suspicious
loungers.
Behind the escalator he groped
along the floor beneath the lockers
until he found his key. The briefcase
was under his arm a minute
later.
In the basement lave he put a
coin in the pay slot of a private
compartment and went in.
As he zipped open the briefcase
he surveyed his features in the mirror.
A small muscle at the corner of
one eye twitched spasmodically.
One cheek wore a frozen quarter
smile. Thirty-six hours under the
paralysis was longer than advisable.
The muscles should be rested at
least every twenty hours.
Fortunately his natural features
would serve as an adequate disguise
now.
He adjusted the ring setting on
the pistol-shaped instrument that
he took from his case, and carefully
rayed several small areas of
his face, loosening muscles that had
been tight too long. He sighed
gratefully when he finished, massaging
his cheeks and forehead with
considerable pleasure. Another
glance in the mirror satisfied him
with the changes that had been
made. He turned to his briefcase
again and exchanged the gun for
a small syringe, which he pushed
into a trouser pocket, and a single-edged
razor blade.
Removing his fiber-cloth jacket
he slashed it into strips with the
razor blade and flushed it down the
disposal bowl. With the sleeves of
his blouse rolled up he had the
appearance of a typical workman
as he strolled from the compartment.
Back at the locker he replaced
the briefcase and, with a wad of
gum, glued the key to the bottom
of the locker frame.
One step more. Taking the syringe
from his pocket, he plunged
the needle into his forearm and
tossed the instrument down a
waste chute. He took three more
steps and paused uncertainly.
When he looked about him it
was with the expression of a man
waking from a vivid dream.
“Q
UITE ingenious,” Graves
murmured admiringly. “You
had your mind already preconditioned
for the shot. But why would
you deliberately give yourself amnesia?”
“What better disguise than to
believe the part you’re playing?”
“A good man must have done
that job on your mind,” Bergstrom
commented. “I’d have hesitated to
try it myself. It must have taken a
lot of trust on your part.”
[p
146
]
“Trust and money,” Zarwell said
drily.
“Your memory’s back then?”
Zarwell nodded.
“I’m glad to hear that,” Bergstrom
assured him. “Now that
you’re well again I’d like to introduce
you to a man named Vernon
Johnson. This world …”
Zarwell stopped him with an upraised
hand. “Good God, man, can’t
you see the reason for all this? I’m
tired. I’m trying to quit.”
“Quit?” Bergstrom did not quite
follow him.
“It started on my home colony,”
Zarwell explained listlessly. “A
gang of hoods had taken over the
government. I helped organize a
movement to get them out. There
was some bloodshed, but it went
quite well. Several months later an
unofficial envoy from another
world asked several of us to give
them a hand on the same kind of
job. The political conditions there
were rotten. We went with him.
Again we were successful. It seems
I have a kind of genius for that
sort of thing.”
He stretched out his legs and regarded
them thoughtfully. “I
learned then the truth of Russell’s
saying: ‘When the oppressed win
their freedom they are as oppressive
as their former masters.’ When
they went bad, I opposed them.
This time I failed. But I escaped
again. I have quite a talent for that
also.
“I’m not a professional do-gooder.”
Zarwell’s tone appealed
to Bergstrom for understanding. “I
have only a normal man’s indignation
at injustice. And now I’ve done
my share. Yet, wherever I go, the
word eventually gets out, and I’m
right back in a fight again. It’s like
the proverbial monkey on my back.
I can’t get rid of it.”
He rose. “That disguise and
memory planting were supposed to
get me out of it. I should have
known it wouldn’t work. But this
time I’m not going to be drawn
back in! You and your Vernon
Johnson can do your own revolting.
I’m through!”
Bergstrom did not argue as he
left.
RESTLESSNESS drove Zarwell
from his flat the next day—a
legal holiday on St. Martin’s. At
a railed-off lot he stopped and loitered
in the shadow of an adjacent
building watching workmen drilling
an excavation for a new structure.
When a man strolled to his side
and stood watching the workmen,
he was not surprised. He waited for
the other to speak.
“I’d like to talk to you, if you
can spare a few minutes,” the
stranger said.
Zarwell turned and studied the
man without answering. He was
medium tall, with the body of an
athlete, though perhaps ten years
[p
147
]
beyond the age of sports. He had
a manner of contained energy.
“You’re Johnson?” he asked.
The man nodded.
Zarwell tried to feel the anger he
wanted to feel, but somehow it
would not come. “We have nothing
to talk about,” was the best he
could manage.
“Then will you just listen? After,
I’ll leave—if you tell me to.”
Against his will he found himself
liking the man, and wanting at least
to be courteous. He inclined his
head toward a curb wastebox with
a flat top. “Should we sit?”
Johnson smiled agreeably and
they walked over to the box and
sat down.
“When this colony was first
founded,” Johnson began without
preamble, “the administrative body
was a governor, and a council of
twelve. Their successors were to
be elected biennially. At first they
were. Then things changed. We
haven’t had an election now in the
last twenty-three years. St. Martin’s
is beginning to prosper. Yet
the only ones receiving the benefits
are the rulers. The citizens work
twelve hours a day. They are poorly
housed
, poorly fed, poorly clothed.
They …”
Zarwell found himself not listening
as Johnson’s voice went on. The
story was always the same. But why
did they always try to drag him into
their troubles?
Why hadn’t he chosen some
other world on which to hide?
The last question prompted a
new thought. Just why had he
chosen St. Martin’s? Was it only a
coincidence? Or had he,
subconsciously
at least, picked this particular
world? He had always
considered himself the unwilling
subject of glib persuaders … but
mightn’t some inner compulsion of
his own have put the monkey on his
back?
“… and we need your help.”
Johnson had finished his speech.
Zarwell gazed up at the bright
sky. He pulled in a long breath,
and let it out in a sigh.
“What are your plans so far?”
he asked wearily.
—
CHARLES V. DE VET | The monkey represents the series of false memories implanted in Zarwell's mind | The monkey represents Zarwell's affliction with ennui after becoming a civilian and living a more mundane existence | The monkey represents Dr. Bergstrom's manipulative influence on Zarwell's psyche | The monkey represents Zarwell's pattern of joining resistance movements, only to watch them turn corrupt | 3 |
26569_ZA7RADIT_2 | What motivates Zarwell to take on the 'missions' he leads? | Transcriber’s note:
This story was published in
Galaxy
magazine, June 1960.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.
[p
135
]
By CHARLES V. DE VET
monkey on his back
Under the cloud of cast-off identities
lay the shape of another man—
was it himself?
Illustrated by DILLON
HE was walking endlessly
down a long, glass-walled
corridor. Bright sunlight
slanted in through one wall, on the
blue knapsack across his shoulders.
Who he was, and what he was doing
here, was clouded. The truth lurked
in some corner of his consciousness,
but it was not reached by surface
awareness.
The corridor opened at last into
a large high-domed room, much
like a railway station or an air terminal.
He walked straight ahead.
At the sight of him a man leaning
negligently against a stone pillar,
to his right but within vision,
straightened and barked an order
to him, “Halt!” He lengthened his
stride but gave no other sign.
[p
136
]
Two men hurried through a
doorway of a small anteroom to his
left, calling to him. He turned away
and began to run.
Shouts and the sound of charging
feet came from behind him. He
cut to the right, running toward the
escalator to the second floor. Another
pair of men were hurrying
down, two steps at a stride. With
no break in pace he veered into an
opening beside the escalator.
At the first turn he saw that the
aisle merely circled the stairway,
coming out into the depot again on
the other side. It was a trap. He
glanced quickly around him.
At the rear of the space was a
row of lockers for traveler use. He
slipped a coin into a pay slot,
opened the zipper on his bag and
pulled out a flat briefcase. It took
him only a few seconds to push the
case into the compartment, lock it
and slide the key along the floor
beneath the locker.
There was nothing to do after
that—except wait.
The men pursuing him came
hurtling around the turn in the
aisle. He kicked his knapsack to
one side, spreading his feet wide
with an instinctive motion.
Until that instant he had intended
to fight. Now he swiftly
reassessed the odds. There were
five of them, he saw. He should be
able to incapacitate two or three
and break out. But the fact that
they had been expecting him meant
that others would very probably
be waiting outside. His best course
now was to sham ignorance. He
relaxed.
He offered no resistance as they
reached him.
They were not gentle men. A tall
ruffian, copper-brown face damp
with perspiration and body oil,
grabbed him by the jacket and
slammed him back against the
lockers. As he shifted his weight
to keep his footing someone drove
a fist into his face. He started to
raise his hands; and a hard flat
object crashed against the side of
his skull.
The starch went out of his legs.
“D
O you make anything out of
it?” the psychoanalyst Milton
Bergstrom, asked.
John Zarwell shook his head.
“Did I talk while I was under?”
“Oh, yes. You were supposed to.
That way I follow pretty well what
you’re reenacting.”
“How does it tie in with what I
told you before?”
Bergstrom’s neat-boned, fair-skinned
face betrayed no emotion
other than an introspective stillness
of his normally alert gaze. “I see
no connection,” he decided, his
words once again precise and meticulous.
“We don’t have enough to
go on. Do you feel able to try another
comanalysis this afternoon
yet?”
“I don’t see why not.” Zarwell
[p
137
]
opened the collar of his shirt. The
day was hot, and the room had no
air conditioning, still a rare luxury
on St. Martin’s. The office window
was open, but it let in no freshness,
only the mildly rank odor that pervaded
all the planet’s habitable
area.
“Good.” Bergstrom rose. “The
serum is quite harmless, John.” He
maintained a professional diversionary
chatter as he administered
the drug. “A scopolamine derivative
that’s been well tested.”
The floor beneath Zarwell’s feet
assumed abruptly the near transfluent
consistency of a damp
sponge. It rose in a foot-high wave
and rolled gently toward the far
wall.
Bergstrom continued talking,
with practiced urbanity. “When
psychiatry was a less exact science,”
his voice went on, seeming to come
from a great distance, “a doctor
had to spend weeks, sometimes
months or years interviewing a
patient. If he was skilled enough,
he could sort the relevancies from
the vast amount of chaff. We are
able now, with the help of the
serum, to confine our discourses to
matters cogent to the patient’s
trouble.”
The floor continued its transmutation,
and Zarwell sank deep into
viscous depths. “Lie back and relax.
Don’t …”
The words tumbled down from
above. They faded, were gone.
ZARWELL found himself
<!-- original does not use drop cap here, it just capitalises the first two words -->
standing on a vast plain. There was
no sky above, and no horizon in the
distance. He was in a place without
space or dimension. There was
nothing here except himself—and
the gun that he held in his hand.
A weapon beautiful in its efficient
simplicity.
He should know all about the
instrument, its purpose and workings,
but he could not bring his
thoughts into rational focus. His
forehead creased with his mental
effort.
Abruptly the unreality about
him shifted perspective. He was
approaching—not walking, but
merely shortening the space between
them—the man who held
the gun. The man who was himself.
The other “himself” drifted
nearer also, as though drawn by a
mutual attraction.
The man with the gun raised his
weapon and pressed the trigger.
With the action the perspective
shifted again. He was watching the
face of the man he shot jerk and
twitch, expand and contract. The
face was unharmed, yet it was no
longer the same. No longer his own
features.
The stranger face smiled approvingly
at him.
“O
DD,” Bergstrom said.
<!-- original does not use drop cap here, it just capitalises the first two words -->
He brought his hands up and joined
the tips of his fingers against his
chest. “But it’s another piece in the
[p
138
]
jig-saw. In time it will fit into
place.” He paused. “It means no
more to you than the first, I suppose?”
“No,” Zarwell answered.
He was not a talking man, Bergstrom
reflected. It was more than
reticence, however. The man had
a hard granite core, only partially
concealed by his present perplexity.
He was a man who could handle
himself well in an emergency.
Bergstrom shrugged, dismissing
his strayed thoughts. “I expected
as much. A quite normal first phase
of treatment.” He straightened a
paper on his desk. “I think that will
be enough for today. Twice in one
sitting is about all we ever try.
Otherwise some particular episode
might cause undue mental stress,
and set up a block.” He glanced
down at his appointment pad. “Tomorrow
at two, then?”
Zarwell grunted acknowledgment
and pushed himself to his
feet, apparently unaware that his
shirt clung damply to his body.
THE sun was still high when
Zarwell left the analyst’s office.
The white marble of the city’s
buildings shimmered in the afternoon
heat, squat and austere as
giant tree trunks, pock-marked and
gray-mottled with windows. Zarwell
was careful not to rest his hand
on the flesh searing surface of the
stone.
The evening meal hour was approaching
when he reached the
Flats, on the way to his apartment.
The streets of the old section were
near-deserted. The only sounds he
heard as he passed were the occasional
cry of a baby, chronically
uncomfortable in the day’s heat,
and the lowing of imported cattle
waiting in a nearby shed to be
shipped to the country.
All St. Martin’s has a distinctive
smell, as of an arid dried-out
swamp, with a faint taint of fish.
But in the Flats the odor changes.
Here is the smell of factories, warehouses,
and trading marts; the smell
of stale cooking drifting from the
homes of the laborers and lower
class techmen who live there.
Zarwell passed a group of
smaller children playing a desultory
game of lic-lic for pieces of
candy and cigarettes. Slowly he
climbed the stairs of a stone flat.
He prepared a supper for himself
and ate it without either enjoyment
or distaste. He lay down, fully
clothed, on his bed. The visit to the
analyst had done nothing to dispel
his ennui.
[p
139
]
The next morning when Zarwell
awoke he lay for a moment, unmoving.
The feeling was there
again, like a scene waiting only to
be gazed at directly to be perceived.
It was as though a great wisdom
lay at the edge of understanding.
If he rested quietly it would
all come to him. Yet always, when
his mind lost its sleep-induced
[p
140
]
lethargy, the moment of near understanding
slipped away.
This morning, however, the sense
of disorientation did not pass with
full wakefulness. He achieved no
understanding, but the strangeness
did not leave as he sat up.
He gazed about him. The room
did not seem to be his own. The
furnishings, and the clothing he observed
in a closet, might have belonged
to a stranger.
He pulled himself from his blankets,
his body moving with mechanical
reaction. The slippers into
which he put his feet were larger
than he had expected them to be.
He walked about the small apartment.
The place was familiar, but
only as it would have been if he
had studied it from blueprints, not
as though he lived there.
The feeling was still with him
when he returned to the psychoanalyst.
THE scene this time was more
kaleidoscopic, less personal.
A village was being ravaged.
Men struggled and died in the
streets. Zarwell moved among
them, seldom taking part in the
individual clashes, yet a moving
force in the
conflict
.
The background changed. He
understood that he was on a different
world.
Here a city burned. Its resistance
was nearing its end. Zarwell was
riding a shaggy pony outside a high
wall surrounding the stricken metropolis.
He moved in and joined a
party of short, bearded men, directing
them as they battered at the
wall with a huge log mounted on a
many-wheeled truck.
The log broke a breach in the
concrete and the besiegers charged
through, carrying back the defenders
who sought vainly to plug the
gap. Soon there would be rioting
in the streets again, plundering and
killing.
Zarwell was not the leader of the
invaders, only a lesser figure in the
rebellion. But he had played a leading
part in the planning of the
strategy that led to the city’s fall.
The job had been well done.
Time passed, without visible
break in the panorama. Now Zarwell
was fleeing, pursued by the
same bearded men who had been
his comrades before. Still he moved
with the same firm purpose, vigilant,
resourceful, and well prepared
for the eventuality that had befallen.
He made his escape without
difficulty.
He alighted from a space ship on
still another world—another shift
in time—and the atmosphere of
conflict engulfed him.
Weary but resigned he accepted
it, and did what he had to do …
BERGSTROM was regarding
<!-- original does not use drop cap here, it just capitalises the first two words -->
him with speculative scrutiny.
“You’ve had quite a past, apparently,”
he observed.
[p
141
]
Zarwell smiled with mild embarrassment.
“At least in my dreams.”
“Dreams?” Bergstrom’s eyes
widened in surprise. “Oh, I beg your
pardon. I must have forgotten to
explain. This work is so routine to
me that sometimes I forget it’s all
new to a patient. Actually what you
experienced under the drug were
not dreams. They were recollections
of real episodes from your
past.”
Zarwell’s expression became
wary. He watched Bergstrom
closely. After a minute, however,
he seemed satisfied, and he let himself
settle back against the cushion
of his chair. “I remember nothing
of what I saw,” he observed.
“That’s why you’re here, you
know,” Bergstrom answered. “To
help you remember.”
“But everything under the drug
is so …”
“Haphazard? That’s true. The
recall episodes are always purely
random, with no chronological sequence.
Our problem will be to reassemble
them in proper order
later. Or some particular scene may
trigger a complete memory return.
“It is my considered opinion,”
Bergstrom went on, “that your lost
memory will turn out to be no ordinary
amnesia. I believe we will find
that your mind has been tampered
with.”
“Nothing I’ve seen under the
drug fits into the past I do remember.”
“That’s what makes me so certain,”
Bergstrom said confidently.
“You don’t remember what we
have shown to be true. Conversely
then, what you think you remember
must be false. It must have been
implanted there. But we can go
into that later. For today I think
we have done enough. This episode
was quite prolonged.”
“I won’t have any time off again
until next week end,” Zarwell reminded
him.
“That’s right.” Bergstrom
thought for a moment. “We
shouldn’t let this hang too long.
Could you come here after work
tomorrow?”
“I suppose I could.”
“Fine,” Bergstrom said with satisfaction.
“I’ll admit I’m considerably
more than casually interested
in your case by this time.”
A WORK truck picked Zarwell
up the next morning and he
rode with a tech crew to the edge of
the reclam area. Beside the belt
bringing ocean muck from the converter
plant at the seashore his
bulldozer was waiting.
He took his place behind the
drive wheel and began working dirt
down between windbreakers anchored
in the rock. Along a makeshift
road into the badlands trucks
brought crushed lime and phosphorus
to supplement the ocean
sediment. The progress of life from
the sea to the land was a mechanical
[p
142
]
process of this growing world.
Nearly two hundred years ago,
when Earth established a colony on
St. Martin’s, the land surface of the
planet had been barren. Only its
seas thrived with animal and vegetable
life. The necessary machinery
and technicians had been supplied
by Earth, and the long struggle began
to fit the world for human
needs. When Zarwell arrived, six
months before, the vitalized area
already extended three hundred
miles along the coast, and sixty
miles inland. And every day the
progress continued. A large percentage
of the energy and resources
of the world were devoted to that
essential expansion.
The reclam crews filled and
sodded the sterile rock, planted
binding grasses, grain and trees, and
diverted rivers to keep it fertile.
When there were no rivers to divert
they blasted out springs and lakes
in the foothills to make their own.
Biologists developed the necessary
germ and insect life from what they
found in the sea. Where that failed,
they imported microorganisms
from Earth.
Three rubber-tracked crawlers
picked their way down from the
mountains until they joined the
road passing the belt. They were
loaded with ore that would be
smelted into metal for depleted
Earth, or for other colonies short
of minerals. It was St. Martin’s only
export thus far.
Zarwell pulled his sun helmet
lower, to better guard his hot, dry
features. The wind blew continuously
on St. Martin’s, but it furnished
small relief from the heat.
After its three-thousand-mile journey
across scorched sterile rock, it
sucked the moisture from a man’s
body, bringing a membrane-shrinking
dryness to the nostrils as it was
breathed in. With it came also the
cloying taste of limestone in a
worker’s mouth.
Zarwell gazed idly about at the
other laborers. Fully three-quarters
of them were beri-rabza ridden. A
cure for the skin fungus had not
yet been found; the men’s faces
and hands were scabbed and red.
The colony had grown to near self-sufficiency,
would soon have a moderate
prosperity, yet they still
lacked adequate medical and research
facilities.
Not all the world’s citizens were
content.
Bergstrom was waiting in his office
when Zarwell arrived that
evening.
HE was lying motionless on a
hard cot, with his eyes closed,
yet with his every sense sharply
quickened. Tentatively he tightened
small muscles in his arms and
legs. Across his wrists and thighs
he felt straps binding him to the
cot.
“So that’s our big, bad man,” a
coarse voice above him observed
[p
143
]
caustically. “He doesn’t look so
tough now, does he?”
“It might have been better to
kill him right away,” a second, less
confident voice said. “It’s supposed
to be impossible to hold him.”
“Don’t be stupid. We just do
what we’re told. We’ll hold him.”
“What do you think they’ll do
with him?”
“Execute him, I suppose,” the
harsh voice said matter-of-factly.
“They’re probably just curious to
see what he looks like first. They’ll
be disappointed.”
Zarwell opened his eyes a slit to
observe his surroundings.
It was a mistake. “He’s out of
it,” the first speaker said, and Zarwell
allowed his eyes to open fully.
The voice, he saw, belonged to
the big man who had bruised him
against the locker at the spaceport.
Irrelevantly he wondered how he
knew now that it had been a spaceport.
His captor’s broad face jeered
down at Zarwell. “Have a good
sleep?” he asked with mock solicitude.
Zarwell did not deign to acknowledge
that he heard.
The big man turned. “You can
tell the Chief he’s awake,” he said.
Zarwell followed his gaze to where
a younger man, with a blond lock of
hair on his forehead, stood behind
him. The youth nodded and went
out, while the other pulled a chair
up to the side of Zarwell’s cot.
While their attention was away
from him Zarwell had unobtrusively
loosened his bonds as much as
possible with arm leverage. As the
big man drew his chair nearer, he
made the hand farthest from him
tight and compact and worked it
free of the leather loop. He waited.
The big man belched. “You’re
supposed to be great stuff in a situation
like this,” he said, his smoke-tan
face splitting in a grin that revealed
large square teeth. “How
about giving me a sample?”
“You’re a yellow-livered bastard,”
Zarwell told him.
The grin faded from the oily face
as the man stood up. He leaned over
the cot—and Zarwell’s left hand
shot up and locked about his throat,
joined almost immediately by the
right.
The man’s mouth opened and he
tried to yell as he threw himself
frantically backward. He clawed at
the hands about his neck. When
that failed to break the grip he suddenly
reversed his weight and
drove his fist at Zarwell’s head.
Zarwell pulled the struggling
body down against his chest and
held it there until all agitated
movement ceased. He sat up then,
letting the body slide to the floor.
The straps about his thighs came
loose with little effort.
THE analyst dabbed at his upper
lip with a handkerchief. “The
episodes are beginning to tie together,”
he said, with an attempt at
[p
144
]
nonchalance. “The next couple
should do it.”
Zarwell did not answer. His
memory seemed on the point of
complete return, and he sat quietly,
hopefully. However, nothing more
came and he returned his attention
to his more immediate problem.
Opening a button on his shirt, he
pulled back a strip of plastic cloth
just below his rib cage and took
out a small flat pistol. He held it
in the palm of his hand. He knew
now why he always carried it.
Bergstrom had his bad moment.
“You’re not going to …” he began
at the sight of the gun. He tried
again. “You must be joking.”
“I have very little sense of humor,”
Zarwell corrected him.
“You’d be foolish!”
Bergstrom obviously realized
how close he was to death. Yet
surprisingly, after the first start,
he showed little fear. Zarwell had
thought the man a bit soft, too
adjusted to a life of ease and some
prestige to meet danger calmly.
Curiosity restrained his trigger finger.
“Why would I be foolish?” he
asked. “Your Meninger oath of inviolable
confidence?”
Bergstrom shook his head. “I
know it’s been broken before. But
you need me. You’re not through,
you know. If you killed me you’d
still have to trust some other
analyst.”
“Is that the best you can do?”
“No.” Bergstrom was angry now.
“But use that logical mind you’re
supposed to have! Scenes before
this have shown what kind of man
you are. Just because this last happened
here on St. Martin’s makes
little difference. If I was going to
turn you in to the police, I’d have
done it before this.”
Zarwell debated with himself the
truth of what the other had said.
“Why didn’t you turn me in?” he
asked.
“Because you’re no mad-dog
killer!” Now that the crisis seemed
to be past, Bergstrom spoke more
calmly, even allowed himself to
relax. “You’re still pretty much in
the fog about yourself. I read more
in those comanalyses than you did.
I even know who you are!”
Zarwell’s eyebrows raised.
“Who am I?” he asked, very interested
now. Without attention he
put his pistol away in a trouser
pocket.
Bergstrom brushed the question
aside with one hand. “Your name
makes little difference. You’ve used
many. But you are an idealist. Your
killings were necessary to bring
justice to the places you visited. By
now you’re almost a legend among
the human worlds. I’d like to talk
more with you on that later.”
While Zarwell considered, Bergstrom
pressed his advantage. “One
more scene might do it,” he said.
“Should we try again—if you trust
me, that is?”
[p
145
]
Zarwell made his decision quickly.
“Go ahead,” he answered.
ALL Zarwell’s attention seemed
on the cigar he lit as he rode
down the escalator, but he surveyed
the terminal carefully over the rim
of his hand. He spied no suspicious
loungers.
Behind the escalator he groped
along the floor beneath the lockers
until he found his key. The briefcase
was under his arm a minute
later.
In the basement lave he put a
coin in the pay slot of a private
compartment and went in.
As he zipped open the briefcase
he surveyed his features in the mirror.
A small muscle at the corner of
one eye twitched spasmodically.
One cheek wore a frozen quarter
smile. Thirty-six hours under the
paralysis was longer than advisable.
The muscles should be rested at
least every twenty hours.
Fortunately his natural features
would serve as an adequate disguise
now.
He adjusted the ring setting on
the pistol-shaped instrument that
he took from his case, and carefully
rayed several small areas of
his face, loosening muscles that had
been tight too long. He sighed
gratefully when he finished, massaging
his cheeks and forehead with
considerable pleasure. Another
glance in the mirror satisfied him
with the changes that had been
made. He turned to his briefcase
again and exchanged the gun for
a small syringe, which he pushed
into a trouser pocket, and a single-edged
razor blade.
Removing his fiber-cloth jacket
he slashed it into strips with the
razor blade and flushed it down the
disposal bowl. With the sleeves of
his blouse rolled up he had the
appearance of a typical workman
as he strolled from the compartment.
Back at the locker he replaced
the briefcase and, with a wad of
gum, glued the key to the bottom
of the locker frame.
One step more. Taking the syringe
from his pocket, he plunged
the needle into his forearm and
tossed the instrument down a
waste chute. He took three more
steps and paused uncertainly.
When he looked about him it
was with the expression of a man
waking from a vivid dream.
“Q
UITE ingenious,” Graves
murmured admiringly. “You
had your mind already preconditioned
for the shot. But why would
you deliberately give yourself amnesia?”
“What better disguise than to
believe the part you’re playing?”
“A good man must have done
that job on your mind,” Bergstrom
commented. “I’d have hesitated to
try it myself. It must have taken a
lot of trust on your part.”
[p
146
]
“Trust and money,” Zarwell said
drily.
“Your memory’s back then?”
Zarwell nodded.
“I’m glad to hear that,” Bergstrom
assured him. “Now that
you’re well again I’d like to introduce
you to a man named Vernon
Johnson. This world …”
Zarwell stopped him with an upraised
hand. “Good God, man, can’t
you see the reason for all this? I’m
tired. I’m trying to quit.”
“Quit?” Bergstrom did not quite
follow him.
“It started on my home colony,”
Zarwell explained listlessly. “A
gang of hoods had taken over the
government. I helped organize a
movement to get them out. There
was some bloodshed, but it went
quite well. Several months later an
unofficial envoy from another
world asked several of us to give
them a hand on the same kind of
job. The political conditions there
were rotten. We went with him.
Again we were successful. It seems
I have a kind of genius for that
sort of thing.”
He stretched out his legs and regarded
them thoughtfully. “I
learned then the truth of Russell’s
saying: ‘When the oppressed win
their freedom they are as oppressive
as their former masters.’ When
they went bad, I opposed them.
This time I failed. But I escaped
again. I have quite a talent for that
also.
“I’m not a professional do-gooder.”
Zarwell’s tone appealed
to Bergstrom for understanding. “I
have only a normal man’s indignation
at injustice. And now I’ve done
my share. Yet, wherever I go, the
word eventually gets out, and I’m
right back in a fight again. It’s like
the proverbial monkey on my back.
I can’t get rid of it.”
He rose. “That disguise and
memory planting were supposed to
get me out of it. I should have
known it wouldn’t work. But this
time I’m not going to be drawn
back in! You and your Vernon
Johnson can do your own revolting.
I’m through!”
Bergstrom did not argue as he
left.
RESTLESSNESS drove Zarwell
from his flat the next day—a
legal holiday on St. Martin’s. At
a railed-off lot he stopped and loitered
in the shadow of an adjacent
building watching workmen drilling
an excavation for a new structure.
When a man strolled to his side
and stood watching the workmen,
he was not surprised. He waited for
the other to speak.
“I’d like to talk to you, if you
can spare a few minutes,” the
stranger said.
Zarwell turned and studied the
man without answering. He was
medium tall, with the body of an
athlete, though perhaps ten years
[p
147
]
beyond the age of sports. He had
a manner of contained energy.
“You’re Johnson?” he asked.
The man nodded.
Zarwell tried to feel the anger he
wanted to feel, but somehow it
would not come. “We have nothing
to talk about,” was the best he
could manage.
“Then will you just listen? After,
I’ll leave—if you tell me to.”
Against his will he found himself
liking the man, and wanting at least
to be courteous. He inclined his
head toward a curb wastebox with
a flat top. “Should we sit?”
Johnson smiled agreeably and
they walked over to the box and
sat down.
“When this colony was first
founded,” Johnson began without
preamble, “the administrative body
was a governor, and a council of
twelve. Their successors were to
be elected biennially. At first they
were. Then things changed. We
haven’t had an election now in the
last twenty-three years. St. Martin’s
is beginning to prosper. Yet
the only ones receiving the benefits
are the rulers. The citizens work
twelve hours a day. They are poorly
housed
, poorly fed, poorly clothed.
They …”
Zarwell found himself not listening
as Johnson’s voice went on. The
story was always the same. But why
did they always try to drag him into
their troubles?
Why hadn’t he chosen some
other world on which to hide?
The last question prompted a
new thought. Just why had he
chosen St. Martin’s? Was it only a
coincidence? Or had he,
subconsciously
at least, picked this particular
world? He had always
considered himself the unwilling
subject of glib persuaders … but
mightn’t some inner compulsion of
his own have put the monkey on his
back?
“… and we need your help.”
Johnson had finished his speech.
Zarwell gazed up at the bright
sky. He pulled in a long breath,
and let it out in a sigh.
“What are your plans so far?”
he asked wearily.
—
CHARLES V. DE VET | He desires to eradicate the galaxy of authoritarian regimes | He is not consciously aware of why he agrees to participate in the missions | He enjoys the adrenaline rush of the precarious situations his missions place him in | He wishes to prevent Earth from being destroyed by man-made climate change | 1 |
26569_ZA7RADIT_3 | What is the purpose of a comanalysis? | Transcriber’s note:
This story was published in
Galaxy
magazine, June 1960.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.
[p
135
]
By CHARLES V. DE VET
monkey on his back
Under the cloud of cast-off identities
lay the shape of another man—
was it himself?
Illustrated by DILLON
HE was walking endlessly
down a long, glass-walled
corridor. Bright sunlight
slanted in through one wall, on the
blue knapsack across his shoulders.
Who he was, and what he was doing
here, was clouded. The truth lurked
in some corner of his consciousness,
but it was not reached by surface
awareness.
The corridor opened at last into
a large high-domed room, much
like a railway station or an air terminal.
He walked straight ahead.
At the sight of him a man leaning
negligently against a stone pillar,
to his right but within vision,
straightened and barked an order
to him, “Halt!” He lengthened his
stride but gave no other sign.
[p
136
]
Two men hurried through a
doorway of a small anteroom to his
left, calling to him. He turned away
and began to run.
Shouts and the sound of charging
feet came from behind him. He
cut to the right, running toward the
escalator to the second floor. Another
pair of men were hurrying
down, two steps at a stride. With
no break in pace he veered into an
opening beside the escalator.
At the first turn he saw that the
aisle merely circled the stairway,
coming out into the depot again on
the other side. It was a trap. He
glanced quickly around him.
At the rear of the space was a
row of lockers for traveler use. He
slipped a coin into a pay slot,
opened the zipper on his bag and
pulled out a flat briefcase. It took
him only a few seconds to push the
case into the compartment, lock it
and slide the key along the floor
beneath the locker.
There was nothing to do after
that—except wait.
The men pursuing him came
hurtling around the turn in the
aisle. He kicked his knapsack to
one side, spreading his feet wide
with an instinctive motion.
Until that instant he had intended
to fight. Now he swiftly
reassessed the odds. There were
five of them, he saw. He should be
able to incapacitate two or three
and break out. But the fact that
they had been expecting him meant
that others would very probably
be waiting outside. His best course
now was to sham ignorance. He
relaxed.
He offered no resistance as they
reached him.
They were not gentle men. A tall
ruffian, copper-brown face damp
with perspiration and body oil,
grabbed him by the jacket and
slammed him back against the
lockers. As he shifted his weight
to keep his footing someone drove
a fist into his face. He started to
raise his hands; and a hard flat
object crashed against the side of
his skull.
The starch went out of his legs.
“D
O you make anything out of
it?” the psychoanalyst Milton
Bergstrom, asked.
John Zarwell shook his head.
“Did I talk while I was under?”
“Oh, yes. You were supposed to.
That way I follow pretty well what
you’re reenacting.”
“How does it tie in with what I
told you before?”
Bergstrom’s neat-boned, fair-skinned
face betrayed no emotion
other than an introspective stillness
of his normally alert gaze. “I see
no connection,” he decided, his
words once again precise and meticulous.
“We don’t have enough to
go on. Do you feel able to try another
comanalysis this afternoon
yet?”
“I don’t see why not.” Zarwell
[p
137
]
opened the collar of his shirt. The
day was hot, and the room had no
air conditioning, still a rare luxury
on St. Martin’s. The office window
was open, but it let in no freshness,
only the mildly rank odor that pervaded
all the planet’s habitable
area.
“Good.” Bergstrom rose. “The
serum is quite harmless, John.” He
maintained a professional diversionary
chatter as he administered
the drug. “A scopolamine derivative
that’s been well tested.”
The floor beneath Zarwell’s feet
assumed abruptly the near transfluent
consistency of a damp
sponge. It rose in a foot-high wave
and rolled gently toward the far
wall.
Bergstrom continued talking,
with practiced urbanity. “When
psychiatry was a less exact science,”
his voice went on, seeming to come
from a great distance, “a doctor
had to spend weeks, sometimes
months or years interviewing a
patient. If he was skilled enough,
he could sort the relevancies from
the vast amount of chaff. We are
able now, with the help of the
serum, to confine our discourses to
matters cogent to the patient’s
trouble.”
The floor continued its transmutation,
and Zarwell sank deep into
viscous depths. “Lie back and relax.
Don’t …”
The words tumbled down from
above. They faded, were gone.
ZARWELL found himself
<!-- original does not use drop cap here, it just capitalises the first two words -->
standing on a vast plain. There was
no sky above, and no horizon in the
distance. He was in a place without
space or dimension. There was
nothing here except himself—and
the gun that he held in his hand.
A weapon beautiful in its efficient
simplicity.
He should know all about the
instrument, its purpose and workings,
but he could not bring his
thoughts into rational focus. His
forehead creased with his mental
effort.
Abruptly the unreality about
him shifted perspective. He was
approaching—not walking, but
merely shortening the space between
them—the man who held
the gun. The man who was himself.
The other “himself” drifted
nearer also, as though drawn by a
mutual attraction.
The man with the gun raised his
weapon and pressed the trigger.
With the action the perspective
shifted again. He was watching the
face of the man he shot jerk and
twitch, expand and contract. The
face was unharmed, yet it was no
longer the same. No longer his own
features.
The stranger face smiled approvingly
at him.
“O
DD,” Bergstrom said.
<!-- original does not use drop cap here, it just capitalises the first two words -->
He brought his hands up and joined
the tips of his fingers against his
chest. “But it’s another piece in the
[p
138
]
jig-saw. In time it will fit into
place.” He paused. “It means no
more to you than the first, I suppose?”
“No,” Zarwell answered.
He was not a talking man, Bergstrom
reflected. It was more than
reticence, however. The man had
a hard granite core, only partially
concealed by his present perplexity.
He was a man who could handle
himself well in an emergency.
Bergstrom shrugged, dismissing
his strayed thoughts. “I expected
as much. A quite normal first phase
of treatment.” He straightened a
paper on his desk. “I think that will
be enough for today. Twice in one
sitting is about all we ever try.
Otherwise some particular episode
might cause undue mental stress,
and set up a block.” He glanced
down at his appointment pad. “Tomorrow
at two, then?”
Zarwell grunted acknowledgment
and pushed himself to his
feet, apparently unaware that his
shirt clung damply to his body.
THE sun was still high when
Zarwell left the analyst’s office.
The white marble of the city’s
buildings shimmered in the afternoon
heat, squat and austere as
giant tree trunks, pock-marked and
gray-mottled with windows. Zarwell
was careful not to rest his hand
on the flesh searing surface of the
stone.
The evening meal hour was approaching
when he reached the
Flats, on the way to his apartment.
The streets of the old section were
near-deserted. The only sounds he
heard as he passed were the occasional
cry of a baby, chronically
uncomfortable in the day’s heat,
and the lowing of imported cattle
waiting in a nearby shed to be
shipped to the country.
All St. Martin’s has a distinctive
smell, as of an arid dried-out
swamp, with a faint taint of fish.
But in the Flats the odor changes.
Here is the smell of factories, warehouses,
and trading marts; the smell
of stale cooking drifting from the
homes of the laborers and lower
class techmen who live there.
Zarwell passed a group of
smaller children playing a desultory
game of lic-lic for pieces of
candy and cigarettes. Slowly he
climbed the stairs of a stone flat.
He prepared a supper for himself
and ate it without either enjoyment
or distaste. He lay down, fully
clothed, on his bed. The visit to the
analyst had done nothing to dispel
his ennui.
[p
139
]
The next morning when Zarwell
awoke he lay for a moment, unmoving.
The feeling was there
again, like a scene waiting only to
be gazed at directly to be perceived.
It was as though a great wisdom
lay at the edge of understanding.
If he rested quietly it would
all come to him. Yet always, when
his mind lost its sleep-induced
[p
140
]
lethargy, the moment of near understanding
slipped away.
This morning, however, the sense
of disorientation did not pass with
full wakefulness. He achieved no
understanding, but the strangeness
did not leave as he sat up.
He gazed about him. The room
did not seem to be his own. The
furnishings, and the clothing he observed
in a closet, might have belonged
to a stranger.
He pulled himself from his blankets,
his body moving with mechanical
reaction. The slippers into
which he put his feet were larger
than he had expected them to be.
He walked about the small apartment.
The place was familiar, but
only as it would have been if he
had studied it from blueprints, not
as though he lived there.
The feeling was still with him
when he returned to the psychoanalyst.
THE scene this time was more
kaleidoscopic, less personal.
A village was being ravaged.
Men struggled and died in the
streets. Zarwell moved among
them, seldom taking part in the
individual clashes, yet a moving
force in the
conflict
.
The background changed. He
understood that he was on a different
world.
Here a city burned. Its resistance
was nearing its end. Zarwell was
riding a shaggy pony outside a high
wall surrounding the stricken metropolis.
He moved in and joined a
party of short, bearded men, directing
them as they battered at the
wall with a huge log mounted on a
many-wheeled truck.
The log broke a breach in the
concrete and the besiegers charged
through, carrying back the defenders
who sought vainly to plug the
gap. Soon there would be rioting
in the streets again, plundering and
killing.
Zarwell was not the leader of the
invaders, only a lesser figure in the
rebellion. But he had played a leading
part in the planning of the
strategy that led to the city’s fall.
The job had been well done.
Time passed, without visible
break in the panorama. Now Zarwell
was fleeing, pursued by the
same bearded men who had been
his comrades before. Still he moved
with the same firm purpose, vigilant,
resourceful, and well prepared
for the eventuality that had befallen.
He made his escape without
difficulty.
He alighted from a space ship on
still another world—another shift
in time—and the atmosphere of
conflict engulfed him.
Weary but resigned he accepted
it, and did what he had to do …
BERGSTROM was regarding
<!-- original does not use drop cap here, it just capitalises the first two words -->
him with speculative scrutiny.
“You’ve had quite a past, apparently,”
he observed.
[p
141
]
Zarwell smiled with mild embarrassment.
“At least in my dreams.”
“Dreams?” Bergstrom’s eyes
widened in surprise. “Oh, I beg your
pardon. I must have forgotten to
explain. This work is so routine to
me that sometimes I forget it’s all
new to a patient. Actually what you
experienced under the drug were
not dreams. They were recollections
of real episodes from your
past.”
Zarwell’s expression became
wary. He watched Bergstrom
closely. After a minute, however,
he seemed satisfied, and he let himself
settle back against the cushion
of his chair. “I remember nothing
of what I saw,” he observed.
“That’s why you’re here, you
know,” Bergstrom answered. “To
help you remember.”
“But everything under the drug
is so …”
“Haphazard? That’s true. The
recall episodes are always purely
random, with no chronological sequence.
Our problem will be to reassemble
them in proper order
later. Or some particular scene may
trigger a complete memory return.
“It is my considered opinion,”
Bergstrom went on, “that your lost
memory will turn out to be no ordinary
amnesia. I believe we will find
that your mind has been tampered
with.”
“Nothing I’ve seen under the
drug fits into the past I do remember.”
“That’s what makes me so certain,”
Bergstrom said confidently.
“You don’t remember what we
have shown to be true. Conversely
then, what you think you remember
must be false. It must have been
implanted there. But we can go
into that later. For today I think
we have done enough. This episode
was quite prolonged.”
“I won’t have any time off again
until next week end,” Zarwell reminded
him.
“That’s right.” Bergstrom
thought for a moment. “We
shouldn’t let this hang too long.
Could you come here after work
tomorrow?”
“I suppose I could.”
“Fine,” Bergstrom said with satisfaction.
“I’ll admit I’m considerably
more than casually interested
in your case by this time.”
A WORK truck picked Zarwell
up the next morning and he
rode with a tech crew to the edge of
the reclam area. Beside the belt
bringing ocean muck from the converter
plant at the seashore his
bulldozer was waiting.
He took his place behind the
drive wheel and began working dirt
down between windbreakers anchored
in the rock. Along a makeshift
road into the badlands trucks
brought crushed lime and phosphorus
to supplement the ocean
sediment. The progress of life from
the sea to the land was a mechanical
[p
142
]
process of this growing world.
Nearly two hundred years ago,
when Earth established a colony on
St. Martin’s, the land surface of the
planet had been barren. Only its
seas thrived with animal and vegetable
life. The necessary machinery
and technicians had been supplied
by Earth, and the long struggle began
to fit the world for human
needs. When Zarwell arrived, six
months before, the vitalized area
already extended three hundred
miles along the coast, and sixty
miles inland. And every day the
progress continued. A large percentage
of the energy and resources
of the world were devoted to that
essential expansion.
The reclam crews filled and
sodded the sterile rock, planted
binding grasses, grain and trees, and
diverted rivers to keep it fertile.
When there were no rivers to divert
they blasted out springs and lakes
in the foothills to make their own.
Biologists developed the necessary
germ and insect life from what they
found in the sea. Where that failed,
they imported microorganisms
from Earth.
Three rubber-tracked crawlers
picked their way down from the
mountains until they joined the
road passing the belt. They were
loaded with ore that would be
smelted into metal for depleted
Earth, or for other colonies short
of minerals. It was St. Martin’s only
export thus far.
Zarwell pulled his sun helmet
lower, to better guard his hot, dry
features. The wind blew continuously
on St. Martin’s, but it furnished
small relief from the heat.
