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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #52228 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/52228)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Search the Sky, by Frederik Pohl and
-C. M. Kornbluth
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Search the Sky
-
-Author: Frederik Pohl
- C. M. Kornbluth
-
-Release Date: June 3, 2016 [EBook #52228]
-Last Updated: July 24, 2023
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SEARCH THE SKY ***
-
-
-
-
- By Frederik Pohl and C. M. Kornbluth
-
-
- _THE SPACE MERCHANTS_
- _SEARCH THE SKY_
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- SEARCH THE
- SKY
-
-
-
-
- by
- Frederik Pohl
- and
- C. M. Kornbluth
-
-
-
-
- BALLANTINE BOOKS · NEW YORK
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1954, BY
- FREDERIK POHL AND C. M. KORNBLUTH
- LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGUE CARD NO. 54-6478
- PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
-
-
- BALLANTINE BOOKS, INC.
- 404 Fifth Avenue, New York 18, N. Y.
-
- ------------------------------------
-
- TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE
-
-
- Extensive research did not uncover
- any evidence that the U.S. copyright
- on this publication was renewed.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- SEARCH THE
- SKY
-
-
-
-
-..... 1
-
-
-DECAY.
-
-Ross stood on the traders’ ramp, overlooking the Yards, and the word
-kept bobbing to the top of his mind.
-
-Decay.
-
-About all of Halsey’s Planet there was the imperceptible reek of decay.
-The clean, big, bustling, efficient spaceport only made the sensation
-stronger. From where he stood on the height of the Ramp, he could see
-the Yards, the spires of Halsey City ten kilometers away—and the
-tumble-down gray acres of Ghost Town between.
-
-Ross wrinkled his nose. He wasn’t a man given to brooding, but the scent
-of decay had saturated his nostrils that morning. He had tossed and
-turned all the night, wrestling with a decision. And he had got up
-early, so early that the only thing that made sense was to walk to work.
-
-And that meant walking through Ghost Town. He hadn’t done that in a long
-time, not since childhood. Ghost Town was a wonderful place to play.
-“Tag,” “Follow My Fuehrer,” “Senators and President”—all the ancient
-games took on new life when you could dodge and turn among crumbling
-ruins, dart down unmarked lanes, gallop through sagging shacks where you
-might stir out a screeching, unexpected recluse.
-
-But it was clear that—in the fifteen years between childhood games and a
-troubled man’s walk to work—Ghost Town had grown.
-
-Everybody knew that! Ask the right specialists, and they’d tell you how
-much and how fast. An acre a year, a street a month, a block a week, the
-specialists would twinkle at you, convinced that the acre, street, block
-was under control, since they could measure it.
-
-Ask the right specialists and they would tell you why it was happening.
-One answer per specialist, with an ironclad guarantee that there would
-be no overlapping of replies. “A purely psychological phenomenon, Mr.
-Ross. A vibration of the pendulum toward greater municipal compactness,
-a huddling, a mature recognition of the facts of interdependence,
-basically a step forward....”
-
-“A purely biological phenomenon, Mr. Ross. Falling birth rate due to
-biochemical deficiency of trace elements processed out of our planetary
-diet. Fortunately the situation has been recognized in time and my bill
-before the Chamber will provide....”
-
-“A purely technological problem, Mr. Ross. Maintenance of a sprawling
-city is inevitably less efficient than that of a compact unit.
-Inevitably there has been a drift back to the central areas and the
-convenience of air-conditioned walkways, winterized plazas....”
-
-Yes. It was a purely psychological-biological-technological-
-educational-demographic problem, and it was basically a step forward.
-
-Ross wondered how many Ghost Towns lay corpselike on the surface of
-Halsey’s Planet. Decay, he thought. Decay.
-
-But it had nothing to do with his problem, the problem that had kept him
-awake all the night, the problem that blighted the view before him now.
-
-The trading bell clanged. The day’s work began.
-
-For Ross it might be his last day’s work at the Yards.