After its three-thousand-mile journey
across scorched sterile rock, it
sucked the moisture from a man’s
body, bringing a membrane-shrinking
dryness to the nostrils as it was
breathed in. With it came also the
cloying taste of limestone in a
worker’s mouth.
Zarwell gazed idly about at the
other laborers. Fully three-quarters
of them were beri-rabza ridden. A
cure for the skin fungus had not
yet been found; the men’s faces
and hands were scabbed and red.
The colony had grown to near self-sufficiency,
would soon have a moderate
prosperity, yet they still
lacked adequate medical and research
facilities.
Not all the world’s citizens were
content.
Bergstrom was waiting in his office
when Zarwell arrived that
evening.
HE was lying motionless on a
hard cot, with his eyes closed,
yet with his every sense sharply
quickened. Tentatively he tightened
small muscles in his arms and
legs. Across his wrists and thighs
he felt straps binding him to the
cot.
“So that’s our big, bad man,” a
coarse voice above him observed
[p
143
]
caustically. “He doesn’t look so
tough now, does he?”
“It might have been better to
kill him right away,” a second, less
confident voice said. “It’s supposed
to be impossible to hold him.”
“Don’t be stupid. We just do
what we’re told. We’ll hold him.”
“What do you think they’ll do
with him?”
“Execute him, I suppose,” the
harsh voice said matter-of-factly.
“They’re probably just curious to
see what he looks like first. They’ll
be disappointed.”
Zarwell opened his eyes a slit to
observe his surroundings.
It was a mistake. “He’s out of
it,” the first speaker said, and Zarwell
allowed his eyes to open fully.
The voice, he saw, belonged to
the big man who had bruised him
against the locker at the spaceport.
Irrelevantly he wondered how he
knew now that it had been a spaceport.
His captor’s broad face jeered
down at Zarwell. “Have a good
sleep?” he asked with mock solicitude.
Zarwell did not deign to acknowledge
that he heard.
The big man turned. “You can
tell the Chief he’s awake,” he said.
Zarwell followed his gaze to where
a younger man, with a blond lock of
hair on his forehead, stood behind
him. The youth nodded and went
out, while the other pulled a chair
up to the side of Zarwell’s cot.
While their attention was away
from him Zarwell had unobtrusively
loosened his bonds as much as
possible with arm leverage. As the
big man drew his chair nearer, he
made the hand farthest from him
tight and compact and worked it
free of the leather loop. He waited.
The big man belched. “You’re
supposed to be great stuff in a situation
like this,” he said, his smoke-tan
face splitting in a grin that revealed
large square teeth. “How
about giving me a sample?”
“You’re a yellow-livered bastard,”
Zarwell told him.
The grin faded from the oily face
as the man stood up. He leaned over
the cot—and Zarwell’s left hand
shot up and locked about his throat,
joined almost immediately by the
right.
The man’s mouth opened and he
tried to yell as he threw himself
frantically backward. He clawed at
the hands about his neck. When
that failed to break the grip he suddenly
reversed his weight and
drove his fist at Zarwell’s head.
Zarwell pulled the struggling
body down against his chest and
held it there until all agitated
movement ceased. He sat up then,
letting the body slide to the floor.
The straps about his thighs came
loose with little effort.
THE analyst dabbed at his upper
lip with a handkerchief. “The
episodes are beginning to tie together,”
he said, with an attempt at
[p
144
]
nonchalance. “The next couple
should do it.”
Zarwell did not answer. His
memory seemed on the point of
complete return, and he sat quietly,
hopefully. However, nothing more
came and he returned his attention
to his more immediate problem.
Opening a button on his shirt, he
pulled back a strip of plastic cloth
just below his rib cage and took
out a small flat pistol. He held it
in the palm of his hand. He knew
now why he always carried it.
Bergstrom had his bad moment.
“You’re not going to …” he began
at the sight of the gun. He tried
again. “You must be joking.”
“I have very little sense of humor,”
Zarwell corrected him.
“You’d be foolish!”
Bergstrom obviously realized
how close he was to death. Yet
surprisingly, after the first start,
he showed little fear. Zarwell had
thought the man a bit soft, too
adjusted to a life of ease and some
prestige to meet danger calmly.
Curiosity restrained his trigger finger.
“Why would I be foolish?” he
asked. “Your Meninger oath of inviolable
confidence?”
Bergstrom shook his head. “I
know it’s been broken before. But
you need me. You’re not through,
you know. If you killed me you’d
still have to trust some other
analyst.”
“Is that the best you can do?”
“No.” Bergstrom was angry now.
“But use that logical mind you’re
supposed to have! Scenes before
this have shown what kind of man
you are. Just because this last happened
here on St. Martin’s makes
little difference. If I was going to
turn you in to the police, I’d have
done it before this.”
Zarwell debated with himself the
truth of what the other had said.
“Why didn’t you turn me in?” he
asked.
“Because you’re no mad-dog
killer!” Now that the crisis seemed
to be past, Bergstrom spoke more
calmly, even allowed himself to
relax. “You’re still pretty much in
the fog about yourself. I read more
in those comanalyses than you did.
I even know who you are!”
Zarwell’s eyebrows raised.
“Who am I?” he asked, very interested
now. Without attention he
put his pistol away in a trouser
pocket.
Bergstrom brushed the question
aside with one hand. “Your name
makes little difference. You’ve used
many. But you are an idealist. Your
killings were necessary to bring
justice to the places you visited. By
now you’re almost a legend among
the human worlds. I’d like to talk
more with you on that later.”
While Zarwell considered, Bergstrom
pressed his advantage. “One
more scene might do it,” he said.
“Should we try again—if you trust
me, that is?”
[p
145
]
Zarwell made his decision quickly.
“Go ahead,” he answered.
ALL Zarwell’s attention seemed
on the cigar he lit as he rode
down the escalator, but he surveyed
the terminal carefully over the rim
of his hand. He spied no suspicious
loungers.
Behind the escalator he groped
along the floor beneath the lockers
until he found his key. The briefcase
was under his arm a minute
later.
In the basement lave he put a
coin in the pay slot of a private
compartment and went in.
As he zipped open the briefcase
he surveyed his features in the mirror.
A small muscle at the corner of
one eye twitched spasmodically.
One cheek wore a frozen quarter
smile. Thirty-six hours under the
paralysis was longer than advisable.
The muscles should be rested at
least every twenty hours.
Fortunately his natural features
would serve as an adequate disguise
now.
He adjusted the ring setting on
the pistol-shaped instrument that
he took from his case, and carefully
rayed several small areas of
his face, loosening muscles that had
been tight too long. He sighed
gratefully when he finished, massaging
his cheeks and forehead with
considerable pleasure. Another
glance in the mirror satisfied him
with the changes that had been
made. He turned to his briefcase
again and exchanged the gun for
a small syringe, which he pushed
into a trouser pocket, and a single-edged
razor blade.
Removing his fiber-cloth jacket
he slashed it into strips with the
razor blade and flushed it down the
disposal bowl. With the sleeves of
his blouse rolled up he had the
appearance of a typical workman
as he strolled from the compartment.
Back at the locker he replaced
the briefcase and, with a wad of
gum, glued the key to the bottom
of the locker frame.
One step more. Taking the syringe
from his pocket, he plunged
the needle into his forearm and
tossed the instrument down a
waste chute. He took three more
steps and paused uncertainly.
When he looked about him it
was with the expression of a man
waking from a vivid dream.
“Q
UITE ingenious,” Graves
murmured admiringly. “You
had your mind already preconditioned
for the shot. But why would
you deliberately give yourself amnesia?”
“What better disguise than to
believe the part you’re playing?”
“A good man must have done
that job on your mind,” Bergstrom
commented. “I’d have hesitated to
try it myself. It must have taken a
lot of trust on your part.”
[p
146
]
“Trust and money,” Zarwell said
drily.
“Your memory’s back then?”
Zarwell nodded.
“I’m glad to hear that,” Bergstrom
assured him. “Now that
you’re well again I’d like to introduce
you to a man named Vernon
Johnson. This world …”
Zarwell stopped him with an upraised
hand. “Good God, man, can’t
you see the reason for all this? I’m
tired. I’m trying to quit.”
“Quit?” Bergstrom did not quite
follow him.
“It started on my home colony,”
Zarwell explained listlessly. “A
gang of hoods had taken over the
government. I helped organize a
movement to get them out. There
was some bloodshed, but it went
quite well. Several months later an
unofficial envoy from another
world asked several of us to give
them a hand on the same kind of
job. The political conditions there
were rotten. We went with him.
Again we were successful. It seems
I have a kind of genius for that
sort of thing.”
He stretched out his legs and regarded
them thoughtfully. “I
learned then the truth of Russell’s
saying: ‘When the oppressed win
their freedom they are as oppressive
as their former masters.’ When
they went bad, I opposed them.
This time I failed. But I escaped
again. I have quite a talent for that
also.
“I’m not a professional do-gooder.”
Zarwell’s tone appealed
to Bergstrom for understanding. “I
have only a normal man’s indignation
at injustice. And now I’ve done
my share. Yet, wherever I go, the
word eventually gets out, and I’m
right back in a fight again. It’s like
the proverbial monkey on my back.
I can’t get rid of it.”
He rose. “That disguise and
memory planting were supposed to
get me out of it. I should have
known it wouldn’t work. But this
time I’m not going to be drawn
back in! You and your Vernon
Johnson can do your own revolting.
I’m through!”
Bergstrom did not argue as he
left.
RESTLESSNESS drove Zarwell
from his flat the next day—a
legal holiday on St. Martin’s. At
a railed-off lot he stopped and loitered
in the shadow of an adjacent
building watching workmen drilling
an excavation for a new structure.
When a man strolled to his side
and stood watching the workmen,
he was not surprised. He waited for
the other to speak.
“I’d like to talk to you, if you
can spare a few minutes,” the
stranger said.
Zarwell turned and studied the
man without answering. He was
medium tall, with the body of an
athlete, though perhaps ten years
[p
147
]
beyond the age of sports. He had
a manner of contained energy.
“You’re Johnson?” he asked.
The man nodded.
Zarwell tried to feel the anger he
wanted to feel, but somehow it
would not come. “We have nothing
to talk about,” was the best he
could manage.
“Then will you just listen? After,
I’ll leave—if you tell me to.”
Against his will he found himself
liking the man, and wanting at least
to be courteous. He inclined his
head toward a curb wastebox with
a flat top. “Should we sit?”
Johnson smiled agreeably and
they walked over to the box and
sat down.
“When this colony was first
founded,” Johnson began without
preamble, “the administrative body
was a governor, and a council of
twelve. Their successors were to
be elected biennially. At first they
were. Then things changed. We
haven’t had an election now in the
last twenty-three years. St. Martin’s
is beginning to prosper. Yet
the only ones receiving the benefits
are the rulers. The citizens work
twelve hours a day. They are poorly
housed
, poorly fed, poorly clothed.
They …”
Zarwell found himself not listening
as Johnson’s voice went on. The
story was always the same. But why
did they always try to drag him into
their troubles?
Why hadn’t he chosen some
other world on which to hide?
The last question prompted a
new thought. Just why had he
chosen St. Martin’s? Was it only a
coincidence? Or had he,
subconsciously
at least, picked this particular
world? He had always
considered himself the unwilling
subject of glib persuaders … but
mightn’t some inner compulsion of
his own have put the monkey on his
back?
“… and we need your help.”
Johnson had finished his speech.
Zarwell gazed up at the bright
sky. He pulled in a long breath,
and let it out in a sigh.
“What are your plans so far?”
he asked wearily.
—
CHARLES V. DE VET | It paralyzes patients in order to restore their nervous systems to equilibrium | It gives more direct access to the plagues of the human mind | It allows a manipulator to implant false memories | It permits a psychoanalyst to remove traumatic memories | 1 |
26569_ZA7RADIT_4 | Why did Zarwell deliberately inject himself? | Transcriber’s note:
This story was published in
Galaxy
magazine, June 1960.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.
[p
135
]
By CHARLES V. DE VET
monkey on his back
Under the cloud of cast-off identities
lay the shape of another man—
was it himself?
Illustrated by DILLON
HE was walking endlessly
down a long, glass-walled
corridor. Bright sunlight
slanted in through one wall, on the
blue knapsack across his shoulders.
Who he was, and what he was doing
here, was clouded. The truth lurked
in some corner of his consciousness,
but it was not reached by surface
awareness.
The corridor opened at last into
a large high-domed room, much
like a railway station or an air terminal.
He walked straight ahead.
At the sight of him a man leaning
negligently against a stone pillar,
to his right but within vision,
straightened and barked an order
to him, “Halt!” He lengthened his
stride but gave no other sign.
[p
136
]
Two men hurried through a
doorway of a small anteroom to his
left, calling to him. He turned away
and began to run.
Shouts and the sound of charging
feet came from behind him. He
cut to the right, running toward the
escalator to the second floor. Another
pair of men were hurrying
down, two steps at a stride. With
no break in pace he veered into an
opening beside the escalator.
At the first turn he saw that the
aisle merely circled the stairway,
coming out into the depot again on
the other side. It was a trap. He
glanced quickly around him.
At the rear of the space was a
row of lockers for traveler use. He
slipped a coin into a pay slot,
opened the zipper on his bag and
pulled out a flat briefcase. It took
him only a few seconds to push the
case into the compartment, lock it
and slide the key along the floor
beneath the locker.
There was nothing to do after
that—except wait.
The men pursuing him came
hurtling around the turn in the
aisle. He kicked his knapsack to
one side, spreading his feet wide
with an instinctive motion.
Until that instant he had intended
to fight. Now he swiftly
reassessed the odds. There were
five of them, he saw. He should be
able to incapacitate two or three
and break out. But the fact that
they had been expecting him meant
that others would very probably
be waiting outside. His best course
now was to sham ignorance. He
relaxed.
He offered no resistance as they
reached him.
They were not gentle men. A tall
ruffian, copper-brown face damp
with perspiration and body oil,
grabbed him by the jacket and
slammed him back against the
lockers. As he shifted his weight
to keep his footing someone drove
a fist into his face. He started to
raise his hands; and a hard flat
object crashed against the side of
his skull.
The starch went out of his legs.
“D
O you make anything out of
it?” the psychoanalyst Milton
Bergstrom, asked.
John Zarwell shook his head.
“Did I talk while I was under?”
“Oh, yes. You were supposed to.
That way I follow pretty well what
you’re reenacting.”
“How does it tie in with what I
told you before?”
Bergstrom’s neat-boned, fair-skinned
face betrayed no emotion
other than an introspective stillness
of his normally alert gaze. “I see
no connection,” he decided, his
words once again precise and meticulous.
“We don’t have enough to
go on. Do you feel able to try another
comanalysis this afternoon
yet?”
“I don’t see why not.” Zarwell
[p
137
]
opened the collar of his shirt. The
day was hot, and the room had no
air conditioning, still a rare luxury
on St. Martin’s. The office window
was open, but it let in no freshness,
only the mildly rank odor that pervaded
all the planet’s habitable
area.
“Good.” Bergstrom rose. “The
serum is quite harmless, John.” He
maintained a professional diversionary
chatter as he administered
the drug. “A scopolamine derivative
that’s been well tested.”
The floor beneath Zarwell’s feet
assumed abruptly the near transfluent
consistency of a damp
sponge. It rose in a foot-high wave
and rolled gently toward the far
wall.
Bergstrom continued talking,
with practiced urbanity. “When
psychiatry was a less exact science,”
his voice went on, seeming to come
from a great distance, “a doctor
had to spend weeks, sometimes
months or years interviewing a
patient. If he was skilled enough,
he could sort the relevancies from
the vast amount of chaff. We are
able now, with the help of the
serum, to confine our discourses to
matters cogent to the patient’s
trouble.”
The floor continued its transmutation,
and Zarwell sank deep into
viscous depths. “Lie back and relax.
Don’t …”
The words tumbled down from
above. They faded, were gone.
ZARWELL found himself
<!-- original does not use drop cap here, it just capitalises the first two words -->
standing on a vast plain. There was
no sky above, and no horizon in the
distance. He was in a place without
space or dimension. There was
nothing here except himself—and
the gun that he held in his hand.
A weapon beautiful in its efficient
simplicity.
He should know all about the
instrument, its purpose and workings,
but he could not bring his
thoughts into rational focus. His
forehead creased with his mental
effort.
Abruptly the unreality about
him shifted perspective. He was
approaching—not walking, but
merely shortening the space between
them—the man who held
the gun. The man who was himself.
The other “himself” drifted
nearer also, as though drawn by a
mutual attraction.
The man with the gun raised his
weapon and pressed the trigger.
With the action the perspective
shifted again. He was watching the
face of the man he shot jerk and
twitch, expand and contract. The
face was unharmed, yet it was no
longer the same. No longer his own
features.
The stranger face smiled approvingly
at him.
“O
DD,” Bergstrom said.
<!-- original does not use drop cap here, it just capitalises the first two words -->
He brought his hands up and joined
the tips of his fingers against his
chest. “But it’s another piece in the
[p
138
]
jig-saw. In time it will fit into
place.” He paused. “It means no
more to you than the first, I suppose?”
“No,” Zarwell answered.
He was not a talking man, Bergstrom
reflected. It was more than
reticence, however. The man had
a hard granite core, only partially
concealed by his present perplexity.
He was a man who could handle
himself well in an emergency.
Bergstrom shrugged, dismissing
his strayed thoughts. “I expected
as much. A quite normal first phase
of treatment.” He straightened a
paper on his desk. “I think that will
be enough for today. Twice in one
sitting is about all we ever try.
Otherwise some particular episode
might cause undue mental stress,
and set up a block.” He glanced
down at his appointment pad. “Tomorrow
at two, then?”
Zarwell grunted acknowledgment
and pushed himself to his
feet, apparently unaware that his
shirt clung damply to his body.
THE sun was still high when
Zarwell left the analyst’s office.
The white marble of the city’s
buildings shimmered in the afternoon
heat, squat and austere as
giant tree trunks, pock-marked and
gray-mottled with windows. Zarwell
was careful not to rest his hand
on the flesh searing surface of the
stone.
The evening meal hour was approaching
when he reached the
Flats, on the way to his apartment.
The streets of the old section were
near-deserted. The only sounds he
heard as he passed were the occasional
cry of a baby, chronically
uncomfortable in the day’s heat,
and the lowing of imported cattle
waiting in a nearby shed to be
shipped to the country.
All St. Martin’s has a distinctive
smell, as of an arid dried-out
swamp, with a faint taint of fish.
But in the Flats the odor changes.
Here is the smell of factories, warehouses,
and trading marts; the smell
of stale cooking drifting from the
homes of the laborers and lower
class techmen who live there.
Zarwell passed a group of
smaller children playing a desultory
game of lic-lic for pieces of
candy and cigarettes. Slowly he
climbed the stairs of a stone flat.
He prepared a supper for himself
and ate it without either enjoyment
or distaste. He lay down, fully
clothed, on his bed. The visit to the
analyst had done nothing to dispel
his ennui.
[p
139
]
The next morning when Zarwell
awoke he lay for a moment, unmoving.
The feeling was there
again, like a scene waiting only to
be gazed at directly to be perceived.
It was as though a great wisdom
lay at the edge of understanding.
If he rested quietly it would
all come to him. Yet always, when
his mind lost its sleep-induced
[p
140
]
lethargy, the moment of near understanding
slipped away.
This morning, however, the sense
of disorientation did not pass with
full wakefulness. He achieved no
understanding, but the strangeness
did not leave as he sat up.
He gazed about him. The room
did not seem to be his own. The
furnishings, and the clothing he observed
in a closet, might have belonged
to a stranger.
He pulled himself from his blankets,
his body moving with mechanical
reaction. The slippers into
which he put his feet were larger
than he had expected them to be.
He walked about the small apartment.
The place was familiar, but
only as it would have been if he
had studied it from blueprints, not
as though he lived there.
The feeling was still with him
when he returned to the psychoanalyst.
THE scene this time was more
kaleidoscopic, less personal.
A village was being ravaged.
Men struggled and died in the
streets. Zarwell moved among
them, seldom taking part in the
individual clashes, yet a moving
force in the
conflict
.
The background changed. He
understood that he was on a different
world.
Here a city burned. Its resistance
was nearing its end. Zarwell was
riding a shaggy pony outside a high
wall surrounding the stricken metropolis.
He moved in and joined a
party of short, bearded men, directing
them as they battered at the
wall with a huge log mounted on a
many-wheeled truck.
The log broke a breach in the
concrete and the besiegers charged
through, carrying back the defenders
who sought vainly to plug the
gap. Soon there would be rioting
in the streets again, plundering and
killing.
Zarwell was not the leader of the
invaders, only a lesser figure in the
rebellion. But he had played a leading
part in the planning of the
strategy that led to the city’s fall.
The job had been well done.
Time passed, without visible
break in the panorama. Now Zarwell
was fleeing, pursued by the
same bearded men who had been
his comrades before. Still he moved
with the same firm purpose, vigilant,
resourceful, and well prepared
for the eventuality that had befallen.
He made his escape without
difficulty.
He alighted from a space ship on
still another world—another shift
in time—and the atmosphere of
conflict engulfed him.
Weary but resigned he accepted
it, and did what he had to do …
BERGSTROM was regarding
<!-- original does not use drop cap here, it just capitalises the first two words -->
him with speculative scrutiny.
“You’ve had quite a past, apparently,”
he observed.
[p
141
]
Zarwell smiled with mild embarrassment.
“At least in my dreams.”
“Dreams?” Bergstrom’s eyes
widened in surprise. “Oh, I beg your
pardon. I must have forgotten to
explain. This work is so routine to
me that sometimes I forget it’s all
new to a patient. Actually what you
experienced under the drug were
not dreams. They were recollections
of real episodes from your
past.”
Zarwell’s expression became
wary. He watched Bergstrom
closely. After a minute, however,
he seemed satisfied, and he let himself
settle back against the cushion
of his chair. “I remember nothing
of what I saw,” he observed.
“That’s why you’re here, you
know,” Bergstrom answered. “To
help you remember.”
“But everything under the drug
is so …”
“Haphazard? That’s true. The
recall episodes are always purely
random, with no chronological sequence.
Our problem will be to reassemble
them in proper order
later. Or some particular scene may
trigger a complete memory return.
“It is my considered opinion,”
Bergstrom went on, “that your lost
memory will turn out to be no ordinary
amnesia. I believe we will find
that your mind has been tampered
with.”
“Nothing I’ve seen under the
drug fits into the past I do remember.”
“That’s what makes me so certain,”
Bergstrom said confidently.
“You don’t remember what we
have shown to be true. Conversely
then, what you think you remember
must be false. It must have been
implanted there. But we can go
into that later. For today I think
we have done enough. This episode
was quite prolonged.”
“I won’t have any time off again
until next week end,” Zarwell reminded
him.
“That’s right.” Bergstrom
thought for a moment. “We
shouldn’t let this hang too long.
Could you come here after work
tomorrow?”
“I suppose I could.”
“Fine,” Bergstrom said with satisfaction.
“I’ll admit I’m considerably
more than casually interested
in your case by this time.”
A WORK truck picked Zarwell
up the next morning and he
rode with a tech crew to the edge of
the reclam area. Beside the belt
bringing ocean muck from the converter
plant at the seashore his
bulldozer was waiting.
He took his place behind the
drive wheel and began working dirt
down between windbreakers anchored
in the rock. Along a makeshift
road into the badlands trucks
brought crushed lime and phosphorus
to supplement the ocean
sediment. The progress of life from
the sea to the land was a mechanical
[p
142
]
process of this growing world.
Nearly two hundred years ago,
when Earth established a colony on
St. Martin’s, the land surface of the
planet had been barren. Only its
seas thrived with animal and vegetable
life. The necessary machinery
and technicians had been supplied
by Earth, and the long struggle began
to fit the world for human
needs. When Zarwell arrived, six
months before, the vitalized area
already extended three hundred
miles along the coast, and sixty
miles inland. And every day the
progress continued. A large percentage
of the energy and resources
of the world were devoted to that
essential expansion.
The reclam crews filled and
sodded the sterile rock, planted
binding grasses, grain and trees, and
diverted rivers to keep it fertile.
When there were no rivers to divert
they blasted out springs and lakes
in the foothills to make their own.
Biologists developed the necessary
germ and insect life from what they
found in the sea. Where that failed,
they imported microorganisms
from Earth.
Three rubber-tracked crawlers
picked their way down from the
mountains until they joined the
road passing the belt. They were
loaded with ore that would be
smelted into metal for depleted
Earth, or for other colonies short
of minerals. It was St. Martin’s only
export thus far.
Zarwell pulled his sun helmet
lower, to better guard his hot, dry
features. The wind blew continuously
on St. Martin’s, but it furnished
small relief from the heat.
After its three-thousand-mile journey
across scorched sterile rock, it
sucked the moisture from a man’s
body, bringing a membrane-shrinking
dryness to the nostrils as it was
breathed in. With it came also the
cloying taste of limestone in a
worker’s mouth.
Zarwell gazed idly about at the
other laborers. Fully three-quarters
of them were beri-rabza ridden. A
cure for the skin fungus had not
yet been found; the men’s faces
and hands were scabbed and red.
The colony had grown to near self-sufficiency,
would soon have a moderate
prosperity, yet they still
lacked adequate medical and research
facilities.
Not all the world’s citizens were
content.
Bergstrom was waiting in his office
when Zarwell arrived that
evening.
HE was lying motionless on a
hard cot, with his eyes closed,
yet with his every sense sharply
quickened. Tentatively he tightened
small muscles in his arms and
legs. Across his wrists and thighs
he felt straps binding him to the
cot.
“So that’s our big, bad man,” a
coarse voice above him observed
[p
143
]
caustically. “He doesn’t look so
tough now, does he?”
“It might have been better to
kill him right away,” a second, less
confident voice said. “It’s supposed
to be impossible to hold him.”
“Don’t be stupid. We just do
what we’re told. We’ll hold him.”
“What do you think they’ll do
with him?”
“Execute him, I suppose,” the
harsh voice said matter-of-factly.
“They’re probably just curious to
see what he looks like first. They’ll
be disappointed.”
Zarwell opened his eyes a slit to
observe his surroundings.
It was a mistake. “He’s out of
it,” the first speaker said, and Zarwell
allowed his eyes to open fully.
The voice, he saw, belonged to
the big man who had bruised him
against the locker at the spaceport.
Irrelevantly he wondered how he
knew now that it had been a spaceport.
His captor’s broad face jeered
down at Zarwell. “Have a good
sleep?” he asked with mock solicitude.
Zarwell did not deign to acknowledge
that he heard.
The big man turned. “You can
tell the Chief he’s awake,” he said.
Zarwell followed his gaze to where
a younger man, with a blond lock of
hair on his forehead, stood behind
him. The youth nodded and went
out, while the other pulled a chair
up to the side of Zarwell’s cot.
While their attention was away
from him Zarwell had unobtrusively
loosened his bonds as much as
possible with arm leverage. As the
big man drew his chair nearer, he
made the hand farthest from him
tight and compact and worked it
free of the leather loop. He waited.
The big man belched. “You’re
supposed to be great stuff in a situation
like this,” he said, his smoke-tan
face splitting in a grin that revealed
large square teeth. “How
about giving me a sample?”
“You’re a yellow-livered bastard,”
Zarwell told him.
The grin faded from the oily face
as the man stood up. He leaned over
the cot—and Zarwell’s left hand
shot up and locked about his throat,
joined almost immediately by the
right.
The man’s mouth opened and he
tried to yell as he threw himself
frantically backward. He clawed at
the hands about his neck. When
that failed to break the grip he suddenly
reversed his weight and
drove his fist at Zarwell’s head.
Zarwell pulled the struggling
body down against his chest and
held it there until all agitated
movement ceased. He sat up then,
letting the body slide to the floor.
The straps about his thighs came
loose with little effort.
THE analyst dabbed at his upper
lip with a handkerchief. “The
episodes are beginning to tie together,”
he said, with an attempt at
[p
144
]
nonchalance. “The next couple
should do it.”
Zarwell did not answer. His
memory seemed on the point of
complete return, and he sat quietly,
hopefully. However, nothing more
came and he returned his attention
to his more immediate problem.
Opening a button on his shirt, he
pulled back a strip of plastic cloth
just below his rib cage and took
out a small flat pistol. He held it
in the palm of his hand. He knew
now why he always carried it.
Bergstrom had his bad moment.
“You’re not going to …” he began
at the sight of the gun. He tried
again. “You must be joking.”
“I have very little sense of humor,”
Zarwell corrected him.
“You’d be foolish!”
Bergstrom obviously realized
how close he was to death. Yet
surprisingly, after the first start,
he showed little fear. Zarwell had
thought the man a bit soft, too
adjusted to a life of ease and some
prestige to meet danger calmly.
Curiosity restrained his trigger finger.
“Why would I be foolish?” he
asked. “Your Meninger oath of inviolable
confidence?”
Bergstrom shook his head. “I
know it’s been broken before. But
you need me. You’re not through,
you know. If you killed me you’d
still have to trust some other
analyst.”
“Is that the best you can do?”
“No.” Bergstrom was angry now.
“But use that logical mind you’re
supposed to have! Scenes before
this have shown what kind of man
you are. Just because this last happened
here on St. Martin’s makes
little difference. If I was going to
turn you in to the police, I’d have
done it before this.”
Zarwell debated with himself the
truth of what the other had said.
“Why didn’t you turn me in?” he
asked.
“Because you’re no mad-dog
killer!” Now that the crisis seemed
to be past, Bergstrom spoke more
calmly, even allowed himself to
relax. “You’re still pretty much in
the fog about yourself. I read more
in those comanalyses than you did.
I even know who you are!”
Zarwell’s eyebrows raised.
“Who am I?” he asked, very interested
now. Without attention he
put his pistol away in a trouser
pocket.
Bergstrom brushed the question
aside with one hand. “Your name
makes little difference. You’ve used
many. But you are an idealist. Your
killings were necessary to bring
justice to the places you visited. By
now you’re almost a legend among
the human worlds. I’d like to talk
more with you on that later.”
While Zarwell considered, Bergstrom
pressed his advantage. “One
more scene might do it,” he said.
“Should we try again—if you trust
me, that is?”
[p
145
]
Zarwell made his decision quickly.
“Go ahead,” he answered.
ALL Zarwell’s attention seemed
on the cigar he lit as he rode
down the escalator, but he surveyed
the terminal carefully over the rim
of his hand. He spied no suspicious
loungers.
Behind the escalator he groped
along the floor beneath the lockers
until he found his key. The briefcase
was under his arm a minute
later.
In the basement lave he put a
coin in the pay slot of a private
compartment and went in.
As he zipped open the briefcase
he surveyed his features in the mirror.
A small muscle at the corner of
one eye twitched spasmodically.
One cheek wore a frozen quarter
smile. Thirty-six hours under the
paralysis was longer than advisable.
The muscles should be rested at
least every twenty hours.
Fortunately his natural features
would serve as an adequate disguise
now.
He adjusted the ring setting on
the pistol-shaped instrument that
he took from his case, and carefully
rayed several small areas of
his face, loosening muscles that had
been tight too long. He sighed
gratefully when he finished, massaging
his cheeks and forehead with
considerable pleasure. Another
glance in the mirror satisfied him
with the changes that had been
made. He turned to his briefcase
again and exchanged the gun for
a small syringe, which he pushed
into a trouser pocket, and a single-edged
razor blade.
Removing his fiber-cloth jacket
he slashed it into strips with the
razor blade and flushed it down the
disposal bowl. With the sleeves of
his blouse rolled up he had the
appearance of a typical workman
as he strolled from the compartment.
Back at the locker he replaced
the briefcase and, with a wad of
gum, glued the key to the bottom
of the locker frame.
One step more. Taking the syringe
from his pocket, he plunged
the needle into his forearm and
tossed the instrument down a
waste chute. He took three more
steps and paused uncertainly.
When he looked about him it
was with the expression of a man
waking from a vivid dream.
“Q
UITE ingenious,” Graves
murmured admiringly. “You
had your mind already preconditioned
for the shot. But why would
you deliberately give yourself amnesia?”
“What better disguise than to
believe the part you’re playing?”
“A good man must have done
that job on your mind,” Bergstrom
commented. “I’d have hesitated to
try it myself. It must have taken a
lot of trust on your part.”
[p
146
]
“Trust and money,” Zarwell said
drily.
“Your memory’s back then?”
Zarwell nodded.
“I’m glad to hear that,” Bergstrom
assured him. “Now that
you’re well again I’d like to introduce
you to a man named Vernon
Johnson. This world …”
Zarwell stopped him with an upraised
hand. “Good God, man, can’t
you see the reason for all this? I’m
tired. I’m trying to quit.”
“Quit?” Bergstrom did not quite
follow him.
“It started on my home colony,”
Zarwell explained listlessly. “A
gang of hoods had taken over the
government. I helped organize a
movement to get them out. There
was some bloodshed, but it went
quite well. Several months later an
unofficial envoy from another
world asked several of us to give
them a hand on the same kind of
job. The political conditions there
were rotten. We went with him.
Again we were successful. It seems
I have a kind of genius for that
sort of thing.”
He stretched out his legs and regarded
them thoughtfully. “I
learned then the truth of Russell’s
saying: ‘When the oppressed win
their freedom they are as oppressive
as their former masters.’ When
they went bad, I opposed them.
This time I failed. But I escaped
again. I have quite a talent for that
also.
“I’m not a professional do-gooder.”
Zarwell’s tone appealed
to Bergstrom for understanding. “I
have only a normal man’s indignation
at injustice. And now I’ve done
my share. Yet, wherever I go, the
word eventually gets out, and I’m
right back in a fight again. It’s like
the proverbial monkey on my back.
I can’t get rid of it.”
He rose. “That disguise and
memory planting were supposed to
get me out of it. I should have
known it wouldn’t work. But this
time I’m not going to be drawn
back in! You and your Vernon
Johnson can do your own revolting.
I’m through!”
Bergstrom did not argue as he
left.
RESTLESSNESS drove Zarwell
from his flat the next day—a
legal holiday on St. Martin’s. At
a railed-off lot he stopped and loitered
in the shadow of an adjacent
building watching workmen drilling
an excavation for a new structure.
When a man strolled to his side
and stood watching the workmen,
he was not surprised. He waited for
the other to speak.
“I’d like to talk to you, if you
can spare a few minutes,” the
stranger said.
Zarwell turned and studied the
man without answering. He was
medium tall, with the body of an
athlete, though perhaps ten years
[p
147
]
beyond the age of sports. He had
a manner of contained energy.
“You’re Johnson?” he asked.
The man nodded.
Zarwell tried to feel the anger he
wanted to feel, but somehow it
would not come. “We have nothing
to talk about,” was the best he
could manage.
“Then will you just listen? After,
I’ll leave—if you tell me to.”
Against his will he found himself
liking the man, and wanting at least
to be courteous. He inclined his
head toward a curb wastebox with
a flat top. “Should we sit?”
Johnson smiled agreeably and
they walked over to the box and
sat down.
“When this colony was first
founded,” Johnson began without
preamble, “the administrative body
was a governor, and a council of
twelve. Their successors were to
be elected biennially. At first they
were. Then things changed. We
haven’t had an election now in the
last twenty-three years. St. Martin’s
is beginning to prosper. Yet
the only ones receiving the benefits
are the rulers. The citizens work
twelve hours a day. They are poorly
housed
, poorly fed, poorly clothed.
They …”
Zarwell found himself not listening
as Johnson’s voice went on. The
story was always the same. But why
did they always try to drag him into
their troubles?
Why hadn’t he chosen some
other world on which to hide?
The last question prompted a
new thought. Just why had he
chosen St. Martin’s? Was it only a
coincidence? Or had he,
subconsciously
at least, picked this particular
world? He had always
considered himself the unwilling
subject of glib persuaders … but
mightn’t some inner compulsion of
his own have put the monkey on his
back?
“… and we need your help.”
Johnson had finished his speech.
Zarwell gazed up at the bright
sky. He pulled in a long breath,
and let it out in a sigh.
“What are your plans so far?”
he asked wearily.
—
CHARLES V. DE VET | To forget memories that influence him to join more missions | To prevent a psychoanalyst from probing his memories | To disguise himself among civilians in a new society | To protect himself from corrupt government officials | 0 |
26569_ZA7RADIT_5 | What do the settings of Zarwell's comanalyses have in common? | Transcriber’s note:
This story was published in
Galaxy
magazine, June 1960.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.
[p
135
]
By CHARLES V. DE VET
monkey on his back
Under the cloud of cast-off identities
lay the shape of another man—
was it himself?
Illustrated by DILLON
HE was walking endlessly
down a long, glass-walled
corridor. Bright sunlight
slanted in through one wall, on the
blue knapsack across his shoulders.
Who he was, and what he was doing
here, was clouded. The truth lurked
in some corner of his consciousness,
but it was not reached by surface
awareness.
The corridor opened at last into
a large high-domed room, much
like a railway station or an air terminal.
He walked straight ahead.
At the sight of him a man leaning
negligently against a stone pillar,
to his right but within vision,
straightened and barked an order
to him, “Halt!” He lengthened his
stride but gave no other sign.
[p
136
]
Two men hurried through a
doorway of a small anteroom to his
left, calling to him. He turned away
and began to run.
Shouts and the sound of charging
feet came from behind him. He
cut to the right, running toward the
escalator to the second floor. Another
pair of men were hurrying
down, two steps at a stride. With
no break in pace he veered into an
opening beside the escalator.
At the first turn he saw that the
aisle merely circled the stairway,
coming out into the depot again on
the other side. It was a trap. He
glanced quickly around him.
At the rear of the space was a
row of lockers for traveler use. He
slipped a coin into a pay slot,
opened the zipper on his bag and
pulled out a flat briefcase. It took
him only a few seconds to push the
case into the compartment, lock it
and slide the key along the floor
beneath the locker.
There was nothing to do after
that—except wait.
The men pursuing him came
hurtling around the turn in the
aisle. He kicked his knapsack to
one side, spreading his feet wide
with an instinctive motion.
Until that instant he had intended
to fight. Now he swiftly
reassessed the odds. There were
five of them, he saw. He should be
able to incapacitate two or three
and break out. But the fact that
they had been expecting him meant
that others would very probably
be waiting outside. His best course
now was to sham ignorance. He
relaxed.
He offered no resistance as they
reached him.
They were not gentle men. A tall
ruffian, copper-brown face damp
with perspiration and body oil,
grabbed him by the jacket and
slammed him back against the
lockers. As he shifted his weight
to keep his footing someone drove
a fist into his face. He started to
raise his hands; and a hard flat
object crashed against the side of
his skull.
The starch went out of his legs.
“D
O you make anything out of
it?” the psychoanalyst Milton
Bergstrom, asked.
John Zarwell shook his head.
“Did I talk while I was under?”
“Oh, yes. You were supposed to.
That way I follow pretty well what
you’re reenacting.”
“How does it tie in with what I
told you before?”
Bergstrom’s neat-boned, fair-skinned
face betrayed no emotion
other than an introspective stillness
of his normally alert gaze. “I see
no connection,” he decided, his
words once again precise and meticulous.
“We don’t have enough to
go on. Do you feel able to try another
comanalysis this afternoon
yet?”
“I don’t see why not.” Zarwell
[p
137
]
opened the collar of his shirt. The
day was hot, and the room had no
air conditioning, still a rare luxury
on St. Martin’s. The office window
was open, but it let in no freshness,
only the mildly rank odor that pervaded
all the planet’s habitable
area.
“Good.” Bergstrom rose. “The
serum is quite harmless, John.” He
maintained a professional diversionary
chatter as he administered
the drug. “A scopolamine derivative
that’s been well tested.”
The floor beneath Zarwell’s feet
assumed abruptly the near transfluent
consistency of a damp
sponge. It rose in a foot-high wave
and rolled gently toward the far
wall.
Bergstrom continued talking,
with practiced urbanity. “When
psychiatry was a less exact science,”
his voice went on, seeming to come
from a great distance, “a doctor
had to spend weeks, sometimes
months or years interviewing a
patient. If he was skilled enough,
he could sort the relevancies from
the vast amount of chaff. We are
able now, with the help of the
serum, to confine our discourses to
matters cogent to the patient’s
trouble.”
The floor continued its transmutation,
and Zarwell sank deep into
viscous depths. “Lie back and relax.
Don’t …”
The words tumbled down from
above. They faded, were gone.
ZARWELL found himself
<!-- original does not use drop cap here, it just capitalises the first two words -->
standing on a vast plain. There was
no sky above, and no horizon in the
distance. He was in a place without
space or dimension. There was
nothing here except himself—and
the gun that he held in his hand.
A weapon beautiful in its efficient
simplicity.
He should know all about the
instrument, its purpose and workings,
but he could not bring his
thoughts into rational focus. His
forehead creased with his mental
effort.
Abruptly the unreality about
him shifted perspective. He was
approaching—not walking, but
merely shortening the space between
them—the man who held
the gun. The man who was himself.
The other “himself” drifted
nearer also, as though drawn by a
mutual attraction.
The man with the gun raised his
weapon and pressed the trigger.
With the action the perspective
shifted again. He was watching the
face of the man he shot jerk and
twitch, expand and contract. The
face was unharmed, yet it was no
longer the same. No longer his own
features.
The stranger face smiled approvingly
at him.
“O
DD,” Bergstrom said.
<!-- original does not use drop cap here, it just capitalises the first two words -->
He brought his hands up and joined
the tips of his fingers against his
chest. “But it’s another piece in the
[p
138
]
jig-saw. In time it will fit into
place.” He paused. “It means no
more to you than the first, I suppose?”
“No,” Zarwell answered.
He was not a talking man, Bergstrom
reflected. It was more than
reticence, however. The man had
a hard granite core, only partially
concealed by his present perplexity.
He was a man who could handle
himself well in an emergency.
Bergstrom shrugged, dismissing
his strayed thoughts. “I expected
as much. A quite normal first phase
of treatment.” He straightened a
paper on his desk. “I think that will
be enough for today. Twice in one
sitting is about all we ever try.
Otherwise some particular episode
might cause undue mental stress,
and set up a block.” He glanced
down at his appointment pad. “Tomorrow
at two, then?”
Zarwell grunted acknowledgment
and pushed himself to his
feet, apparently unaware that his
shirt clung damply to his body.
THE sun was still high when
Zarwell left the analyst’s office.
The white marble of the city’s
buildings shimmered in the afternoon
heat, squat and austere as
giant tree trunks, pock-marked and
gray-mottled with windows. Zarwell
was careful not to rest his hand
on the flesh searing surface of the
stone.
The evening meal hour was approaching
when he reached the
Flats, on the way to his apartment.
The streets of the old section were
near-deserted. The only sounds he
heard as he passed were the occasional
cry of a baby, chronically
uncomfortable in the day’s heat,
and the lowing of imported cattle
waiting in a nearby shed to be
shipped to the country.
All St. Martin’s has a distinctive
smell, as of an arid dried-out
swamp, with a faint taint of fish.
But in the Flats the odor changes.
Here is the smell of factories, warehouses,
and trading marts; the smell
of stale cooking drifting from the
homes of the laborers and lower
class techmen who live there.
Zarwell passed a group of
smaller children playing a desultory
game of lic-lic for pieces of
candy and cigarettes. Slowly he
climbed the stairs of a stone flat.
He prepared a supper for himself
and ate it without either enjoyment
or distaste. He lay down, fully
clothed, on his bed. The visit to the
analyst had done nothing to dispel
his ennui.
[p
139
]
The next morning when Zarwell
awoke he lay for a moment, unmoving.
The feeling was there
again, like a scene waiting only to
be gazed at directly to be perceived.
It was as though a great wisdom
lay at the edge of understanding.
If he rested quietly it would
all come to him. Yet always, when
his mind lost its sleep-induced
[p
140
]
lethargy, the moment of near understanding
slipped away.