-
- * * * * *
-
-He walked slowly from the ramp to the offices of the Oldham Trading
-Corporation. “Morning, Ross boy,” his breezy young boss greeted him.
-Charles Oldham IV’s father had always taken a paternal attitude toward
-his help, and Charles Oldham IV was not going to change anything that
-Daddy had done. He shook Ross’s hand at the door of the suite and
-apologized because they hadn’t been able to find a new secretary for him
-yet. They’d been looking for two weeks, but the three applicants they
-had been able to dredge up had all been hopeless. “It’s the damn
-Chamber,” said Charles Oldham IV, winsomely gesturing with his hands to
-show how helpless men of affairs were against the blundering
-interference of Government. “Damn labor shortage is nothing but a damn
-artificial scarcity crisis. Daddy saw it; he knew it was coming.”
-
-Ross almost told him he was quitting, but held back. Maybe it was
-because he didn’t want to spoil Oldham’s day with bad news, right on top
-of the opening bell. Or maybe it was because, in spite of a sleepless
-night, he still wasn’t quite sure.
-
-The morning’s work helped him to become sure. It was the same monotonous
-grind.
-
-Three freighters had arrived at dawn from Halsey’s third moon, but none
-of them was any affair of his. There was an export shipment of jewelry
-and watches to be attended to, but the ship was not to take off for
-another week. It scarcely classified as urgent. Ross worked on the
-manifests for a couple of hours, stared through his window for an hour,
-and then it was time for lunch.
-
-Little Marconi hailed him as he passed through the traders’ lounge.
-
-Of all the juniors on the Exchange, Marconi was the one Ross found
-easiest to take. He was lean and dark where Ross was solid and fair;
-worse, he stood four ranks above Ross in seniority. But, since Ross
-worked for Oldham, and Marconi worked for Haarland’s, the difference
-could be waived in social intercourse.
-
-Ross suspected that, to Marconi as to him, trading was only a job—a dull
-one, and not a crusade. And he knew that Marconi’s reading was not
-confined to bills of lading. “Lunch?” asked Marconi. “Sure,” Ross said.
-And he knew he’d probably spill his secret to the little man from
-Haarland’s.
-
-The skyroom was crowded—comparatively. All eight of the usual tables
-were taken; they pushed on into the roped-off area by the windows and
-found a table overlooking the Yards. Marconi blew dust off his chair.
-“Been a long time since this was used,” he grumbled. “Drink?” He raised
-his eyebrows when Ross nodded. It made a break; Marconi was the one
-usually who had a drink with lunch, Ross never touched it.
-
-When the drinks came, each of them said to the other in perfect
-synchronism: “I’ve got something to tell you.”
-
-They looked startled—then laughed. “Go ahead,” said Ross.
-
-The little man didn’t even argue. Rapturously he drew a photo out of his
-pocket.
-
-God, thought Ross wearily, Lurline again! He studied the picture with a
-show of interest. “New snap?” he asked brightly. “Lovely girl——” Then he
-noticed the inscription: _To my fiance, with crates of love._ “Well!” he
-said, “Fiance, is it? Congratulations, Marconi!”
-
-Marconi was almost drooling on the photo. “Next month,” he said happily.
-“A big, big wedding. For keeps, Ross—for keeps. With children!”
-
-Ross made an expression of polite surprise. “You don’t say!” he said.
-
-“It’s all down in black and white! She agrees to have two children in
-the first five years—no permissive clause, a straight guarantee. Fifteen
-hundred annual allowance per child. And, Ross, do you know what? Her
-lawyer told her right in front of me that she ought to ask for three
-thousand, and she told him, ‘No, Mr. Turek. I happen to be in love.’ How
-do you like that, Ross?”
-
-“A girl in a million,” Ross said feebly. His private thoughts were that
-Marconi had been gaffed and netted like a sugar perch. Lurline was of
-the Old Landowners, who didn’t own anything much but land these days,
-and Marconi was an undersized nobody who happened to make a very good
-living. Sure she happened to be in love. Smartest thing she could be. Of
-course, promising to have children sounded pretty special; but the
-papers were full of those things every day. Marconi could reliably be
-counted on to hang himself. He’d promise her breakfast in bed every
-third week end, or the maid that he couldn’t possibly find on the labor
-market, and the courts would throw all the promises on both sides out of
-the contract as a matter of simple equity. But the marriage would stick,
-all right.
-
-Marconi had himself a final moist, fatuous sigh and returned the photo
-to his pocket. “And now,” he asked brightly, craning his neck for the
-waiter, “what’s your news?”
-
-Ross sipped his drink, staring out at the nuzzling freighters in their
-hemispherical slips. He said abruptly, “I might be on one of those next
-week. Fallon’s got a purser’s berth open.”
-
-Marconi forgot the waiter and gaped. “Quitting?”
-
-“I’ve got to do something!” Ross exploded. His own voice scared him;
-there was a knife blade of hysteria in the sound of it. He gripped the
-edge of the table and forced himself to be calm and deliberate.
-
-Marconi said tardily, “Easy, Ross.”
-
-“Easy! You’ve said it, Marconi: ‘Easy.’ Everything’s so damned easy and
-so damned boring that I’m just about ready to blow! I’ve got to do
-something,” he repeated. “I’m getting nowhere! I push papers around and
-then I push them back again. You know what happens next. You get soft
-and paunchy. You find yourself going by the book instead of by your
-head. You’re covered, if you go by the book—no matter what happens. And
-you might just as well be dead!”
-
-“Now, Ross——”
-
-“Now, hell!” Ross flared. “Marconi, I swear I think there’s something
-wrong with me! Look, take Ghost Town for instance. Ever wonder why
-nobody lives there, except a couple of crazy old hermits?”
-
-“Why, it’s Ghost Town,” Marconi explained. “It’s deserted.”
-
-“And why is it deserted? What happened to the people who used to live
-there?”
-
-Marconi shook his head. “You need a vacation, son,” he said
-sympathetically. “That was a long time ago. Hundreds of years, maybe.”
-
-“But where did the people go?” Ross persisted desperately. “All of the
-city was inhabited hundreds of years ago—the city was twice as big as it
-is now. How come?”
-
-Marconi shrugged. “Dunno.”
-
-Ross collapsed. “Don’t know. You don’t know, I don’t know, nobody knows.
-Only thing is, I care! I’m curious. Marconi, I get—well, moody.
-Depressed. I get to worrying about crazy things. Ghost Town, for one.
-And why can’t they find a secretary for me? And am I really different
-from everybody else or do I just think so—and doesn’t that mean that I’m
-insane?”
-
-He laughed. Marconi said warmly, “Ross, you aren’t the only one; don’t
-ever think you are. I went through it myself. Found the answer, too. You
-wait, Ross.”
-
-He paused. Ross said suspiciously, “Yeah?”
-
-Marconi tapped the breast pocket with the photo of Lurline. “She’ll come
-along,” he said.
-
-Ross managed not to sneer in his face. “No,” he said wearily. “Look, I
-don’t advertise it, but I was married once. I was eighteen, it lasted
-for a year and I’m the one who walked out. Flat-fee settlement; it took
-me five years to pay off the loan, but I never regretted it.”
-
-Marconi began gravely, “Sexual incompatibility——”
-
-Ross cut him off with an impatient gesture. “In that department,” he
-said, “it so happens she was a genius. But——”
-
-“But?”
-
-Ross shrugged. “I must have been crazy,” he said shortly. “I kept
-thinking that she was half-dead, dying on the vine like the rest of
-Halsey’s Planet. And I must still be crazy, because I still think so.”
-
-The little man involuntarily felt his breast pocket. He said gently,
-“Maybe you’ve been working too hard.”
-
-“Too hard!” Ross laughed, a curious blend of true humor and
-self-disgust. “Well,” he admitted, “I need a change, anyhow. I might as
-well be on a longliner. At least I’d have my spree to look back on.”
-
-“No!” Marconi said, so violently that Ross slopped the drink he was
-lifting to his mouth.