This morning, however, the sense
of disorientation did not pass with
full wakefulness. He achieved no
understanding, but the strangeness
did not leave as he sat up.
He gazed about him. The room
did not seem to be his own. The
furnishings, and the clothing he observed
in a closet, might have belonged
to a stranger.
He pulled himself from his blankets,
his body moving with mechanical
reaction. The slippers into
which he put his feet were larger
than he had expected them to be.
He walked about the small apartment.
The place was familiar, but
only as it would have been if he
had studied it from blueprints, not
as though he lived there.
The feeling was still with him
when he returned to the psychoanalyst.
THE scene this time was more
kaleidoscopic, less personal.
A village was being ravaged.
Men struggled and died in the
streets. Zarwell moved among
them, seldom taking part in the
individual clashes, yet a moving
force in the
conflict
.
The background changed. He
understood that he was on a different
world.
Here a city burned. Its resistance
was nearing its end. Zarwell was
riding a shaggy pony outside a high
wall surrounding the stricken metropolis.
He moved in and joined a
party of short, bearded men, directing
them as they battered at the
wall with a huge log mounted on a
many-wheeled truck.
The log broke a breach in the
concrete and the besiegers charged
through, carrying back the defenders
who sought vainly to plug the
gap. Soon there would be rioting
in the streets again, plundering and
killing.
Zarwell was not the leader of the
invaders, only a lesser figure in the
rebellion. But he had played a leading
part in the planning of the
strategy that led to the city’s fall.
The job had been well done.
Time passed, without visible
break in the panorama. Now Zarwell
was fleeing, pursued by the
same bearded men who had been
his comrades before. Still he moved
with the same firm purpose, vigilant,
resourceful, and well prepared
for the eventuality that had befallen.
He made his escape without
difficulty.
He alighted from a space ship on
still another world—another shift
in time—and the atmosphere of
conflict engulfed him.
Weary but resigned he accepted
it, and did what he had to do …
BERGSTROM was regarding
<!-- original does not use drop cap here, it just capitalises the first two words -->
him with speculative scrutiny.
“You’ve had quite a past, apparently,”
he observed.
[p
141
]
Zarwell smiled with mild embarrassment.
“At least in my dreams.”
“Dreams?” Bergstrom’s eyes
widened in surprise. “Oh, I beg your
pardon. I must have forgotten to
explain. This work is so routine to
me that sometimes I forget it’s all
new to a patient. Actually what you
experienced under the drug were
not dreams. They were recollections
of real episodes from your
past.”
Zarwell’s expression became
wary. He watched Bergstrom
closely. After a minute, however,
he seemed satisfied, and he let himself
settle back against the cushion
of his chair. “I remember nothing
of what I saw,” he observed.
“That’s why you’re here, you
know,” Bergstrom answered. “To
help you remember.”
“But everything under the drug
is so …”
“Haphazard? That’s true. The
recall episodes are always purely
random, with no chronological sequence.
Our problem will be to reassemble
them in proper order
later. Or some particular scene may
trigger a complete memory return.
“It is my considered opinion,”
Bergstrom went on, “that your lost
memory will turn out to be no ordinary
amnesia. I believe we will find
that your mind has been tampered
with.”
“Nothing I’ve seen under the
drug fits into the past I do remember.”
“That’s what makes me so certain,”
Bergstrom said confidently.
“You don’t remember what we
have shown to be true. Conversely
then, what you think you remember
must be false. It must have been
implanted there. But we can go
into that later. For today I think
we have done enough. This episode
was quite prolonged.”
“I won’t have any time off again
until next week end,” Zarwell reminded
him.
“That’s right.” Bergstrom
thought for a moment. “We
shouldn’t let this hang too long.
Could you come here after work
tomorrow?”
“I suppose I could.”
“Fine,” Bergstrom said with satisfaction.
“I’ll admit I’m considerably
more than casually interested
in your case by this time.”
A WORK truck picked Zarwell
up the next morning and he
rode with a tech crew to the edge of
the reclam area. Beside the belt
bringing ocean muck from the converter
plant at the seashore his
bulldozer was waiting.
He took his place behind the
drive wheel and began working dirt
down between windbreakers anchored
in the rock. Along a makeshift
road into the badlands trucks
brought crushed lime and phosphorus
to supplement the ocean
sediment. The progress of life from
the sea to the land was a mechanical
[p
142
]
process of this growing world.
Nearly two hundred years ago,
when Earth established a colony on
St. Martin’s, the land surface of the
planet had been barren. Only its
seas thrived with animal and vegetable
life. The necessary machinery
and technicians had been supplied
by Earth, and the long struggle began
to fit the world for human
needs. When Zarwell arrived, six
months before, the vitalized area
already extended three hundred
miles along the coast, and sixty
miles inland. And every day the
progress continued. A large percentage
of the energy and resources
of the world were devoted to that
essential expansion.
The reclam crews filled and
sodded the sterile rock, planted
binding grasses, grain and trees, and
diverted rivers to keep it fertile.
When there were no rivers to divert
they blasted out springs and lakes
in the foothills to make their own.
Biologists developed the necessary
germ and insect life from what they
found in the sea. Where that failed,
they imported microorganisms
from Earth.
Three rubber-tracked crawlers
picked their way down from the
mountains until they joined the
road passing the belt. They were
loaded with ore that would be
smelted into metal for depleted
Earth, or for other colonies short
of minerals. It was St. Martin’s only
export thus far.
Zarwell pulled his sun helmet
lower, to better guard his hot, dry
features. The wind blew continuously
on St. Martin’s, but it furnished
small relief from the heat.
After its three-thousand-mile journey
across scorched sterile rock, it
sucked the moisture from a man’s
body, bringing a membrane-shrinking
dryness to the nostrils as it was
breathed in. With it came also the
cloying taste of limestone in a
worker’s mouth.
Zarwell gazed idly about at the
other laborers. Fully three-quarters
of them were beri-rabza ridden. A
cure for the skin fungus had not
yet been found; the men’s faces
and hands were scabbed and red.
The colony had grown to near self-sufficiency,
would soon have a moderate
prosperity, yet they still
lacked adequate medical and research
facilities.
Not all the world’s citizens were
content.
Bergstrom was waiting in his office
when Zarwell arrived that
evening.
HE was lying motionless on a
hard cot, with his eyes closed,
yet with his every sense sharply
quickened. Tentatively he tightened
small muscles in his arms and
legs. Across his wrists and thighs
he felt straps binding him to the
cot.
“So that’s our big, bad man,” a
coarse voice above him observed
[p
143
]
caustically. “He doesn’t look so
tough now, does he?”
“It might have been better to
kill him right away,” a second, less
confident voice said. “It’s supposed
to be impossible to hold him.”
“Don’t be stupid. We just do
what we’re told. We’ll hold him.”
“What do you think they’ll do
with him?”
“Execute him, I suppose,” the
harsh voice said matter-of-factly.
“They’re probably just curious to
see what he looks like first. They’ll
be disappointed.”
Zarwell opened his eyes a slit to
observe his surroundings.
It was a mistake. “He’s out of
it,” the first speaker said, and Zarwell
allowed his eyes to open fully.
The voice, he saw, belonged to
the big man who had bruised him
against the locker at the spaceport.
Irrelevantly he wondered how he
knew now that it had been a spaceport.
His captor’s broad face jeered
down at Zarwell. “Have a good
sleep?” he asked with mock solicitude.
Zarwell did not deign to acknowledge
that he heard.
The big man turned. “You can
tell the Chief he’s awake,” he said.
Zarwell followed his gaze to where
a younger man, with a blond lock of
hair on his forehead, stood behind
him. The youth nodded and went
out, while the other pulled a chair
up to the side of Zarwell’s cot.
While their attention was away
from him Zarwell had unobtrusively
loosened his bonds as much as
possible with arm leverage. As the
big man drew his chair nearer, he
made the hand farthest from him
tight and compact and worked it
free of the leather loop. He waited.
The big man belched. “You’re
supposed to be great stuff in a situation
like this,” he said, his smoke-tan
face splitting in a grin that revealed
large square teeth. “How
about giving me a sample?”
“You’re a yellow-livered bastard,”
Zarwell told him.
The grin faded from the oily face
as the man stood up. He leaned over
the cot—and Zarwell’s left hand
shot up and locked about his throat,
joined almost immediately by the
right.
The man’s mouth opened and he
tried to yell as he threw himself
frantically backward. He clawed at
the hands about his neck. When
that failed to break the grip he suddenly
reversed his weight and
drove his fist at Zarwell’s head.
Zarwell pulled the struggling
body down against his chest and
held it there until all agitated
movement ceased. He sat up then,
letting the body slide to the floor.
The straps about his thighs came
loose with little effort.
THE analyst dabbed at his upper
lip with a handkerchief. “The
episodes are beginning to tie together,”
he said, with an attempt at
[p
144
]
nonchalance. “The next couple
should do it.”
Zarwell did not answer. His
memory seemed on the point of
complete return, and he sat quietly,
hopefully. However, nothing more
came and he returned his attention
to his more immediate problem.
Opening a button on his shirt, he
pulled back a strip of plastic cloth
just below his rib cage and took
out a small flat pistol. He held it
in the palm of his hand. He knew
now why he always carried it.
Bergstrom had his bad moment.
“You’re not going to …” he began
at the sight of the gun. He tried
again. “You must be joking.”
“I have very little sense of humor,”
Zarwell corrected him.
“You’d be foolish!”
Bergstrom obviously realized
how close he was to death. Yet
surprisingly, after the first start,
he showed little fear. Zarwell had
thought the man a bit soft, too
adjusted to a life of ease and some
prestige to meet danger calmly.
Curiosity restrained his trigger finger.
“Why would I be foolish?” he
asked. “Your Meninger oath of inviolable
confidence?”
Bergstrom shook his head. “I
know it’s been broken before. But
you need me. You’re not through,
you know. If you killed me you’d
still have to trust some other
analyst.”
“Is that the best you can do?”
“No.” Bergstrom was angry now.
“But use that logical mind you’re
supposed to have! Scenes before
this have shown what kind of man
you are. Just because this last happened
here on St. Martin’s makes
little difference. If I was going to
turn you in to the police, I’d have
done it before this.”
Zarwell debated with himself the
truth of what the other had said.
“Why didn’t you turn me in?” he
asked.
“Because you’re no mad-dog
killer!” Now that the crisis seemed
to be past, Bergstrom spoke more
calmly, even allowed himself to
relax. “You’re still pretty much in
the fog about yourself. I read more
in those comanalyses than you did.
I even know who you are!”
Zarwell’s eyebrows raised.
“Who am I?” he asked, very interested
now. Without attention he
put his pistol away in a trouser
pocket.
Bergstrom brushed the question
aside with one hand. “Your name
makes little difference. You’ve used
many. But you are an idealist. Your
killings were necessary to bring
justice to the places you visited. By
now you’re almost a legend among
the human worlds. I’d like to talk
more with you on that later.”
While Zarwell considered, Bergstrom
pressed his advantage. “One
more scene might do it,” he said.
“Should we try again—if you trust
me, that is?”
[p
145
]
Zarwell made his decision quickly.
“Go ahead,” he answered.
ALL Zarwell’s attention seemed
on the cigar he lit as he rode
down the escalator, but he surveyed
the terminal carefully over the rim
of his hand. He spied no suspicious
loungers.
Behind the escalator he groped
along the floor beneath the lockers
until he found his key. The briefcase
was under his arm a minute
later.
In the basement lave he put a
coin in the pay slot of a private
compartment and went in.
As he zipped open the briefcase
he surveyed his features in the mirror.
A small muscle at the corner of
one eye twitched spasmodically.
One cheek wore a frozen quarter
smile. Thirty-six hours under the
paralysis was longer than advisable.
The muscles should be rested at
least every twenty hours.
Fortunately his natural features
would serve as an adequate disguise
now.
He adjusted the ring setting on
the pistol-shaped instrument that
he took from his case, and carefully
rayed several small areas of
his face, loosening muscles that had
been tight too long. He sighed
gratefully when he finished, massaging
his cheeks and forehead with
considerable pleasure. Another
glance in the mirror satisfied him
with the changes that had been
made. He turned to his briefcase
again and exchanged the gun for
a small syringe, which he pushed
into a trouser pocket, and a single-edged
razor blade.
Removing his fiber-cloth jacket
he slashed it into strips with the
razor blade and flushed it down the
disposal bowl. With the sleeves of
his blouse rolled up he had the
appearance of a typical workman
as he strolled from the compartment.
Back at the locker he replaced
the briefcase and, with a wad of
gum, glued the key to the bottom
of the locker frame.
One step more. Taking the syringe
from his pocket, he plunged
the needle into his forearm and
tossed the instrument down a
waste chute. He took three more
steps and paused uncertainly.
When he looked about him it
was with the expression of a man
waking from a vivid dream.
“Q
UITE ingenious,” Graves
murmured admiringly. “You
had your mind already preconditioned
for the shot. But why would
you deliberately give yourself amnesia?”
“What better disguise than to
believe the part you’re playing?”
“A good man must have done
that job on your mind,” Bergstrom
commented. “I’d have hesitated to
try it myself. It must have taken a
lot of trust on your part.”
[p
146
]
“Trust and money,” Zarwell said
drily.
“Your memory’s back then?”
Zarwell nodded.
“I’m glad to hear that,” Bergstrom
assured him. “Now that
you’re well again I’d like to introduce
you to a man named Vernon
Johnson. This world …”
Zarwell stopped him with an upraised
hand. “Good God, man, can’t
you see the reason for all this? I’m
tired. I’m trying to quit.”
“Quit?” Bergstrom did not quite
follow him.
“It started on my home colony,”
Zarwell explained listlessly. “A
gang of hoods had taken over the
government. I helped organize a
movement to get them out. There
was some bloodshed, but it went
quite well. Several months later an
unofficial envoy from another
world asked several of us to give
them a hand on the same kind of
job. The political conditions there
were rotten. We went with him.
Again we were successful. It seems
I have a kind of genius for that
sort of thing.”
He stretched out his legs and regarded
them thoughtfully. “I
learned then the truth of Russell’s
saying: ‘When the oppressed win
their freedom they are as oppressive
as their former masters.’ When
they went bad, I opposed them.
This time I failed. But I escaped
again. I have quite a talent for that
also.
“I’m not a professional do-gooder.”
Zarwell’s tone appealed
to Bergstrom for understanding. “I
have only a normal man’s indignation
at injustice. And now I’ve done
my share. Yet, wherever I go, the
word eventually gets out, and I’m
right back in a fight again. It’s like
the proverbial monkey on my back.
I can’t get rid of it.”
He rose. “That disguise and
memory planting were supposed to
get me out of it. I should have
known it wouldn’t work. But this
time I’m not going to be drawn
back in! You and your Vernon
Johnson can do your own revolting.
I’m through!”
Bergstrom did not argue as he
left.
RESTLESSNESS drove Zarwell
from his flat the next day—a
legal holiday on St. Martin’s. At
a railed-off lot he stopped and loitered
in the shadow of an adjacent
building watching workmen drilling
an excavation for a new structure.
When a man strolled to his side
and stood watching the workmen,
he was not surprised. He waited for
the other to speak.
“I’d like to talk to you, if you
can spare a few minutes,” the
stranger said.
Zarwell turned and studied the
man without answering. He was
medium tall, with the body of an
athlete, though perhaps ten years
[p
147
]
beyond the age of sports. He had
a manner of contained energy.
“You’re Johnson?” he asked.
The man nodded.
Zarwell tried to feel the anger he
wanted to feel, but somehow it
would not come. “We have nothing
to talk about,” was the best he
could manage.
“Then will you just listen? After,
I’ll leave—if you tell me to.”
Against his will he found himself
liking the man, and wanting at least
to be courteous. He inclined his
head toward a curb wastebox with
a flat top. “Should we sit?”
Johnson smiled agreeably and
they walked over to the box and
sat down.
“When this colony was first
founded,” Johnson began without
preamble, “the administrative body
was a governor, and a council of
twelve. Their successors were to
be elected biennially. At first they
were. Then things changed. We
haven’t had an election now in the
last twenty-three years. St. Martin’s
is beginning to prosper. Yet
the only ones receiving the benefits
are the rulers. The citizens work
twelve hours a day. They are poorly
housed
, poorly fed, poorly clothed.
They …”
Zarwell found himself not listening
as Johnson’s voice went on. The
story was always the same. But why
did they always try to drag him into
their troubles?
Why hadn’t he chosen some
other world on which to hide?
The last question prompted a
new thought. Just why had he
chosen St. Martin’s? Was it only a
coincidence? Or had he,
subconsciously
at least, picked this particular
world? He had always
considered himself the unwilling
subject of glib persuaders … but
mightn’t some inner compulsion of
his own have put the monkey on his
back?
“… and we need your help.”
Johnson had finished his speech.
Zarwell gazed up at the bright
sky. He pulled in a long breath,
and let it out in a sigh.
“What are your plans so far?”
he asked wearily.
—
CHARLES V. DE VET | deception | captivity | pursuits | weapons | 2 |
26569_ZA7RADIT_6 | For what reason is Zarwell seeking treatment with Bergstrom? | Transcriber’s note:
This story was published in
Galaxy
magazine, June 1960.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.
[p
135
]
By CHARLES V. DE VET
monkey on his back
Under the cloud of cast-off identities
lay the shape of another man—
was it himself?
Illustrated by DILLON
HE was walking endlessly
down a long, glass-walled
corridor. Bright sunlight
slanted in through one wall, on the
blue knapsack across his shoulders.
Who he was, and what he was doing
here, was clouded. The truth lurked
in some corner of his consciousness,
but it was not reached by surface
awareness.
The corridor opened at last into
a large high-domed room, much
like a railway station or an air terminal.
He walked straight ahead.
At the sight of him a man leaning
negligently against a stone pillar,
to his right but within vision,
straightened and barked an order
to him, “Halt!” He lengthened his
stride but gave no other sign.
[p
136
]
Two men hurried through a
doorway of a small anteroom to his
left, calling to him. He turned away
and began to run.
Shouts and the sound of charging
feet came from behind him. He
cut to the right, running toward the
escalator to the second floor. Another
pair of men were hurrying
down, two steps at a stride. With
no break in pace he veered into an
opening beside the escalator.
At the first turn he saw that the
aisle merely circled the stairway,
coming out into the depot again on
the other side. It was a trap. He
glanced quickly around him.
At the rear of the space was a
row of lockers for traveler use. He
slipped a coin into a pay slot,
opened the zipper on his bag and
pulled out a flat briefcase. It took
him only a few seconds to push the
case into the compartment, lock it
and slide the key along the floor
beneath the locker.
There was nothing to do after
that—except wait.
The men pursuing him came
hurtling around the turn in the
aisle. He kicked his knapsack to
one side, spreading his feet wide
with an instinctive motion.
Until that instant he had intended
to fight. Now he swiftly
reassessed the odds. There were
five of them, he saw. He should be
able to incapacitate two or three
and break out. But the fact that
they had been expecting him meant
that others would very probably
be waiting outside. His best course
now was to sham ignorance. He
relaxed.
He offered no resistance as they
reached him.
They were not gentle men. A tall
ruffian, copper-brown face damp
with perspiration and body oil,
grabbed him by the jacket and
slammed him back against the
lockers. As he shifted his weight
to keep his footing someone drove
a fist into his face. He started to
raise his hands; and a hard flat
object crashed against the side of
his skull.
The starch went out of his legs.
“D
O you make anything out of
it?” the psychoanalyst Milton
Bergstrom, asked.
John Zarwell shook his head.
“Did I talk while I was under?”
“Oh, yes. You were supposed to.
That way I follow pretty well what
you’re reenacting.”
“How does it tie in with what I
told you before?”
Bergstrom’s neat-boned, fair-skinned
face betrayed no emotion
other than an introspective stillness
of his normally alert gaze. “I see
no connection,” he decided, his
words once again precise and meticulous.
“We don’t have enough to
go on. Do you feel able to try another
comanalysis this afternoon
yet?”
“I don’t see why not.” Zarwell
[p
137
]
opened the collar of his shirt. The
day was hot, and the room had no
air conditioning, still a rare luxury
on St. Martin’s. The office window
was open, but it let in no freshness,
only the mildly rank odor that pervaded
all the planet’s habitable
area.
“Good.” Bergstrom rose. “The
serum is quite harmless, John.” He
maintained a professional diversionary
chatter as he administered
the drug. “A scopolamine derivative
that’s been well tested.”
The floor beneath Zarwell’s feet
assumed abruptly the near transfluent
consistency of a damp
sponge. It rose in a foot-high wave
and rolled gently toward the far
wall.
Bergstrom continued talking,
with practiced urbanity. “When
psychiatry was a less exact science,”
his voice went on, seeming to come
from a great distance, “a doctor
had to spend weeks, sometimes
months or years interviewing a
patient. If he was skilled enough,
he could sort the relevancies from
the vast amount of chaff. We are
able now, with the help of the
serum, to confine our discourses to
matters cogent to the patient’s
trouble.”
The floor continued its transmutation,
and Zarwell sank deep into
viscous depths. “Lie back and relax.
Don’t …”
The words tumbled down from
above. They faded, were gone.
ZARWELL found himself
<!-- original does not use drop cap here, it just capitalises the first two words -->
standing on a vast plain. There was
no sky above, and no horizon in the
distance. He was in a place without
space or dimension. There was
nothing here except himself—and
the gun that he held in his hand.
A weapon beautiful in its efficient
simplicity.
He should know all about the
instrument, its purpose and workings,
but he could not bring his
thoughts into rational focus. His
forehead creased with his mental
effort.
Abruptly the unreality about
him shifted perspective. He was
approaching—not walking, but
merely shortening the space between
them—the man who held
the gun. The man who was himself.
The other “himself” drifted
nearer also, as though drawn by a
mutual attraction.
The man with the gun raised his
weapon and pressed the trigger.
With the action the perspective
shifted again. He was watching the
face of the man he shot jerk and
twitch, expand and contract. The
face was unharmed, yet it was no
longer the same. No longer his own
features.
The stranger face smiled approvingly
at him.
“O
DD,” Bergstrom said.
<!-- original does not use drop cap here, it just capitalises the first two words -->
He brought his hands up and joined
the tips of his fingers against his
chest. “But it’s another piece in the
[p
138
]
jig-saw. In time it will fit into
place.” He paused. “It means no
more to you than the first, I suppose?”
“No,” Zarwell answered.
He was not a talking man, Bergstrom
reflected. It was more than
reticence, however. The man had
a hard granite core, only partially
concealed by his present perplexity.
He was a man who could handle
himself well in an emergency.
Bergstrom shrugged, dismissing
his strayed thoughts. “I expected
as much. A quite normal first phase
of treatment.” He straightened a
paper on his desk. “I think that will
be enough for today. Twice in one
sitting is about all we ever try.
Otherwise some particular episode
might cause undue mental stress,
and set up a block.” He glanced
down at his appointment pad. “Tomorrow
at two, then?”
Zarwell grunted acknowledgment
and pushed himself to his
feet, apparently unaware that his
shirt clung damply to his body.
THE sun was still high when
Zarwell left the analyst’s office.
The white marble of the city’s
buildings shimmered in the afternoon
heat, squat and austere as
giant tree trunks, pock-marked and
gray-mottled with windows. Zarwell
was careful not to rest his hand
on the flesh searing surface of the
stone.
The evening meal hour was approaching
when he reached the
Flats, on the way to his apartment.
The streets of the old section were
near-deserted. The only sounds he
heard as he passed were the occasional
cry of a baby, chronically
uncomfortable in the day’s heat,
and the lowing of imported cattle
waiting in a nearby shed to be
shipped to the country.
All St. Martin’s has a distinctive
smell, as of an arid dried-out
swamp, with a faint taint of fish.
But in the Flats the odor changes.
Here is the smell of factories, warehouses,
and trading marts; the smell
of stale cooking drifting from the
homes of the laborers and lower
class techmen who live there.
Zarwell passed a group of
smaller children playing a desultory
game of lic-lic for pieces of
candy and cigarettes. Slowly he
climbed the stairs of a stone flat.
He prepared a supper for himself
and ate it without either enjoyment
or distaste. He lay down, fully
clothed, on his bed. The visit to the
analyst had done nothing to dispel
his ennui.
[p
139
]
The next morning when Zarwell
awoke he lay for a moment, unmoving.
The feeling was there
again, like a scene waiting only to
be gazed at directly to be perceived.
It was as though a great wisdom
lay at the edge of understanding.
If he rested quietly it would
all come to him. Yet always, when
his mind lost its sleep-induced
[p
140
]
lethargy, the moment of near understanding
slipped away.
This morning, however, the sense
of disorientation did not pass with
full wakefulness. He achieved no
understanding, but the strangeness
did not leave as he sat up.
He gazed about him. The room
did not seem to be his own. The
furnishings, and the clothing he observed
in a closet, might have belonged
to a stranger.
He pulled himself from his blankets,
his body moving with mechanical
reaction. The slippers into
which he put his feet were larger
than he had expected them to be.
He walked about the small apartment.
The place was familiar, but
only as it would have been if he
had studied it from blueprints, not
as though he lived there.
The feeling was still with him
when he returned to the psychoanalyst.
THE scene this time was more
kaleidoscopic, less personal.
A village was being ravaged.
Men struggled and died in the
streets. Zarwell moved among
them, seldom taking part in the
individual clashes, yet a moving
force in the
conflict
.
The background changed. He
understood that he was on a different
world.
Here a city burned. Its resistance
was nearing its end. Zarwell was
riding a shaggy pony outside a high
wall surrounding the stricken metropolis.
He moved in and joined a
party of short, bearded men, directing
them as they battered at the
wall with a huge log mounted on a
many-wheeled truck.
The log broke a breach in the
concrete and the besiegers charged
through, carrying back the defenders
who sought vainly to plug the
gap. Soon there would be rioting
in the streets again, plundering and
killing.
Zarwell was not the leader of the
invaders, only a lesser figure in the
rebellion. But he had played a leading
part in the planning of the
strategy that led to the city’s fall.
The job had been well done.
Time passed, without visible
break in the panorama. Now Zarwell
was fleeing, pursued by the
same bearded men who had been
his comrades before. Still he moved
with the same firm purpose, vigilant,
resourceful, and well prepared
for the eventuality that had befallen.
He made his escape without
difficulty.
He alighted from a space ship on
still another world—another shift
in time—and the atmosphere of
conflict engulfed him.
Weary but resigned he accepted
it, and did what he had to do …
BERGSTROM was regarding
<!-- original does not use drop cap here, it just capitalises the first two words -->
him with speculative scrutiny.
“You’ve had quite a past, apparently,”
he observed.
[p
141
]
Zarwell smiled with mild embarrassment.
“At least in my dreams.”
“Dreams?” Bergstrom’s eyes
widened in surprise. “Oh, I beg your
pardon. I must have forgotten to
explain. This work is so routine to
me that sometimes I forget it’s all
new to a patient. Actually what you
experienced under the drug were
not dreams. They were recollections
of real episodes from your
past.”
Zarwell’s expression became
wary. He watched Bergstrom
closely. After a minute, however,
he seemed satisfied, and he let himself
settle back against the cushion
of his chair. “I remember nothing
of what I saw,” he observed.
“That’s why you’re here, you
know,” Bergstrom answered. “To
help you remember.”
“But everything under the drug
is so …”
“Haphazard? That’s true. The
recall episodes are always purely
random, with no chronological sequence.
Our problem will be to reassemble
them in proper order
later. Or some particular scene may
trigger a complete memory return.
“It is my considered opinion,”
Bergstrom went on, “that your lost
memory will turn out to be no ordinary
amnesia. I believe we will find
that your mind has been tampered
with.”
“Nothing I’ve seen under the
drug fits into the past I do remember.”
“That’s what makes me so certain,”
Bergstrom said confidently.
“You don’t remember what we
have shown to be true. Conversely
then, what you think you remember
must be false. It must have been
implanted there. But we can go
into that later. For today I think
we have done enough. This episode
was quite prolonged.”
“I won’t have any time off again
until next week end,” Zarwell reminded
him.
“That’s right.” Bergstrom
thought for a moment. “We
shouldn’t let this hang too long.
Could you come here after work
tomorrow?”
“I suppose I could.”
“Fine,” Bergstrom said with satisfaction.
“I’ll admit I’m considerably
more than casually interested
in your case by this time.”
A WORK truck picked Zarwell
up the next morning and he
rode with a tech crew to the edge of
the reclam area. Beside the belt
bringing ocean muck from the converter
plant at the seashore his
bulldozer was waiting.
He took his place behind the
drive wheel and began working dirt
down between windbreakers anchored
in the rock. Along a makeshift
road into the badlands trucks
brought crushed lime and phosphorus
to supplement the ocean
sediment. The progress of life from
the sea to the land was a mechanical
[p
142
]
process of this growing world.
Nearly two hundred years ago,
when Earth established a colony on
St. Martin’s, the land surface of the
planet had been barren. Only its
seas thrived with animal and vegetable
life. The necessary machinery
and technicians had been supplied
by Earth, and the long struggle began
to fit the world for human
needs. When Zarwell arrived, six
months before, the vitalized area
already extended three hundred
miles along the coast, and sixty
miles inland. And every day the
progress continued. A large percentage
of the energy and resources
of the world were devoted to that
essential expansion.
The reclam crews filled and
sodded the sterile rock, planted
binding grasses, grain and trees, and
diverted rivers to keep it fertile.
When there were no rivers to divert
they blasted out springs and lakes
in the foothills to make their own.
Biologists developed the necessary
germ and insect life from what they
found in the sea. Where that failed,
they imported microorganisms
from Earth.
Three rubber-tracked crawlers
picked their way down from the
mountains until they joined the
road passing the belt. They were
loaded with ore that would be
smelted into metal for depleted
Earth, or for other colonies short
of minerals. It was St. Martin’s only
export thus far.
Zarwell pulled his sun helmet
lower, to better guard his hot, dry
features. The wind blew continuously
on St. Martin’s, but it furnished
small relief from the heat.
After its three-thousand-mile journey
across scorched sterile rock, it
sucked the moisture from a man’s
body, bringing a membrane-shrinking
dryness to the nostrils as it was
breathed in. With it came also the
cloying taste of limestone in a
worker’s mouth.
Zarwell gazed idly about at the
other laborers. Fully three-quarters
of them were beri-rabza ridden. A
cure for the skin fungus had not
yet been found; the men’s faces
and hands were scabbed and red.
The colony had grown to near self-sufficiency,
would soon have a moderate
prosperity, yet they still
lacked adequate medical and research
facilities.
Not all the world’s citizens were
content.
Bergstrom was waiting in his office
when Zarwell arrived that
evening.
HE was lying motionless on a
hard cot, with his eyes closed,
yet with his every sense sharply
quickened. Tentatively he tightened
small muscles in his arms and
legs. Across his wrists and thighs
he felt straps binding him to the
cot.
“So that’s our big, bad man,” a
coarse voice above him observed
[p
143
]
caustically. “He doesn’t look so
tough now, does he?”
“It might have been better to
kill him right away,” a second, less
confident voice said. “It’s supposed
to be impossible to hold him.”
“Don’t be stupid. We just do
what we’re told. We’ll hold him.”
“What do you think they’ll do
with him?”
“Execute him, I suppose,” the
harsh voice said matter-of-factly.
“They’re probably just curious to
see what he looks like first. They’ll
be disappointed.”
Zarwell opened his eyes a slit to
observe his surroundings.
It was a mistake. “He’s out of
it,” the first speaker said, and Zarwell
allowed his eyes to open fully.
The voice, he saw, belonged to
the big man who had bruised him
against the locker at the spaceport.
Irrelevantly he wondered how he
knew now that it had been a spaceport.
His captor’s broad face jeered
down at Zarwell. “Have a good
sleep?” he asked with mock solicitude.
Zarwell did not deign to acknowledge
that he heard.
The big man turned. “You can
tell the Chief he’s awake,” he said.
Zarwell followed his gaze to where
a younger man, with a blond lock of
hair on his forehead, stood behind
him. The youth nodded and went
out, while the other pulled a chair
up to the side of Zarwell’s cot.
While their attention was away
from him Zarwell had unobtrusively
loosened his bonds as much as
possible with arm leverage. As the
big man drew his chair nearer, he
made the hand farthest from him
tight and compact and worked it
free of the leather loop. He waited.
The big man belched. “You’re
supposed to be great stuff in a situation
like this,” he said, his smoke-tan
face splitting in a grin that revealed
large square teeth. “How
about giving me a sample?”
“You’re a yellow-livered bastard,”
Zarwell told him.
The grin faded from the oily face
as the man stood up. He leaned over
the cot—and Zarwell’s left hand
shot up and locked about his throat,
joined almost immediately by the
right.
The man’s mouth opened and he
tried to yell as he threw himself
frantically backward. He clawed at
the hands about his neck. When
that failed to break the grip he suddenly
reversed his weight and
drove his fist at Zarwell’s head.
Zarwell pulled the struggling
body down against his chest and
held it there until all agitated
movement ceased. He sat up then,
letting the body slide to the floor.
The straps about his thighs came
loose with little effort.
THE analyst dabbed at his upper
lip with a handkerchief. “The
episodes are beginning to tie together,”
he said, with an attempt at
[p
144
]
nonchalance. “The next couple
should do it.”
Zarwell did not answer. His
memory seemed on the point of
complete return, and he sat quietly,
hopefully. However, nothing more
came and he returned his attention
to his more immediate problem.
Opening a button on his shirt, he
pulled back a strip of plastic cloth
just below his rib cage and took
out a small flat pistol. He held it
in the palm of his hand. He knew
now why he always carried it.
Bergstrom had his bad moment.
“You’re not going to …” he began
at the sight of the gun. He tried
again. “You must be joking.”
“I have very little sense of humor,”
Zarwell corrected him.
“You’d be foolish!”
Bergstrom obviously realized
how close he was to death. Yet
surprisingly, after the first start,
he showed little fear. Zarwell had
thought the man a bit soft, too
adjusted to a life of ease and some
prestige to meet danger calmly.
Curiosity restrained his trigger finger.
“Why would I be foolish?” he
asked. “Your Meninger oath of inviolable
confidence?”
Bergstrom shook his head. “I
know it’s been broken before. But
you need me. You’re not through,
you know. If you killed me you’d
still have to trust some other
analyst.”
“Is that the best you can do?”
“No.” Bergstrom was angry now.
“But use that logical mind you’re
supposed to have! Scenes before
this have shown what kind of man
you are. Just because this last happened
here on St. Martin’s makes
little difference. If I was going to
turn you in to the police, I’d have
done it before this.”
Zarwell debated with himself the
truth of what the other had said.
“Why didn’t you turn me in?” he
asked.
“Because you’re no mad-dog
killer!” Now that the crisis seemed
to be past, Bergstrom spoke more
calmly, even allowed himself to
relax. “You’re still pretty much in
the fog about yourself. I read more
in those comanalyses than you did.
I even know who you are!”
Zarwell’s eyebrows raised.
“Who am I?” he asked, very interested
now. Without attention he
put his pistol away in a trouser
pocket.
Bergstrom brushed the question
aside with one hand. “Your name
makes little difference. You’ve used
many. But you are an idealist. Your
killings were necessary to bring
justice to the places you visited. By
now you’re almost a legend among
the human worlds. I’d like to talk
more with you on that later.”
While Zarwell considered, Bergstrom
pressed his advantage. “One
more scene might do it,” he said.
“Should we try again—if you trust
me, that is?”
[p
145
]
Zarwell made his decision quickly.
“Go ahead,” he answered.
ALL Zarwell’s attention seemed
on the cigar he lit as he rode
down the escalator, but he surveyed
the terminal carefully over the rim
of his hand. He spied no suspicious
loungers.
Behind the escalator he groped
along the floor beneath the lockers
until he found his key. The briefcase
was under his arm a minute
later.
In the basement lave he put a
coin in the pay slot of a private
compartment and went in.
As he zipped open the briefcase
he surveyed his features in the mirror.
A small muscle at the corner of
one eye twitched spasmodically.
One cheek wore a frozen quarter
smile. Thirty-six hours under the
paralysis was longer than advisable.
The muscles should be rested at
least every twenty hours.
Fortunately his natural features
would serve as an adequate disguise
now.
He adjusted the ring setting on
the pistol-shaped instrument that
he took from his case, and carefully
rayed several small areas of
his face, loosening muscles that had
been tight too long. He sighed
gratefully when he finished, massaging
his cheeks and forehead with
considerable pleasure. Another
glance in the mirror satisfied him
with the changes that had been
made. He turned to his briefcase
again and exchanged the gun for
a small syringe, which he pushed
into a trouser pocket, and a single-edged
razor blade.
Removing his fiber-cloth jacket
he slashed it into strips with the
razor blade and flushed it down the
disposal bowl. With the sleeves of
his blouse rolled up he had the
appearance of a typical workman
as he strolled from the compartment.
Back at the locker he replaced
the briefcase and, with a wad of
gum, glued the key to the bottom
of the locker frame.
One step more. Taking the syringe
from his pocket, he plunged
the needle into his forearm and
tossed the instrument down a
waste chute. He took three more
steps and paused uncertainly.
When he looked about him it
was with the expression of a man
waking from a vivid dream.
“Q
UITE ingenious,” Graves
murmured admiringly. “You
had your mind already preconditioned
for the shot. But why would
you deliberately give yourself amnesia?”
“What better disguise than to
believe the part you’re playing?”
“A good man must have done
that job on your mind,” Bergstrom
commented. “I’d have hesitated to
try it myself. It must have taken a
lot of trust on your part.”
[p
146
]
“Trust and money,” Zarwell said
drily.
“Your memory’s back then?”
Zarwell nodded.
“I’m glad to hear that,” Bergstrom
assured him. “Now that
you’re well again I’d like to introduce
you to a man named Vernon
Johnson. This world …”
Zarwell stopped him with an upraised
hand. “Good God, man, can’t
you see the reason for all this? I’m
tired. I’m trying to quit.”
“Quit?” Bergstrom did not quite
follow him.
“It started on my home colony,”
Zarwell explained listlessly. “A
gang of hoods had taken over the
government. I helped organize a
movement to get them out. There
was some bloodshed, but it went
quite well. Several months later an
unofficial envoy from another
world asked several of us to give
them a hand on the same kind of
job. The political conditions there
were rotten. We went with him.
Again we were successful. It seems
I have a kind of genius for that
sort of thing.”
He stretched out his legs and regarded
them thoughtfully. “I
learned then the truth of Russell’s
saying: ‘When the oppressed win
their freedom they are as oppressive
as their former masters.’ When
they went bad, I opposed them.
This time I failed. But I escaped
again. I have quite a talent for that
also.
“I’m not a professional do-gooder.”
Zarwell’s tone appealed
to Bergstrom for understanding. “I
have only a normal man’s indignation
at injustice. And now I’ve done
my share. Yet, wherever I go, the
word eventually gets out, and I’m
right back in a fight again. It’s like
the proverbial monkey on my back.
I can’t get rid of it.”
He rose. “That disguise and
memory planting were supposed to
get me out of it. I should have
known it wouldn’t work. But this
time I’m not going to be drawn
back in! You and your Vernon
Johnson can do your own revolting.
I’m through!”
Bergstrom did not argue as he
left.
RESTLESSNESS drove Zarwell
from his flat the next day—a
legal holiday on St. Martin’s. At
a railed-off lot he stopped and loitered
in the shadow of an adjacent
building watching workmen drilling
an excavation for a new structure.
When a man strolled to his side
and stood watching the workmen,
he was not surprised. He waited for
the other to speak.
“I’d like to talk to you, if you
can spare a few minutes,” the
stranger said.
Zarwell turned and studied the
man without answering. He was
medium tall, with the body of an
athlete, though perhaps ten years
[p
147
]
beyond the age of sports. He had
a manner of contained energy.
“You’re Johnson?” he asked.
The man nodded.
Zarwell tried to feel the anger he
wanted to feel, but somehow it
would not come. “We have nothing
to talk about,” was the best he
could manage.
“Then will you just listen? After,
I’ll leave—if you tell me to.”
Against his will he found himself
liking the man, and wanting at least
to be courteous. He inclined his
head toward a curb wastebox with
a flat top. “Should we sit?”
Johnson smiled agreeably and
they walked over to the box and
sat down.
“When this colony was first
founded,” Johnson began without
preamble, “the administrative body
was a governor, and a council of
twelve. Their successors were to
be elected biennially. At first they
were. Then things changed. We
haven’t had an election now in the
last twenty-three years. St. Martin’s
is beginning to prosper. Yet
the only ones receiving the benefits
are the rulers. The citizens work
twelve hours a day. They are poorly
housed
, poorly fed, poorly clothed.
They …”
Zarwell found himself not listening
as Johnson’s voice went on. The
story was always the same. But why
did they always try to drag him into
their troubles?
Why hadn’t he chosen some
other world on which to hide?
The last question prompted a
new thought. Just why had he
chosen St. Martin’s? Was it only a
coincidence? Or had he,
subconsciously
at least, picked this particular
world? He had always
considered himself the unwilling
subject of glib persuaders … but
mightn’t some inner compulsion of
his own have put the monkey on his
back?
“… and we need your help.”
Johnson had finished his speech.
Zarwell gazed up at the bright
sky. He pulled in a long breath,
and let it out in a sigh.
“What are your plans so far?”
he asked wearily.
—
CHARLES V. DE VET | He is experiencing symptoms of memory loss | He struggles with night terrors on a regular basis | He feels paranoid that someone is controlling his thoughts | He wishes to rid himself of the ennui that stems from his depression | 0 |
26569_ZA7RADIT_7 | Which term best describes the sequencing of Zarwell's dreams under comanalysis? | Transcriber’s note:
This story was published in
Galaxy
magazine, June 1960.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.
[p
135
]
By CHARLES V. DE VET
monkey on his back
Under the cloud of cast-off identities
lay the shape of another man—
was it himself?
Illustrated by DILLON
HE was walking endlessly
down a long, glass-walled
corridor. Bright sunlight
slanted in through one wall, on the
blue knapsack across his shoulders.
Who he was, and what he was doing
here, was clouded. The truth lurked
in some corner of his consciousness,
but it was not reached by surface
awareness.
The corridor opened at last into
a large high-domed room, much
like a railway station or an air terminal.
He walked straight ahead.
At the sight of him a man leaning
negligently against a stone pillar,
to his right but within vision,
straightened and barked an order
to him, “Halt!” He lengthened his
stride but gave no other sign.
[p
136
]
Two men hurried through a
doorway of a small anteroom to his
left, calling to him. He turned away
and began to run.
Shouts and the sound of charging
feet came from behind him. He
cut to the right, running toward the
escalator to the second floor. Another
pair of men were hurrying
down, two steps at a stride. With
no break in pace he veered into an
opening beside the escalator.
At the first turn he saw that the
aisle merely circled the stairway,
coming out into the depot again on
the other side. It was a trap. He
glanced quickly around him.
At the rear of the space was a
row of lockers for traveler use. He
slipped a coin into a pay slot,
opened the zipper on his bag and
pulled out a flat briefcase. It took
him only a few seconds to push the
case into the compartment, lock it
and slide the key along the floor
beneath the locker.
There was nothing to do after
that—except wait.
The men pursuing him came
hurtling around the turn in the
aisle. He kicked his knapsack to
one side, spreading his feet wide
with an instinctive motion.
Until that instant he had intended
to fight. Now he swiftly
reassessed the odds. There were
five of them, he saw. He should be
able to incapacitate two or three
and break out. But the fact that
they had been expecting him meant
that others would very probably
be waiting outside. His best course
now was to sham ignorance. He
relaxed.
He offered no resistance as they
reached him.
They were not gentle men. A tall
ruffian, copper-brown face damp
with perspiration and body oil,
grabbed him by the jacket and
slammed him back against the
lockers. As he shifted his weight
to keep his footing someone drove
a fist into his face. He started to
raise his hands; and a hard flat
object crashed against the side of
his skull.
The starch went out of his legs.
“D
O you make anything out of
it?” the psychoanalyst Milton
Bergstrom, asked.
John Zarwell shook his head.
“Did I talk while I was under?”
“Oh, yes. You were supposed to.
That way I follow pretty well what
you’re reenacting.”
“How does it tie in with what I
told you before?”
Bergstrom’s neat-boned, fair-skinned
face betrayed no emotion
other than an introspective stillness
of his normally alert gaze. “I see
no connection,” he decided, his
words once again precise and meticulous.
“We don’t have enough to
go on. Do you feel able to try another
comanalysis this afternoon
yet?”
“I don’t see why not.” Zarwell
[p
137
]
opened the collar of his shirt. The
day was hot, and the room had no
air conditioning, still a rare luxury
on St. Martin’s. The office window
was open, but it let in no freshness,
only the mildly rank odor that pervaded
all the planet’s habitable
area.
“Good.” Bergstrom rose. “The
serum is quite harmless, John.” He
maintained a professional diversionary
chatter as he administered
the drug. “A scopolamine derivative
that’s been well tested.”
The floor beneath Zarwell’s feet
assumed abruptly the near transfluent
consistency of a damp
sponge. It rose in a foot-high wave
and rolled gently toward the far
wall.
Bergstrom continued talking,
with practiced urbanity. “When
psychiatry was a less exact science,”
his voice went on, seeming to come
from a great distance, “a doctor
had to spend weeks, sometimes
months or years interviewing a
patient. If he was skilled enough,
he could sort the relevancies from
the vast amount of chaff. We are
able now, with the help of the
serum, to confine our discourses to
matters cogent to the patient’s
trouble.”
The floor continued its transmutation,
and Zarwell sank deep into
viscous depths. “Lie back and relax.
Don’t …”
The words tumbled down from
above. They faded, were gone.
ZARWELL found himself
<!-- original does not use drop cap here, it just capitalises the first two words -->
standing on a vast plain. There was
no sky above, and no horizon in the
distance. He was in a place without
space or dimension. There was
nothing here except himself—and
the gun that he held in his hand.
A weapon beautiful in its efficient
simplicity.
He should know all about the
instrument, its purpose and workings,
but he could not bring his
thoughts into rational focus. His
forehead creased with his mental
effort.
Abruptly the unreality about
him shifted perspective. He was
approaching—not walking, but
merely shortening the space between
them—the man who held
the gun. The man who was himself.
The other “himself” drifted
nearer also, as though drawn by a
mutual attraction.
The man with the gun raised his
weapon and pressed the trigger.
With the action the perspective
shifted again. He was watching the
face of the man he shot jerk and
twitch, expand and contract. The
face was unharmed, yet it was no
longer the same. No longer his own
features.
The stranger face smiled approvingly
at him.
“O
DD,” Bergstrom said.
<!-- original does not use drop cap here, it just capitalises the first two words -->
He brought his hands up and joined
the tips of his fingers against his
chest. “But it’s another piece in the
[p
138
]
jig-saw. In time it will fit into
place.” He paused. “It means no
more to you than the first, I suppose?”
“No,” Zarwell answered.
He was not a talking man, Bergstrom
reflected. It was more than
reticence, however. The man had
a hard granite core, only partially
concealed by his present perplexity.
He was a man who could handle
himself well in an emergency.
Bergstrom shrugged, dismissing
his strayed thoughts. “I expected
as much. A quite normal first phase
of treatment.” He straightened a
paper on his desk. “I think that will
be enough for today. Twice in one
sitting is about all we ever try.
Otherwise some particular episode
might cause undue mental stress,
and set up a block.” He glanced
down at his appointment pad. “Tomorrow
at two, then?”
Zarwell grunted acknowledgment
and pushed himself to his
feet, apparently unaware that his
shirt clung damply to his body.
THE sun was still high when
Zarwell left the analyst’s office.
The white marble of the city’s
buildings shimmered in the afternoon
heat, squat and austere as
giant tree trunks, pock-marked and
gray-mottled with windows. Zarwell
was careful not to rest his hand
on the flesh searing surface of the
stone.
The evening meal hour was approaching
when he reached the
Flats, on the way to his apartment.
The streets of the old section were
near-deserted. The only sounds he
heard as he passed were the occasional
cry of a baby, chronically
uncomfortable in the day’s heat,
and the lowing of imported cattle
waiting in a nearby shed to be
shipped to the country.
All St. Martin’s has a distinctive
smell, as of an arid dried-out
swamp, with a faint taint of fish.
But in the Flats the odor changes.
Here is the smell of factories, warehouses,
and trading marts; the smell
of stale cooking drifting from the
homes of the laborers and lower
class techmen who live there.
Zarwell passed a group of
smaller children playing a desultory
game of lic-lic for pieces of
candy and cigarettes. Slowly he
climbed the stairs of a stone flat.
He prepared a supper for himself
and ate it without either enjoyment
or distaste. He lay down, fully
clothed, on his bed. The visit to the
analyst had done nothing to dispel
his ennui.
[p
139
]
The next morning when Zarwell
awoke he lay for a moment, unmoving.
The feeling was there
again, like a scene waiting only to
be gazed at directly to be perceived.
It was as though a great wisdom
lay at the edge of understanding.
If he rested quietly it would
all come to him. Yet always, when
his mind lost its sleep-induced
[p
140
]
lethargy, the moment of near understanding
slipped away.
This morning, however, the sense
of disorientation did not pass with
full wakefulness. He achieved no
understanding, but the strangeness
did not leave as he sat up.
He gazed about him. The room
did not seem to be his own. The
furnishings, and the clothing he observed
in a closet, might have belonged
to a stranger.
He pulled himself from his blankets,
his body moving with mechanical
reaction. The slippers into
which he put his feet were larger
than he had expected them to be.
He walked about the small apartment.
The place was familiar, but
only as it would have been if he
had studied it from blueprints, not
as though he lived there.
The feeling was still with him
when he returned to the psychoanalyst.
THE scene this time was more
kaleidoscopic, less personal.
A village was being ravaged.
Men struggled and died in the
streets. Zarwell moved among
them, seldom taking part in the
individual clashes, yet a moving
force in the
conflict
.
The background changed. He
understood that he was on a different
world.
Here a city burned. Its resistance
was nearing its end. Zarwell was
riding a shaggy pony outside a high
wall surrounding the stricken metropolis.
He moved in and joined a
party of short, bearded men, directing
them as they battered at the
wall with a huge log mounted on a
many-wheeled truck.
The log broke a breach in the
concrete and the besiegers charged
through, carrying back the defenders
who sought vainly to plug the
gap. Soon there would be rioting
in the streets again, plundering and
killing.
Zarwell was not the leader of the
invaders, only a lesser figure in the
rebellion. But he had played a leading
part in the planning of the
strategy that led to the city’s fall.
The job had been well done.
Time passed, without visible
break in the panorama. Now Zarwell
was fleeing, pursued by the
same bearded men who had been
his comrades before. Still he moved
with the same firm purpose, vigilant,
resourceful, and well prepared
for the eventuality that had befallen.
He made his escape without
difficulty.
He alighted from a space ship on
still another world—another shift
in time—and the atmosphere of
conflict engulfed him.
Weary but resigned he accepted
it, and did what he had to do …
BERGSTROM was regarding
<!-- original does not use drop cap here, it just capitalises the first two words -->
him with speculative scrutiny.
“You’ve had quite a past, apparently,”
he observed.
[p
141
]
Zarwell smiled with mild embarrassment.
“At least in my dreams.”
“Dreams?” Bergstrom’s eyes
widened in surprise. “Oh, I beg your
pardon. I must have forgotten to
explain. This work is so routine to
me that sometimes I forget it’s all
new to a patient. Actually what you
experienced under the drug were
not dreams. They were recollections
of real episodes from your
past.”
Zarwell’s expression became
wary. He watched Bergstrom
closely. After a minute, however,
he seemed satisfied, and he let himself
settle back against the cushion
of his chair. “I remember nothing
of what I saw,” he observed.
“That’s why you’re here, you
know,” Bergstrom answered. “To
help you remember.”
“But everything under the drug
is so …”
“Haphazard? That’s true. The
recall episodes are always purely
random, with no chronological sequence.
Our problem will be to reassemble
them in proper order
later. Or some particular scene may
trigger a complete memory return.
“It is my considered opinion,”
Bergstrom went on, “that your lost
memory will turn out to be no ordinary
amnesia. I believe we will find
that your mind has been tampered
with.”
“Nothing I’ve seen under the
drug fits into the past I do remember.”
“That’s what makes me so certain,”
Bergstrom said confidently.
“You don’t remember what we
have shown to be true. Conversely
then, what you think you remember
must be false. It must have been
implanted there. But we can go
into that later. For today I think
we have done enough. This episode
was quite prolonged.”
“I won’t have any time off again
until next week end,” Zarwell reminded
him.
“That’s right.” Bergstrom
thought for a moment. “We
shouldn’t let this hang too long.
Could you come here after work
tomorrow?”
“I suppose I could.”
“Fine,” Bergstrom said with satisfaction.
“I’ll admit I’m considerably
more than casually interested
in your case by this time.”
A WORK truck picked Zarwell
up the next morning and he
rode with a tech crew to the edge of
the reclam area. Beside the belt
bringing ocean muck from the converter
plant at the seashore his
bulldozer was waiting.
He took his place behind the
drive wheel and began working dirt
down between windbreakers anchored
in the rock. Along a makeshift
road into the badlands trucks
brought crushed lime and phosphorus
to supplement the ocean
sediment. The progress of life from
the sea to the land was a mechanical
[p
142
]
process of this growing world.
Nearly two hundred years ago,
when Earth established a colony on
St. Martin’s, the land surface of the
planet had been barren. Only its
seas thrived with animal and vegetable
life. The necessary machinery
and technicians had been supplied
by Earth, and the long struggle began
to fit the world for human
needs. When Zarwell arrived, six
months before, the vitalized area
already extended three hundred
miles along the coast, and sixty
miles inland. And every day the
progress continued. A large percentage
of the energy and resources
of the world were devoted to that
essential expansion.
The reclam crews filled and
sodded the sterile rock, planted
binding grasses, grain and trees, and
diverted rivers to keep it fertile.
When there were no rivers to divert
they blasted out springs and lakes
in the foothills to make their own.
Biologists developed the necessary
germ and insect life from what they
found in the sea. Where that failed,
they imported microorganisms
from Earth.
Three rubber-tracked crawlers
picked their way down from the
mountains until they joined the
road passing the belt. They were
loaded with ore that would be
smelted into metal for depleted
Earth, or for other colonies short
of minerals. It was St. Martin’s only
export thus far.
Zarwell pulled his sun helmet
lower, to better guard his hot, dry
features. The wind blew continuously
on St. Martin’s, but it furnished
small relief from the heat.
After its three-thousand-mile journey
across scorched sterile rock, it
sucked the moisture from a man’s
body, bringing a membrane-shrinking
dryness to the nostrils as it was
breathed in. With it came also the
cloying taste of limestone in a
worker’s mouth.
Zarwell gazed idly about at the
other laborers. Fully three-quarters
of them were beri-rabza ridden. A
cure for the skin fungus had not
yet been found; the men’s faces
and hands were scabbed and red.
The colony had grown to near self-sufficiency,
would soon have a moderate
prosperity, yet they still
lacked adequate medical and research
facilities.
Not all the world’s citizens were
content.
Bergstrom was waiting in his office
when Zarwell arrived that
evening.
HE was lying motionless on a
hard cot, with his eyes closed,
yet with his every sense sharply
quickened. Tentatively he tightened
small muscles in his arms and
legs. Across his wrists and thighs
he felt straps binding him to the
cot.
“So that’s our big, bad man,” a
coarse voice above him observed
[p
143
]
caustically. “He doesn’t look so
tough now, does he?”
“It might have been better to
kill him right away,” a second, less
confident voice said. “It’s supposed
to be impossible to hold him.”
“Don’t be stupid. We just do
what we’re told. We’ll hold him.”
“What do you think they’ll do
with him?”
“Execute him, I suppose,” the
harsh voice said matter-of-factly.
“They’re probably just curious to
see what he looks like first. They’ll
be disappointed.”
Zarwell opened his eyes a slit to
observe his surroundings.
It was a mistake. “He’s out of
it,” the first speaker said, and Zarwell
allowed his eyes to open fully.
The voice, he saw, belonged to
the big man who had bruised him
against the locker at the spaceport.
Irrelevantly he wondered how he
knew now that it had been a spaceport.
His captor’s broad face jeered
down at Zarwell. “Have a good
sleep?” he asked with mock solicitude.
Zarwell did not deign to acknowledge
that he heard.
The big man turned. “You can
tell the Chief he’s awake,” he said.
Zarwell followed his gaze to where
a younger man, with a blond lock of
hair on his forehead, stood behind
him. The youth nodded and went
out, while the other pulled a chair
up to the side of Zarwell’s cot.
While their attention was away
from him Zarwell had unobtrusively
loosened his bonds as much as
possible with arm leverage. As the
big man drew his chair nearer, he
made the hand farthest from him
tight and compact and worked it
free of the leather loop. He waited.
The big man belched. “You’re
supposed to be great stuff in a situation
like this,” he said, his smoke-tan
face splitting in a grin that revealed
large square teeth. “How
about giving me a sample?”
“You’re a yellow-livered bastard,”
Zarwell told him.
The grin faded from the oily face
as the man stood up. He leaned over
the cot—and Zarwell’s left hand
shot up and locked about his throat,
joined almost immediately by the
right.
The man’s mouth opened and he
tried to yell as he threw himself
frantically backward. He clawed at
the hands about his neck. When
that failed to break the grip he suddenly
reversed his weight and
drove his fist at Zarwell’s head.
Zarwell pulled the struggling
body down against his chest and
held it there until all agitated
movement ceased. He sat up then,
letting the body slide to the floor.
The straps about his thighs came
loose with little effort.
THE analyst dabbed at his upper
lip with a handkerchief. “The
episodes are beginning to tie together,”
he said, with an attempt at
[p
144
]
nonchalance. “The next couple
should do it.”
Zarwell did not answer. His
memory seemed on the point of
complete return, and he sat quietly,
hopefully. However, nothing more
came and he returned his attention
to his more immediate problem.
Opening a button on his shirt, he
pulled back a strip of plastic cloth
just below his rib cage and took
out a small flat pistol. He held it
in the palm of his hand. He knew
now why he always carried it.
Bergstrom had his bad moment.
“You’re not going to …” he began
at the sight of the gun. He tried
again. “You must be joking.”
“I have very little sense of humor,”
Zarwell corrected him.
“You’d be foolish!”
Bergstrom obviously realized
how close he was to death. Yet
surprisingly, after the first start,
he showed little fear. Zarwell had
thought the man a bit soft, too
adjusted to a life of ease and some
prestige to meet danger calmly.
Curiosity restrained his trigger finger.
“Why would I be foolish?” he
asked. “Your Meninger oath of inviolable
confidence?”
Bergstrom shook his head. “I
know it’s been broken before. But
you need me. You’re not through,
you know. If you killed me you’d
still have to trust some other
analyst.”
“Is that the best you can do?”
“No.” Bergstrom was angry now.
“But use that logical mind you’re
supposed to have! Scenes before
this have shown what kind of man
you are. Just because this last happened
here on St. Martin’s makes
little difference. If I was going to
turn you in to the police, I’d have
done it before this.”
Zarwell debated with himself the
truth of what the other had said.
“Why didn’t you turn me in?” he
asked.
“Because you’re no mad-dog
killer!” Now that the crisis seemed
to be past, Bergstrom spoke more
calmly, even allowed himself to
relax. “You’re still pretty much in
the fog about yourself. I read more
in those comanalyses than you did.
I even know who you are!”
Zarwell’s eyebrows raised.
“Who am I?” he asked, very interested
now. Without attention he
put his pistol away in a trouser
pocket.
Bergstrom brushed the question
aside with one hand. “Your name
makes little difference. You’ve used
many. But you are an idealist. Your
killings were necessary to bring
justice to the places you visited. By
now you’re almost a legend among
the human worlds. I’d like to talk
more with you on that later.”
While Zarwell considered, Bergstrom
pressed his advantage. “One
more scene might do it,” he said.
“Should we try again—if you trust
me, that is?”
[p
145
]
Zarwell made his decision quickly.
“Go ahead,” he answered.
ALL Zarwell’s attention seemed
on the cigar he lit as he rode
down the escalator, but he surveyed
the terminal carefully over the rim
of his hand. He spied no suspicious
loungers.
Behind the escalator he groped
along the floor beneath the lockers
until he found his key. The briefcase
was under his arm a minute
later.
In the basement lave he put a
coin in the pay slot of a private
compartment and went in.
As he zipped open the briefcase
he surveyed his features in the mirror.
A small muscle at the corner of
one eye twitched spasmodically.
One cheek wore a frozen quarter
smile. Thirty-six hours under the
paralysis was longer than advisable.
The muscles should be rested at
least every twenty hours.
Fortunately his natural features
would serve as an adequate disguise
now.
He adjusted the ring setting on
the pistol-shaped instrument that
he took from his case, and carefully
rayed several small areas of
his face, loosening muscles that had
been tight too long. He sighed
gratefully when he finished, massaging
his cheeks and forehead with
considerable pleasure. Another
glance in the mirror satisfied him
with the changes that had been
made. He turned to his briefcase
again and exchanged the gun for
a small syringe, which he pushed
into a trouser pocket, and a single-edged
razor blade.
Removing his fiber-cloth jacket
he slashed it into strips with the
razor blade and flushed it down the
disposal bowl. With the sleeves of
his blouse rolled up he had the
appearance of a typical workman
as he strolled from the compartment.
Back at the locker he replaced
the briefcase and, with a wad of
gum, glued the key to the bottom
of the locker frame.
One step more. Taking the syringe
from his pocket, he plunged
the needle into his forearm and
tossed the instrument down a
waste chute. He took three more
steps and paused uncertainly.
When he looked about him it
was with the expression of a man
waking from a vivid dream.
“Q
UITE ingenious,” Graves
murmured admiringly. “You
had your mind already preconditioned
for the shot. But why would
you deliberately give yourself amnesia?”
“What better disguise than to
believe the part you’re playing?”
“A good man must have done
that job on your mind,” Bergstrom
commented. “I’d have hesitated to
try it myself. It must have taken a
lot of trust on your part.”
[p
146
]
“Trust and money,” Zarwell said
drily.
“Your memory’s back then?”
Zarwell nodded.
“I’m glad to hear that,” Bergstrom
assured him. “Now that
you’re well again I’d like to introduce
you to a man named Vernon
Johnson. This world …”
Zarwell stopped him with an upraised
hand. “Good God, man, can’t
you see the reason for all this? I’m
tired. I’m trying to quit.”
“Quit?” Bergstrom did not quite
follow him.
“It started on my home colony,”
Zarwell explained listlessly. “A
gang of hoods had taken over the
government. I helped organize a
movement to get them out. There
was some bloodshed, but it went
quite well. Several months later an
unofficial envoy from another
world asked several of us to give
them a hand on the same kind of
job. The political conditions there
were rotten. We went with him.
Again we were successful. It seems
I have a kind of genius for that
sort of thing.”
He stretched out his legs and regarded
them thoughtfully. “I
learned then the truth of Russell’s
saying: ‘When the oppressed win
their freedom they are as oppressive
as their former masters.’ When
they went bad, I opposed them.
This time I failed. But I escaped
again. I have quite a talent for that
also.
“I’m not a professional do-gooder.”
Zarwell’s tone appealed
to Bergstrom for understanding. “I
have only a normal man’s indignation
at injustice. And now I’ve done
my share. Yet, wherever I go, the
word eventually gets out, and I’m
right back in a fight again. It’s like
the proverbial monkey on my back.
I can’t get rid of it.”
He rose. “That disguise and
memory planting were supposed to
get me out of it. I should have
known it wouldn’t work. But this
time I’m not going to be drawn
back in! You and your Vernon
Johnson can do your own revolting.
I’m through!”
Bergstrom did not argue as he
left.
RESTLESSNESS drove Zarwell
from his flat the next day—a
legal holiday on St. Martin’s. At
a railed-off lot he stopped and loitered
in the shadow of an adjacent
building watching workmen drilling
an excavation for a new structure.
When a man strolled to his side
and stood watching the workmen,
he was not surprised. He waited for
the other to speak.
“I’d like to talk to you, if you
can spare a few minutes,” the
stranger said.
Zarwell turned and studied the
man without answering. He was
medium tall, with the body of an
athlete, though perhaps ten years
[p
147
]
beyond the age of sports. He had
a manner of contained energy.
“You’re Johnson?” he asked.
The man nodded.
Zarwell tried to feel the anger he
wanted to feel, but somehow it
would not come. “We have nothing
to talk about,” was the best he
could manage.
“Then will you just listen? After,
I’ll leave—if you tell me to.”
Against his will he found himself
liking the man, and wanting at least
to be courteous. He inclined his
head toward a curb wastebox with
a flat top. “Should we sit?”
Johnson smiled agreeably and
they walked over to the box and
sat down.
“When this colony was first
founded,” Johnson began without
preamble, “the administrative body
was a governor, and a council of
twelve. Their successors were to
be elected biennially. At first they
were. Then things changed. We
haven’t had an election now in the
last twenty-three years. St. Martin’s
is beginning to prosper. Yet
the only ones receiving the benefits
are the rulers. The citizens work
twelve hours a day. They are poorly
housed
, poorly fed, poorly clothed.
They …”
Zarwell found himself not listening
as Johnson’s voice went on. The
story was always the same. But why
did they always try to drag him into
their troubles?
Why hadn’t he chosen some
other world on which to hide?
The last question prompted a
new thought. Just why had he
chosen St. Martin’s? Was it only a
coincidence? Or had he,
subconsciously
at least, picked this particular
world? He had always
considered himself the unwilling
subject of glib persuaders … but
mightn’t some inner compulsion of
his own have put the monkey on his
back?
“… and we need your help.”
Johnson had finished his speech.
Zarwell gazed up at the bright
sky. He pulled in a long breath,
and let it out in a sigh.
“What are your plans so far?”
he asked wearily.
—
CHARLES V. DE VET | arbitrary | prophetic | misleading | regressive | 0 |
26569_ZA7RADIT_8 | What is the purpose of the reclam crews? | Transcriber’s note:
This story was published in
Galaxy
magazine, June 1960.
Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.
[p
135
]
By CHARLES V. DE VET
monkey on his back
Under the cloud of cast-off identities
lay the shape of another man—
was it himself?
Illustrated by DILLON
HE was walking endlessly
down a long, glass-walled
corridor. Bright sunlight
slanted in through one wall, on the
blue knapsack across his shoulders.
Who he was, and what he was doing
here, was clouded. The truth lurked
in some corner of his consciousness,
but it was not reached by surface
awareness.
The corridor opened at last into
a large high-domed room, much
like a railway station or an air terminal.
He walked straight ahead.
At the sight of him a man leaning
negligently against a stone pillar,
to his right but within vision,
straightened and barked an order
to him, “Halt!” He lengthened his
stride but gave no other sign.
[p
136
]
Two men hurried through a
doorway of a small anteroom to his
left, calling to him. He turned away
and began to run.
Shouts and the sound of charging
feet came from behind him. He
cut to the right, running toward the
escalator to the second floor. Another
pair of men were hurrying
down, two steps at a stride. With
no break in pace he veered into an
opening beside the escalator.
At the first turn he saw that the
aisle merely circled the stairway,
coming out into the depot again on
the other side. It was a trap. He
glanced quickly around him.
At the rear of the space was a
row of lockers for traveler use. He
slipped a coin into a pay slot,
opened the zipper on his bag and
pulled out a flat briefcase. It took
him only a few seconds to push the
case into the compartment, lock it
and slide the key along the floor
beneath the locker.
There was nothing to do after
that—except wait.
The men pursuing him came
hurtling around the turn in the
aisle. He kicked his knapsack to
one side, spreading his feet wide
with an instinctive motion.
Until that instant he had intended
to fight. Now he swiftly
reassessed the odds. There were
five of them, he saw. He should be
able to incapacitate two or three
and break out. But the fact that
they had been expecting him meant
that others would very probably
be waiting outside. His best course
now was to sham ignorance. He
relaxed.
He offered no resistance as they
reached him.
They were not gentle men. A tall
ruffian, copper-brown face damp
with perspiration and body oil,
grabbed him by the jacket and
slammed him back against the
lockers. As he shifted his weight
to keep his footing someone drove
a fist into his face. He started to
raise his hands; and a hard flat
object crashed against the side of
his skull.
The starch went out of his legs.
“D
O you make anything out of
it?” the psychoanalyst Milton
Bergstrom, asked.
John Zarwell shook his head.
“Did I talk while I was under?”
“Oh, yes. You were supposed to.
That way I follow pretty well what
you’re reenacting.”
“How does it tie in with what I
told you before?”
Bergstrom’s neat-boned, fair-skinned
face betrayed no emotion
other than an introspective stillness
of his normally alert gaze. “I see
no connection,” he decided, his
words once again precise and meticulous.
“We don’t have enough to
go on. Do you feel able to try another
comanalysis this afternoon
yet?”
“I don’t see why not.” Zarwell
[p
137
]
opened the collar of his shirt. The
day was hot, and the room had no
air conditioning, still a rare luxury
on St. Martin’s. The office window
was open, but it let in no freshness,
only the mildly rank odor that pervaded
all the planet’s habitable
area.
“Good.” Bergstrom rose. “The
serum is quite harmless, John.” He
maintained a professional diversionary
chatter as he administered
the drug. “A scopolamine derivative
that’s been well tested.”
The floor beneath Zarwell’s feet
assumed abruptly the near transfluent
consistency of a damp
sponge. It rose in a foot-high wave
and rolled gently toward the far
wall.
Bergstrom continued talking,
with practiced urbanity. “When
psychiatry was a less exact science,”
his voice went on, seeming to come
from a great distance, “a doctor
had to spend weeks, sometimes
months or years interviewing a
patient. If he was skilled enough,
he could sort the relevancies from
the vast amount of chaff. We are
able now, with the help of the
serum, to confine our discourses to
matters cogent to the patient’s
trouble.”
The floor continued its transmutation,
and Zarwell sank deep into
viscous depths. “Lie back and relax.
Don’t …”
The words tumbled down from
above. They faded, were gone.
ZARWELL found himself
<!-- original does not use drop cap here, it just capitalises the first two words -->
standing on a vast plain. There was
no sky above, and no horizon in the
distance. He was in a place without
space or dimension. There was
nothing here except himself—and
the gun that he held in his hand.
A weapon beautiful in its efficient
simplicity.
He should know all about the
instrument, its purpose and workings,
but he could not bring his
thoughts into rational focus. His
forehead creased with his mental
effort.
Abruptly the unreality about
him shifted perspective. He was
approaching—not walking, but
merely shortening the space between
them—the man who held
the gun. The man who was himself.
The other “himself” drifted
nearer also, as though drawn by a
mutual attraction.
The man with the gun raised his
weapon and pressed the trigger.
With the action the perspective
shifted again. He was watching the
face of the man he shot jerk and
twitch, expand and contract. The
face was unharmed, yet it was no
longer the same. No longer his own
features.
The stranger face smiled approvingly
at him.
“O
DD,” Bergstrom said.
<!-- original does not use drop cap here, it just capitalises the first two words -->
He brought his hands up and joined
the tips of his fingers against his
chest. “But it’s another piece in the
[p
138
]
jig-saw. In time it will fit into
place.” He paused. “It means no
more to you than the first, I suppose?”
“No,” Zarwell answered.
He was not a talking man, Bergstrom
reflected. It was more than
reticence, however. The man had
a hard granite core, only partially
concealed by his present perplexity.
He was a man who could handle
himself well in an emergency.
Bergstrom shrugged, dismissing
his strayed thoughts. “I expected
as much. A quite normal first phase
of treatment.” He straightened a
paper on his desk. “I think that will
be enough for today. Twice in one
sitting is about all we ever try.
Otherwise some particular episode
might cause undue mental stress,
and set up a block.” He glanced
down at his appointment pad. “Tomorrow
at two, then?”
Zarwell grunted acknowledgment
and pushed himself to his
feet, apparently unaware that his
shirt clung damply to his body.
THE sun was still high when
Zarwell left the analyst’s office.
The white marble of the city’s
buildings shimmered in the afternoon
heat, squat and austere as
giant tree trunks, pock-marked and
gray-mottled with windows. Zarwell
was careful not to rest his hand
on the flesh searing surface of the
stone.
The evening meal hour was approaching
when he reached the
Flats, on the way to his apartment.
The streets of the old section were
near-deserted. The only sounds he
heard as he passed were the occasional
cry of a baby, chronically
uncomfortable in the day’s heat,
and the lowing of imported cattle
waiting in a nearby shed to be
shipped to the country.
All St. Martin’s has a distinctive
smell, as of an arid dried-out
swamp, with a faint taint of fish.
But in the Flats the odor changes.
Here is the smell of factories, warehouses,
and trading marts; the smell
of stale cooking drifting from the
homes of the laborers and lower
class techmen who live there.
Zarwell passed a group of
smaller children playing a desultory
game of lic-lic for pieces of
candy and cigarettes. Slowly he
climbed the stairs of a stone flat.
He prepared a supper for himself
and ate it without either enjoyment
or distaste. He lay down, fully
clothed, on his bed. The visit to the
analyst had done nothing to dispel
his ennui.
[p
139
]
The next morning when Zarwell
awoke he lay for a moment, unmoving.
The feeling was there
again, like a scene waiting only to
be gazed at directly to be perceived.
It was as though a great wisdom
lay at the edge of understanding.
If he rested quietly it would
all come to him. Yet always, when
his mind lost its sleep-induced
[p
140
]
lethargy, the moment of near understanding
slipped away.
This morning, however, the sense
of disorientation did not pass with
full wakefulness. He achieved no
understanding, but the strangeness
did not leave as he sat up.
He gazed about him. The room
did not seem to be his own. The
furnishings, and the clothing he observed
in a closet, might have belonged
to a stranger.
He pulled himself from his blankets,
his body moving with mechanical
reaction. The slippers into
which he put his feet were larger
than he had expected them to be.
He walked about the small apartment.
The place was familiar, but
only as it would have been if he
had studied it from blueprints, not
as though he lived there.
The feeling was still with him
when he returned to the psychoanalyst.
THE scene this time was more
kaleidoscopic, less personal.
A village was being ravaged.
Men struggled and died in the
streets. Zarwell moved among
them, seldom taking part in the
individual clashes, yet a moving
force in the
conflict
.
The background changed. He
understood that he was on a different
world.
Here a city burned. Its resistance
was nearing its end. Zarwell was
riding a shaggy pony outside a high
wall surrounding the stricken metropolis.
He moved in and joined a
party of short, bearded men, directing
them as they battered at the
wall with a huge log mounted on a
many-wheeled truck.
The log broke a breach in the
concrete and the besiegers charged
through, carrying back the defenders
who sought vainly to plug the
gap. Soon there would be rioting
in the streets again, plundering and
killing.
Zarwell was not the leader of the
invaders, only a lesser figure in the
rebellion. But he had played a leading
part in the planning of the
strategy that led to the city’s fall.
The job had been well done.
Time passed, without visible
break in the panorama. Now Zarwell
was fleeing, pursued by the
same bearded men who had been
his comrades before. Still he moved
with the same firm purpose, vigilant,
resourceful, and well prepared
for the eventuality that had befallen.
He made his escape without
difficulty.
He alighted from a space ship on
still another world—another shift
in time—and the atmosphere of
conflict engulfed him.
Weary but resigned he accepted
it, and did what he had to do …
BERGSTROM was regarding
<!-- original does not use drop cap here, it just capitalises the first two words -->
him with speculative scrutiny.
“You’ve had quite a past, apparently,”
he observed.
[p
141
]
Zarwell smiled with mild embarrassment.
“At least in my dreams.”
“Dreams?” Bergstrom’s eyes
widened in surprise. “Oh, I beg your
pardon. I must have forgotten to
explain. This work is so routine to
me that sometimes I forget it’s all
new to a patient. Actually what you
experienced under the drug were
not dreams. They were recollections
of real episodes from your
past.”
Zarwell’s expression became
wary. He watched Bergstrom
closely. After a minute, however,
he seemed satisfied, and he let himself
settle back against the cushion
of his chair. “I remember nothing
of what I saw,” he observed.
“That’s why you’re here, you
know,” Bergstrom answered. “To
help you remember.”
“But everything under the drug
is so …”
“Haphazard? That’s true. The
recall episodes are always purely
random, with no chronological sequence.
Our problem will be to reassemble
them in proper order
later. Or some particular scene may
trigger a complete memory return.
“It is my considered opinion,”
Bergstrom went on, “that your lost
memory will turn out to be no ordinary
amnesia. I believe we will find
that your mind has been tampered
with.”
“Nothing I’ve seen under the
drug fits into the past I do remember.”
“That’s what makes me so certain,”
Bergstrom said confidently.
“You don’t remember what we
have shown to be true. Conversely
then, what you think you remember
must be false. It must have been
implanted there. But we can go
into that later. For today I think
we have done enough. This episode
was quite prolonged.”
“I won’t have any time off again
until next week end,” Zarwell reminded
him.
“That’s right.” Bergstrom
thought for a moment. “We
shouldn’t let this hang too long.
Could you come here after work
tomorrow?”
“I suppose I could.”
“Fine,” Bergstrom said with satisfaction.
“I’ll admit I’m considerably
more than casually interested
in your case by this time.”
A WORK truck picked Zarwell
up the next morning and he
rode with a tech crew to the edge of
the reclam area. Beside the belt
bringing ocean muck from the converter
plant at the seashore his
bulldozer was waiting.
He took his place behind the
drive wheel and began working dirt
down between windbreakers anchored
in the rock. Along a makeshift
road into the badlands trucks
brought crushed lime and phosphorus
to supplement the ocean
sediment. The progress of life from
the sea to the land was a mechanical
[p
142
]
process of this growing world.
Nearly two hundred years ago,
when Earth established a colony on
St. Martin’s, the land surface of the
planet had been barren. Only its
seas thrived with animal and vegetable
life. The necessary machinery
and technicians had been supplied
by Earth, and the long struggle began
to fit the world for human
needs. When Zarwell arrived, six
months before, the vitalized area
already extended three hundred
miles along the coast, and sixty
miles inland. And every day the
progress continued. A large percentage
of the energy and resources
of the world were devoted to that
essential expansion.
The reclam crews filled and
sodded the sterile rock, planted
binding grasses, grain and trees, and
diverted rivers to keep it fertile.
When there were no rivers to divert
they blasted out springs and lakes
in the foothills to make their own.
Biologists developed the necessary
germ and insect life from what they
found in the sea. Where that failed,
they imported microorganisms
from Earth.
Three rubber-tracked crawlers
picked their way down from the
mountains until they joined the
road passing the belt. They were
loaded with ore that would be
smelted into metal for depleted
Earth, or for other colonies short
of minerals. It was St. Martin’s only
export thus far.
Zarwell pulled his sun helmet
lower, to better guard his hot, dry
features. The wind blew continuously
on St. Martin’s, but it furnished
small relief from the heat.
After its three-thousand-mile journey
across scorched sterile rock, it
sucked the moisture from a man’s
body, bringing a membrane-shrinking
dryness to the nostrils as it was
breathed in. With it came also the
cloying taste of limestone in a
worker’s mouth.
Zarwell gazed idly about at the
other laborers. Fully three-quarters
of them were beri-rabza ridden. A
cure for the skin fungus had not
yet been found; the men’s faces
and hands were scabbed and red.
The colony had grown to near self-sufficiency,
would soon have a moderate
prosperity, yet they still
lacked adequate medical and research
facilities.
Not all the world’s citizens were
content.
Bergstrom was waiting in his office
when Zarwell arrived that
evening.
HE was lying motionless on a
hard cot, with his eyes closed,
yet with his every sense sharply
quickened. Tentatively he tightened
small muscles in his arms and
legs. Across his wrists and thighs
he felt straps binding him to the
cot.
“So that’s our big, bad man,” a
coarse voice above him observed
[p
143
]
caustically. “He doesn’t look so
tough now, does he?”
“It might have been better to
kill him right away,” a second, less
confident voice said. “It’s supposed
to be impossible to hold him.”
“Don’t be stupid. We just do
what we’re told. We’ll hold him.”
“What do you think they’ll do
with him?”
“Execute him, I suppose,” the
harsh voice said matter-of-factly.
“They’re probably just curious to
see what he looks like first. They’ll
be disappointed.”
Zarwell opened his eyes a slit to
observe his surroundings.
It was a mistake. “He’s out of
it,” the first speaker said, and Zarwell
allowed his eyes to open fully.
The voice, he saw, belonged to
the big man who had bruised him
against the locker at the spaceport.
Irrelevantly he wondered how he
knew now that it had been a spaceport.
His captor’s broad face jeered
down at Zarwell. “Have a good
sleep?” he asked with mock solicitude.
Zarwell did not deign to acknowledge
that he heard.
The big man turned. “You can
tell the Chief he’s awake,” he said.
Zarwell followed his gaze to where
a younger man, with a blond lock of
hair on his forehead, stood behind
him. The youth nodded and went
out, while the other pulled a chair
up to the side of Zarwell’s cot.
While their attention was away
from him Zarwell had unobtrusively
loosened his bonds as much as
possible with arm leverage. As the
big man drew his chair nearer, he
made the hand farthest from him
tight and compact and worked it
free of the leather loop. He waited.
The big man belched. “You’re
supposed to be great stuff in a situation
like this,” he said, his smoke-tan
face splitting in a grin that revealed
large square teeth. “How
about giving me a sample?”
“You’re a yellow-livered bastard,”
Zarwell told him.
The grin faded from the oily face
as the man stood up. He leaned over
the cot—and Zarwell’s left hand
shot up and locked about his throat,
joined almost immediately by the
right.
The man’s mouth opened and he
tried to yell as he threw himself
frantically backward. He clawed at
the hands about his neck. When
that failed to break the grip he suddenly
reversed his weight and
drove his fist at Zarwell’s head.
Zarwell pulled the struggling
body down against his chest and
held it there until all agitated
movement ceased. He sat up then,
letting the body slide to the floor.
The straps about his thighs came
loose with little effort.
THE analyst dabbed at his upper
lip with a handkerchief. “The
episodes are beginning to tie together,”
he said, with an attempt at
[p
144
]
nonchalance. “The next couple
should do it.”
Zarwell did not answer. His
memory seemed on the point of
complete return, and he sat quietly,
hopefully. However, nothing more
came and he returned his attention
to his more immediate problem.
Opening a button on his shirt, he
pulled back a strip of plastic cloth
just below his rib cage and took
out a small flat pistol. He held it
in the palm of his hand. He knew
now why he always carried it.
Bergstrom had his bad moment.
“You’re not going to …” he began
at the sight of the gun. He tried
again. “You must be joking.”
“I have very little sense of humor,”
Zarwell corrected him.
“You’d be foolish!”
Bergstrom obviously realized
how close he was to death. Yet
surprisingly, after the first start,
he showed little fear. Zarwell had
thought the man a bit soft, too
adjusted to a life of ease and some
prestige to meet danger calmly.
Curiosity restrained his trigger finger.
“Why would I be foolish?” he
asked. “Your Meninger oath of inviolable
confidence?”
Bergstrom shook his head. “I
know it’s been broken before. But
you need me. You’re not through,
you know. If you killed me you’d
still have to trust some other
analyst.”
“Is that the best you can do?”
“No.” Bergstrom was angry now.
“But use that logical mind you’re
supposed to have! Scenes before
this have shown what kind of man
you are. Just because this last happened
here on St. Martin’s makes
little difference. If I was going to
turn you in to the police, I’d have
done it before this.”
Zarwell debated with himself the
truth of what the other had said.
“Why didn’t you turn me in?” he
asked.
“Because you’re no mad-dog
killer!” Now that the crisis seemed
to be past, Bergstrom spoke more
calmly, even allowed himself to
relax. “You’re still pretty much in
the fog about yourself. I read more
in those comanalyses than you did.
I even know who you are!”
Zarwell’s eyebrows raised.
“Who am I?” he asked, very interested
now. Without attention he
put his pistol away in a trouser
pocket.
Bergstrom brushed the question
aside with one hand. “Your name
makes little difference. You’ve used
many. But you are an idealist. Your
killings were necessary to bring
justice to the places you visited. By
now you’re almost a legend among
the human worlds. I’d like to talk
more with you on that later.”
While Zarwell considered, Bergstrom
pressed his advantage. “One
more scene might do it,” he said.
“Should we try again—if you trust
me, that is?”
[p
145
]
Zarwell made his decision quickly.
“Go ahead,” he answered.
ALL Zarwell’s attention seemed
on the cigar he lit as he rode
down the escalator, but he surveyed
the terminal carefully over the rim
of his hand. He spied no suspicious
loungers.
Behind the escalator he groped
along the floor beneath the lockers
until he found his key. The briefcase
was under his arm a minute
later.
In the basement lave he put a
coin in the pay slot of a private
compartment and went in.
As he zipped open the briefcase
he surveyed his features in the mirror.
A small muscle at the corner of
one eye twitched spasmodically.
One cheek wore a frozen quarter
smile. Thirty-six hours under the
paralysis was longer than advisable.
The muscles should be rested at
least every twenty hours.
Fortunately his natural features
would serve as an adequate disguise
now.
He adjusted the ring setting on
the pistol-shaped instrument that
he took from his case, and carefully
rayed several small areas of
his face, loosening muscles that had
been tight too long. He sighed
gratefully when he finished, massaging
his cheeks and forehead with
considerable pleasure. Another
glance in the mirror satisfied him
with the changes that had been
made. He turned to his briefcase
again and exchanged the gun for
a small syringe, which he pushed
into a trouser pocket, and a single-edged
razor blade.
Removing his fiber-cloth jacket
he slashed it into strips with the
razor blade and flushed it down the
disposal bowl. With the sleeves of
his blouse rolled up he had the
appearance of a typical workman
as he strolled from the compartment.
Back at the locker he replaced
the briefcase and, with a wad of
gum, glued the key to the bottom
of the locker frame.
One step more. Taking the syringe
from his pocket, he plunged
the needle into his forearm and
tossed the instrument down a
waste chute. He took three more
steps and paused uncertainly.
When he looked about him it
was with the expression of a man
waking from a vivid dream.
“Q
UITE ingenious,” Graves
murmured admiringly. “You
had your mind already preconditioned
for the shot. But why would
you deliberately give yourself amnesia?”
“What better disguise than to
believe the part you’re playing?”
“A good man must have done
that job on your mind,” Bergstrom
commented. “I’d have hesitated to
try it myself. It must have taken a
lot of trust on your part.”
[p
146
]
“Trust and money,” Zarwell said
drily.
“Your memory’s back then?”
Zarwell nodded.
“I’m glad to hear that,” Bergstrom
assured him. “Now that
you’re well again I’d like to introduce
you to a man named Vernon
Johnson. This world …”
Zarwell stopped him with an upraised
hand. “Good God, man, can’t
you see the reason for all this? I’m
tired. I’m trying to quit.”
“Quit?” Bergstrom did not quite
follow him.
“It started on my home colony,”
Zarwell explained listlessly. “A
gang of hoods had taken over the
government. I helped organize a
movement to get them out. There
was some bloodshed, but it went
quite well. Several months later an
unofficial envoy from another
world asked several of us to give
them a hand on the same kind of
job. The political conditions there
were rotten. We went with him.
Again we were successful. It seems
I have a kind of genius for that
sort of thing.”
He stretched out his legs and regarded
them thoughtfully. “I
learned then the truth of Russell’s
saying: ‘When the oppressed win
their freedom they are as oppressive
as their former masters.’ When
they went bad, I opposed them.