-
-Ross looked hard at the little man—hard and speculatively. “No, then,”
-he said. “It was just a figure of speech, of course. But tell me
-something, won’t you, Marconi?”
-
-“Tell you what?”
-
-“Tell me why such a violent reaction to the word ‘longliner.’ I want to
-know.”
-
-“Hell, Ross,” the little man grumbled, “you know what a longliner is.
-Gutter-scrapings for crews; nothing for a man like you.”
-
-“I want to know more,” Ross insisted. “When I ask you what a longliner
-is, what the crew do with themselves for two or three centuries, you
-change the subject. You always change the subject! Maybe you know
-something I don’t know. I want to know what it is, and this time the
-subject doesn’t get changed. You don’t get off the hook until I find
-out.” He took a sip of his drink and leaned back. “Tell me about
-longliners,” he said. “I’ve never seen one coming in; it’s been fifteen
-years or so since that bucket from Sirius IV, hasn’t it? But you were on
-the job then.”
-
-Marconi was no longer a man in love or one of the few people whom Ross
-considered to be wholly alive—like him. He was a hard-eyed little
-stranger with a stubborn mouth and an ingratiating veneer. In short he
-was again a trader, and a good one.
-
-“I’ll tell you anything I know,” Marconi declared positively, and
-insincerely. “Tend to that fellow first though, will you?” He pointed to
-a uniformed Yards messenger whose eye had just alighted on Ross. The man
-threaded his way, stumbling, through the tables and laid a sealed
-envelope down in the puddle left by Ross’s drink.
-
-“Sorry, sir,” he said crisply, wiped off the envelope with his
-handkerchief and, for lagniappe, wiped the puddle off the table into
-Ross’s lap.
-
-Speechless, Ross signed for the envelope on a red-tabbed slip marked
-URGENT * PRIORITY * RUSH. The messenger saluted, almost putting his own
-eye out, and left, crashing into tables and chairs.
-
-“Half-dead,” Ross muttered, following him with his eyes. “How the devil
-do they stay alive at all?”
-
-Marconi said, unsmiling, “You’re taking this kick pretty seriously,
-Ross. I admit he’s a little clumsy, but——”
-
-“But nothing,” said Ross. “Don’t try to tell me you don’t know
-something’s wrong, Marconi! He’s a bumbling incompetent, and half his
-generation is just like him.” He looked bitterly at the envelope and
-dropped it on the table again. “More manifests,” he said. “I swear I’ll
-start throwing tableware if I have to check another bill of lading.
-Brighten my day, Marconi; tell me about the longliners. You’re not off
-the hook yet, you know.”
-
-Marconi signaled for another drink. “All right,” he said. “Marconi tells
-all about longliners. They’re ships. They go from the planet of one star
-to the planet of another star. It takes a long time, because stars are
-many light-years apart and rocket ships cannot travel as fast as light.
-Einstein said so—whoever he was. Do we start with the Sirius IV ship? I
-was around when it came in, all right. Fifteen years ago, and Halsey’s
-Planet is still enjoying the benefits of it. And so is Leverett and Sons
-Trading Corporation. They did fine on flowers from seeds that bucket
-brought, they did fine on sugar perch from eggs that bucket brought.
-I’ve never had it myself. Raw fish for dessert! But some people swear by
-it—at five shields a portion. They can have it.”
-
-“The hook, Marconi,” Ross reminded grimly.
-
-Trader Marconi laughed amiably. “Sorry. Well, what else? Pictures and
-music, but I’m not much on them. I do read, though, and as a reader I
-say, God bless that bucket from Sirius IV. We never had a novelist like
-Morris Halliday on this planet—or an essayist like Jay Waring. Let’s
-see, there have been eight Halliday novels off the microfilms so far,
-and I think Leverett still has a couple in the vaults. Leverett must
-be——”
-
-“Marconi. I don’t want to hear about Leverett and Sons. Or Morris
-Halliday, or Waring. I want to hear about longliners.”
-
-“I’m trying to tell you,” Marconi said sullenly, the mask down.