This time I failed. But I escaped
again. I have quite a talent for that
also.
“I’m not a professional do-gooder.”
Zarwell’s tone appealed
to Bergstrom for understanding. “I
have only a normal man’s indignation
at injustice. And now I’ve done
my share. Yet, wherever I go, the
word eventually gets out, and I’m
right back in a fight again. It’s like
the proverbial monkey on my back.
I can’t get rid of it.”
He rose. “That disguise and
memory planting were supposed to
get me out of it. I should have
known it wouldn’t work. But this
time I’m not going to be drawn
back in! You and your Vernon
Johnson can do your own revolting.
I’m through!”
Bergstrom did not argue as he
left.
RESTLESSNESS drove Zarwell
from his flat the next day—a
legal holiday on St. Martin’s. At
a railed-off lot he stopped and loitered
in the shadow of an adjacent
building watching workmen drilling
an excavation for a new structure.
When a man strolled to his side
and stood watching the workmen,
he was not surprised. He waited for
the other to speak.
“I’d like to talk to you, if you
can spare a few minutes,” the
stranger said.
Zarwell turned and studied the
man without answering. He was
medium tall, with the body of an
athlete, though perhaps ten years
[p
147
]
beyond the age of sports. He had
a manner of contained energy.
“You’re Johnson?” he asked.
The man nodded.
Zarwell tried to feel the anger he
wanted to feel, but somehow it
would not come. “We have nothing
to talk about,” was the best he
could manage.
“Then will you just listen? After,
I’ll leave—if you tell me to.”
Against his will he found himself
liking the man, and wanting at least
to be courteous. He inclined his
head toward a curb wastebox with
a flat top. “Should we sit?”
Johnson smiled agreeably and
they walked over to the box and
sat down.
“When this colony was first
founded,” Johnson began without
preamble, “the administrative body
was a governor, and a council of
twelve. Their successors were to
be elected biennially. At first they
were. Then things changed. We
haven’t had an election now in the
last twenty-three years. St. Martin’s
is beginning to prosper. Yet
the only ones receiving the benefits
are the rulers. The citizens work
twelve hours a day. They are poorly
housed
, poorly fed, poorly clothed.
They …”
Zarwell found himself not listening
as Johnson’s voice went on. The
story was always the same. But why
did they always try to drag him into
their troubles?
Why hadn’t he chosen some
other world on which to hide?
The last question prompted a
new thought. Just why had he
chosen St. Martin’s? Was it only a
coincidence? Or had he,
subconsciously
at least, picked this particular
world? He had always
considered himself the unwilling
subject of glib persuaders … but
mightn’t some inner compulsion of
his own have put the monkey on his
back?
“… and we need your help.”
Johnson had finished his speech.
Zarwell gazed up at the bright
sky. He pulled in a long breath,
and let it out in a sigh.
“What are your plans so far?”
he asked wearily.
—
CHARLES V. DE VET | To imprison anyone who breaks the Meninger oath of inviolate confidence | To establish habitable human settlements after the destruction of Earth | To search for minerals that could be used to produce serum for comanalyses | To reclaim fugitives from resistance movements and force them into captivity | 1 |
99917_U9ORXW61_1 | According to the author, what made open trade so accessible in the 14th century? | What cities in the post-Brexit era could learn from a 14th-century trading bloc
As you fly from the country now known as Germany to Britain, the coastal geography of northern European cities gently unfurls. You can see where the sea smacks into them, or where yawning estuaries unfold like funnels between green and brown city and choppy blue water. You can track the snaking rivers and canals that form unrepentant umbilical connections to the settlements set a little further inland.
By their nature cities along coasts and rivers developed so they could be open to trade with each other. From the middle of the 13th century, and for some 300 years after, many settlements dotted along this route formed the prosperous Hanseatic League, a European trading confederation of market towns, before the rise of the nation state led to its dissolution.
The Hanseatic League is not well known, and today it lives on most prominently in the name of the German national airline Lufthansa, literally the 'Hansa of the skies', whose planes you can look out of – and down towards the Hanseatic cities – on the short journeys between mainland Europe and Britain. The letters HH on the number plates of cars in Hamburg stand for Hansestadt Hamburg: another proud little memory of this hidden history.
In the traumatised atmosphere of post-Brexit Britain, it is worth remembering the Hanseatic League. It could point us towards new relationships between progressive city dwellers in a world that otherwise seems to be putting the brakes on modernity.
Despite some of Britain's Leave voters longing to inhabit a fantastical realm immune to foreign influence, the reality is patently very different to that. In the late 1300s, Chaucer wrote about characters travelling to Jerusalem, and others who came from Europe; and it was at exactly this point that the Hanseatic League slowly started to coalesce, eventually influencing our isles.
The League is most easily understood as a loose federation of cities that acted together in self-interest to promote trade. The Hanseatic cities developed their own legal system, and their armies came to one another's aid. Merchants who wanted to buy and sell and travel were taking the lead at a time when nation states were not fit for purpose: in the case of England or Denmark, leadership was too centralised and authoritarian, while in German-speaking lands a nation had yet to be formed.
We think of nations today as elemental almost, immovable. Yet look at any city of Mitteleuropa and you'll see the many different names it has had as borders and regimes have shifted with the sands of time. Nations come and go. Cities endure.
"It is often said that great cities survived great empires," says Cristina Ampatzidou, editor-in-chief of the Rotterdam-based online publishing platform Amateur Cities. "So it is not unrealistic to think of cities as discrete entities that compete and collaborate with each other, independently from the states to which they belong."
The cities involved in the Hanseatic League are found along the Baltic and North Sea coasts, and slightly inland too. The League stretched from Novgorod in the east – in what is now Russia – to London in the west. Tallinn, Riga, Gdańsk, Visby, Berlin, Cologne, Antwerp, Stockholm, Bergen, Kiel, Rostock, Dinant, Bruges, Turku, Groningen, Hanover, Wroclaw, Kaliningrad: all were involved at different stages in the Hanse's history, which ran on into the 1500s.
The League covered lands that today find themselves a part of the modern nations of Finland, Sweden, Poland, the Netherlands, Belgium, France, Norway, Lithuania, Estonia and Latvia. It was a huge – and hugely ambitious – undertaking in the days when communications consisted of ink and paper and the only viable method of travel was by ship. Wood, fur, wool, silver, herring, cod and salt were the main items traded. But what was also exchanged was knowledge. In some ways it was an exercise in what we today call 'soft diplomacy'. There was no maniacal ruler overseeing things – merchants met and talked. They raised armies and waged war against kings who threatened their businesses and their freedoms and their peace.
There was a kind of proto-democracy at work. Professor Rainer Postel, of the Bundeswehr Universität (Germany's equivalent of Sandhurst military academy), has described the Hanse as "a community of interests without power politics". As David Abulafia, Professor of Mediterranean History at Cambridge points out, "The lack of an elaborate superstructure was one of the things that made the Hanse work. Having said that, one should recognise that Lübeck in particular dominated the League for long periods."
Lübeck was where the merchants most often met; and where renewed recent interest in the Hanse eventually led to Angela Merkel cutting the ribbon at the brand new European Hansemuseum in the city last year.
Germany today – multicultural, economically and culturally motoring, free and fair – seems like the ideal model for a modern European nation state. And part of that success lies in the gravitas the country has given to its Hanseatic history. For Germany is not a top-down country with one city unhealthily dominating as with France and Britain (regional economic inequalities have plagued Britain since the painful de-industrialisation of the 1980s, especially in the north). Germany respects federalism and its cities exist on a much more even keel. The way that Cologne, Munich, Frankfurt, Dusseldorf and Stuttgart all bring varied economic and cultural character to the party is pure Hanse. The former Hanseatic cities of Hamburg, Berlin and Bremen have city state status within Germany, putting them on the same level as a whole region or 'land' like Bavaria or Brandenburg.
So how about a new Hanseatic League? I ask Benjamin Barber, senior fellow at New York's Fordham University. "I believe you will find there is a new Hanse," he says, "that constituted itself about 10 or 11 years ago – including many of the original Hanseatic League cities." Barber is founder of the Global Parliament of Mayors, which he describes as a kind of Hanse of all cities, not just European ports, which will give cities a global urban voice and a common platform for action. The parliament convenes for its inaugural session in The Hague in September.
"Cities both exist within nations and transcend nations. Their power lies not just in the extent of
de jure
autonomy ceded or granted by 'higher' levels of government," says Bruce Katz, centennial scholar at the Washington DC thinktank the Brookings Institution. "Rather, cities have de facto power, the result of larger market and demographic forces and environmental imperatives that value proximity, density, connectivity and quality. Smart nations will see themselves as partners to their cities, setting strong platforms for urban prosperity and devolving powers, where appropriate, to give cities the flexibility to perform… Dumb nations will continue to dictate from above, stifling market activity and urban potential."
But could we go further? Could cities like London declare independence from the UK? London's economy is larger than that of Scotland and Wales combined. "States will not vanish or surrender their waning sovereignty," says Benjamin Barber. "But cities will meet across frontiers and work together to solve problems. The objective is not an independent London or New York, but interdependent cities collaborating globally. And that is happening."
London's voters largely wanted to remain a part of the EU and to maintain the city's status as an entrepôt. There is clearly a widening chasm between urban and rural life at the heart of many nations. Visualisations of Austria's recent presidential election showed the issue clearly: the country's cities voted for the Green candidate Alexander Van der Bellen, while the the rural districts went for right-wing nationalist Norbert Hofer (whose legal challenge to the close result has resulted in a rerun being announced for October). And in the USA in November, it's likely that Trump voters will also come from rural areas and Clinton voters from the cities. City dwellers are finding ever more in common with the world's other city dwellers than with their countrymen 50 miles down the road.
Back in Britain, one of history's little oddities pops up on the east coast. Boston in Lincolnshire and King's Lynn in Norfolk were both forward-looking Hanseatic League towns that traded with far-flung ports and hosted foreign merchants. King's Lynn contains the only extantHanse House left in Britain (London's was knocked down to build Cannon Street Station in the 1800s). Yet in the EU referendum these two areas polled among the highest Leave votes of anywhere in the country.
"Things change," says LSE's Professor Tony Travers. "[King's Lynn] used to be very highly connected, but the economy moved on and left those trading ports like it in a different situation." Take, for example, the pivot towards the New World, with which trade made more sense from the west-coast ports like Bristol and Liverpool. While these boomed between the 1600s and 1800s, the Hanseatic ports declined and then died out. "One of the things that's interesting about the [referendum] decision is that it begs all sorts of questions about the future of the UK and its relationship with Europe; and of London and Scotland and their relationship with the rest of Europe. When the EU began as the EEC in the mid-20th century some saw it as a modern day Hanse. Now the EU seems to be waning, perhaps its successor will have to ape the Hanse even more."
For all its complex beauty, life can ultimately be reduced to a series of binary options: yes or no, stick or twist, in or out, innovation or stagnation, modernity or mythology. The referendum result was disappointing for many progressive observers because it felt like a step backwards. Despite being primarily about trade monopolies and money making, the Hanse was, in its way, an early stab at stepping forwards: it encompassed internationalism, rational thought, free trade, loose democratic institutions and, most crucially of all, movement.
The future, for many observers, can only be understood in terms of the free movement of people, capital, goods and ideas. It is this necessary movement, and its possible curtailment, that could be the spark that leads to cities like London to seek independence and parity with other world cities – rather than with the rural hinterlands of Britain.
Of course, cities seceding from their nation states would provide huge headaches for countries whose biggest economic driver had been removed – as well as likely deepening ideological differences between city and rural dwellers. Moreover, cities need the food the countryside provides.
Yet for all the potential pitfalls, city states can thrive. Look at Singapore, Hong Kong, or de facto city states like Dubai and Abu Dhabi. One of the most telling characteristics about these four – all of course former British imperial enclaves – is that they are utterly outward looking. To return to the sky analogy, it's the airlines of each of these (Singapore Airlines, Cathay Pacific, Emirates and Etihad) that open up each respective city to the world in the way that the machinery of the Hanse did on the Baltic Sea 600 years ago. And it's the unions each city makes with other places that also look thoroughly Hanseatic in character. A model for modern city states, then. But is it one that we want?
"The Hanseatic League was not always accepted by local citizens," says Cristina Ampatzidou, "because the privileges granted to the Hanse merchants were forcing local traders out of competition and many cities took steps to eliminate them. The reasons the countryside is turning to the right [globally] are not independent from cities turning increasingly into speculation machines for the profit of a happy few. It is basically these systemic contradictions that must be addressed before we resort to more isolationist ideas that would intensify the urban-rural political divide. The bottom line is not whether a contemporary Hanse-esque federation is possible, it probably is; but whether it is actually desirable."
This article was originally published on TheLong+Short. Read the original article. | Prevalence of natural resources in concentrated areas | Agreement on shared principles of commerce | Settlement along geographically accessible areas | Inclusion of both rural and urban community members | 2 |
99917_U9ORXW61_2 | Which terms most likely describe how the author views Brexit? | What cities in the post-Brexit era could learn from a 14th-century trading bloc
As you fly from the country now known as Germany to Britain, the coastal geography of northern European cities gently unfurls. You can see where the sea smacks into them, or where yawning estuaries unfold like funnels between green and brown city and choppy blue water. You can track the snaking rivers and canals that form unrepentant umbilical connections to the settlements set a little further inland.
By their nature cities along coasts and rivers developed so they could be open to trade with each other. From the middle of the 13th century, and for some 300 years after, many settlements dotted along this route formed the prosperous Hanseatic League, a European trading confederation of market towns, before the rise of the nation state led to its dissolution.
The Hanseatic League is not well known, and today it lives on most prominently in the name of the German national airline Lufthansa, literally the 'Hansa of the skies', whose planes you can look out of – and down towards the Hanseatic cities – on the short journeys between mainland Europe and Britain. The letters HH on the number plates of cars in Hamburg stand for Hansestadt Hamburg: another proud little memory of this hidden history.
In the traumatised atmosphere of post-Brexit Britain, it is worth remembering the Hanseatic League. It could point us towards new relationships between progressive city dwellers in a world that otherwise seems to be putting the brakes on modernity.
Despite some of Britain's Leave voters longing to inhabit a fantastical realm immune to foreign influence, the reality is patently very different to that. In the late 1300s, Chaucer wrote about characters travelling to Jerusalem, and others who came from Europe; and it was at exactly this point that the Hanseatic League slowly started to coalesce, eventually influencing our isles.
The League is most easily understood as a loose federation of cities that acted together in self-interest to promote trade. The Hanseatic cities developed their own legal system, and their armies came to one another's aid. Merchants who wanted to buy and sell and travel were taking the lead at a time when nation states were not fit for purpose: in the case of England or Denmark, leadership was too centralised and authoritarian, while in German-speaking lands a nation had yet to be formed.
We think of nations today as elemental almost, immovable. Yet look at any city of Mitteleuropa and you'll see the many different names it has had as borders and regimes have shifted with the sands of time. Nations come and go. Cities endure.
"It is often said that great cities survived great empires," says Cristina Ampatzidou, editor-in-chief of the Rotterdam-based online publishing platform Amateur Cities. "So it is not unrealistic to think of cities as discrete entities that compete and collaborate with each other, independently from the states to which they belong."
The cities involved in the Hanseatic League are found along the Baltic and North Sea coasts, and slightly inland too. The League stretched from Novgorod in the east – in what is now Russia – to London in the west. Tallinn, Riga, Gdańsk, Visby, Berlin, Cologne, Antwerp, Stockholm, Bergen, Kiel, Rostock, Dinant, Bruges, Turku, Groningen, Hanover, Wroclaw, Kaliningrad: all were involved at different stages in the Hanse's history, which ran on into the 1500s.
The League covered lands that today find themselves a part of the modern nations of Finland, Sweden, Poland, the Netherlands, Belgium, France, Norway, Lithuania, Estonia and Latvia. It was a huge – and hugely ambitious – undertaking in the days when communications consisted of ink and paper and the only viable method of travel was by ship. Wood, fur, wool, silver, herring, cod and salt were the main items traded. But what was also exchanged was knowledge. In some ways it was an exercise in what we today call 'soft diplomacy'. There was no maniacal ruler overseeing things – merchants met and talked. They raised armies and waged war against kings who threatened their businesses and their freedoms and their peace.
There was a kind of proto-democracy at work. Professor Rainer Postel, of the Bundeswehr Universität (Germany's equivalent of Sandhurst military academy), has described the Hanse as "a community of interests without power politics". As David Abulafia, Professor of Mediterranean History at Cambridge points out, "The lack of an elaborate superstructure was one of the things that made the Hanse work. Having said that, one should recognise that Lübeck in particular dominated the League for long periods."
Lübeck was where the merchants most often met; and where renewed recent interest in the Hanse eventually led to Angela Merkel cutting the ribbon at the brand new European Hansemuseum in the city last year.
Germany today – multicultural, economically and culturally motoring, free and fair – seems like the ideal model for a modern European nation state. And part of that success lies in the gravitas the country has given to its Hanseatic history. For Germany is not a top-down country with one city unhealthily dominating as with France and Britain (regional economic inequalities have plagued Britain since the painful de-industrialisation of the 1980s, especially in the north). Germany respects federalism and its cities exist on a much more even keel. The way that Cologne, Munich, Frankfurt, Dusseldorf and Stuttgart all bring varied economic and cultural character to the party is pure Hanse. The former Hanseatic cities of Hamburg, Berlin and Bremen have city state status within Germany, putting them on the same level as a whole region or 'land' like Bavaria or Brandenburg.
So how about a new Hanseatic League? I ask Benjamin Barber, senior fellow at New York's Fordham University. "I believe you will find there is a new Hanse," he says, "that constituted itself about 10 or 11 years ago – including many of the original Hanseatic League cities." Barber is founder of the Global Parliament of Mayors, which he describes as a kind of Hanse of all cities, not just European ports, which will give cities a global urban voice and a common platform for action. The parliament convenes for its inaugural session in The Hague in September.
"Cities both exist within nations and transcend nations. Their power lies not just in the extent of
de jure
autonomy ceded or granted by 'higher' levels of government," says Bruce Katz, centennial scholar at the Washington DC thinktank the Brookings Institution. "Rather, cities have de facto power, the result of larger market and demographic forces and environmental imperatives that value proximity, density, connectivity and quality. Smart nations will see themselves as partners to their cities, setting strong platforms for urban prosperity and devolving powers, where appropriate, to give cities the flexibility to perform… Dumb nations will continue to dictate from above, stifling market activity and urban potential."
But could we go further? Could cities like London declare independence from the UK? London's economy is larger than that of Scotland and Wales combined. "States will not vanish or surrender their waning sovereignty," says Benjamin Barber. "But cities will meet across frontiers and work together to solve problems. The objective is not an independent London or New York, but interdependent cities collaborating globally. And that is happening."
London's voters largely wanted to remain a part of the EU and to maintain the city's status as an entrepôt. There is clearly a widening chasm between urban and rural life at the heart of many nations. Visualisations of Austria's recent presidential election showed the issue clearly: the country's cities voted for the Green candidate Alexander Van der Bellen, while the the rural districts went for right-wing nationalist Norbert Hofer (whose legal challenge to the close result has resulted in a rerun being announced for October). And in the USA in November, it's likely that Trump voters will also come from rural areas and Clinton voters from the cities. City dwellers are finding ever more in common with the world's other city dwellers than with their countrymen 50 miles down the road.
Back in Britain, one of history's little oddities pops up on the east coast. Boston in Lincolnshire and King's Lynn in Norfolk were both forward-looking Hanseatic League towns that traded with far-flung ports and hosted foreign merchants. King's Lynn contains the only extantHanse House left in Britain (London's was knocked down to build Cannon Street Station in the 1800s). Yet in the EU referendum these two areas polled among the highest Leave votes of anywhere in the country.
"Things change," says LSE's Professor Tony Travers. "[King's Lynn] used to be very highly connected, but the economy moved on and left those trading ports like it in a different situation." Take, for example, the pivot towards the New World, with which trade made more sense from the west-coast ports like Bristol and Liverpool. While these boomed between the 1600s and 1800s, the Hanseatic ports declined and then died out. "One of the things that's interesting about the [referendum] decision is that it begs all sorts of questions about the future of the UK and its relationship with Europe; and of London and Scotland and their relationship with the rest of Europe. When the EU began as the EEC in the mid-20th century some saw it as a modern day Hanse. Now the EU seems to be waning, perhaps its successor will have to ape the Hanse even more."
For all its complex beauty, life can ultimately be reduced to a series of binary options: yes or no, stick or twist, in or out, innovation or stagnation, modernity or mythology. The referendum result was disappointing for many progressive observers because it felt like a step backwards. Despite being primarily about trade monopolies and money making, the Hanse was, in its way, an early stab at stepping forwards: it encompassed internationalism, rational thought, free trade, loose democratic institutions and, most crucially of all, movement.
The future, for many observers, can only be understood in terms of the free movement of people, capital, goods and ideas. It is this necessary movement, and its possible curtailment, that could be the spark that leads to cities like London to seek independence and parity with other world cities – rather than with the rural hinterlands of Britain.
Of course, cities seceding from their nation states would provide huge headaches for countries whose biggest economic driver had been removed – as well as likely deepening ideological differences between city and rural dwellers. Moreover, cities need the food the countryside provides.
Yet for all the potential pitfalls, city states can thrive. Look at Singapore, Hong Kong, or de facto city states like Dubai and Abu Dhabi. One of the most telling characteristics about these four – all of course former British imperial enclaves – is that they are utterly outward looking. To return to the sky analogy, it's the airlines of each of these (Singapore Airlines, Cathay Pacific, Emirates and Etihad) that open up each respective city to the world in the way that the machinery of the Hanse did on the Baltic Sea 600 years ago. And it's the unions each city makes with other places that also look thoroughly Hanseatic in character. A model for modern city states, then. But is it one that we want?
"The Hanseatic League was not always accepted by local citizens," says Cristina Ampatzidou, "because the privileges granted to the Hanse merchants were forcing local traders out of competition and many cities took steps to eliminate them. The reasons the countryside is turning to the right [globally] are not independent from cities turning increasingly into speculation machines for the profit of a happy few. It is basically these systemic contradictions that must be addressed before we resort to more isolationist ideas that would intensify the urban-rural political divide. The bottom line is not whether a contemporary Hanse-esque federation is possible, it probably is; but whether it is actually desirable."
This article was originally published on TheLong+Short. Read the original article. | perplexing and disturbing | ambitious and progressive | ill-conceived and quixotic | haphazard and inequitable | 2 |
99917_U9ORXW61_3 | What is the primary purpose of the article? | What cities in the post-Brexit era could learn from a 14th-century trading bloc
As you fly from the country now known as Germany to Britain, the coastal geography of northern European cities gently unfurls. You can see where the sea smacks into them, or where yawning estuaries unfold like funnels between green and brown city and choppy blue water. You can track the snaking rivers and canals that form unrepentant umbilical connections to the settlements set a little further inland.
By their nature cities along coasts and rivers developed so they could be open to trade with each other. From the middle of the 13th century, and for some 300 years after, many settlements dotted along this route formed the prosperous Hanseatic League, a European trading confederation of market towns, before the rise of the nation state led to its dissolution.
The Hanseatic League is not well known, and today it lives on most prominently in the name of the German national airline Lufthansa, literally the 'Hansa of the skies', whose planes you can look out of – and down towards the Hanseatic cities – on the short journeys between mainland Europe and Britain. The letters HH on the number plates of cars in Hamburg stand for Hansestadt Hamburg: another proud little memory of this hidden history.
In the traumatised atmosphere of post-Brexit Britain, it is worth remembering the Hanseatic League. It could point us towards new relationships between progressive city dwellers in a world that otherwise seems to be putting the brakes on modernity.
Despite some of Britain's Leave voters longing to inhabit a fantastical realm immune to foreign influence, the reality is patently very different to that. In the late 1300s, Chaucer wrote about characters travelling to Jerusalem, and others who came from Europe; and it was at exactly this point that the Hanseatic League slowly started to coalesce, eventually influencing our isles.
The League is most easily understood as a loose federation of cities that acted together in self-interest to promote trade. The Hanseatic cities developed their own legal system, and their armies came to one another's aid. Merchants who wanted to buy and sell and travel were taking the lead at a time when nation states were not fit for purpose: in the case of England or Denmark, leadership was too centralised and authoritarian, while in German-speaking lands a nation had yet to be formed.
We think of nations today as elemental almost, immovable. Yet look at any city of Mitteleuropa and you'll see the many different names it has had as borders and regimes have shifted with the sands of time. Nations come and go. Cities endure.
"It is often said that great cities survived great empires," says Cristina Ampatzidou, editor-in-chief of the Rotterdam-based online publishing platform Amateur Cities. "So it is not unrealistic to think of cities as discrete entities that compete and collaborate with each other, independently from the states to which they belong."
The cities involved in the Hanseatic League are found along the Baltic and North Sea coasts, and slightly inland too. The League stretched from Novgorod in the east – in what is now Russia – to London in the west. Tallinn, Riga, Gdańsk, Visby, Berlin, Cologne, Antwerp, Stockholm, Bergen, Kiel, Rostock, Dinant, Bruges, Turku, Groningen, Hanover, Wroclaw, Kaliningrad: all were involved at different stages in the Hanse's history, which ran on into the 1500s.
The League covered lands that today find themselves a part of the modern nations of Finland, Sweden, Poland, the Netherlands, Belgium, France, Norway, Lithuania, Estonia and Latvia. It was a huge – and hugely ambitious – undertaking in the days when communications consisted of ink and paper and the only viable method of travel was by ship. Wood, fur, wool, silver, herring, cod and salt were the main items traded. But what was also exchanged was knowledge. In some ways it was an exercise in what we today call 'soft diplomacy'. There was no maniacal ruler overseeing things – merchants met and talked. They raised armies and waged war against kings who threatened their businesses and their freedoms and their peace.
There was a kind of proto-democracy at work. Professor Rainer Postel, of the Bundeswehr Universität (Germany's equivalent of Sandhurst military academy), has described the Hanse as "a community of interests without power politics". As David Abulafia, Professor of Mediterranean History at Cambridge points out, "The lack of an elaborate superstructure was one of the things that made the Hanse work. Having said that, one should recognise that Lübeck in particular dominated the League for long periods."
Lübeck was where the merchants most often met; and where renewed recent interest in the Hanse eventually led to Angela Merkel cutting the ribbon at the brand new European Hansemuseum in the city last year.
Germany today – multicultural, economically and culturally motoring, free and fair – seems like the ideal model for a modern European nation state. And part of that success lies in the gravitas the country has given to its Hanseatic history. For Germany is not a top-down country with one city unhealthily dominating as with France and Britain (regional economic inequalities have plagued Britain since the painful de-industrialisation of the 1980s, especially in the north). Germany respects federalism and its cities exist on a much more even keel. The way that Cologne, Munich, Frankfurt, Dusseldorf and Stuttgart all bring varied economic and cultural character to the party is pure Hanse. The former Hanseatic cities of Hamburg, Berlin and Bremen have city state status within Germany, putting them on the same level as a whole region or 'land' like Bavaria or Brandenburg.
So how about a new Hanseatic League? I ask Benjamin Barber, senior fellow at New York's Fordham University. "I believe you will find there is a new Hanse," he says, "that constituted itself about 10 or 11 years ago – including many of the original Hanseatic League cities." Barber is founder of the Global Parliament of Mayors, which he describes as a kind of Hanse of all cities, not just European ports, which will give cities a global urban voice and a common platform for action. The parliament convenes for its inaugural session in The Hague in September.
"Cities both exist within nations and transcend nations. Their power lies not just in the extent of
de jure
autonomy ceded or granted by 'higher' levels of government," says Bruce Katz, centennial scholar at the Washington DC thinktank the Brookings Institution. "Rather, cities have de facto power, the result of larger market and demographic forces and environmental imperatives that value proximity, density, connectivity and quality. Smart nations will see themselves as partners to their cities, setting strong platforms for urban prosperity and devolving powers, where appropriate, to give cities the flexibility to perform… Dumb nations will continue to dictate from above, stifling market activity and urban potential."
But could we go further? Could cities like London declare independence from the UK? London's economy is larger than that of Scotland and Wales combined. "States will not vanish or surrender their waning sovereignty," says Benjamin Barber. "But cities will meet across frontiers and work together to solve problems. The objective is not an independent London or New York, but interdependent cities collaborating globally. And that is happening."
London's voters largely wanted to remain a part of the EU and to maintain the city's status as an entrepôt. There is clearly a widening chasm between urban and rural life at the heart of many nations. Visualisations of Austria's recent presidential election showed the issue clearly: the country's cities voted for the Green candidate Alexander Van der Bellen, while the the rural districts went for right-wing nationalist Norbert Hofer (whose legal challenge to the close result has resulted in a rerun being announced for October). And in the USA in November, it's likely that Trump voters will also come from rural areas and Clinton voters from the cities. City dwellers are finding ever more in common with the world's other city dwellers than with their countrymen 50 miles down the road.
Back in Britain, one of history's little oddities pops up on the east coast. Boston in Lincolnshire and King's Lynn in Norfolk were both forward-looking Hanseatic League towns that traded with far-flung ports and hosted foreign merchants. King's Lynn contains the only extantHanse House left in Britain (London's was knocked down to build Cannon Street Station in the 1800s). Yet in the EU referendum these two areas polled among the highest Leave votes of anywhere in the country.
"Things change," says LSE's Professor Tony Travers. "[King's Lynn] used to be very highly connected, but the economy moved on and left those trading ports like it in a different situation." Take, for example, the pivot towards the New World, with which trade made more sense from the west-coast ports like Bristol and Liverpool. While these boomed between the 1600s and 1800s, the Hanseatic ports declined and then died out. "One of the things that's interesting about the [referendum] decision is that it begs all sorts of questions about the future of the UK and its relationship with Europe; and of London and Scotland and their relationship with the rest of Europe. When the EU began as the EEC in the mid-20th century some saw it as a modern day Hanse. Now the EU seems to be waning, perhaps its successor will have to ape the Hanse even more."
For all its complex beauty, life can ultimately be reduced to a series of binary options: yes or no, stick or twist, in or out, innovation or stagnation, modernity or mythology. The referendum result was disappointing for many progressive observers because it felt like a step backwards. Despite being primarily about trade monopolies and money making, the Hanse was, in its way, an early stab at stepping forwards: it encompassed internationalism, rational thought, free trade, loose democratic institutions and, most crucially of all, movement.
The future, for many observers, can only be understood in terms of the free movement of people, capital, goods and ideas. It is this necessary movement, and its possible curtailment, that could be the spark that leads to cities like London to seek independence and parity with other world cities – rather than with the rural hinterlands of Britain.
Of course, cities seceding from their nation states would provide huge headaches for countries whose biggest economic driver had been removed – as well as likely deepening ideological differences between city and rural dwellers. Moreover, cities need the food the countryside provides.
Yet for all the potential pitfalls, city states can thrive. Look at Singapore, Hong Kong, or de facto city states like Dubai and Abu Dhabi. One of the most telling characteristics about these four – all of course former British imperial enclaves – is that they are utterly outward looking. To return to the sky analogy, it's the airlines of each of these (Singapore Airlines, Cathay Pacific, Emirates and Etihad) that open up each respective city to the world in the way that the machinery of the Hanse did on the Baltic Sea 600 years ago. And it's the unions each city makes with other places that also look thoroughly Hanseatic in character. A model for modern city states, then. But is it one that we want?
"The Hanseatic League was not always accepted by local citizens," says Cristina Ampatzidou, "because the privileges granted to the Hanse merchants were forcing local traders out of competition and many cities took steps to eliminate them. The reasons the countryside is turning to the right [globally] are not independent from cities turning increasingly into speculation machines for the profit of a happy few. It is basically these systemic contradictions that must be addressed before we resort to more isolationist ideas that would intensify the urban-rural political divide. The bottom line is not whether a contemporary Hanse-esque federation is possible, it probably is; but whether it is actually desirable."
This article was originally published on TheLong+Short. Read the original article. | To share a historical account of 14th century commerce practices and why they were replaced | To propose a model for international commerce in nation-states with divided populations | To lament and decry Britain's misguided decision to abandon the European Union | To entertain readers with an ironic predicament that has resulted from western globalization | 1 |
99917_U9ORXW61_4 | According to the author, how should progressive urban cities function differently than states? | What cities in the post-Brexit era could learn from a 14th-century trading bloc
As you fly from the country now known as Germany to Britain, the coastal geography of northern European cities gently unfurls. You can see where the sea smacks into them, or where yawning estuaries unfold like funnels between green and brown city and choppy blue water. You can track the snaking rivers and canals that form unrepentant umbilical connections to the settlements set a little further inland.
By their nature cities along coasts and rivers developed so they could be open to trade with each other. From the middle of the 13th century, and for some 300 years after, many settlements dotted along this route formed the prosperous Hanseatic League, a European trading confederation of market towns, before the rise of the nation state led to its dissolution.
The Hanseatic League is not well known, and today it lives on most prominently in the name of the German national airline Lufthansa, literally the 'Hansa of the skies', whose planes you can look out of – and down towards the Hanseatic cities – on the short journeys between mainland Europe and Britain. The letters HH on the number plates of cars in Hamburg stand for Hansestadt Hamburg: another proud little memory of this hidden history.
In the traumatised atmosphere of post-Brexit Britain, it is worth remembering the Hanseatic League. It could point us towards new relationships between progressive city dwellers in a world that otherwise seems to be putting the brakes on modernity.
Despite some of Britain's Leave voters longing to inhabit a fantastical realm immune to foreign influence, the reality is patently very different to that. In the late 1300s, Chaucer wrote about characters travelling to Jerusalem, and others who came from Europe; and it was at exactly this point that the Hanseatic League slowly started to coalesce, eventually influencing our isles.
The League is most easily understood as a loose federation of cities that acted together in self-interest to promote trade. The Hanseatic cities developed their own legal system, and their armies came to one another's aid. Merchants who wanted to buy and sell and travel were taking the lead at a time when nation states were not fit for purpose: in the case of England or Denmark, leadership was too centralised and authoritarian, while in German-speaking lands a nation had yet to be formed.
We think of nations today as elemental almost, immovable. Yet look at any city of Mitteleuropa and you'll see the many different names it has had as borders and regimes have shifted with the sands of time. Nations come and go. Cities endure.
"It is often said that great cities survived great empires," says Cristina Ampatzidou, editor-in-chief of the Rotterdam-based online publishing platform Amateur Cities. "So it is not unrealistic to think of cities as discrete entities that compete and collaborate with each other, independently from the states to which they belong."
The cities involved in the Hanseatic League are found along the Baltic and North Sea coasts, and slightly inland too. The League stretched from Novgorod in the east – in what is now Russia – to London in the west. Tallinn, Riga, Gdańsk, Visby, Berlin, Cologne, Antwerp, Stockholm, Bergen, Kiel, Rostock, Dinant, Bruges, Turku, Groningen, Hanover, Wroclaw, Kaliningrad: all were involved at different stages in the Hanse's history, which ran on into the 1500s.
The League covered lands that today find themselves a part of the modern nations of Finland, Sweden, Poland, the Netherlands, Belgium, France, Norway, Lithuania, Estonia and Latvia. It was a huge – and hugely ambitious – undertaking in the days when communications consisted of ink and paper and the only viable method of travel was by ship. Wood, fur, wool, silver, herring, cod and salt were the main items traded. But what was also exchanged was knowledge. In some ways it was an exercise in what we today call 'soft diplomacy'. There was no maniacal ruler overseeing things – merchants met and talked. They raised armies and waged war against kings who threatened their businesses and their freedoms and their peace.
There was a kind of proto-democracy at work. Professor Rainer Postel, of the Bundeswehr Universität (Germany's equivalent of Sandhurst military academy), has described the Hanse as "a community of interests without power politics". As David Abulafia, Professor of Mediterranean History at Cambridge points out, "The lack of an elaborate superstructure was one of the things that made the Hanse work. Having said that, one should recognise that Lübeck in particular dominated the League for long periods."
Lübeck was where the merchants most often met; and where renewed recent interest in the Hanse eventually led to Angela Merkel cutting the ribbon at the brand new European Hansemuseum in the city last year.
Germany today – multicultural, economically and culturally motoring, free and fair – seems like the ideal model for a modern European nation state. And part of that success lies in the gravitas the country has given to its Hanseatic history. For Germany is not a top-down country with one city unhealthily dominating as with France and Britain (regional economic inequalities have plagued Britain since the painful de-industrialisation of the 1980s, especially in the north). Germany respects federalism and its cities exist on a much more even keel. The way that Cologne, Munich, Frankfurt, Dusseldorf and Stuttgart all bring varied economic and cultural character to the party is pure Hanse. The former Hanseatic cities of Hamburg, Berlin and Bremen have city state status within Germany, putting them on the same level as a whole region or 'land' like Bavaria or Brandenburg.
So how about a new Hanseatic League? I ask Benjamin Barber, senior fellow at New York's Fordham University. "I believe you will find there is a new Hanse," he says, "that constituted itself about 10 or 11 years ago – including many of the original Hanseatic League cities." Barber is founder of the Global Parliament of Mayors, which he describes as a kind of Hanse of all cities, not just European ports, which will give cities a global urban voice and a common platform for action. The parliament convenes for its inaugural session in The Hague in September.
"Cities both exist within nations and transcend nations. Their power lies not just in the extent of
de jure
autonomy ceded or granted by 'higher' levels of government," says Bruce Katz, centennial scholar at the Washington DC thinktank the Brookings Institution. "Rather, cities have de facto power, the result of larger market and demographic forces and environmental imperatives that value proximity, density, connectivity and quality. Smart nations will see themselves as partners to their cities, setting strong platforms for urban prosperity and devolving powers, where appropriate, to give cities the flexibility to perform… Dumb nations will continue to dictate from above, stifling market activity and urban potential."
But could we go further? Could cities like London declare independence from the UK? London's economy is larger than that of Scotland and Wales combined. "States will not vanish or surrender their waning sovereignty," says Benjamin Barber. "But cities will meet across frontiers and work together to solve problems. The objective is not an independent London or New York, but interdependent cities collaborating globally. And that is happening."
London's voters largely wanted to remain a part of the EU and to maintain the city's status as an entrepôt. There is clearly a widening chasm between urban and rural life at the heart of many nations. Visualisations of Austria's recent presidential election showed the issue clearly: the country's cities voted for the Green candidate Alexander Van der Bellen, while the the rural districts went for right-wing nationalist Norbert Hofer (whose legal challenge to the close result has resulted in a rerun being announced for October). And in the USA in November, it's likely that Trump voters will also come from rural areas and Clinton voters from the cities. City dwellers are finding ever more in common with the world's other city dwellers than with their countrymen 50 miles down the road.
Back in Britain, one of history's little oddities pops up on the east coast. Boston in Lincolnshire and King's Lynn in Norfolk were both forward-looking Hanseatic League towns that traded with far-flung ports and hosted foreign merchants. King's Lynn contains the only extantHanse House left in Britain (London's was knocked down to build Cannon Street Station in the 1800s). Yet in the EU referendum these two areas polled among the highest Leave votes of anywhere in the country.
"Things change," says LSE's Professor Tony Travers. "[King's Lynn] used to be very highly connected, but the economy moved on and left those trading ports like it in a different situation." Take, for example, the pivot towards the New World, with which trade made more sense from the west-coast ports like Bristol and Liverpool. While these boomed between the 1600s and 1800s, the Hanseatic ports declined and then died out. "One of the things that's interesting about the [referendum] decision is that it begs all sorts of questions about the future of the UK and its relationship with Europe; and of London and Scotland and their relationship with the rest of Europe. When the EU began as the EEC in the mid-20th century some saw it as a modern day Hanse. Now the EU seems to be waning, perhaps its successor will have to ape the Hanse even more."
For all its complex beauty, life can ultimately be reduced to a series of binary options: yes or no, stick or twist, in or out, innovation or stagnation, modernity or mythology. The referendum result was disappointing for many progressive observers because it felt like a step backwards. Despite being primarily about trade monopolies and money making, the Hanse was, in its way, an early stab at stepping forwards: it encompassed internationalism, rational thought, free trade, loose democratic institutions and, most crucially of all, movement.
The future, for many observers, can only be understood in terms of the free movement of people, capital, goods and ideas. It is this necessary movement, and its possible curtailment, that could be the spark that leads to cities like London to seek independence and parity with other world cities – rather than with the rural hinterlands of Britain.
Of course, cities seceding from their nation states would provide huge headaches for countries whose biggest economic driver had been removed – as well as likely deepening ideological differences between city and rural dwellers. Moreover, cities need the food the countryside provides.
Yet for all the potential pitfalls, city states can thrive. Look at Singapore, Hong Kong, or de facto city states like Dubai and Abu Dhabi. One of the most telling characteristics about these four – all of course former British imperial enclaves – is that they are utterly outward looking. To return to the sky analogy, it's the airlines of each of these (Singapore Airlines, Cathay Pacific, Emirates and Etihad) that open up each respective city to the world in the way that the machinery of the Hanse did on the Baltic Sea 600 years ago. And it's the unions each city makes with other places that also look thoroughly Hanseatic in character. A model for modern city states, then. But is it one that we want?
"The Hanseatic League was not always accepted by local citizens," says Cristina Ampatzidou, "because the privileges granted to the Hanse merchants were forcing local traders out of competition and many cities took steps to eliminate them. The reasons the countryside is turning to the right [globally] are not independent from cities turning increasingly into speculation machines for the profit of a happy few. It is basically these systemic contradictions that must be addressed before we resort to more isolationist ideas that would intensify the urban-rural political divide. The bottom line is not whether a contemporary Hanse-esque federation is possible, it probably is; but whether it is actually desirable."
This article was originally published on TheLong+Short. Read the original article. | They should expand their operations into more rural areas to bring economic prosperity to those regions | They should maintain an isolationist approach from other cities as well as rural areas within their own nations | They should partner and contend with other cities to form international networks of commerce | They should work establish a symbiotic relationship with their states to ensure longevity of both entities | 2 |
99917_U9ORXW61_5 | According to the author, what do some of the most thriving modern cities have in common? | What cities in the post-Brexit era could learn from a 14th-century trading bloc
As you fly from the country now known as Germany to Britain, the coastal geography of northern European cities gently unfurls. You can see where the sea smacks into them, or where yawning estuaries unfold like funnels between green and brown city and choppy blue water. You can track the snaking rivers and canals that form unrepentant umbilical connections to the settlements set a little further inland.
By their nature cities along coasts and rivers developed so they could be open to trade with each other. From the middle of the 13th century, and for some 300 years after, many settlements dotted along this route formed the prosperous Hanseatic League, a European trading confederation of market towns, before the rise of the nation state led to its dissolution.
The Hanseatic League is not well known, and today it lives on most prominently in the name of the German national airline Lufthansa, literally the 'Hansa of the skies', whose planes you can look out of – and down towards the Hanseatic cities – on the short journeys between mainland Europe and Britain. The letters HH on the number plates of cars in Hamburg stand for Hansestadt Hamburg: another proud little memory of this hidden history.
In the traumatised atmosphere of post-Brexit Britain, it is worth remembering the Hanseatic League. It could point us towards new relationships between progressive city dwellers in a world that otherwise seems to be putting the brakes on modernity.
Despite some of Britain's Leave voters longing to inhabit a fantastical realm immune to foreign influence, the reality is patently very different to that. In the late 1300s, Chaucer wrote about characters travelling to Jerusalem, and others who came from Europe; and it was at exactly this point that the Hanseatic League slowly started to coalesce, eventually influencing our isles.
The League is most easily understood as a loose federation of cities that acted together in self-interest to promote trade. The Hanseatic cities developed their own legal system, and their armies came to one another's aid. Merchants who wanted to buy and sell and travel were taking the lead at a time when nation states were not fit for purpose: in the case of England or Denmark, leadership was too centralised and authoritarian, while in German-speaking lands a nation had yet to be formed.