-
-“No, you’re not. You’re telling me that the longline ships go from one
-stellar system to another with merchandise. I know that.”
-
-“Then what do you want?”
-
-“Don’t be difficult, Marconi. I want to know the facts. All about
-longliners. The big hush-hush. The candid explanations that explain
-nothing—except that a starship is a starship. I know that they’re
-closed-system, multigeneration jobs; a group of people get in on Sirius
-IV and their great-great-great-great-grandchildren come giggling and
-stumbling out on Halsey’s Planet. I know that every couple of
-generations your firm—and mine, for that matter—builds one with profits
-that would be taxed off anyway and slings it out, stocked with seeds and
-film and sound tape and patent designs and manufacturing specifications
-for every new gimmick on the market, in the hope that it’ll be back long
-after we’re dead with a similar cargo to enrich your firm’s and my
-firm’s then-current owners. Sounds silly—but, as I say, it’s tax money
-anyhow. I know that your firm and mine staff the ships with half a dozen
-bums of each sex, who are loaded aboard with a dandy case of delirium
-tremens, contracted from spending their bounty money the only way they
-know how. And that’s just about all I know. Take it from there, Marconi.
-And be specific.”
-
-The little man shrugged irritably. “That gag’s beginning to wear thin,
-Ross,” he complained. “What do you want me to tell you—the number of
-welds in Bulkhead 47 of ‘Starship 74’? What’s the difference? As you
-said, a starship is a starship is a longliner. Without them the
-inhabited solar systems would have no means of contact or commerce. What
-else is there to say?”
-
-Ross looked suddenly lost. “I—don’t know,” he said. “Don’t you know,
-Marconi?”
-
-Marconi hesitated, and for a moment Ross was sure he did know—knew
-something, at any rate, something that might be an answer to the doubts
-and nagging inconsistencies that were bothering him. But then Marconi
-shrugged and looked at his watch and ordered another drink.
-
-But there was something wrong. Ross felt himself in the position of a
-diagnostician whose patient willfully refuses to tell where it hurts.
-The planet was sick—but wouldn’t admit it. Sick? Dying! Maybe he was on
-the wrong track entirely. Maybe the starships had nothing to do with it.
-Maybe there was nothing that Marconi knew that would fit a piece into
-the puzzle and make the answer come out all clear—but Ghost Town
-continued to grow acre by acre, year by year. And Oldham still hadn’t
-found him a secretary capable of writing her own name.
-
-“According to the historians, everything fits nicely into place,” Ross
-said, dubiously. “They say we came here ourselves in longliners once,
-Marconi. Our ancestors under some man named Halsey colonized this place,
-fourteen hundred years ago. According to the longliners that come in
-from other stars, their ancestors colonized wherever they came from in
-starships from a place called Earth. Where is this Earth, Marconi?”
-
-Marconi said succinctly, “Look in the star charts. It’s there.”
-
-“Yes, but——”
-
-“But, hell,” Marconi said in annoyance. “What in the world has got into
-you, Ross? Earth is a planet like any other planet. The starship Halsey
-colonized in was a starship like any other starship—only bigger. I
-guess, that is—I wasn’t there. After all, what are the longliners but
-colonists? They happen to be going to planets that are already
-inhabited, that’s all. So a starship is nothing new or even very
-interesting, and this is beginning to bore me, and you ought to read
-your urgent-priority-rush message.”
-
-Ross felt repentant—knowing that that was just how Trader Marconi wanted
-him to feel. He said slowly, “I’m sorry if I’m being a nuisance,
-Marconi. You know how it is when you feel stale and restless. I know all
-the stories—but it’s so damned hard to believe them. The famous
-colonizing ships. They must have been absolutely gigantic to take any
-reasonable number of people on a closed-circuit, multigeneration ride.
-We can’t build them that big now!”
-
-“No reason to.”
-
-“But we couldn’t if we had to. Imagine shooting those things all over
-the Galaxy. How many inhabited planets in the charts—five hundred? A
-thousand? Think of the technology, Marconi. What became of it?”
-
-“We don’t need that sort of technology any more,” Marconi explained.
-“That job is done. Now we concentrate on more important things. Learning
-to live with each other. Developing our own planet. Increasing our
-understanding of social factors and demographic——”
-
-Ross was laughing at last. “Well, Marconi,” he said at last, “that takes
-care of that! We sure have figured out how to handle the social factors,
-all right. Every year there are fewer of them to handle. Pretty soon
-we’ll all be dead, and then the problem can be marked ‘solved.’”
-
-Marconi laughed too—eagerly, as if he’d been waiting for the chance. He
-said, “Now that that’s settled, are you going to open your message? Are
-you at least going to have some lunch?”
-
-The Yards messenger stumbled up to their table again, this time with an
-envelope for Marconi. He looked sharply at Ross’s unopened envelope and
-said nothing, pointedly. Ross guiltily picked it up and tore it open.
-You could act like a sulky child in front of a friend, but strangers
-didn’t understand.
-
-The message was from his office. RADAR REPORTS HIGH VELOCITY SPACECRAFT
-ON AUTOCONTROLS. FIRST APPROXIMATION TRAJECTORY INDICATES INTERSTELLAR
-ORIGIN. PROBABLE ETA YARDS 1500. NO RADIO MESSAGES RECEIVED. DON’T HAVE
-TO TELL YOU TO GET ON THIS IMMEDIATELY AND GIVE IT YOUR BEST. OLDHAM.
-
-Ross looked at Marconi, whose expression was perturbed. “Bet I know what
-your message says,” he offered with an uneasy quaver in his voice.
-
-Marconi said: “I’ll bet you do. Oldham’s radar setup on Sunward always
-has been better than Haarland’s. Better location. Man, you are in
-trouble! Let’s get out there and hope nobody’s missed you so far.”
-
-They grabbed sandwiches from the snack bar on the way out and munched
-them while the Yards jeep took them to the ready line. Skirting the
-freighters in their pits, slipping past the enormous overhaul sheds,
-they saw excited debates going on. Twice they were passed by Yards
-vehicles heading toward the landing area. Halfway to the line they heard
-the recall sirens warning everybody and everything out of the ten seared
-acres surrounded by homing and Ground-Controlled Approach radars. That
-was where the big ones were landed.
-
-The ready line was jammed when they got there. Ships from one or another
-of the five moons that circled Halsey’s planet were common; the moons
-were the mines. Even the weekly liner and freighters from the colony on
-Sunward, the planet next in from Halsey’s, were routine to the Yards
-workers. But to anybody an interstellar ship was a sensation, a
-once-or-twice-in-a-lifetime thrill.
-
-Protocols were uncertain. Traders argued about the first crack at the
-strangers and their goods. A dealer named Aalborg said the only fair
-system would be to give every trade there an equal opportunity to do
-business—in alphabetical order. Everybody agreed that under no
-circumstances should the man from Leverett and Sons be allowed to
-trade—everybody, except the man from Leverett and Sons. He pointed out
-that his firm was the logical choice because it had more and fresher
-experience in handling interstellar goods than any other....
-
-They almost mobbed him.
-
-It wasn’t merely money that filled the atmosphere with electric tingles.
-The glamor of time-travel was on them. The crew aboard that ship were
-travelers of time as well as space. The crew that had launched the ship
-was dust. The crew that served it now had never seen a planet.
-
-There was even some humility in the crowd. There were thoughtful ones
-among them who reflected that it was not, after all, a very great feat
-to hitch a rocket to a shell and lob it across a few million miles to a
-neighboring planet. It was eclipsed by the tremendous deed whose climax
-they were about to witness. The thoughtful ones shrugged and sighed as
-they thought that even the starship booming down toward Halsey’s
-Planet—fitted with the cleverest air replenishers and the most
-miraculously efficient waste converters—was only a counter in the game
-whose great rule was the mass-energy formulation of the legendary
-Einstein: that there is no way to push a material object past the speed
-of light.