We think of nations today as elemental almost, immovable. Yet look at any city of Mitteleuropa and you'll see the many different names it has had as borders and regimes have shifted with the sands of time. Nations come and go. Cities endure.
"It is often said that great cities survived great empires," says Cristina Ampatzidou, editor-in-chief of the Rotterdam-based online publishing platform Amateur Cities. "So it is not unrealistic to think of cities as discrete entities that compete and collaborate with each other, independently from the states to which they belong."
The cities involved in the Hanseatic League are found along the Baltic and North Sea coasts, and slightly inland too. The League stretched from Novgorod in the east – in what is now Russia – to London in the west. Tallinn, Riga, Gdańsk, Visby, Berlin, Cologne, Antwerp, Stockholm, Bergen, Kiel, Rostock, Dinant, Bruges, Turku, Groningen, Hanover, Wroclaw, Kaliningrad: all were involved at different stages in the Hanse's history, which ran on into the 1500s.
The League covered lands that today find themselves a part of the modern nations of Finland, Sweden, Poland, the Netherlands, Belgium, France, Norway, Lithuania, Estonia and Latvia. It was a huge – and hugely ambitious – undertaking in the days when communications consisted of ink and paper and the only viable method of travel was by ship. Wood, fur, wool, silver, herring, cod and salt were the main items traded. But what was also exchanged was knowledge. In some ways it was an exercise in what we today call 'soft diplomacy'. There was no maniacal ruler overseeing things – merchants met and talked. They raised armies and waged war against kings who threatened their businesses and their freedoms and their peace.
There was a kind of proto-democracy at work. Professor Rainer Postel, of the Bundeswehr Universität (Germany's equivalent of Sandhurst military academy), has described the Hanse as "a community of interests without power politics". As David Abulafia, Professor of Mediterranean History at Cambridge points out, "The lack of an elaborate superstructure was one of the things that made the Hanse work. Having said that, one should recognise that Lübeck in particular dominated the League for long periods."
Lübeck was where the merchants most often met; and where renewed recent interest in the Hanse eventually led to Angela Merkel cutting the ribbon at the brand new European Hansemuseum in the city last year.
Germany today – multicultural, economically and culturally motoring, free and fair – seems like the ideal model for a modern European nation state. And part of that success lies in the gravitas the country has given to its Hanseatic history. For Germany is not a top-down country with one city unhealthily dominating as with France and Britain (regional economic inequalities have plagued Britain since the painful de-industrialisation of the 1980s, especially in the north). Germany respects federalism and its cities exist on a much more even keel. The way that Cologne, Munich, Frankfurt, Dusseldorf and Stuttgart all bring varied economic and cultural character to the party is pure Hanse. The former Hanseatic cities of Hamburg, Berlin and Bremen have city state status within Germany, putting them on the same level as a whole region or 'land' like Bavaria or Brandenburg.
So how about a new Hanseatic League? I ask Benjamin Barber, senior fellow at New York's Fordham University. "I believe you will find there is a new Hanse," he says, "that constituted itself about 10 or 11 years ago – including many of the original Hanseatic League cities." Barber is founder of the Global Parliament of Mayors, which he describes as a kind of Hanse of all cities, not just European ports, which will give cities a global urban voice and a common platform for action. The parliament convenes for its inaugural session in The Hague in September.
"Cities both exist within nations and transcend nations. Their power lies not just in the extent of
de jure
autonomy ceded or granted by 'higher' levels of government," says Bruce Katz, centennial scholar at the Washington DC thinktank the Brookings Institution. "Rather, cities have de facto power, the result of larger market and demographic forces and environmental imperatives that value proximity, density, connectivity and quality. Smart nations will see themselves as partners to their cities, setting strong platforms for urban prosperity and devolving powers, where appropriate, to give cities the flexibility to perform… Dumb nations will continue to dictate from above, stifling market activity and urban potential."
But could we go further? Could cities like London declare independence from the UK? London's economy is larger than that of Scotland and Wales combined. "States will not vanish or surrender their waning sovereignty," says Benjamin Barber. "But cities will meet across frontiers and work together to solve problems. The objective is not an independent London or New York, but interdependent cities collaborating globally. And that is happening."
London's voters largely wanted to remain a part of the EU and to maintain the city's status as an entrepôt. There is clearly a widening chasm between urban and rural life at the heart of many nations. Visualisations of Austria's recent presidential election showed the issue clearly: the country's cities voted for the Green candidate Alexander Van der Bellen, while the the rural districts went for right-wing nationalist Norbert Hofer (whose legal challenge to the close result has resulted in a rerun being announced for October). And in the USA in November, it's likely that Trump voters will also come from rural areas and Clinton voters from the cities. City dwellers are finding ever more in common with the world's other city dwellers than with their countrymen 50 miles down the road.
Back in Britain, one of history's little oddities pops up on the east coast. Boston in Lincolnshire and King's Lynn in Norfolk were both forward-looking Hanseatic League towns that traded with far-flung ports and hosted foreign merchants. King's Lynn contains the only extantHanse House left in Britain (London's was knocked down to build Cannon Street Station in the 1800s). Yet in the EU referendum these two areas polled among the highest Leave votes of anywhere in the country.
"Things change," says LSE's Professor Tony Travers. "[King's Lynn] used to be very highly connected, but the economy moved on and left those trading ports like it in a different situation." Take, for example, the pivot towards the New World, with which trade made more sense from the west-coast ports like Bristol and Liverpool. While these boomed between the 1600s and 1800s, the Hanseatic ports declined and then died out. "One of the things that's interesting about the [referendum] decision is that it begs all sorts of questions about the future of the UK and its relationship with Europe; and of London and Scotland and their relationship with the rest of Europe. When the EU began as the EEC in the mid-20th century some saw it as a modern day Hanse. Now the EU seems to be waning, perhaps its successor will have to ape the Hanse even more."
For all its complex beauty, life can ultimately be reduced to a series of binary options: yes or no, stick or twist, in or out, innovation or stagnation, modernity or mythology. The referendum result was disappointing for many progressive observers because it felt like a step backwards. Despite being primarily about trade monopolies and money making, the Hanse was, in its way, an early stab at stepping forwards: it encompassed internationalism, rational thought, free trade, loose democratic institutions and, most crucially of all, movement.
The future, for many observers, can only be understood in terms of the free movement of people, capital, goods and ideas. It is this necessary movement, and its possible curtailment, that could be the spark that leads to cities like London to seek independence and parity with other world cities – rather than with the rural hinterlands of Britain.
Of course, cities seceding from their nation states would provide huge headaches for countries whose biggest economic driver had been removed – as well as likely deepening ideological differences between city and rural dwellers. Moreover, cities need the food the countryside provides.
Yet for all the potential pitfalls, city states can thrive. Look at Singapore, Hong Kong, or de facto city states like Dubai and Abu Dhabi. One of the most telling characteristics about these four – all of course former British imperial enclaves – is that they are utterly outward looking. To return to the sky analogy, it's the airlines of each of these (Singapore Airlines, Cathay Pacific, Emirates and Etihad) that open up each respective city to the world in the way that the machinery of the Hanse did on the Baltic Sea 600 years ago. And it's the unions each city makes with other places that also look thoroughly Hanseatic in character. A model for modern city states, then. But is it one that we want?
"The Hanseatic League was not always accepted by local citizens," says Cristina Ampatzidou, "because the privileges granted to the Hanse merchants were forcing local traders out of competition and many cities took steps to eliminate them. The reasons the countryside is turning to the right [globally] are not independent from cities turning increasingly into speculation machines for the profit of a happy few. It is basically these systemic contradictions that must be addressed before we resort to more isolationist ideas that would intensify the urban-rural political divide. The bottom line is not whether a contemporary Hanse-esque federation is possible, it probably is; but whether it is actually desirable."
This article was originally published on TheLong+Short. Read the original article. | They are established in geographically appealing areas | They are determined to learn from the mistakes of their forebearers | They look beyond their borders for economic possibility | They are ruled by democratic governments | 2 |
99917_U9ORXW61_6 | The Hanseatic League is most closely aligned with which form of government? | What cities in the post-Brexit era could learn from a 14th-century trading bloc
As you fly from the country now known as Germany to Britain, the coastal geography of northern European cities gently unfurls. You can see where the sea smacks into them, or where yawning estuaries unfold like funnels between green and brown city and choppy blue water. You can track the snaking rivers and canals that form unrepentant umbilical connections to the settlements set a little further inland.
By their nature cities along coasts and rivers developed so they could be open to trade with each other. From the middle of the 13th century, and for some 300 years after, many settlements dotted along this route formed the prosperous Hanseatic League, a European trading confederation of market towns, before the rise of the nation state led to its dissolution.
The Hanseatic League is not well known, and today it lives on most prominently in the name of the German national airline Lufthansa, literally the 'Hansa of the skies', whose planes you can look out of – and down towards the Hanseatic cities – on the short journeys between mainland Europe and Britain. The letters HH on the number plates of cars in Hamburg stand for Hansestadt Hamburg: another proud little memory of this hidden history.
In the traumatised atmosphere of post-Brexit Britain, it is worth remembering the Hanseatic League. It could point us towards new relationships between progressive city dwellers in a world that otherwise seems to be putting the brakes on modernity.
Despite some of Britain's Leave voters longing to inhabit a fantastical realm immune to foreign influence, the reality is patently very different to that. In the late 1300s, Chaucer wrote about characters travelling to Jerusalem, and others who came from Europe; and it was at exactly this point that the Hanseatic League slowly started to coalesce, eventually influencing our isles.
The League is most easily understood as a loose federation of cities that acted together in self-interest to promote trade. The Hanseatic cities developed their own legal system, and their armies came to one another's aid. Merchants who wanted to buy and sell and travel were taking the lead at a time when nation states were not fit for purpose: in the case of England or Denmark, leadership was too centralised and authoritarian, while in German-speaking lands a nation had yet to be formed.
We think of nations today as elemental almost, immovable. Yet look at any city of Mitteleuropa and you'll see the many different names it has had as borders and regimes have shifted with the sands of time. Nations come and go. Cities endure.
"It is often said that great cities survived great empires," says Cristina Ampatzidou, editor-in-chief of the Rotterdam-based online publishing platform Amateur Cities. "So it is not unrealistic to think of cities as discrete entities that compete and collaborate with each other, independently from the states to which they belong."
The cities involved in the Hanseatic League are found along the Baltic and North Sea coasts, and slightly inland too. The League stretched from Novgorod in the east – in what is now Russia – to London in the west. Tallinn, Riga, Gdańsk, Visby, Berlin, Cologne, Antwerp, Stockholm, Bergen, Kiel, Rostock, Dinant, Bruges, Turku, Groningen, Hanover, Wroclaw, Kaliningrad: all were involved at different stages in the Hanse's history, which ran on into the 1500s.
The League covered lands that today find themselves a part of the modern nations of Finland, Sweden, Poland, the Netherlands, Belgium, France, Norway, Lithuania, Estonia and Latvia. It was a huge – and hugely ambitious – undertaking in the days when communications consisted of ink and paper and the only viable method of travel was by ship. Wood, fur, wool, silver, herring, cod and salt were the main items traded. But what was also exchanged was knowledge. In some ways it was an exercise in what we today call 'soft diplomacy'. There was no maniacal ruler overseeing things – merchants met and talked. They raised armies and waged war against kings who threatened their businesses and their freedoms and their peace.
There was a kind of proto-democracy at work. Professor Rainer Postel, of the Bundeswehr Universität (Germany's equivalent of Sandhurst military academy), has described the Hanse as "a community of interests without power politics". As David Abulafia, Professor of Mediterranean History at Cambridge points out, "The lack of an elaborate superstructure was one of the things that made the Hanse work. Having said that, one should recognise that Lübeck in particular dominated the League for long periods."
Lübeck was where the merchants most often met; and where renewed recent interest in the Hanse eventually led to Angela Merkel cutting the ribbon at the brand new European Hansemuseum in the city last year.
Germany today – multicultural, economically and culturally motoring, free and fair – seems like the ideal model for a modern European nation state. And part of that success lies in the gravitas the country has given to its Hanseatic history. For Germany is not a top-down country with one city unhealthily dominating as with France and Britain (regional economic inequalities have plagued Britain since the painful de-industrialisation of the 1980s, especially in the north). Germany respects federalism and its cities exist on a much more even keel. The way that Cologne, Munich, Frankfurt, Dusseldorf and Stuttgart all bring varied economic and cultural character to the party is pure Hanse. The former Hanseatic cities of Hamburg, Berlin and Bremen have city state status within Germany, putting them on the same level as a whole region or 'land' like Bavaria or Brandenburg.
So how about a new Hanseatic League? I ask Benjamin Barber, senior fellow at New York's Fordham University. "I believe you will find there is a new Hanse," he says, "that constituted itself about 10 or 11 years ago – including many of the original Hanseatic League cities." Barber is founder of the Global Parliament of Mayors, which he describes as a kind of Hanse of all cities, not just European ports, which will give cities a global urban voice and a common platform for action. The parliament convenes for its inaugural session in The Hague in September.
"Cities both exist within nations and transcend nations. Their power lies not just in the extent of
de jure
autonomy ceded or granted by 'higher' levels of government," says Bruce Katz, centennial scholar at the Washington DC thinktank the Brookings Institution. "Rather, cities have de facto power, the result of larger market and demographic forces and environmental imperatives that value proximity, density, connectivity and quality. Smart nations will see themselves as partners to their cities, setting strong platforms for urban prosperity and devolving powers, where appropriate, to give cities the flexibility to perform… Dumb nations will continue to dictate from above, stifling market activity and urban potential."
But could we go further? Could cities like London declare independence from the UK? London's economy is larger than that of Scotland and Wales combined. "States will not vanish or surrender their waning sovereignty," says Benjamin Barber. "But cities will meet across frontiers and work together to solve problems. The objective is not an independent London or New York, but interdependent cities collaborating globally. And that is happening."
London's voters largely wanted to remain a part of the EU and to maintain the city's status as an entrepôt. There is clearly a widening chasm between urban and rural life at the heart of many nations. Visualisations of Austria's recent presidential election showed the issue clearly: the country's cities voted for the Green candidate Alexander Van der Bellen, while the the rural districts went for right-wing nationalist Norbert Hofer (whose legal challenge to the close result has resulted in a rerun being announced for October). And in the USA in November, it's likely that Trump voters will also come from rural areas and Clinton voters from the cities. City dwellers are finding ever more in common with the world's other city dwellers than with their countrymen 50 miles down the road.
Back in Britain, one of history's little oddities pops up on the east coast. Boston in Lincolnshire and King's Lynn in Norfolk were both forward-looking Hanseatic League towns that traded with far-flung ports and hosted foreign merchants. King's Lynn contains the only extantHanse House left in Britain (London's was knocked down to build Cannon Street Station in the 1800s). Yet in the EU referendum these two areas polled among the highest Leave votes of anywhere in the country.
"Things change," says LSE's Professor Tony Travers. "[King's Lynn] used to be very highly connected, but the economy moved on and left those trading ports like it in a different situation." Take, for example, the pivot towards the New World, with which trade made more sense from the west-coast ports like Bristol and Liverpool. While these boomed between the 1600s and 1800s, the Hanseatic ports declined and then died out. "One of the things that's interesting about the [referendum] decision is that it begs all sorts of questions about the future of the UK and its relationship with Europe; and of London and Scotland and their relationship with the rest of Europe. When the EU began as the EEC in the mid-20th century some saw it as a modern day Hanse. Now the EU seems to be waning, perhaps its successor will have to ape the Hanse even more."
For all its complex beauty, life can ultimately be reduced to a series of binary options: yes or no, stick or twist, in or out, innovation or stagnation, modernity or mythology. The referendum result was disappointing for many progressive observers because it felt like a step backwards. Despite being primarily about trade monopolies and money making, the Hanse was, in its way, an early stab at stepping forwards: it encompassed internationalism, rational thought, free trade, loose democratic institutions and, most crucially of all, movement.
The future, for many observers, can only be understood in terms of the free movement of people, capital, goods and ideas. It is this necessary movement, and its possible curtailment, that could be the spark that leads to cities like London to seek independence and parity with other world cities – rather than with the rural hinterlands of Britain.
Of course, cities seceding from their nation states would provide huge headaches for countries whose biggest economic driver had been removed – as well as likely deepening ideological differences between city and rural dwellers. Moreover, cities need the food the countryside provides.
Yet for all the potential pitfalls, city states can thrive. Look at Singapore, Hong Kong, or de facto city states like Dubai and Abu Dhabi. One of the most telling characteristics about these four – all of course former British imperial enclaves – is that they are utterly outward looking. To return to the sky analogy, it's the airlines of each of these (Singapore Airlines, Cathay Pacific, Emirates and Etihad) that open up each respective city to the world in the way that the machinery of the Hanse did on the Baltic Sea 600 years ago. And it's the unions each city makes with other places that also look thoroughly Hanseatic in character. A model for modern city states, then. But is it one that we want?
"The Hanseatic League was not always accepted by local citizens," says Cristina Ampatzidou, "because the privileges granted to the Hanse merchants were forcing local traders out of competition and many cities took steps to eliminate them. The reasons the countryside is turning to the right [globally] are not independent from cities turning increasingly into speculation machines for the profit of a happy few. It is basically these systemic contradictions that must be addressed before we resort to more isolationist ideas that would intensify the urban-rural political divide. The bottom line is not whether a contemporary Hanse-esque federation is possible, it probably is; but whether it is actually desirable."
This article was originally published on TheLong+Short. Read the original article. | democracy | confederation | socialism | anarchy | 1 |
99917_U9ORXW61_7 | For the author, the Hanseatic League represents all of the following EXCEPT: | What cities in the post-Brexit era could learn from a 14th-century trading bloc
As you fly from the country now known as Germany to Britain, the coastal geography of northern European cities gently unfurls. You can see where the sea smacks into them, or where yawning estuaries unfold like funnels between green and brown city and choppy blue water. You can track the snaking rivers and canals that form unrepentant umbilical connections to the settlements set a little further inland.
By their nature cities along coasts and rivers developed so they could be open to trade with each other. From the middle of the 13th century, and for some 300 years after, many settlements dotted along this route formed the prosperous Hanseatic League, a European trading confederation of market towns, before the rise of the nation state led to its dissolution.
The Hanseatic League is not well known, and today it lives on most prominently in the name of the German national airline Lufthansa, literally the 'Hansa of the skies', whose planes you can look out of – and down towards the Hanseatic cities – on the short journeys between mainland Europe and Britain. The letters HH on the number plates of cars in Hamburg stand for Hansestadt Hamburg: another proud little memory of this hidden history.
In the traumatised atmosphere of post-Brexit Britain, it is worth remembering the Hanseatic League. It could point us towards new relationships between progressive city dwellers in a world that otherwise seems to be putting the brakes on modernity.
Despite some of Britain's Leave voters longing to inhabit a fantastical realm immune to foreign influence, the reality is patently very different to that. In the late 1300s, Chaucer wrote about characters travelling to Jerusalem, and others who came from Europe; and it was at exactly this point that the Hanseatic League slowly started to coalesce, eventually influencing our isles.
The League is most easily understood as a loose federation of cities that acted together in self-interest to promote trade. The Hanseatic cities developed their own legal system, and their armies came to one another's aid. Merchants who wanted to buy and sell and travel were taking the lead at a time when nation states were not fit for purpose: in the case of England or Denmark, leadership was too centralised and authoritarian, while in German-speaking lands a nation had yet to be formed.
We think of nations today as elemental almost, immovable. Yet look at any city of Mitteleuropa and you'll see the many different names it has had as borders and regimes have shifted with the sands of time. Nations come and go. Cities endure.
"It is often said that great cities survived great empires," says Cristina Ampatzidou, editor-in-chief of the Rotterdam-based online publishing platform Amateur Cities. "So it is not unrealistic to think of cities as discrete entities that compete and collaborate with each other, independently from the states to which they belong."
The cities involved in the Hanseatic League are found along the Baltic and North Sea coasts, and slightly inland too. The League stretched from Novgorod in the east – in what is now Russia – to London in the west. Tallinn, Riga, Gdańsk, Visby, Berlin, Cologne, Antwerp, Stockholm, Bergen, Kiel, Rostock, Dinant, Bruges, Turku, Groningen, Hanover, Wroclaw, Kaliningrad: all were involved at different stages in the Hanse's history, which ran on into the 1500s.
The League covered lands that today find themselves a part of the modern nations of Finland, Sweden, Poland, the Netherlands, Belgium, France, Norway, Lithuania, Estonia and Latvia. It was a huge – and hugely ambitious – undertaking in the days when communications consisted of ink and paper and the only viable method of travel was by ship. Wood, fur, wool, silver, herring, cod and salt were the main items traded. But what was also exchanged was knowledge. In some ways it was an exercise in what we today call 'soft diplomacy'. There was no maniacal ruler overseeing things – merchants met and talked. They raised armies and waged war against kings who threatened their businesses and their freedoms and their peace.
There was a kind of proto-democracy at work. Professor Rainer Postel, of the Bundeswehr Universität (Germany's equivalent of Sandhurst military academy), has described the Hanse as "a community of interests without power politics". As David Abulafia, Professor of Mediterranean History at Cambridge points out, "The lack of an elaborate superstructure was one of the things that made the Hanse work. Having said that, one should recognise that Lübeck in particular dominated the League for long periods."
Lübeck was where the merchants most often met; and where renewed recent interest in the Hanse eventually led to Angela Merkel cutting the ribbon at the brand new European Hansemuseum in the city last year.
Germany today – multicultural, economically and culturally motoring, free and fair – seems like the ideal model for a modern European nation state. And part of that success lies in the gravitas the country has given to its Hanseatic history. For Germany is not a top-down country with one city unhealthily dominating as with France and Britain (regional economic inequalities have plagued Britain since the painful de-industrialisation of the 1980s, especially in the north). Germany respects federalism and its cities exist on a much more even keel. The way that Cologne, Munich, Frankfurt, Dusseldorf and Stuttgart all bring varied economic and cultural character to the party is pure Hanse. The former Hanseatic cities of Hamburg, Berlin and Bremen have city state status within Germany, putting them on the same level as a whole region or 'land' like Bavaria or Brandenburg.
So how about a new Hanseatic League? I ask Benjamin Barber, senior fellow at New York's Fordham University. "I believe you will find there is a new Hanse," he says, "that constituted itself about 10 or 11 years ago – including many of the original Hanseatic League cities." Barber is founder of the Global Parliament of Mayors, which he describes as a kind of Hanse of all cities, not just European ports, which will give cities a global urban voice and a common platform for action. The parliament convenes for its inaugural session in The Hague in September.
"Cities both exist within nations and transcend nations. Their power lies not just in the extent of
de jure
autonomy ceded or granted by 'higher' levels of government," says Bruce Katz, centennial scholar at the Washington DC thinktank the Brookings Institution. "Rather, cities have de facto power, the result of larger market and demographic forces and environmental imperatives that value proximity, density, connectivity and quality. Smart nations will see themselves as partners to their cities, setting strong platforms for urban prosperity and devolving powers, where appropriate, to give cities the flexibility to perform… Dumb nations will continue to dictate from above, stifling market activity and urban potential."
But could we go further? Could cities like London declare independence from the UK? London's economy is larger than that of Scotland and Wales combined. "States will not vanish or surrender their waning sovereignty," says Benjamin Barber. "But cities will meet across frontiers and work together to solve problems. The objective is not an independent London or New York, but interdependent cities collaborating globally. And that is happening."
London's voters largely wanted to remain a part of the EU and to maintain the city's status as an entrepôt. There is clearly a widening chasm between urban and rural life at the heart of many nations. Visualisations of Austria's recent presidential election showed the issue clearly: the country's cities voted for the Green candidate Alexander Van der Bellen, while the the rural districts went for right-wing nationalist Norbert Hofer (whose legal challenge to the close result has resulted in a rerun being announced for October). And in the USA in November, it's likely that Trump voters will also come from rural areas and Clinton voters from the cities. City dwellers are finding ever more in common with the world's other city dwellers than with their countrymen 50 miles down the road.
Back in Britain, one of history's little oddities pops up on the east coast. Boston in Lincolnshire and King's Lynn in Norfolk were both forward-looking Hanseatic League towns that traded with far-flung ports and hosted foreign merchants. King's Lynn contains the only extantHanse House left in Britain (London's was knocked down to build Cannon Street Station in the 1800s). Yet in the EU referendum these two areas polled among the highest Leave votes of anywhere in the country.
"Things change," says LSE's Professor Tony Travers. "[King's Lynn] used to be very highly connected, but the economy moved on and left those trading ports like it in a different situation." Take, for example, the pivot towards the New World, with which trade made more sense from the west-coast ports like Bristol and Liverpool. While these boomed between the 1600s and 1800s, the Hanseatic ports declined and then died out. "One of the things that's interesting about the [referendum] decision is that it begs all sorts of questions about the future of the UK and its relationship with Europe; and of London and Scotland and their relationship with the rest of Europe. When the EU began as the EEC in the mid-20th century some saw it as a modern day Hanse. Now the EU seems to be waning, perhaps its successor will have to ape the Hanse even more."
For all its complex beauty, life can ultimately be reduced to a series of binary options: yes or no, stick or twist, in or out, innovation or stagnation, modernity or mythology. The referendum result was disappointing for many progressive observers because it felt like a step backwards. Despite being primarily about trade monopolies and money making, the Hanse was, in its way, an early stab at stepping forwards: it encompassed internationalism, rational thought, free trade, loose democratic institutions and, most crucially of all, movement.
The future, for many observers, can only be understood in terms of the free movement of people, capital, goods and ideas. It is this necessary movement, and its possible curtailment, that could be the spark that leads to cities like London to seek independence and parity with other world cities – rather than with the rural hinterlands of Britain.
Of course, cities seceding from their nation states would provide huge headaches for countries whose biggest economic driver had been removed – as well as likely deepening ideological differences between city and rural dwellers. Moreover, cities need the food the countryside provides.
Yet for all the potential pitfalls, city states can thrive. Look at Singapore, Hong Kong, or de facto city states like Dubai and Abu Dhabi. One of the most telling characteristics about these four – all of course former British imperial enclaves – is that they are utterly outward looking. To return to the sky analogy, it's the airlines of each of these (Singapore Airlines, Cathay Pacific, Emirates and Etihad) that open up each respective city to the world in the way that the machinery of the Hanse did on the Baltic Sea 600 years ago. And it's the unions each city makes with other places that also look thoroughly Hanseatic in character. A model for modern city states, then. But is it one that we want?
"The Hanseatic League was not always accepted by local citizens," says Cristina Ampatzidou, "because the privileges granted to the Hanse merchants were forcing local traders out of competition and many cities took steps to eliminate them. The reasons the countryside is turning to the right [globally] are not independent from cities turning increasingly into speculation machines for the profit of a happy few. It is basically these systemic contradictions that must be addressed before we resort to more isolationist ideas that would intensify the urban-rural political divide. The bottom line is not whether a contemporary Hanse-esque federation is possible, it probably is; but whether it is actually desirable."
This article was originally published on TheLong+Short. Read the original article. | open commerce | flexible governing bodies | booming industrialization | a pragmatic approach | 2 |
99917_U9ORXW61_8 | According to the author, what is the major factor that will determine if modern nations will adopt a replica of the Hanseatic League? | What cities in the post-Brexit era could learn from a 14th-century trading bloc
As you fly from the country now known as Germany to Britain, the coastal geography of northern European cities gently unfurls. You can see where the sea smacks into them, or where yawning estuaries unfold like funnels between green and brown city and choppy blue water. You can track the snaking rivers and canals that form unrepentant umbilical connections to the settlements set a little further inland.
By their nature cities along coasts and rivers developed so they could be open to trade with each other. From the middle of the 13th century, and for some 300 years after, many settlements dotted along this route formed the prosperous Hanseatic League, a European trading confederation of market towns, before the rise of the nation state led to its dissolution.
The Hanseatic League is not well known, and today it lives on most prominently in the name of the German national airline Lufthansa, literally the 'Hansa of the skies', whose planes you can look out of – and down towards the Hanseatic cities – on the short journeys between mainland Europe and Britain. The letters HH on the number plates of cars in Hamburg stand for Hansestadt Hamburg: another proud little memory of this hidden history.
In the traumatised atmosphere of post-Brexit Britain, it is worth remembering the Hanseatic League. It could point us towards new relationships between progressive city dwellers in a world that otherwise seems to be putting the brakes on modernity.
Despite some of Britain's Leave voters longing to inhabit a fantastical realm immune to foreign influence, the reality is patently very different to that. In the late 1300s, Chaucer wrote about characters travelling to Jerusalem, and others who came from Europe; and it was at exactly this point that the Hanseatic League slowly started to coalesce, eventually influencing our isles.
The League is most easily understood as a loose federation of cities that acted together in self-interest to promote trade. The Hanseatic cities developed their own legal system, and their armies came to one another's aid. Merchants who wanted to buy and sell and travel were taking the lead at a time when nation states were not fit for purpose: in the case of England or Denmark, leadership was too centralised and authoritarian, while in German-speaking lands a nation had yet to be formed.
We think of nations today as elemental almost, immovable. Yet look at any city of Mitteleuropa and you'll see the many different names it has had as borders and regimes have shifted with the sands of time. Nations come and go. Cities endure.
"It is often said that great cities survived great empires," says Cristina Ampatzidou, editor-in-chief of the Rotterdam-based online publishing platform Amateur Cities. "So it is not unrealistic to think of cities as discrete entities that compete and collaborate with each other, independently from the states to which they belong."
The cities involved in the Hanseatic League are found along the Baltic and North Sea coasts, and slightly inland too. The League stretched from Novgorod in the east – in what is now Russia – to London in the west. Tallinn, Riga, Gdańsk, Visby, Berlin, Cologne, Antwerp, Stockholm, Bergen, Kiel, Rostock, Dinant, Bruges, Turku, Groningen, Hanover, Wroclaw, Kaliningrad: all were involved at different stages in the Hanse's history, which ran on into the 1500s.
The League covered lands that today find themselves a part of the modern nations of Finland, Sweden, Poland, the Netherlands, Belgium, France, Norway, Lithuania, Estonia and Latvia. It was a huge – and hugely ambitious – undertaking in the days when communications consisted of ink and paper and the only viable method of travel was by ship. Wood, fur, wool, silver, herring, cod and salt were the main items traded. But what was also exchanged was knowledge. In some ways it was an exercise in what we today call 'soft diplomacy'. There was no maniacal ruler overseeing things – merchants met and talked. They raised armies and waged war against kings who threatened their businesses and their freedoms and their peace.
There was a kind of proto-democracy at work. Professor Rainer Postel, of the Bundeswehr Universität (Germany's equivalent of Sandhurst military academy), has described the Hanse as "a community of interests without power politics". As David Abulafia, Professor of Mediterranean History at Cambridge points out, "The lack of an elaborate superstructure was one of the things that made the Hanse work. Having said that, one should recognise that Lübeck in particular dominated the League for long periods."
Lübeck was where the merchants most often met; and where renewed recent interest in the Hanse eventually led to Angela Merkel cutting the ribbon at the brand new European Hansemuseum in the city last year.
Germany today – multicultural, economically and culturally motoring, free and fair – seems like the ideal model for a modern European nation state. And part of that success lies in the gravitas the country has given to its Hanseatic history. For Germany is not a top-down country with one city unhealthily dominating as with France and Britain (regional economic inequalities have plagued Britain since the painful de-industrialisation of the 1980s, especially in the north). Germany respects federalism and its cities exist on a much more even keel. The way that Cologne, Munich, Frankfurt, Dusseldorf and Stuttgart all bring varied economic and cultural character to the party is pure Hanse. The former Hanseatic cities of Hamburg, Berlin and Bremen have city state status within Germany, putting them on the same level as a whole region or 'land' like Bavaria or Brandenburg.
So how about a new Hanseatic League? I ask Benjamin Barber, senior fellow at New York's Fordham University. "I believe you will find there is a new Hanse," he says, "that constituted itself about 10 or 11 years ago – including many of the original Hanseatic League cities." Barber is founder of the Global Parliament of Mayors, which he describes as a kind of Hanse of all cities, not just European ports, which will give cities a global urban voice and a common platform for action. The parliament convenes for its inaugural session in The Hague in September.
"Cities both exist within nations and transcend nations. Their power lies not just in the extent of
de jure
autonomy ceded or granted by 'higher' levels of government," says Bruce Katz, centennial scholar at the Washington DC thinktank the Brookings Institution. "Rather, cities have de facto power, the result of larger market and demographic forces and environmental imperatives that value proximity, density, connectivity and quality. Smart nations will see themselves as partners to their cities, setting strong platforms for urban prosperity and devolving powers, where appropriate, to give cities the flexibility to perform… Dumb nations will continue to dictate from above, stifling market activity and urban potential."
But could we go further? Could cities like London declare independence from the UK? London's economy is larger than that of Scotland and Wales combined. "States will not vanish or surrender their waning sovereignty," says Benjamin Barber. "But cities will meet across frontiers and work together to solve problems. The objective is not an independent London or New York, but interdependent cities collaborating globally. And that is happening."
London's voters largely wanted to remain a part of the EU and to maintain the city's status as an entrepôt. There is clearly a widening chasm between urban and rural life at the heart of many nations. Visualisations of Austria's recent presidential election showed the issue clearly: the country's cities voted for the Green candidate Alexander Van der Bellen, while the the rural districts went for right-wing nationalist Norbert Hofer (whose legal challenge to the close result has resulted in a rerun being announced for October). And in the USA in November, it's likely that Trump voters will also come from rural areas and Clinton voters from the cities. City dwellers are finding ever more in common with the world's other city dwellers than with their countrymen 50 miles down the road.
Back in Britain, one of history's little oddities pops up on the east coast. Boston in Lincolnshire and King's Lynn in Norfolk were both forward-looking Hanseatic League towns that traded with far-flung ports and hosted foreign merchants. King's Lynn contains the only extantHanse House left in Britain (London's was knocked down to build Cannon Street Station in the 1800s). Yet in the EU referendum these two areas polled among the highest Leave votes of anywhere in the country.
"Things change," says LSE's Professor Tony Travers. "[King's Lynn] used to be very highly connected, but the economy moved on and left those trading ports like it in a different situation." Take, for example, the pivot towards the New World, with which trade made more sense from the west-coast ports like Bristol and Liverpool. While these boomed between the 1600s and 1800s, the Hanseatic ports declined and then died out. "One of the things that's interesting about the [referendum] decision is that it begs all sorts of questions about the future of the UK and its relationship with Europe; and of London and Scotland and their relationship with the rest of Europe. When the EU began as the EEC in the mid-20th century some saw it as a modern day Hanse. Now the EU seems to be waning, perhaps its successor will have to ape the Hanse even more."
For all its complex beauty, life can ultimately be reduced to a series of binary options: yes or no, stick or twist, in or out, innovation or stagnation, modernity or mythology. The referendum result was disappointing for many progressive observers because it felt like a step backwards. Despite being primarily about trade monopolies and money making, the Hanse was, in its way, an early stab at stepping forwards: it encompassed internationalism, rational thought, free trade, loose democratic institutions and, most crucially of all, movement.
The future, for many observers, can only be understood in terms of the free movement of people, capital, goods and ideas. It is this necessary movement, and its possible curtailment, that could be the spark that leads to cities like London to seek independence and parity with other world cities – rather than with the rural hinterlands of Britain.
Of course, cities seceding from their nation states would provide huge headaches for countries whose biggest economic driver had been removed – as well as likely deepening ideological differences between city and rural dwellers. Moreover, cities need the food the countryside provides.
Yet for all the potential pitfalls, city states can thrive. Look at Singapore, Hong Kong, or de facto city states like Dubai and Abu Dhabi. One of the most telling characteristics about these four – all of course former British imperial enclaves – is that they are utterly outward looking. To return to the sky analogy, it's the airlines of each of these (Singapore Airlines, Cathay Pacific, Emirates and Etihad) that open up each respective city to the world in the way that the machinery of the Hanse did on the Baltic Sea 600 years ago. And it's the unions each city makes with other places that also look thoroughly Hanseatic in character. A model for modern city states, then. But is it one that we want?
"The Hanseatic League was not always accepted by local citizens," says Cristina Ampatzidou, "because the privileges granted to the Hanse merchants were forcing local traders out of competition and many cities took steps to eliminate them. The reasons the countryside is turning to the right [globally] are not independent from cities turning increasingly into speculation machines for the profit of a happy few. It is basically these systemic contradictions that must be addressed before we resort to more isolationist ideas that would intensify the urban-rural political divide. The bottom line is not whether a contemporary Hanse-esque federation is possible, it probably is; but whether it is actually desirable."
This article was originally published on TheLong+Short. Read the original article. | Whether a model can exist without creating further disparities among citizens | Whether citizens can avoid war and hording of resources without permanent borders | Whether urban areas can accommodate the preferences of rural areas | Whether urban and rural denizens can orient goals based on shared values | 0 |
99912_26PU82E5_1 | Which term best describes the author's tone toward delivering a 'baby' by C-section for the first time? | Obstetrics for beginners
It's my first go at delivering a baby by caesarean section – and the foetal head is impacted, jammed in its mother's pelvis. To be honest I'm struggling.
Incisions have been made in the lower part of the mother's abdomen and womb. I've pushed my gloved hand inside and managed to slide my fingers between the baby's head and the surrounding uterine tissue. But it's difficult. The baby is tightly wedged in. I've had to push hard to get my hand to the far side of its head, and even though I'm now cupping and grasping it in the approved manner, I can't seem to pull it out. Dare I grip its head more firmly? Dare I pull harder?
The baby's mother – she's called Debra – remains impassive throughout these agonised fumblings. Her face reveals nothing of what she may be feeling. But then Debra has no feelings. Indeed she has no face…
So you can stop worrying. Debra – Desperate Debra to use her full trade name – is a simulator designed to help doctors practise their skill at dealing with impacted foetuses: babies that get stuck trying to exit the womb by the normal route. She comprises the lower two thirds (ie from the mid-chest region downwards) of a life-sized but limbless female torso made of flesh-coloured silicone rubber. She comes with a vulva, a pre-cut incision in her abdomen and, most importantly, a uterus containing a foetal head that should, in the normal way of things, be free to emerge between her legs. But this fetus is going nowhere until an obstetrician – or in this case me – can successfully grasp and pull it out.
The clever and sophisticated simulator I'm playing with started life as a lash-up in an obstetrician's home workshop: a Heath Robinson-style contraption barely recognisable as a model of the human body. But it wasn't at that stage intended as a simulator for training medical staff. Its sole purpose was to test the effectiveness of a novel device called a Tydeman tube. Paradoxically, although the testing equipment, Debra, is now commercially available, the device it was intended to test has yet to reach the market.
The inventor of the tube and of Desperate Debra is Dr Graham Tydeman, a consultant in obstetrics and gynaecology at Victoria Hospital in Kirkcaldy, Fife. Only after he'd built Debra did he realise that she might serve a purpose beyond his original intention. His is a decade-long tale of inspired insights, thwarted aims and shifting purposes; but with a good outcome. Although the Tydeman tube is still in gestation, Desperate Debra herself is now thriving.
To understand the desperation of Debra and how the Tydeman tube might help to relieve it requires a brief foray into basic obstetric knowhow. Evolution has endowed us with heads proportionally so large that even when labour runs according to plan, the delivery process involves a bit of a squeeze. For the baby's head to get stuck on the way out may not be usual, but it's by no means a rarity.
The standard response is to perform a caesarean section. Every year some 160,000 babies are born in the UK this way, with almost two thirds of them classified as emergencies. One audit has suggested that roughly 8,000 babies get stuck and have to be delivered by caesarean at a stage when their mothers are fully dilated. "Some of the babies will be so close to coming out by the normal route," says Tydeman, "that it's then difficult to get them back up and remove them through the hole in the woman's tummy." Which women are most at risk of this setback seems to be largely unpredictable. "We just observe that it happens… It's been discussed in the medical literature since the 1940s, but until 10 years ago, and throughout my training and most of my life as a consultant, it wasn't really talked about."
Considering the universality of childbirth, impaction and the best way of dealing with it are topics that seem to have gone remarkably unstudied. "There are strong opinions about why it happens and what to do, but very little research evidence," says Tydeman, adding that many of these opinions are contradictory.
In a protracted birth that's destined to end with a caesarean, the longer the labour is allowed to go on before the obstetrician decides to intervene, the greater the likelihood that the baby's head will become impacted. However, concern over the rising number of babies born by caesarean has made doctors more wary of doing them – one consequence of which is that medical staff may allow a difficult birth to continue for longer before they resort to surgery. This could be boosting the frequency of impaction. But, again, no one is certain.
When obstetricians doing planned caesareans slice open a mother's womb, what they usually see is the baby's head. By slipping a hand round and below it they can easily guide the baby out. "When you do a caesarean for an impacted baby," says Tydeman, "you make the incision in the same place, but what you might come across is a shoulder because the baby's so much further down [the birth canal]." As I'd discovered for myself, sliding a hand around the baby's head is then far more difficult. "It makes your fingers hurt," says Tydeman. "It makes your pulse rate go up to about 200, and you break out in a sweat because know you've only got about five or 10 minutes before there are serious consequences. The clock is ticking."
If a baby's head is jammed down in the mother's pelvic region, common sense suggests that it might help if a second person gives a gentle backward push on the area of its head visible through the mother's dilated cervix. "In our unit," says Tydeman, "when the woman is fully dilated and you'd expect the baby to come out normally [but it doesn't]… a registrar will be asking for a push-up about one in five times." Although registrars are doctors still in training, they're nonetheless experienced; which suggests requests for push-ups during unplanned caesareans are far from uncommon. The Tydeman tube is a gadget intended to make this manoeuvre safer and more effective.
Creativity and innovation have many unlikely sources. What seems to have inspired Tydeman to develop his device was the characteristic sound of a Wellington boot being pulled free of wet, muddy ground: a slurpy, sucking, gurgling noise. When an impacted foetal head is pulled free of the uterus it's often accompanied by a similar sucking noise, the result of air rushing in between the obstetrician's fingers to fill the space vacated. "What occurred to me years ago was that if the air can't get in, why not put a tube up into the vagina so that it can get in from below the baby's head." From time to time, if he felt he felt the baby might stick, Tydeman would slip a length of sterile silicone tubing through the woman's vagina and up into the womb next to the baby's head. Allowing air in by this route would release any suction forces tending to hold it where it was.
Tydeman didn't do much with the idea until 10 years ago when one trainee, who was experiencing real difficulty getting heads out, prompted him to think again about the problem. Around the same time, he met professor of obstetrics Andrew Shennan and consultant midwife Annette Briley, both of the Women's Health Academic Centre at St Thomas's hospital. Between them they came up with a device – the Tydeman tube – to make pushing on the foetus more controlled while simultaneously releasing any vacuum that might be holding it in place.
The instrument is made up of a rigid plastic tube opening into a softer silicone cup. Pressure to the foetal head is applied using four pads projecting forward from the cup's interior. Holding the device by the tube, the user places the cup against the part of the head exposed through the dilated cervix, and presses. This pushes the baby back up into the uterus while releasing any suction pressure that may have been holding it, so allowing the obstetrician to extract it more easily. Because pressure is distributed equally between the four pads with a greater combined surface area than that of a user's fingertips, the risk of inadvertent damage is minimised.
The team found some money to employ a product designer who used computer-aided design technology and 3D printing to make a prototype. "We were at the point of getting one made in silicone," says Tydeman, "when we realised that before we started experimenting on women we really ought to test it on a simulator." No such simulator existed – so he decided to make one himself.
That Tydeman was able to do this comes as no great surprise once you've glanced at his website. His career may be rooted in medicine but his interests encompass sculpture, furniture making and much else. He works in wood, glass, metals and plastic. "I've got a big workshop with a lathe and a forge," he says. "I make stuff. I always have, ever since I was a child. My dad was a woodwork teacher, my mum was very creative with fabric."
Although tests carried out with the Debra prototype showed that the tube would work as intended, Tydeman and his colleagues then faced what he calls a kind of medical catch-22. "We had the tube finished about three years ago… but we were more interested in trying to save lives than selling a product. We thought that the right thing to do before commercialising it was to be sure we'd got the best design." They tried it on a dozen or so women in labour, and concluded that it did what it supposed to. But they held off trying to market it because they wanted to do more extensive, more rigorous clinical studies.
This presented a problem. "If you've applied for research money," says Tydeman, "but you've already got what seems to be a commercially viable design, potential funders are going to say that the company aiming to sell it should pay for the work." On the other hand, commercial interest is easier to drum up if you've already got evidence that a device is safe and effective.
That said, the team didn't want to leave the tube sitting on the shelf. So they eventually decided to go ahead and find a commercial partner willing to manufacture and market it. They have now identified one, and are fairly confident it will soon be in production. With sufficient users it should then be possible to compile factual – as opposed to anecdotal – evidence of benefit. Not ideal, Tydeman concedes, but the best they can do at present.
In the meantime, back to Desperate Debra: so named, Tydeman says, not after any particular person but because the appellation is memorably alliterative. He put together the original Debra in a weekend. The skin was made out of a neoprene wetsuit fixed to a scaffolding formed from plastic tubing he'd found 20 years ago in skip outside a Glasgow pub; the head was cast in silicone from a model he'd made in plasticine, and the rest comprised old springs and other bits of stuff lying around his workshop. "It wasn't actually that difficult," Tydeman says.
When originally conceived, remember, Debra was simply a means of testing the effectiveness of the tube. What she looked like was neither here nor there. It was only once Debra was reborn as a teaching aid that she needed sprucing up.
Tydeman can remember the exact moment when the idea of her having a greater role dawned on him. "I was on the sleeper train down from Scotland to London," he says. "Debra was with me because the first Tydeman tube had become available at St Thomas's… It was about midnight, I'd had my free whisky and I suddenly thought, 'Blow me! Even if the tube doesn't work, Debra could be useful as a teaching aid'."
The following morning, at St Thomas's, Tydeman asked a visiting professor of obstetrics to have a look at Debra and tell him what she thought. She put her hand into Debra's womb, grasped the foetal head and said it felt just like the real thing. "Terribly flattering," Tydeman laughs.
With a grant from the Guy's and St Thomas's Charity fund they made Debra more presentable. Tydeman showed the prototype to Adam Rouilly, an established company specialising in medical models and simulators. They were impressed. A year later, the first of Debra's smartened-up sisters was on the market.
In Debra as she is now, the precise extent and nature of her desperation can be fine-tuned according to need. The foetal head inside her uterus can be moved to mimic the various positions that an unborn baby may adopt. By tightening a spring inside Debra's body, it's also possible vary the degree of impaction from mild to so severe that the head is virtually impossible to extract. In this way she simulates the full range of difficulty that obstetricians are likely to encounter.
So how valuable in training medical staff is a simulator like this? Very, according to Annette Briley. Imagine it's the middle of the night and an unplanned emergency caesarean is required: "Some poor junior doctor might find himself trying to manage it on his own." To have practised the knack of extracting a firmly impacted baby from a simulator is lot better than first honing your skill on a real woman.
At St Thomas's, midwives in training also get an opportunity to practise on Debra. The chances that midwives will find themselves having to do the actual extraction of an infant are slim; but they're quite likely to be asked to help the obstetrician by pushing a stuck baby from below. Debra's anatomy allows them to practise this skill; and to learn where and how hard to push on the infant skull. "Any practice you've done in the cold light of day will help you stay calm and composed in an emergency, and that's what we're aiming for," says Briley.
It's still too soon to make a final judgement about Debra’s impact. "When we first brought Debra out," Briley recalls, "some of the really experienced professors said things like, 'We always managed without one. Why would you need this?' But ask them to have a go at using it and then they admit it's really good." Medicine as a whole has an oddly ambivalent relationship to innovation. Some new findings, techniques or equipment take years to penetrate the profession; others are seized upon immediately.
A proper study of the clinical effectiveness of the Tydeman tube will necessarily involve women giving birth. Assessing the value of Debra as a simulator didn't require human subjects; and the team has already conducted such a study. Thirty obstetricians, from three NHS maternity units and with varying levels of experience, took part. They all received a brief explanation of how Debra works, and were then asked to try a timed removal of the foetal head at three different levels of difficulty. Overall, 87 per cent reported that the simulator offered a realistic experience of dealing with an impacted head, and 93 per cent thought it would be valuable as a training device.
The use of simulators to teach technical skills is now common in medical schools. You can learn to sew up a knife wound, catheterise a bladder or intubate an airway. You can practise cardiopulmonary resuscitation or ear syringing or even go through the motions of a keyhole surgical procedure. The technology required to do these things may cost a few pounds, or tens of thousands. Either way, given that most of these devices were invented during the past three or four decades, it comes as something of a surprise to learn that simulation for medical purposes can be traced back as far as the Chinese Song dynasty of 960-1279 AD.
One of the treatments of choice in that era was, naturally, acupuncture. But how to teach tyro-acupuncturists where to place the needles? Simple. A life-size bronze statue dotted with small holes indicated the points of insertion. And how then to test the students' grasp of their subject? If the statute was hollow, filled with liquid and given an outer coating of wax to mask the holes, a correct needle insertion would be followed by a leak.
Given the universality of childbirth it's no surprise that, then as now, the womb turns out to be the most simulated of our organs. For the benefit of 18th-century midwives and doctors-in-training, the Bologna surgeon Giovanni Antonio Galli devised a birthing simulator comprising a glass uterus supported by an artificial pelvis and containing a flexible foetus. Trainees had to deliver the baby while wearing a blindfold. Only the tutor could witness the fumbling of their hands.
As the material for a convincing simulation, glass clearly has its drawbacks. But another 18th-century contraption used a pink cloth-covered mannequin comprising a female torso complete with genitalia, a set of implantable foetuses of various ages, and even – a real
coup de théâtre
, this – a facility for exuding suitably coloured liquids at the appropriate moment.
Oddly, as medicine became more scientific, most of these devices fell by the wayside. As an academic review of these and other devices has pointed out, much of the 20th century was something of Dark Ages for simulation. Its value in professional training has had to be rediscovered: an endeavour in which inventive people like Graham Tydeman, sometimes with workshops rich in discarded junk, are still fruitfully engaged.
This article was originally published on TheLong+Short. Read the original article. | befuddled | petrified | apprehensive | confident | 2 |
99912_26PU82E5_2 | What factor necessitates the change in frequency of performed C-sections? | Obstetrics for beginners
It's my first go at delivering a baby by caesarean section – and the foetal head is impacted, jammed in its mother's pelvis. To be honest I'm struggling.
Incisions have been made in the lower part of the mother's abdomen and womb. I've pushed my gloved hand inside and managed to slide my fingers between the baby's head and the surrounding uterine tissue. But it's difficult. The baby is tightly wedged in. I've had to push hard to get my hand to the far side of its head, and even though I'm now cupping and grasping it in the approved manner, I can't seem to pull it out. Dare I grip its head more firmly? Dare I pull harder?
The baby's mother – she's called Debra – remains impassive throughout these agonised fumblings. Her face reveals nothing of what she may be feeling. But then Debra has no feelings. Indeed she has no face…
So you can stop worrying. Debra – Desperate Debra to use her full trade name – is a simulator designed to help doctors practise their skill at dealing with impacted foetuses: babies that get stuck trying to exit the womb by the normal route. She comprises the lower two thirds (ie from the mid-chest region downwards) of a life-sized but limbless female torso made of flesh-coloured silicone rubber. She comes with a vulva, a pre-cut incision in her abdomen and, most importantly, a uterus containing a foetal head that should, in the normal way of things, be free to emerge between her legs. But this fetus is going nowhere until an obstetrician – or in this case me – can successfully grasp and pull it out.
The clever and sophisticated simulator I'm playing with started life as a lash-up in an obstetrician's home workshop: a Heath Robinson-style contraption barely recognisable as a model of the human body. But it wasn't at that stage intended as a simulator for training medical staff. Its sole purpose was to test the effectiveness of a novel device called a Tydeman tube. Paradoxically, although the testing equipment, Debra, is now commercially available, the device it was intended to test has yet to reach the market.
The inventor of the tube and of Desperate Debra is Dr Graham Tydeman, a consultant in obstetrics and gynaecology at Victoria Hospital in Kirkcaldy, Fife. Only after he'd built Debra did he realise that she might serve a purpose beyond his original intention. His is a decade-long tale of inspired insights, thwarted aims and shifting purposes; but with a good outcome. Although the Tydeman tube is still in gestation, Desperate Debra herself is now thriving.
To understand the desperation of Debra and how the Tydeman tube might help to relieve it requires a brief foray into basic obstetric knowhow. Evolution has endowed us with heads proportionally so large that even when labour runs according to plan, the delivery process involves a bit of a squeeze. For the baby's head to get stuck on the way out may not be usual, but it's by no means a rarity.
The standard response is to perform a caesarean section. Every year some 160,000 babies are born in the UK this way, with almost two thirds of them classified as emergencies. One audit has suggested that roughly 8,000 babies get stuck and have to be delivered by caesarean at a stage when their mothers are fully dilated. "Some of the babies will be so close to coming out by the normal route," says Tydeman, "that it's then difficult to get them back up and remove them through the hole in the woman's tummy." Which women are most at risk of this setback seems to be largely unpredictable. "We just observe that it happens… It's been discussed in the medical literature since the 1940s, but until 10 years ago, and throughout my training and most of my life as a consultant, it wasn't really talked about."
Considering the universality of childbirth, impaction and the best way of dealing with it are topics that seem to have gone remarkably unstudied. "There are strong opinions about why it happens and what to do, but very little research evidence," says Tydeman, adding that many of these opinions are contradictory.
In a protracted birth that's destined to end with a caesarean, the longer the labour is allowed to go on before the obstetrician decides to intervene, the greater the likelihood that the baby's head will become impacted. However, concern over the rising number of babies born by caesarean has made doctors more wary of doing them – one consequence of which is that medical staff may allow a difficult birth to continue for longer before they resort to surgery. This could be boosting the frequency of impaction. But, again, no one is certain.
When obstetricians doing planned caesareans slice open a mother's womb, what they usually see is the baby's head. By slipping a hand round and below it they can easily guide the baby out. "When you do a caesarean for an impacted baby," says Tydeman, "you make the incision in the same place, but what you might come across is a shoulder because the baby's so much further down [the birth canal]." As I'd discovered for myself, sliding a hand around the baby's head is then far more difficult. "It makes your fingers hurt," says Tydeman. "It makes your pulse rate go up to about 200, and you break out in a sweat because know you've only got about five or 10 minutes before there are serious consequences. The clock is ticking."
If a baby's head is jammed down in the mother's pelvic region, common sense suggests that it might help if a second person gives a gentle backward push on the area of its head visible through the mother's dilated cervix. "In our unit," says Tydeman, "when the woman is fully dilated and you'd expect the baby to come out normally [but it doesn't]… a registrar will be asking for a push-up about one in five times." Although registrars are doctors still in training, they're nonetheless experienced; which suggests requests for push-ups during unplanned caesareans are far from uncommon. The Tydeman tube is a gadget intended to make this manoeuvre safer and more effective.
Creativity and innovation have many unlikely sources. What seems to have inspired Tydeman to develop his device was the characteristic sound of a Wellington boot being pulled free of wet, muddy ground: a slurpy, sucking, gurgling noise. When an impacted foetal head is pulled free of the uterus it's often accompanied by a similar sucking noise, the result of air rushing in between the obstetrician's fingers to fill the space vacated. "What occurred to me years ago was that if the air can't get in, why not put a tube up into the vagina so that it can get in from below the baby's head." From time to time, if he felt he felt the baby might stick, Tydeman would slip a length of sterile silicone tubing through the woman's vagina and up into the womb next to the baby's head. Allowing air in by this route would release any suction forces tending to hold it where it was.
Tydeman didn't do much with the idea until 10 years ago when one trainee, who was experiencing real difficulty getting heads out, prompted him to think again about the problem. Around the same time, he met professor of obstetrics Andrew Shennan and consultant midwife Annette Briley, both of the Women's Health Academic Centre at St Thomas's hospital. Between them they came up with a device – the Tydeman tube – to make pushing on the foetus more controlled while simultaneously releasing any vacuum that might be holding it in place.
The instrument is made up of a rigid plastic tube opening into a softer silicone cup. Pressure to the foetal head is applied using four pads projecting forward from the cup's interior. Holding the device by the tube, the user places the cup against the part of the head exposed through the dilated cervix, and presses. This pushes the baby back up into the uterus while releasing any suction pressure that may have been holding it, so allowing the obstetrician to extract it more easily. Because pressure is distributed equally between the four pads with a greater combined surface area than that of a user's fingertips, the risk of inadvertent damage is minimised.
The team found some money to employ a product designer who used computer-aided design technology and 3D printing to make a prototype. "We were at the point of getting one made in silicone," says Tydeman, "when we realised that before we started experimenting on women we really ought to test it on a simulator." No such simulator existed – so he decided to make one himself.
That Tydeman was able to do this comes as no great surprise once you've glanced at his website. His career may be rooted in medicine but his interests encompass sculpture, furniture making and much else. He works in wood, glass, metals and plastic. "I've got a big workshop with a lathe and a forge," he says. "I make stuff. I always have, ever since I was a child. My dad was a woodwork teacher, my mum was very creative with fabric."
Although tests carried out with the Debra prototype showed that the tube would work as intended, Tydeman and his colleagues then faced what he calls a kind of medical catch-22. "We had the tube finished about three years ago… but we were more interested in trying to save lives than selling a product. We thought that the right thing to do before commercialising it was to be sure we'd got the best design." They tried it on a dozen or so women in labour, and concluded that it did what it supposed to. But they held off trying to market it because they wanted to do more extensive, more rigorous clinical studies.
This presented a problem. "If you've applied for research money," says Tydeman, "but you've already got what seems to be a commercially viable design, potential funders are going to say that the company aiming to sell it should pay for the work." On the other hand, commercial interest is easier to drum up if you've already got evidence that a device is safe and effective.
That said, the team didn't want to leave the tube sitting on the shelf. So they eventually decided to go ahead and find a commercial partner willing to manufacture and market it. They have now identified one, and are fairly confident it will soon be in production. With sufficient users it should then be possible to compile factual – as opposed to anecdotal – evidence of benefit. Not ideal, Tydeman concedes, but the best they can do at present.
In the meantime, back to Desperate Debra: so named, Tydeman says, not after any particular person but because the appellation is memorably alliterative. He put together the original Debra in a weekend. The skin was made out of a neoprene wetsuit fixed to a scaffolding formed from plastic tubing he'd found 20 years ago in skip outside a Glasgow pub; the head was cast in silicone from a model he'd made in plasticine, and the rest comprised old springs and other bits of stuff lying around his workshop. "It wasn't actually that difficult," Tydeman says.
When originally conceived, remember, Debra was simply a means of testing the effectiveness of the tube. What she looked like was neither here nor there. It was only once Debra was reborn as a teaching aid that she needed sprucing up.
Tydeman can remember the exact moment when the idea of her having a greater role dawned on him. "I was on the sleeper train down from Scotland to London," he says. "Debra was with me because the first Tydeman tube had become available at St Thomas's… It was about midnight, I'd had my free whisky and I suddenly thought, 'Blow me! Even if the tube doesn't work, Debra could be useful as a teaching aid'."
The following morning, at St Thomas's, Tydeman asked a visiting professor of obstetrics to have a look at Debra and tell him what she thought. She put her hand into Debra's womb, grasped the foetal head and said it felt just like the real thing. "Terribly flattering," Tydeman laughs.
With a grant from the Guy's and St Thomas's Charity fund they made Debra more presentable. Tydeman showed the prototype to Adam Rouilly, an established company specialising in medical models and simulators. They were impressed. A year later, the first of Debra's smartened-up sisters was on the market.
In Debra as she is now, the precise extent and nature of her desperation can be fine-tuned according to need. The foetal head inside her uterus can be moved to mimic the various positions that an unborn baby may adopt. By tightening a spring inside Debra's body, it's also possible vary the degree of impaction from mild to so severe that the head is virtually impossible to extract. In this way she simulates the full range of difficulty that obstetricians are likely to encounter.
So how valuable in training medical staff is a simulator like this? Very, according to Annette Briley. Imagine it's the middle of the night and an unplanned emergency caesarean is required: "Some poor junior doctor might find himself trying to manage it on his own." To have practised the knack of extracting a firmly impacted baby from a simulator is lot better than first honing your skill on a real woman.
At St Thomas's, midwives in training also get an opportunity to practise on Debra. The chances that midwives will find themselves having to do the actual extraction of an infant are slim; but they're quite likely to be asked to help the obstetrician by pushing a stuck baby from below. Debra's anatomy allows them to practise this skill; and to learn where and how hard to push on the infant skull. "Any practice you've done in the cold light of day will help you stay calm and composed in an emergency, and that's what we're aiming for," says Briley.
It's still too soon to make a final judgement about Debra’s impact. "When we first brought Debra out," Briley recalls, "some of the really experienced professors said things like, 'We always managed without one. Why would you need this?' But ask them to have a go at using it and then they admit it's really good." Medicine as a whole has an oddly ambivalent relationship to innovation. Some new findings, techniques or equipment take years to penetrate the profession; others are seized upon immediately.
A proper study of the clinical effectiveness of the Tydeman tube will necessarily involve women giving birth. Assessing the value of Debra as a simulator didn't require human subjects; and the team has already conducted such a study. Thirty obstetricians, from three NHS maternity units and with varying levels of experience, took part. They all received a brief explanation of how Debra works, and were then asked to try a timed removal of the foetal head at three different levels of difficulty. Overall, 87 per cent reported that the simulator offered a realistic experience of dealing with an impacted head, and 93 per cent thought it would be valuable as a training device.
The use of simulators to teach technical skills is now common in medical schools. You can learn to sew up a knife wound, catheterise a bladder or intubate an airway. You can practise cardiopulmonary resuscitation or ear syringing or even go through the motions of a keyhole surgical procedure. The technology required to do these things may cost a few pounds, or tens of thousands. Either way, given that most of these devices were invented during the past three or four decades, it comes as something of a surprise to learn that simulation for medical purposes can be traced back as far as the Chinese Song dynasty of 960-1279 AD.
One of the treatments of choice in that era was, naturally, acupuncture. But how to teach tyro-acupuncturists where to place the needles? Simple. A life-size bronze statue dotted with small holes indicated the points of insertion. And how then to test the students' grasp of their subject? If the statute was hollow, filled with liquid and given an outer coating of wax to mask the holes, a correct needle insertion would be followed by a leak.
Given the universality of childbirth it's no surprise that, then as now, the womb turns out to be the most simulated of our organs. For the benefit of 18th-century midwives and doctors-in-training, the Bologna surgeon Giovanni Antonio Galli devised a birthing simulator comprising a glass uterus supported by an artificial pelvis and containing a flexible foetus. Trainees had to deliver the baby while wearing a blindfold. Only the tutor could witness the fumbling of their hands.
As the material for a convincing simulation, glass clearly has its drawbacks. But another 18th-century contraption used a pink cloth-covered mannequin comprising a female torso complete with genitalia, a set of implantable foetuses of various ages, and even – a real
coup de théâtre
, this – a facility for exuding suitably coloured liquids at the appropriate moment.
Oddly, as medicine became more scientific, most of these devices fell by the wayside. As an academic review of these and other devices has pointed out, much of the 20th century was something of Dark Ages for simulation. Its value in professional training has had to be rediscovered: an endeavour in which inventive people like Graham Tydeman, sometimes with workshops rich in discarded junk, are still fruitfully engaged.
This article was originally published on TheLong+Short. Read the original article. | Uterine environment | Practitioner training | Cranial growth | Advanced technology | 2 |
99912_26PU82E5_3 | Which factor is the best predictor of necessity for an emergency C-section on a fetus? | Obstetrics for beginners
It's my first go at delivering a baby by caesarean section – and the foetal head is impacted, jammed in its mother's pelvis. To be honest I'm struggling.
Incisions have been made in the lower part of the mother's abdomen and womb. I've pushed my gloved hand inside and managed to slide my fingers between the baby's head and the surrounding uterine tissue. But it's difficult. The baby is tightly wedged in. I've had to push hard to get my hand to the far side of its head, and even though I'm now cupping and grasping it in the approved manner, I can't seem to pull it out. Dare I grip its head more firmly? Dare I pull harder?
The baby's mother – she's called Debra – remains impassive throughout these agonised fumblings. Her face reveals nothing of what she may be feeling. But then Debra has no feelings. Indeed she has no face…
So you can stop worrying. Debra – Desperate Debra to use her full trade name – is a simulator designed to help doctors practise their skill at dealing with impacted foetuses: babies that get stuck trying to exit the womb by the normal route. She comprises the lower two thirds (ie from the mid-chest region downwards) of a life-sized but limbless female torso made of flesh-coloured silicone rubber. She comes with a vulva, a pre-cut incision in her abdomen and, most importantly, a uterus containing a foetal head that should, in the normal way of things, be free to emerge between her legs. But this fetus is going nowhere until an obstetrician – or in this case me – can successfully grasp and pull it out.
The clever and sophisticated simulator I'm playing with started life as a lash-up in an obstetrician's home workshop: a Heath Robinson-style contraption barely recognisable as a model of the human body. But it wasn't at that stage intended as a simulator for training medical staff. Its sole purpose was to test the effectiveness of a novel device called a Tydeman tube. Paradoxically, although the testing equipment, Debra, is now commercially available, the device it was intended to test has yet to reach the market.
The inventor of the tube and of Desperate Debra is Dr Graham Tydeman, a consultant in obstetrics and gynaecology at Victoria Hospital in Kirkcaldy, Fife. Only after he'd built Debra did he realise that she might serve a purpose beyond his original intention. His is a decade-long tale of inspired insights, thwarted aims and shifting purposes; but with a good outcome. Although the Tydeman tube is still in gestation, Desperate Debra herself is now thriving.
To understand the desperation of Debra and how the Tydeman tube might help to relieve it requires a brief foray into basic obstetric knowhow. Evolution has endowed us with heads proportionally so large that even when labour runs according to plan, the delivery process involves a bit of a squeeze. For the baby's head to get stuck on the way out may not be usual, but it's by no means a rarity.
The standard response is to perform a caesarean section. Every year some 160,000 babies are born in the UK this way, with almost two thirds of them classified as emergencies. One audit has suggested that roughly 8,000 babies get stuck and have to be delivered by caesarean at a stage when their mothers are fully dilated. "Some of the babies will be so close to coming out by the normal route," says Tydeman, "that it's then difficult to get them back up and remove them through the hole in the woman's tummy." Which women are most at risk of this setback seems to be largely unpredictable. "We just observe that it happens… It's been discussed in the medical literature since the 1940s, but until 10 years ago, and throughout my training and most of my life as a consultant, it wasn't really talked about."
Considering the universality of childbirth, impaction and the best way of dealing with it are topics that seem to have gone remarkably unstudied. "There are strong opinions about why it happens and what to do, but very little research evidence," says Tydeman, adding that many of these opinions are contradictory.
In a protracted birth that's destined to end with a caesarean, the longer the labour is allowed to go on before the obstetrician decides to intervene, the greater the likelihood that the baby's head will become impacted. However, concern over the rising number of babies born by caesarean has made doctors more wary of doing them – one consequence of which is that medical staff may allow a difficult birth to continue for longer before they resort to surgery. This could be boosting the frequency of impaction. But, again, no one is certain.
When obstetricians doing planned caesareans slice open a mother's womb, what they usually see is the baby's head. By slipping a hand round and below it they can easily guide the baby out. "When you do a caesarean for an impacted baby," says Tydeman, "you make the incision in the same place, but what you might come across is a shoulder because the baby's so much further down [the birth canal]." As I'd discovered for myself, sliding a hand around the baby's head is then far more difficult. "It makes your fingers hurt," says Tydeman. "It makes your pulse rate go up to about 200, and you break out in a sweat because know you've only got about five or 10 minutes before there are serious consequences. The clock is ticking."
If a baby's head is jammed down in the mother's pelvic region, common sense suggests that it might help if a second person gives a gentle backward push on the area of its head visible through the mother's dilated cervix. "In our unit," says Tydeman, "when the woman is fully dilated and you'd expect the baby to come out normally [but it doesn't]… a registrar will be asking for a push-up about one in five times." Although registrars are doctors still in training, they're nonetheless experienced; which suggests requests for push-ups during unplanned caesareans are far from uncommon. The Tydeman tube is a gadget intended to make this manoeuvre safer and more effective.
Creativity and innovation have many unlikely sources. What seems to have inspired Tydeman to develop his device was the characteristic sound of a Wellington boot being pulled free of wet, muddy ground: a slurpy, sucking, gurgling noise. When an impacted foetal head is pulled free of the uterus it's often accompanied by a similar sucking noise, the result of air rushing in between the obstetrician's fingers to fill the space vacated. "What occurred to me years ago was that if the air can't get in, why not put a tube up into the vagina so that it can get in from below the baby's head." From time to time, if he felt he felt the baby might stick, Tydeman would slip a length of sterile silicone tubing through the woman's vagina and up into the womb next to the baby's head. Allowing air in by this route would release any suction forces tending to hold it where it was.
Tydeman didn't do much with the idea until 10 years ago when one trainee, who was experiencing real difficulty getting heads out, prompted him to think again about the problem. Around the same time, he met professor of obstetrics Andrew Shennan and consultant midwife Annette Briley, both of the Women's Health Academic Centre at St Thomas's hospital. Between them they came up with a device – the Tydeman tube – to make pushing on the foetus more controlled while simultaneously releasing any vacuum that might be holding it in place.
The instrument is made up of a rigid plastic tube opening into a softer silicone cup. Pressure to the foetal head is applied using four pads projecting forward from the cup's interior. Holding the device by the tube, the user places the cup against the part of the head exposed through the dilated cervix, and presses. This pushes the baby back up into the uterus while releasing any suction pressure that may have been holding it, so allowing the obstetrician to extract it more easily. Because pressure is distributed equally between the four pads with a greater combined surface area than that of a user's fingertips, the risk of inadvertent damage is minimised.
The team found some money to employ a product designer who used computer-aided design technology and 3D printing to make a prototype. "We were at the point of getting one made in silicone," says Tydeman, "when we realised that before we started experimenting on women we really ought to test it on a simulator." No such simulator existed – so he decided to make one himself.
That Tydeman was able to do this comes as no great surprise once you've glanced at his website. His career may be rooted in medicine but his interests encompass sculpture, furniture making and much else. He works in wood, glass, metals and plastic. "I've got a big workshop with a lathe and a forge," he says. "I make stuff. I always have, ever since I was a child. My dad was a woodwork teacher, my mum was very creative with fabric."
Although tests carried out with the Debra prototype showed that the tube would work as intended, Tydeman and his colleagues then faced what he calls a kind of medical catch-22. "We had the tube finished about three years ago… but we were more interested in trying to save lives than selling a product. We thought that the right thing to do before commercialising it was to be sure we'd got the best design." They tried it on a dozen or so women in labour, and concluded that it did what it supposed to. But they held off trying to market it because they wanted to do more extensive, more rigorous clinical studies.
This presented a problem. "If you've applied for research money," says Tydeman, "but you've already got what seems to be a commercially viable design, potential funders are going to say that the company aiming to sell it should pay for the work." On the other hand, commercial interest is easier to drum up if you've already got evidence that a device is safe and effective.
That said, the team didn't want to leave the tube sitting on the shelf. So they eventually decided to go ahead and find a commercial partner willing to manufacture and market it. They have now identified one, and are fairly confident it will soon be in production. With sufficient users it should then be possible to compile factual – as opposed to anecdotal – evidence of benefit. Not ideal, Tydeman concedes, but the best they can do at present.
In the meantime, back to Desperate Debra: so named, Tydeman says, not after any particular person but because the appellation is memorably alliterative. He put together the original Debra in a weekend. The skin was made out of a neoprene wetsuit fixed to a scaffolding formed from plastic tubing he'd found 20 years ago in skip outside a Glasgow pub; the head was cast in silicone from a model he'd made in plasticine, and the rest comprised old springs and other bits of stuff lying around his workshop. "It wasn't actually that difficult," Tydeman says.
When originally conceived, remember, Debra was simply a means of testing the effectiveness of the tube. What she looked like was neither here nor there. It was only once Debra was reborn as a teaching aid that she needed sprucing up.
Tydeman can remember the exact moment when the idea of her having a greater role dawned on him. "I was on the sleeper train down from Scotland to London," he says. "Debra was with me because the first Tydeman tube had become available at St Thomas's… It was about midnight, I'd had my free whisky and I suddenly thought, 'Blow me! Even if the tube doesn't work, Debra could be useful as a teaching aid'."
The following morning, at St Thomas's, Tydeman asked a visiting professor of obstetrics to have a look at Debra and tell him what she thought. She put her hand into Debra's womb, grasped the foetal head and said it felt just like the real thing. "Terribly flattering," Tydeman laughs.
With a grant from the Guy's and St Thomas's Charity fund they made Debra more presentable. Tydeman showed the prototype to Adam Rouilly, an established company specialising in medical models and simulators. They were impressed. A year later, the first of Debra's smartened-up sisters was on the market.
In Debra as she is now, the precise extent and nature of her desperation can be fine-tuned according to need. The foetal head inside her uterus can be moved to mimic the various positions that an unborn baby may adopt. By tightening a spring inside Debra's body, it's also possible vary the degree of impaction from mild to so severe that the head is virtually impossible to extract. In this way she simulates the full range of difficulty that obstetricians are likely to encounter.
So how valuable in training medical staff is a simulator like this? Very, according to Annette Briley. Imagine it's the middle of the night and an unplanned emergency caesarean is required: "Some poor junior doctor might find himself trying to manage it on his own." To have practised the knack of extracting a firmly impacted baby from a simulator is lot better than first honing your skill on a real woman.
At St Thomas's, midwives in training also get an opportunity to practise on Debra. The chances that midwives will find themselves having to do the actual extraction of an infant are slim; but they're quite likely to be asked to help the obstetrician by pushing a stuck baby from below. Debra's anatomy allows them to practise this skill; and to learn where and how hard to push on the infant skull. "Any practice you've done in the cold light of day will help you stay calm and composed in an emergency, and that's what we're aiming for," says Briley.
It's still too soon to make a final judgement about Debra’s impact. "When we first brought Debra out," Briley recalls, "some of the really experienced professors said things like, 'We always managed without one. Why would you need this?' But ask them to have a go at using it and then they admit it's really good." Medicine as a whole has an oddly ambivalent relationship to innovation. Some new findings, techniques or equipment take years to penetrate the profession; others are seized upon immediately.
A proper study of the clinical effectiveness of the Tydeman tube will necessarily involve women giving birth. Assessing the value of Debra as a simulator didn't require human subjects; and the team has already conducted such a study. Thirty obstetricians, from three NHS maternity units and with varying levels of experience, took part. They all received a brief explanation of how Debra works, and were then asked to try a timed removal of the foetal head at three different levels of difficulty. Overall, 87 per cent reported that the simulator offered a realistic experience of dealing with an impacted head, and 93 per cent thought it would be valuable as a training device.
The use of simulators to teach technical skills is now common in medical schools. You can learn to sew up a knife wound, catheterise a bladder or intubate an airway. You can practise cardiopulmonary resuscitation or ear syringing or even go through the motions of a keyhole surgical procedure. The technology required to do these things may cost a few pounds, or tens of thousands. Either way, given that most of these devices were invented during the past three or four decades, it comes as something of a surprise to learn that simulation for medical purposes can be traced back as far as the Chinese Song dynasty of 960-1279 AD.
One of the treatments of choice in that era was, naturally, acupuncture. But how to teach tyro-acupuncturists where to place the needles? Simple. A life-size bronze statue dotted with small holes indicated the points of insertion. And how then to test the students' grasp of their subject? If the statute was hollow, filled with liquid and given an outer coating of wax to mask the holes, a correct needle insertion would be followed by a leak.
Given the universality of childbirth it's no surprise that, then as now, the womb turns out to be the most simulated of our organs. For the benefit of 18th-century midwives and doctors-in-training, the Bologna surgeon Giovanni Antonio Galli devised a birthing simulator comprising a glass uterus supported by an artificial pelvis and containing a flexible foetus. Trainees had to deliver the baby while wearing a blindfold. Only the tutor could witness the fumbling of their hands.
As the material for a convincing simulation, glass clearly has its drawbacks. But another 18th-century contraption used a pink cloth-covered mannequin comprising a female torso complete with genitalia, a set of implantable foetuses of various ages, and even – a real
coup de théâtre
, this – a facility for exuding suitably coloured liquids at the appropriate moment.
Oddly, as medicine became more scientific, most of these devices fell by the wayside. As an academic review of these and other devices has pointed out, much of the 20th century was something of Dark Ages for simulation. Its value in professional training has had to be rediscovered: an endeavour in which inventive people like Graham Tydeman, sometimes with workshops rich in discarded junk, are still fruitfully engaged.
This article was originally published on TheLong+Short. Read the original article. | Father's birth weight | Mother's birth weight | Practitioner's level of experience | There is no agreed upon factor | 3 |
99912_26PU82E5_4 | Describe how the frequency of C-sections has changed over time | Obstetrics for beginners
It's my first go at delivering a baby by caesarean section – and the foetal head is impacted, jammed in its mother's pelvis. To be honest I'm struggling.
Incisions have been made in the lower part of the mother's abdomen and womb. I've pushed my gloved hand inside and managed to slide my fingers between the baby's head and the surrounding uterine tissue. But it's difficult. The baby is tightly wedged in. I've had to push hard to get my hand to the far side of its head, and even though I'm now cupping and grasping it in the approved manner, I can't seem to pull it out. Dare I grip its head more firmly? Dare I pull harder?
The baby's mother – she's called Debra – remains impassive throughout these agonised fumblings. Her face reveals nothing of what she may be feeling. But then Debra has no feelings. Indeed she has no face…
So you can stop worrying. Debra – Desperate Debra to use her full trade name – is a simulator designed to help doctors practise their skill at dealing with impacted foetuses: babies that get stuck trying to exit the womb by the normal route. She comprises the lower two thirds (ie from the mid-chest region downwards) of a life-sized but limbless female torso made of flesh-coloured silicone rubber. She comes with a vulva, a pre-cut incision in her abdomen and, most importantly, a uterus containing a foetal head that should, in the normal way of things, be free to emerge between her legs. But this fetus is going nowhere until an obstetrician – or in this case me – can successfully grasp and pull it out.
The clever and sophisticated simulator I'm playing with started life as a lash-up in an obstetrician's home workshop: a Heath Robinson-style contraption barely recognisable as a model of the human body. But it wasn't at that stage intended as a simulator for training medical staff. Its sole purpose was to test the effectiveness of a novel device called a Tydeman tube. Paradoxically, although the testing equipment, Debra, is now commercially available, the device it was intended to test has yet to reach the market.
The inventor of the tube and of Desperate Debra is Dr Graham Tydeman, a consultant in obstetrics and gynaecology at Victoria Hospital in Kirkcaldy, Fife. Only after he'd built Debra did he realise that she might serve a purpose beyond his original intention. His is a decade-long tale of inspired insights, thwarted aims and shifting purposes; but with a good outcome. Although the Tydeman tube is still in gestation, Desperate Debra herself is now thriving.
To understand the desperation of Debra and how the Tydeman tube might help to relieve it requires a brief foray into basic obstetric knowhow. Evolution has endowed us with heads proportionally so large that even when labour runs according to plan, the delivery process involves a bit of a squeeze. For the baby's head to get stuck on the way out may not be usual, but it's by no means a rarity.
The standard response is to perform a caesarean section. Every year some 160,000 babies are born in the UK this way, with almost two thirds of them classified as emergencies. One audit has suggested that roughly 8,000 babies get stuck and have to be delivered by caesarean at a stage when their mothers are fully dilated. "Some of the babies will be so close to coming out by the normal route," says Tydeman, "that it's then difficult to get them back up and remove them through the hole in the woman's tummy." Which women are most at risk of this setback seems to be largely unpredictable. "We just observe that it happens… It's been discussed in the medical literature since the 1940s, but until 10 years ago, and throughout my training and most of my life as a consultant, it wasn't really talked about."
Considering the universality of childbirth, impaction and the best way of dealing with it are topics that seem to have gone remarkably unstudied. "There are strong opinions about why it happens and what to do, but very little research evidence," says Tydeman, adding that many of these opinions are contradictory.
In a protracted birth that's destined to end with a caesarean, the longer the labour is allowed to go on before the obstetrician decides to intervene, the greater the likelihood that the baby's head will become impacted. However, concern over the rising number of babies born by caesarean has made doctors more wary of doing them – one consequence of which is that medical staff may allow a difficult birth to continue for longer before they resort to surgery. This could be boosting the frequency of impaction. But, again, no one is certain.
When obstetricians doing planned caesareans slice open a mother's womb, what they usually see is the baby's head. By slipping a hand round and below it they can easily guide the baby out. "When you do a caesarean for an impacted baby," says Tydeman, "you make the incision in the same place, but what you might come across is a shoulder because the baby's so much further down [the birth canal]." As I'd discovered for myself, sliding a hand around the baby's head is then far more difficult. "It makes your fingers hurt," says Tydeman. "It makes your pulse rate go up to about 200, and you break out in a sweat because know you've only got about five or 10 minutes before there are serious consequences. The clock is ticking."
If a baby's head is jammed down in the mother's pelvic region, common sense suggests that it might help if a second person gives a gentle backward push on the area of its head visible through the mother's dilated cervix. "In our unit," says Tydeman, "when the woman is fully dilated and you'd expect the baby to come out normally [but it doesn't]… a registrar will be asking for a push-up about one in five times." Although registrars are doctors still in training, they're nonetheless experienced; which suggests requests for push-ups during unplanned caesareans are far from uncommon. The Tydeman tube is a gadget intended to make this manoeuvre safer and more effective.
Creativity and innovation have many unlikely sources. What seems to have inspired Tydeman to develop his device was the characteristic sound of a Wellington boot being pulled free of wet, muddy ground: a slurpy, sucking, gurgling noise. When an impacted foetal head is pulled free of the uterus it's often accompanied by a similar sucking noise, the result of air rushing in between the obstetrician's fingers to fill the space vacated. "What occurred to me years ago was that if the air can't get in, why not put a tube up into the vagina so that it can get in from below the baby's head." From time to time, if he felt he felt the baby might stick, Tydeman would slip a length of sterile silicone tubing through the woman's vagina and up into the womb next to the baby's head. Allowing air in by this route would release any suction forces tending to hold it where it was.
Tydeman didn't do much with the idea until 10 years ago when one trainee, who was experiencing real difficulty getting heads out, prompted him to think again about the problem. Around the same time, he met professor of obstetrics Andrew Shennan and consultant midwife Annette Briley, both of the Women's Health Academic Centre at St Thomas's hospital. Between them they came up with a device – the Tydeman tube – to make pushing on the foetus more controlled while simultaneously releasing any vacuum that might be holding it in place.
The instrument is made up of a rigid plastic tube opening into a softer silicone cup. Pressure to the foetal head is applied using four pads projecting forward from the cup's interior. Holding the device by the tube, the user places the cup against the part of the head exposed through the dilated cervix, and presses. This pushes the baby back up into the uterus while releasing any suction pressure that may have been holding it, so allowing the obstetrician to extract it more easily. Because pressure is distributed equally between the four pads with a greater combined surface area than that of a user's fingertips, the risk of inadvertent damage is minimised.
The team found some money to employ a product designer who used computer-aided design technology and 3D printing to make a prototype. "We were at the point of getting one made in silicone," says Tydeman, "when we realised that before we started experimenting on women we really ought to test it on a simulator." No such simulator existed – so he decided to make one himself.
That Tydeman was able to do this comes as no great surprise once you've glanced at his website. His career may be rooted in medicine but his interests encompass sculpture, furniture making and much else. He works in wood, glass, metals and plastic. "I've got a big workshop with a lathe and a forge," he says. "I make stuff. I always have, ever since I was a child. My dad was a woodwork teacher, my mum was very creative with fabric."
Although tests carried out with the Debra prototype showed that the tube would work as intended, Tydeman and his colleagues then faced what he calls a kind of medical catch-22. "We had the tube finished about three years ago… but we were more interested in trying to save lives than selling a product. We thought that the right thing to do before commercialising it was to be sure we'd got the best design." They tried it on a dozen or so women in labour, and concluded that it did what it supposed to. But they held off trying to market it because they wanted to do more extensive, more rigorous clinical studies.
This presented a problem. "If you've applied for research money," says Tydeman, "but you've already got what seems to be a commercially viable design, potential funders are going to say that the company aiming to sell it should pay for the work." On the other hand, commercial interest is easier to drum up if you've already got evidence that a device is safe and effective.
That said, the team didn't want to leave the tube sitting on the shelf. So they eventually decided to go ahead and find a commercial partner willing to manufacture and market it. They have now identified one, and are fairly confident it will soon be in production. With sufficient users it should then be possible to compile factual – as opposed to anecdotal – evidence of benefit. Not ideal, Tydeman concedes, but the best they can do at present.
In the meantime, back to Desperate Debra: so named, Tydeman says, not after any particular person but because the appellation is memorably alliterative. He put together the original Debra in a weekend. The skin was made out of a neoprene wetsuit fixed to a scaffolding formed from plastic tubing he'd found 20 years ago in skip outside a Glasgow pub; the head was cast in silicone from a model he'd made in plasticine, and the rest comprised old springs and other bits of stuff lying around his workshop. "It wasn't actually that difficult," Tydeman says.
When originally conceived, remember, Debra was simply a means of testing the effectiveness of the tube. What she looked like was neither here nor there. It was only once Debra was reborn as a teaching aid that she needed sprucing up.
Tydeman can remember the exact moment when the idea of her having a greater role dawned on him. "I was on the sleeper train down from Scotland to London," he says. "Debra was with me because the first Tydeman tube had become available at St Thomas's… It was about midnight, I'd had my free whisky and I suddenly thought, 'Blow me! Even if the tube doesn't work, Debra could be useful as a teaching aid'."
The following morning, at St Thomas's, Tydeman asked a visiting professor of obstetrics to have a look at Debra and tell him what she thought. She put her hand into Debra's womb, grasped the foetal head and said it felt just like the real thing. "Terribly flattering," Tydeman laughs.
With a grant from the Guy's and St Thomas's Charity fund they made Debra more presentable. Tydeman showed the prototype to Adam Rouilly, an established company specialising in medical models and simulators. They were impressed. A year later, the first of Debra's smartened-up sisters was on the market.
In Debra as she is now, the precise extent and nature of her desperation can be fine-tuned according to need. The foetal head inside her uterus can be moved to mimic the various positions that an unborn baby may adopt. By tightening a spring inside Debra's body, it's also possible vary the degree of impaction from mild to so severe that the head is virtually impossible to extract. In this way she simulates the full range of difficulty that obstetricians are likely to encounter.
So how valuable in training medical staff is a simulator like this? Very, according to Annette Briley. Imagine it's the middle of the night and an unplanned emergency caesarean is required: "Some poor junior doctor might find himself trying to manage it on his own." To have practised the knack of extracting a firmly impacted baby from a simulator is lot better than first honing your skill on a real woman.
At St Thomas's, midwives in training also get an opportunity to practise on Debra. The chances that midwives will find themselves having to do the actual extraction of an infant are slim; but they're quite likely to be asked to help the obstetrician by pushing a stuck baby from below. Debra's anatomy allows them to practise this skill; and to learn where and how hard to push on the infant skull. "Any practice you've done in the cold light of day will help you stay calm and composed in an emergency, and that's what we're aiming for," says Briley.
It's still too soon to make a final judgement about Debra’s impact. "When we first brought Debra out," Briley recalls, "some of the really experienced professors said things like, 'We always managed without one. Why would you need this?' But ask them to have a go at using it and then they admit it's really good." Medicine as a whole has an oddly ambivalent relationship to innovation. Some new findings, techniques or equipment take years to penetrate the profession; others are seized upon immediately.
A proper study of the clinical effectiveness of the Tydeman tube will necessarily involve women giving birth. Assessing the value of Debra as a simulator didn't require human subjects; and the team has already conducted such a study. Thirty obstetricians, from three NHS maternity units and with varying levels of experience, took part. They all received a brief explanation of how Debra works, and were then asked to try a timed removal of the foetal head at three different levels of difficulty. Overall, 87 per cent reported that the simulator offered a realistic experience of dealing with an impacted head, and 93 per cent thought it would be valuable as a training device.
The use of simulators to teach technical skills is now common in medical schools. You can learn to sew up a knife wound, catheterise a bladder or intubate an airway. You can practise cardiopulmonary resuscitation or ear syringing or even go through the motions of a keyhole surgical procedure. The technology required to do these things may cost a few pounds, or tens of thousands. Either way, given that most of these devices were invented during the past three or four decades, it comes as something of a surprise to learn that simulation for medical purposes can be traced back as far as the Chinese Song dynasty of 960-1279 AD.
One of the treatments of choice in that era was, naturally, acupuncture. But how to teach tyro-acupuncturists where to place the needles? Simple. A life-size bronze statue dotted with small holes indicated the points of insertion. And how then to test the students' grasp of their subject? If the statute was hollow, filled with liquid and given an outer coating of wax to mask the holes, a correct needle insertion would be followed by a leak.
Given the universality of childbirth it's no surprise that, then as now, the womb turns out to be the most simulated of our organs. For the benefit of 18th-century midwives and doctors-in-training, the Bologna surgeon Giovanni Antonio Galli devised a birthing simulator comprising a glass uterus supported by an artificial pelvis and containing a flexible foetus. Trainees had to deliver the baby while wearing a blindfold. Only the tutor could witness the fumbling of their hands.
As the material for a convincing simulation, glass clearly has its drawbacks. But another 18th-century contraption used a pink cloth-covered mannequin comprising a female torso complete with genitalia, a set of implantable foetuses of various ages, and even – a real
coup de théâtre
, this – a facility for exuding suitably coloured liquids at the appropriate moment.
Oddly, as medicine became more scientific, most of these devices fell by the wayside. As an academic review of these and other devices has pointed out, much of the 20th century was something of Dark Ages for simulation. Its value in professional training has had to be rediscovered: an endeavour in which inventive people like Graham Tydeman, sometimes with workshops rich in discarded junk, are still fruitfully engaged.
This article was originally published on TheLong+Short. Read the original article. | The frequency has gradually decreased | The frequency has plateaued | The frequency has no significant trend | The frequency has steadily increased | 3 |
99912_26PU82E5_5 | What risk, according to the author, is increased by practitioners who are wary of performing C-sections? | Obstetrics for beginners
It's my first go at delivering a baby by caesarean section – and the foetal head is impacted, jammed in its mother's pelvis. To be honest I'm struggling.
Incisions have been made in the lower part of the mother's abdomen and womb. I've pushed my gloved hand inside and managed to slide my fingers between the baby's head and the surrounding uterine tissue. But it's difficult. The baby is tightly wedged in. I've had to push hard to get my hand to the far side of its head, and even though I'm now cupping and grasping it in the approved manner, I can't seem to pull it out. Dare I grip its head more firmly? Dare I pull harder?
The baby's mother – she's called Debra – remains impassive throughout these agonised fumblings. Her face reveals nothing of what she may be feeling. But then Debra has no feelings. Indeed she has no face…
So you can stop worrying. Debra – Desperate Debra to use her full trade name – is a simulator designed to help doctors practise their skill at dealing with impacted foetuses: babies that get stuck trying to exit the womb by the normal route. She comprises the lower two thirds (ie from the mid-chest region downwards) of a life-sized but limbless female torso made of flesh-coloured silicone rubber. She comes with a vulva, a pre-cut incision in her abdomen and, most importantly, a uterus containing a foetal head that should, in the normal way of things, be free to emerge between her legs. But this fetus is going nowhere until an obstetrician – or in this case me – can successfully grasp and pull it out.
The clever and sophisticated simulator I'm playing with started life as a lash-up in an obstetrician's home workshop: a Heath Robinson-style contraption barely recognisable as a model of the human body. But it wasn't at that stage intended as a simulator for training medical staff. Its sole purpose was to test the effectiveness of a novel device called a Tydeman tube. Paradoxically, although the testing equipment, Debra, is now commercially available, the device it was intended to test has yet to reach the market.
The inventor of the tube and of Desperate Debra is Dr Graham Tydeman, a consultant in obstetrics and gynaecology at Victoria Hospital in Kirkcaldy, Fife. Only after he'd built Debra did he realise that she might serve a purpose beyond his original intention. His is a decade-long tale of inspired insights, thwarted aims and shifting purposes; but with a good outcome. Although the Tydeman tube is still in gestation, Desperate Debra herself is now thriving.
To understand the desperation of Debra and how the Tydeman tube might help to relieve it requires a brief foray into basic obstetric knowhow. Evolution has endowed us with heads proportionally so large that even when labour runs according to plan, the delivery process involves a bit of a squeeze. For the baby's head to get stuck on the way out may not be usual, but it's by no means a rarity.
The standard response is to perform a caesarean section. Every year some 160,000 babies are born in the UK this way, with almost two thirds of them classified as emergencies. One audit has suggested that roughly 8,000 babies get stuck and have to be delivered by caesarean at a stage when their mothers are fully dilated. "Some of the babies will be so close to coming out by the normal route," says Tydeman, "that it's then difficult to get them back up and remove them through the hole in the woman's tummy." Which women are most at risk of this setback seems to be largely unpredictable. "We just observe that it happens… It's been discussed in the medical literature since the 1940s, but until 10 years ago, and throughout my training and most of my life as a consultant, it wasn't really talked about."
Considering the universality of childbirth, impaction and the best way of dealing with it are topics that seem to have gone remarkably unstudied. "There are strong opinions about why it happens and what to do, but very little research evidence," says Tydeman, adding that many of these opinions are contradictory.
In a protracted birth that's destined to end with a caesarean, the longer the labour is allowed to go on before the obstetrician decides to intervene, the greater the likelihood that the baby's head will become impacted. However, concern over the rising number of babies born by caesarean has made doctors more wary of doing them – one consequence of which is that medical staff may allow a difficult birth to continue for longer before they resort to surgery. This could be boosting the frequency of impaction. But, again, no one is certain.
When obstetricians doing planned caesareans slice open a mother's womb, what they usually see is the baby's head. By slipping a hand round and below it they can easily guide the baby out. "When you do a caesarean for an impacted baby," says Tydeman, "you make the incision in the same place, but what you might come across is a shoulder because the baby's so much further down [the birth canal]." As I'd discovered for myself, sliding a hand around the baby's head is then far more difficult. "It makes your fingers hurt," says Tydeman. "It makes your pulse rate go up to about 200, and you break out in a sweat because know you've only got about five or 10 minutes before there are serious consequences. The clock is ticking."
If a baby's head is jammed down in the mother's pelvic region, common sense suggests that it might help if a second person gives a gentle backward push on the area of its head visible through the mother's dilated cervix. "In our unit," says Tydeman, "when the woman is fully dilated and you'd expect the baby to come out normally [but it doesn't]… a registrar will be asking for a push-up about one in five times." Although registrars are doctors still in training, they're nonetheless experienced; which suggests requests for push-ups during unplanned caesareans are far from uncommon. The Tydeman tube is a gadget intended to make this manoeuvre safer and more effective.
Creativity and innovation have many unlikely sources. What seems to have inspired Tydeman to develop his device was the characteristic sound of a Wellington boot being pulled free of wet, muddy ground: a slurpy, sucking, gurgling noise. When an impacted foetal head is pulled free of the uterus it's often accompanied by a similar sucking noise, the result of air rushing in between the obstetrician's fingers to fill the space vacated. "What occurred to me years ago was that if the air can't get in, why not put a tube up into the vagina so that it can get in from below the baby's head." From time to time, if he felt he felt the baby might stick, Tydeman would slip a length of sterile silicone tubing through the woman's vagina and up into the womb next to the baby's head. Allowing air in by this route would release any suction forces tending to hold it where it was.
Tydeman didn't do much with the idea until 10 years ago when one trainee, who was experiencing real difficulty getting heads out, prompted him to think again about the problem. Around the same time, he met professor of obstetrics Andrew Shennan and consultant midwife Annette Briley, both of the Women's Health Academic Centre at St Thomas's hospital. Between them they came up with a device – the Tydeman tube – to make pushing on the foetus more controlled while simultaneously releasing any vacuum that might be holding it in place.
The instrument is made up of a rigid plastic tube opening into a softer silicone cup. Pressure to the foetal head is applied using four pads projecting forward from the cup's interior. Holding the device by the tube, the user places the cup against the part of the head exposed through the dilated cervix, and presses. This pushes the baby back up into the uterus while releasing any suction pressure that may have been holding it, so allowing the obstetrician to extract it more easily. Because pressure is distributed equally between the four pads with a greater combined surface area than that of a user's fingertips, the risk of inadvertent damage is minimised.
The team found some money to employ a product designer who used computer-aided design technology and 3D printing to make a prototype. "We were at the point of getting one made in silicone," says Tydeman, "when we realised that before we started experimenting on women we really ought to test it on a simulator." No such simulator existed – so he decided to make one himself.
That Tydeman was able to do this comes as no great surprise once you've glanced at his website. His career may be rooted in medicine but his interests encompass sculpture, furniture making and much else. He works in wood, glass, metals and plastic. "I've got a big workshop with a lathe and a forge," he says. "I make stuff. I always have, ever since I was a child. My dad was a woodwork teacher, my mum was very creative with fabric."
Although tests carried out with the Debra prototype showed that the tube would work as intended, Tydeman and his colleagues then faced what he calls a kind of medical catch-22. "We had the tube finished about three years ago… but we were more interested in trying to save lives than selling a product. We thought that the right thing to do before commercialising it was to be sure we'd got the best design." They tried it on a dozen or so women in labour, and concluded that it did what it supposed to. But they held off trying to market it because they wanted to do more extensive, more rigorous clinical studies.
This presented a problem. "If you've applied for research money," says Tydeman, "but you've already got what seems to be a commercially viable design, potential funders are going to say that the company aiming to sell it should pay for the work." On the other hand, commercial interest is easier to drum up if you've already got evidence that a device is safe and effective.
That said, the team didn't want to leave the tube sitting on the shelf. So they eventually decided to go ahead and find a commercial partner willing to manufacture and market it. They have now identified one, and are fairly confident it will soon be in production. With sufficient users it should then be possible to compile factual – as opposed to anecdotal – evidence of benefit. Not ideal, Tydeman concedes, but the best they can do at present.
In the meantime, back to Desperate Debra: so named, Tydeman says, not after any particular person but because the appellation is memorably alliterative. He put together the original Debra in a weekend. The skin was made out of a neoprene wetsuit fixed to a scaffolding formed from plastic tubing he'd found 20 years ago in skip outside a Glasgow pub; the head was cast in silicone from a model he'd made in plasticine, and the rest comprised old springs and other bits of stuff lying around his workshop. "It wasn't actually that difficult," Tydeman says.
When originally conceived, remember, Debra was simply a means of testing the effectiveness of the tube. What she looked like was neither here nor there. It was only once Debra was reborn as a teaching aid that she needed sprucing up.
Tydeman can remember the exact moment when the idea of her having a greater role dawned on him. "I was on the sleeper train down from Scotland to London," he says. "Debra was with me because the first Tydeman tube had become available at St Thomas's… It was about midnight, I'd had my free whisky and I suddenly thought, 'Blow me! Even if the tube doesn't work, Debra could be useful as a teaching aid'."
The following morning, at St Thomas's, Tydeman asked a visiting professor of obstetrics to have a look at Debra and tell him what she thought. She put her hand into Debra's womb, grasped the foetal head and said it felt just like the real thing. "Terribly flattering," Tydeman laughs.
With a grant from the Guy's and St Thomas's Charity fund they made Debra more presentable. Tydeman showed the prototype to Adam Rouilly, an established company specialising in medical models and simulators. They were impressed. A year later, the first of Debra's smartened-up sisters was on the market.
In Debra as she is now, the precise extent and nature of her desperation can be fine-tuned according to need. The foetal head inside her uterus can be moved to mimic the various positions that an unborn baby may adopt. By tightening a spring inside Debra's body, it's also possible vary the degree of impaction from mild to so severe that the head is virtually impossible to extract. In this way she simulates the full range of difficulty that obstetricians are likely to encounter.
So how valuable in training medical staff is a simulator like this? Very, according to Annette Briley. Imagine it's the middle of the night and an unplanned emergency caesarean is required: "Some poor junior doctor might find himself trying to manage it on his own." To have practised the knack of extracting a firmly impacted baby from a simulator is lot better than first honing your skill on a real woman.
At St Thomas's, midwives in training also get an opportunity to practise on Debra. The chances that midwives will find themselves having to do the actual extraction of an infant are slim; but they're quite likely to be asked to help the obstetrician by pushing a stuck baby from below. Debra's anatomy allows them to practise this skill; and to learn where and how hard to push on the infant skull. "Any practice you've done in the cold light of day will help you stay calm and composed in an emergency, and that's what we're aiming for," says Briley.
It's still too soon to make a final judgement about Debra’s impact. "When we first brought Debra out," Briley recalls, "some of the really experienced professors said things like, 'We always managed without one. Why would you need this?' But ask them to have a go at using it and then they admit it's really good." Medicine as a whole has an oddly ambivalent relationship to innovation. Some new findings, techniques or equipment take years to penetrate the profession; others are seized upon immediately.
A proper study of the clinical effectiveness of the Tydeman tube will necessarily involve women giving birth. Assessing the value of Debra as a simulator didn't require human subjects; and the team has already conducted such a study. Thirty obstetricians, from three NHS maternity units and with varying levels of experience, took part. They all received a brief explanation of how Debra works, and were then asked to try a timed removal of the foetal head at three different levels of difficulty. Overall, 87 per cent reported that the simulator offered a realistic experience of dealing with an impacted head, and 93 per cent thought it would be valuable as a training device.
The use of simulators to teach technical skills is now common in medical schools. You can learn to sew up a knife wound, catheterise a bladder or intubate an airway. You can practise cardiopulmonary resuscitation or ear syringing or even go through the motions of a keyhole surgical procedure. The technology required to do these things may cost a few pounds, or tens of thousands. Either way, given that most of these devices were invented during the past three or four decades, it comes as something of a surprise to learn that simulation for medical purposes can be traced back as far as the Chinese Song dynasty of 960-1279 AD.
One of the treatments of choice in that era was, naturally, acupuncture. But how to teach tyro-acupuncturists where to place the needles? Simple. A life-size bronze statue dotted with small holes indicated the points of insertion. And how then to test the students' grasp of their subject? If the statute was hollow, filled with liquid and given an outer coating of wax to mask the holes, a correct needle insertion would be followed by a leak.
Given the universality of childbirth it's no surprise that, then as now, the womb turns out to be the most simulated of our organs. For the benefit of 18th-century midwives and doctors-in-training, the Bologna surgeon Giovanni Antonio Galli devised a birthing simulator comprising a glass uterus supported by an artificial pelvis and containing a flexible foetus. Trainees had to deliver the baby while wearing a blindfold. Only the tutor could witness the fumbling of their hands.
As the material for a convincing simulation, glass clearly has its drawbacks. But another 18th-century contraption used a pink cloth-covered mannequin comprising a female torso complete with genitalia, a set of implantable foetuses of various ages, and even – a real
coup de théâtre
, this – a facility for exuding suitably coloured liquids at the appropriate moment.
Oddly, as medicine became more scientific, most of these devices fell by the wayside. As an academic review of these and other devices has pointed out, much of the 20th century was something of Dark Ages for simulation. Its value in professional training has had to be rediscovered: an endeavour in which inventive people like Graham Tydeman, sometimes with workshops rich in discarded junk, are still fruitfully engaged.
This article was originally published on TheLong+Short. Read the original article. | They could be sued for malpractice if the fetus does not survive childbirth | They could be sued for malpractice if the mother does not survive childbirth | They could increase the prevalence of impaction and, therefore, challenging births | They could accidentally make the incision in the wrong location, necessitating further costly surgeries | 2 |
99912_26PU82E5_6 | What inspired Tydeman to develop his device? | Obstetrics for beginners
It's my first go at delivering a baby by caesarean section – and the foetal head is impacted, jammed in its mother's pelvis. To be honest I'm struggling.
Incisions have been made in the lower part of the mother's abdomen and womb. I've pushed my gloved hand inside and managed to slide my fingers between the baby's head and the surrounding uterine tissue. But it's difficult. The baby is tightly wedged in. I've had to push hard to get my hand to the far side of its head, and even though I'm now cupping and grasping it in the approved manner, I can't seem to pull it out. Dare I grip its head more firmly? Dare I pull harder?
The baby's mother – she's called Debra – remains impassive throughout these agonised fumblings. Her face reveals nothing of what she may be feeling. But then Debra has no feelings. Indeed she has no face…
So you can stop worrying. Debra – Desperate Debra to use her full trade name – is a simulator designed to help doctors practise their skill at dealing with impacted foetuses: babies that get stuck trying to exit the womb by the normal route. She comprises the lower two thirds (ie from the mid-chest region downwards) of a life-sized but limbless female torso made of flesh-coloured silicone rubber. She comes with a vulva, a pre-cut incision in her abdomen and, most importantly, a uterus containing a foetal head that should, in the normal way of things, be free to emerge between her legs. But this fetus is going nowhere until an obstetrician – or in this case me – can successfully grasp and pull it out.
The clever and sophisticated simulator I'm playing with started life as a lash-up in an obstetrician's home workshop: a Heath Robinson-style contraption barely recognisable as a model of the human body. But it wasn't at that stage intended as a simulator for training medical staff. Its sole purpose was to test the effectiveness of a novel device called a Tydeman tube. Paradoxically, although the testing equipment, Debra, is now commercially available, the device it was intended to test has yet to reach the market.
The inventor of the tube and of Desperate Debra is Dr Graham Tydeman, a consultant in obstetrics and gynaecology at Victoria Hospital in Kirkcaldy, Fife. Only after he'd built Debra did he realise that she might serve a purpose beyond his original intention. His is a decade-long tale of inspired insights, thwarted aims and shifting purposes; but with a good outcome. Although the Tydeman tube is still in gestation, Desperate Debra herself is now thriving.
To understand the desperation of Debra and how the Tydeman tube might help to relieve it requires a brief foray into basic obstetric knowhow. Evolution has endowed us with heads proportionally so large that even when labour runs according to plan, the delivery process involves a bit of a squeeze. For the baby's head to get stuck on the way out may not be usual, but it's by no means a rarity.
The standard response is to perform a caesarean section. Every year some 160,000 babies are born in the UK this way, with almost two thirds of them classified as emergencies. One audit has suggested that roughly 8,000 babies get stuck and have to be delivered by caesarean at a stage when their mothers are fully dilated. "Some of the babies will be so close to coming out by the normal route," says Tydeman, "that it's then difficult to get them back up and remove them through the hole in the woman's tummy." Which women are most at risk of this setback seems to be largely unpredictable. "We just observe that it happens… It's been discussed in the medical literature since the 1940s, but until 10 years ago, and throughout my training and most of my life as a consultant, it wasn't really talked about."
Considering the universality of childbirth, impaction and the best way of dealing with it are topics that seem to have gone remarkably unstudied. "There are strong opinions about why it happens and what to do, but very little research evidence," says Tydeman, adding that many of these opinions are contradictory.
In a protracted birth that's destined to end with a caesarean, the longer the labour is allowed to go on before the obstetrician decides to intervene, the greater the likelihood that the baby's head will become impacted. However, concern over the rising number of babies born by caesarean has made doctors more wary of doing them – one consequence of which is that medical staff may allow a difficult birth to continue for longer before they resort to surgery. This could be boosting the frequency of impaction. But, again, no one is certain.
When obstetricians doing planned caesareans slice open a mother's womb, what they usually see is the baby's head. By slipping a hand round and below it they can easily guide the baby out. "When you do a caesarean for an impacted baby," says Tydeman, "you make the incision in the same place, but what you might come across is a shoulder because the baby's so much further down [the birth canal]." As I'd discovered for myself, sliding a hand around the baby's head is then far more difficult. "It makes your fingers hurt," says Tydeman. "It makes your pulse rate go up to about 200, and you break out in a sweat because know you've only got about five or 10 minutes before there are serious consequences. The clock is ticking."
If a baby's head is jammed down in the mother's pelvic region, common sense suggests that it might help if a second person gives a gentle backward push on the area of its head visible through the mother's dilated cervix. "In our unit," says Tydeman, "when the woman is fully dilated and you'd expect the baby to come out normally [but it doesn't]… a registrar will be asking for a push-up about one in five times." Although registrars are doctors still in training, they're nonetheless experienced; which suggests requests for push-ups during unplanned caesareans are far from uncommon. The Tydeman tube is a gadget intended to make this manoeuvre safer and more effective.
Creativity and innovation have many unlikely sources. What seems to have inspired Tydeman to develop his device was the characteristic sound of a Wellington boot being pulled free of wet, muddy ground: a slurpy, sucking, gurgling noise. When an impacted foetal head is pulled free of the uterus it's often accompanied by a similar sucking noise, the result of air rushing in between the obstetrician's fingers to fill the space vacated. "What occurred to me years ago was that if the air can't get in, why not put a tube up into the vagina so that it can get in from below the baby's head." From time to time, if he felt he felt the baby might stick, Tydeman would slip a length of sterile silicone tubing through the woman's vagina and up into the womb next to the baby's head. Allowing air in by this route would release any suction forces tending to hold it where it was.
Tydeman didn't do much with the idea until 10 years ago when one trainee, who was experiencing real difficulty getting heads out, prompted him to think again about the problem. Around the same time, he met professor of obstetrics Andrew Shennan and consultant midwife Annette Briley, both of the Women's Health Academic Centre at St Thomas's hospital. Between them they came up with a device – the Tydeman tube – to make pushing on the foetus more controlled while simultaneously releasing any vacuum that might be holding it in place.
The instrument is made up of a rigid plastic tube opening into a softer silicone cup. Pressure to the foetal head is applied using four pads projecting forward from the cup's interior. Holding the device by the tube, the user places the cup against the part of the head exposed through the dilated cervix, and presses. This pushes the baby back up into the uterus while releasing any suction pressure that may have been holding it, so allowing the obstetrician to extract it more easily. Because pressure is distributed equally between the four pads with a greater combined surface area than that of a user's fingertips, the risk of inadvertent damage is minimised.
The team found some money to employ a product designer who used computer-aided design technology and 3D printing to make a prototype. "We were at the point of getting one made in silicone," says Tydeman, "when we realised that before we started experimenting on women we really ought to test it on a simulator." No such simulator existed – so he decided to make one himself.
That Tydeman was able to do this comes as no great surprise once you've glanced at his website. His career may be rooted in medicine but his interests encompass sculpture, furniture making and much else. He works in wood, glass, metals and plastic. "I've got a big workshop with a lathe and a forge," he says. "I make stuff. I always have, ever since I was a child. My dad was a woodwork teacher, my mum was very creative with fabric."
Although tests carried out with the Debra prototype showed that the tube would work as intended, Tydeman and his colleagues then faced what he calls a kind of medical catch-22. "We had the tube finished about three years ago… but we were more interested in trying to save lives than selling a product. We thought that the right thing to do before commercialising it was to be sure we'd got the best design." They tried it on a dozen or so women in labour, and concluded that it did what it supposed to. But they held off trying to market it because they wanted to do more extensive, more rigorous clinical studies.
This presented a problem. "If you've applied for research money," says Tydeman, "but you've already got what seems to be a commercially viable design, potential funders are going to say that the company aiming to sell it should pay for the work." On the other hand, commercial interest is easier to drum up if you've already got evidence that a device is safe and effective.
That said, the team didn't want to leave the tube sitting on the shelf. So they eventually decided to go ahead and find a commercial partner willing to manufacture and market it. They have now identified one, and are fairly confident it will soon be in production. With sufficient users it should then be possible to compile factual – as opposed to anecdotal – evidence of benefit. Not ideal, Tydeman concedes, but the best they can do at present.
In the meantime, back to Desperate Debra: so named, Tydeman says, not after any particular person but because the appellation is memorably alliterative. He put together the original Debra in a weekend. The skin was made out of a neoprene wetsuit fixed to a scaffolding formed from plastic tubing he'd found 20 years ago in skip outside a Glasgow pub; the head was cast in silicone from a model he'd made in plasticine, and the rest comprised old springs and other bits of stuff lying around his workshop. "It wasn't actually that difficult," Tydeman says.
When originally conceived, remember, Debra was simply a means of testing the effectiveness of the tube. What she looked like was neither here nor there. It was only once Debra was reborn as a teaching aid that she needed sprucing up.
Tydeman can remember the exact moment when the idea of her having a greater role dawned on him. "I was on the sleeper train down from Scotland to London," he says. "Debra was with me because the first Tydeman tube had become available at St Thomas's… It was about midnight, I'd had my free whisky and I suddenly thought, 'Blow me! Even if the tube doesn't work, Debra could be useful as a teaching aid'."
The following morning, at St Thomas's, Tydeman asked a visiting professor of obstetrics to have a look at Debra and tell him what she thought. She put her hand into Debra's womb, grasped the foetal head and said it felt just like the real thing. "Terribly flattering," Tydeman laughs.
With a grant from the Guy's and St Thomas's Charity fund they made Debra more presentable. Tydeman showed the prototype to Adam Rouilly, an established company specialising in medical models and simulators. They were impressed. A year later, the first of Debra's smartened-up sisters was on the market.
In Debra as she is now, the precise extent and nature of her desperation can be fine-tuned according to need. The foetal head inside her uterus can be moved to mimic the various positions that an unborn baby may adopt. By tightening a spring inside Debra's body, it's also possible vary the degree of impaction from mild to so severe that the head is virtually impossible to extract. In this way she simulates the full range of difficulty that obstetricians are likely to encounter.
So how valuable in training medical staff is a simulator like this? Very, according to Annette Briley. Imagine it's the middle of the night and an unplanned emergency caesarean is required: "Some poor junior doctor might find himself trying to manage it on his own." To have practised the knack of extracting a firmly impacted baby from a simulator is lot better than first honing your skill on a real woman.
At St Thomas's, midwives in training also get an opportunity to practise on Debra. The chances that midwives will find themselves having to do the actual extraction of an infant are slim; but they're quite likely to be asked to help the obstetrician by pushing a stuck baby from below. Debra's anatomy allows them to practise this skill; and to learn where and how hard to push on the infant skull. "Any practice you've done in the cold light of day will help you stay calm and composed in an emergency, and that's what we're aiming for," says Briley.
It's still too soon to make a final judgement about Debra’s impact. "When we first brought Debra out," Briley recalls, "some of the really experienced professors said things like, 'We always managed without one. Why would you need this?' But ask them to have a go at using it and then they admit it's really good." Medicine as a whole has an oddly ambivalent relationship to innovation. Some new findings, techniques or equipment take years to penetrate the profession; others are seized upon immediately.
A proper study of the clinical effectiveness of the Tydeman tube will necessarily involve women giving birth. Assessing the value of Debra as a simulator didn't require human subjects; and the team has already conducted such a study. Thirty obstetricians, from three NHS maternity units and with varying levels of experience, took part. They all received a brief explanation of how Debra works, and were then asked to try a timed removal of the foetal head at three different levels of difficulty. Overall, 87 per cent reported that the simulator offered a realistic experience of dealing with an impacted head, and 93 per cent thought it would be valuable as a training device.
The use of simulators to teach technical skills is now common in medical schools. You can learn to sew up a knife wound, catheterise a bladder or intubate an airway. You can practise cardiopulmonary resuscitation or ear syringing or even go through the motions of a keyhole surgical procedure. The technology required to do these things may cost a few pounds, or tens of thousands. Either way, given that most of these devices were invented during the past three or four decades, it comes as something of a surprise to learn that simulation for medical purposes can be traced back as far as the Chinese Song dynasty of 960-1279 AD.
One of the treatments of choice in that era was, naturally, acupuncture. But how to teach tyro-acupuncturists where to place the needles? Simple. A life-size bronze statue dotted with small holes indicated the points of insertion. And how then to test the students' grasp of their subject? If the statute was hollow, filled with liquid and given an outer coating of wax to mask the holes, a correct needle insertion would be followed by a leak.
Given the universality of childbirth it's no surprise that, then as now, the womb turns out to be the most simulated of our organs. For the benefit of 18th-century midwives and doctors-in-training, the Bologna surgeon Giovanni Antonio Galli devised a birthing simulator comprising a glass uterus supported by an artificial pelvis and containing a flexible foetus. Trainees had to deliver the baby while wearing a blindfold. Only the tutor could witness the fumbling of their hands.
As the material for a convincing simulation, glass clearly has its drawbacks. But another 18th-century contraption used a pink cloth-covered mannequin comprising a female torso complete with genitalia, a set of implantable foetuses of various ages, and even – a real
coup de théâtre
, this – a facility for exuding suitably coloured liquids at the appropriate moment.
Oddly, as medicine became more scientific, most of these devices fell by the wayside. As an academic review of these and other devices has pointed out, much of the 20th century was something of Dark Ages for simulation. Its value in professional training has had to be rediscovered: an endeavour in which inventive people like Graham Tydeman, sometimes with workshops rich in discarded junk, are still fruitfully engaged.
This article was originally published on TheLong+Short. Read the original article. | A mannequin | A sound | An advertisement | A smell | 1 |
99912_26PU82E5_7 | According to Tydeman, what has caused the Tydeman tube to not get sold/approved? | Obstetrics for beginners
It's my first go at delivering a baby by caesarean section – and the foetal head is impacted, jammed in its mother's pelvis. To be honest I'm struggling.
Incisions have been made in the lower part of the mother's abdomen and womb. I've pushed my gloved hand inside and managed to slide my fingers between the baby's head and the surrounding uterine tissue. But it's difficult. The baby is tightly wedged in. I've had to push hard to get my hand to the far side of its head, and even though I'm now cupping and grasping it in the approved manner, I can't seem to pull it out. Dare I grip its head more firmly? Dare I pull harder?
The baby's mother – she's called Debra – remains impassive throughout these agonised fumblings. Her face reveals nothing of what she may be feeling. But then Debra has no feelings. Indeed she has no face…
So you can stop worrying. Debra – Desperate Debra to use her full trade name – is a simulator designed to help doctors practise their skill at dealing with impacted foetuses: babies that get stuck trying to exit the womb by the normal route. She comprises the lower two thirds (ie from the mid-chest region downwards) of a life-sized but limbless female torso made of flesh-coloured silicone rubber. She comes with a vulva, a pre-cut incision in her abdomen and, most importantly, a uterus containing a foetal head that should, in the normal way of things, be free to emerge between her legs. But this fetus is going nowhere until an obstetrician – or in this case me – can successfully grasp and pull it out.
The clever and sophisticated simulator I'm playing with started life as a lash-up in an obstetrician's home workshop: a Heath Robinson-style contraption barely recognisable as a model of the human body. But it wasn't at that stage intended as a simulator for training medical staff. Its sole purpose was to test the effectiveness of a novel device called a Tydeman tube. Paradoxically, although the testing equipment, Debra, is now commercially available, the device it was intended to test has yet to reach the market.
The inventor of the tube and of Desperate Debra is Dr Graham Tydeman, a consultant in obstetrics and gynaecology at Victoria Hospital in Kirkcaldy, Fife. Only after he'd built Debra did he realise that she might serve a purpose beyond his original intention. His is a decade-long tale of inspired insights, thwarted aims and shifting purposes; but with a good outcome. Although the Tydeman tube is still in gestation, Desperate Debra herself is now thriving.
To understand the desperation of Debra and how the Tydeman tube might help to relieve it requires a brief foray into basic obstetric knowhow. Evolution has endowed us with heads proportionally so large that even when labour runs according to plan, the delivery process involves a bit of a squeeze. For the baby's head to get stuck on the way out may not be usual, but it's by no means a rarity.
The standard response is to perform a caesarean section. Every year some 160,000 babies are born in the UK this way, with almost two thirds of them classified as emergencies. One audit has suggested that roughly 8,000 babies get stuck and have to be delivered by caesarean at a stage when their mothers are fully dilated. "Some of the babies will be so close to coming out by the normal route," says Tydeman, "that it's then difficult to get them back up and remove them through the hole in the woman's tummy." Which women are most at risk of this setback seems to be largely unpredictable. "We just observe that it happens… It's been discussed in the medical literature since the 1940s, but until 10 years ago, and throughout my training and most of my life as a consultant, it wasn't really talked about."
Considering the universality of childbirth, impaction and the best way of dealing with it are topics that seem to have gone remarkably unstudied. "There are strong opinions about why it happens and what to do, but very little research evidence," says Tydeman, adding that many of these opinions are contradictory.
In a protracted birth that's destined to end with a caesarean, the longer the labour is allowed to go on before the obstetrician decides to intervene, the greater the likelihood that the baby's head will become impacted. However, concern over the rising number of babies born by caesarean has made doctors more wary of doing them – one consequence of which is that medical staff may allow a difficult birth to continue for longer before they resort to surgery. This could be boosting the frequency of impaction. But, again, no one is certain.
When obstetricians doing planned caesareans slice open a mother's womb, what they usually see is the baby's head. By slipping a hand round and below it they can easily guide the baby out. "When you do a caesarean for an impacted baby," says Tydeman, "you make the incision in the same place, but what you might come across is a shoulder because the baby's so much further down [the birth canal]." As I'd discovered for myself, sliding a hand around the baby's head is then far more difficult. "It makes your fingers hurt," says Tydeman. "It makes your pulse rate go up to about 200, and you break out in a sweat because know you've only got about five or 10 minutes before there are serious consequences. The clock is ticking."
If a baby's head is jammed down in the mother's pelvic region, common sense suggests that it might help if a second person gives a gentle backward push on the area of its head visible through the mother's dilated cervix. "In our unit," says Tydeman, "when the woman is fully dilated and you'd expect the baby to come out normally [but it doesn't]… a registrar will be asking for a push-up about one in five times." Although registrars are doctors still in training, they're nonetheless experienced; which suggests requests for push-ups during unplanned caesareans are far from uncommon. The Tydeman tube is a gadget intended to make this manoeuvre safer and more effective.
Creativity and innovation have many unlikely sources. What seems to have inspired Tydeman to develop his device was the characteristic sound of a Wellington boot being pulled free of wet, muddy ground: a slurpy, sucking, gurgling noise. When an impacted foetal head is pulled free of the uterus it's often accompanied by a similar sucking noise, the result of air rushing in between the obstetrician's fingers to fill the space vacated. "What occurred to me years ago was that if the air can't get in, why not put a tube up into the vagina so that it can get in from below the baby's head." From time to time, if he felt he felt the baby might stick, Tydeman would slip a length of sterile silicone tubing through the woman's vagina and up into the womb next to the baby's head. Allowing air in by this route would release any suction forces tending to hold it where it was.
Tydeman didn't do much with the idea until 10 years ago when one trainee, who was experiencing real difficulty getting heads out, prompted him to think again about the problem. Around the same time, he met professor of obstetrics Andrew Shennan and consultant midwife Annette Briley, both of the Women's Health Academic Centre at St Thomas's hospital. Between them they came up with a device – the Tydeman tube – to make pushing on the foetus more controlled while simultaneously releasing any vacuum that might be holding it in place.
The instrument is made up of a rigid plastic tube opening into a softer silicone cup. Pressure to the foetal head is applied using four pads projecting forward from the cup's interior. Holding the device by the tube, the user places the cup against the part of the head exposed through the dilated cervix, and presses. This pushes the baby back up into the uterus while releasing any suction pressure that may have been holding it, so allowing the obstetrician to extract it more easily. Because pressure is distributed equally between the four pads with a greater combined surface area than that of a user's fingertips, the risk of inadvertent damage is minimised.
The team found some money to employ a product designer who used computer-aided design technology and 3D printing to make a prototype. "We were at the point of getting one made in silicone," says Tydeman, "when we realised that before we started experimenting on women we really ought to test it on a simulator." No such simulator existed – so he decided to make one himself.
That Tydeman was able to do this comes as no great surprise once you've glanced at his website. His career may be rooted in medicine but his interests encompass sculpture, furniture making and much else. He works in wood, glass, metals and plastic. "I've got a big workshop with a lathe and a forge," he says. "I make stuff. I always have, ever since I was a child. My dad was a woodwork teacher, my mum was very creative with fabric."
Although tests carried out with the Debra prototype showed that the tube would work as intended, Tydeman and his colleagues then faced what he calls a kind of medical catch-22. "We had the tube finished about three years ago… but we were more interested in trying to save lives than selling a product. We thought that the right thing to do before commercialising it was to be sure we'd got the best design." They tried it on a dozen or so women in labour, and concluded that it did what it supposed to. But they held off trying to market it because they wanted to do more extensive, more rigorous clinical studies.
This presented a problem. "If you've applied for research money," says Tydeman, "but you've already got what seems to be a commercially viable design, potential funders are going to say that the company aiming to sell it should pay for the work." On the other hand, commercial interest is easier to drum up if you've already got evidence that a device is safe and effective.
That said, the team didn't want to leave the tube sitting on the shelf. So they eventually decided to go ahead and find a commercial partner willing to manufacture and market it. They have now identified one, and are fairly confident it will soon be in production. With sufficient users it should then be possible to compile factual – as opposed to anecdotal – evidence of benefit. Not ideal, Tydeman concedes, but the best they can do at present.
In the meantime, back to Desperate Debra: so named, Tydeman says, not after any particular person but because the appellation is memorably alliterative. He put together the original Debra in a weekend. The skin was made out of a neoprene wetsuit fixed to a scaffolding formed from plastic tubing he'd found 20 years ago in skip outside a Glasgow pub; the head was cast in silicone from a model he'd made in plasticine, and the rest comprised old springs and other bits of stuff lying around his workshop. "It wasn't actually that difficult," Tydeman says.
When originally conceived, remember, Debra was simply a means of testing the effectiveness of the tube. What she looked like was neither here nor there. It was only once Debra was reborn as a teaching aid that she needed sprucing up.
Tydeman can remember the exact moment when the idea of her having a greater role dawned on him. "I was on the sleeper train down from Scotland to London," he says. "Debra was with me because the first Tydeman tube had become available at St Thomas's… It was about midnight, I'd had my free whisky and I suddenly thought, 'Blow me! Even if the tube doesn't work, Debra could be useful as a teaching aid'."
The following morning, at St Thomas's, Tydeman asked a visiting professor of obstetrics to have a look at Debra and tell him what she thought. She put her hand into Debra's womb, grasped the foetal head and said it felt just like the real thing. "Terribly flattering," Tydeman laughs.
With a grant from the Guy's and St Thomas's Charity fund they made Debra more presentable. Tydeman showed the prototype to Adam Rouilly, an established company specialising in medical models and simulators. They were impressed. A year later, the first of Debra's smartened-up sisters was on the market.
In Debra as she is now, the precise extent and nature of her desperation can be fine-tuned according to need. The foetal head inside her uterus can be moved to mimic the various positions that an unborn baby may adopt. By tightening a spring inside Debra's body, it's also possible vary the degree of impaction from mild to so severe that the head is virtually impossible to extract. In this way she simulates the full range of difficulty that obstetricians are likely to encounter.
So how valuable in training medical staff is a simulator like this? Very, according to Annette Briley. Imagine it's the middle of the night and an unplanned emergency caesarean is required: "Some poor junior doctor might find himself trying to manage it on his own." To have practised the knack of extracting a firmly impacted baby from a simulator is lot better than first honing your skill on a real woman.
At St Thomas's, midwives in training also get an opportunity to practise on Debra. The chances that midwives will find themselves having to do the actual extraction of an infant are slim; but they're quite likely to be asked to help the obstetrician by pushing a stuck baby from below. Debra's anatomy allows them to practise this skill; and to learn where and how hard to push on the infant skull. "Any practice you've done in the cold light of day will help you stay calm and composed in an emergency, and that's what we're aiming for," says Briley.
It's still too soon to make a final judgement about Debra’s impact. "When we first brought Debra out," Briley recalls, "some of the really experienced professors said things like, 'We always managed without one. Why would you need this?' But ask them to have a go at using it and then they admit it's really good." Medicine as a whole has an oddly ambivalent relationship to innovation. Some new findings, techniques or equipment take years to penetrate the profession; others are seized upon immediately.
A proper study of the clinical effectiveness of the Tydeman tube will necessarily involve women giving birth. Assessing the value of Debra as a simulator didn't require human subjects; and the team has already conducted such a study. Thirty obstetricians, from three NHS maternity units and with varying levels of experience, took part. They all received a brief explanation of how Debra works, and were then asked to try a timed removal of the foetal head at three different levels of difficulty. Overall, 87 per cent reported that the simulator offered a realistic experience of dealing with an impacted head, and 93 per cent thought it would be valuable as a training device.
The use of simulators to teach technical skills is now common in medical schools. You can learn to sew up a knife wound, catheterise a bladder or intubate an airway. You can practise cardiopulmonary resuscitation or ear syringing or even go through the motions of a keyhole surgical procedure. The technology required to do these things may cost a few pounds, or tens of thousands. Either way, given that most of these devices were invented during the past three or four decades, it comes as something of a surprise to learn that simulation for medical purposes can be traced back as far as the Chinese Song dynasty of 960-1279 AD.
One of the treatments of choice in that era was, naturally, acupuncture. But how to teach tyro-acupuncturists where to place the needles? Simple. A life-size bronze statue dotted with small holes indicated the points of insertion. And how then to test the students' grasp of their subject? If the statute was hollow, filled with liquid and given an outer coating of wax to mask the holes, a correct needle insertion would be followed by a leak.
Given the universality of childbirth it's no surprise that, then as now, the womb turns out to be the most simulated of our organs. For the benefit of 18th-century midwives and doctors-in-training, the Bologna surgeon Giovanni Antonio Galli devised a birthing simulator comprising a glass uterus supported by an artificial pelvis and containing a flexible foetus. Trainees had to deliver the baby while wearing a blindfold. Only the tutor could witness the fumbling of their hands.
As the material for a convincing simulation, glass clearly has its drawbacks. But another 18th-century contraption used a pink cloth-covered mannequin comprising a female torso complete with genitalia, a set of implantable foetuses of various ages, and even – a real
coup de théâtre
, this – a facility for exuding suitably coloured liquids at the appropriate moment.
Oddly, as medicine became more scientific, most of these devices fell by the wayside. As an academic review of these and other devices has pointed out, much of the 20th century was something of Dark Ages for simulation. Its value in professional training has had to be rediscovered: an endeavour in which inventive people like Graham Tydeman, sometimes with workshops rich in discarded junk, are still fruitfully engaged.
This article was originally published on TheLong+Short. Read the original article. | Any products that could possibly cause death during childbirth are generally viewed with more apprehension | Because his device is so promising, investors want him to pay for its commercialization | Too many investors are competing over the rights of commercialization | Tydeman does not approve of the prototypes generated by potential investors | 1 |