-
-A report swept the field that left men reeling in its wake. Radar Track
-confirmed that the ship was of unfamiliar pattern. All hope that it
-might be a starship launched from this very spot on the last leg of a
-stupefying round trip was officially dead. The starship was foreign.
-
-“Wonder what they have?” Marconi muttered.
-
-“Trader!” Ross sneered ponderously. He was feeling better; the weight of
-depression had been lifted for the time being, either by his confession
-or the electric atmosphere. If every day were like this, he thought
-vaguely....
-
-“Let’s not kid each other,” Marconi was saying exuberantly. “This is an
-event, man! Where are they from, what are they peddling? Do I get a good
-cut at their wares? It could be fifty thousand shields for me in
-commission alone. Lurline and I could build a tower house on Great Blue
-Lake with that kind of money, with a whole floor for her parents! Ross,
-you just don’t know what it is to really be in love. Everything
-changes.”
-
-A jeep roared up and slammed to a stop; Ross blinked and yelled: “Here
-it comes!”
-
-They watched the ground-controlled approach with the interest of
-semiprofessionals and concealed their rising excitement with shop talk.
-
-“Whups! There goes the high-power job into action.” Marconi pointed as a
-huge dish antenna swiveled ponderously on its mast. “Seems the
-medium-output dishes can’t handle her.”
-
-“Maybe the high-power dish can’t either. She might be just plain shot.”
-
-“Standard, sealed GCA doesn’t get shot, my young friend. Not in a
-neon-atmosphere tank it doesn’t.”
-
-“Maybe along about the fifth generation they forgot what it was and cut
-it open with an acetylene torch to see what was inside.”
-
-“Bad luck for us in that case, Ross.” The ship steadied on a due-west
-course and flashed across the heavens and over the horizon.
-
-“Somebody decided a braking ellipse or two was in order. What about line
-of sight?”
-
-“No sweat. The GCA jockey—and I’d bet it’s Delafield himself—pushes a
-button that hooks him into the high-power dish at every rocket field on
-Halsey’s. It’s been all thought out. There’s a potential fortune aboard
-that longliner and Fields Administration wants its percentage for
-servicing and accommodating.”
-
-“Wonder what they have?”
-
-“I already asked that one, Ross.”
-
-“So you did.”
-
-They lapsed into silence until the rocket boomed in again from the east,
-high and slow. The big dish swiveled abruptly and began tracking again.
-
-“He’ll try to bring her down this time. Yes! There go fore and
-stabilizing jets.”
-
-Flame jutted from the silvery speck high in the blue; its apparent speed
-slowed to a crawl. It vanished for a second as steering jets turned her
-slowly endwise. They caught sight of the stern jets when they blasted
-for the descent.
-
-It was uneventful—just the landing of a very, very big rocket. When a
-landing is successful it is like every other successful landing ever
-made.
-
-But the action that the field whirled into immediately following the
-landing was far from routine. The bullhorns roared that all traders,
-wipers, rubbernecks, and visitors were to get behind the ready lines and
-stay there. All Class-Three-and-higher Field personnel were to take
-stations for longliner clearance. The weapons and decontamination
-parties were to take their stations immediately. Captain Delafield would
-issue all future orders and don’t let any of the traders talk you out of
-it, men. Captain Delafield would issue all future orders.
-
-Ross watched in considerable surprise as Field men working with drilled
-precision broke out half a dozen sleek, needle-nosed guns from an
-innocent-looking bay of the warehouse and manhandled them into position.
-From another bay a large pressure tank was hauled and backed against the
-lock of the starship. Ross could see the station medic bustlingly
-supervise that, and the hosing of white gunk onto the juncture between
-tank and ship.
-
-Delafield crossed the stretch from the GCA complex to the tank, vanished
-into it through a pressure-fitted door and that was that. The tank had
-no windows.
-
-Ross said to Marconi, wonderingly: “What’s all this about? There was Doc
-Gibbons handling the pressure tank, there was Chunk Blaney rolling out a
-God-damned cannon I never knew was there—how many more little secrets
-are there that I don’t know about?”
-
-Marconi grinned. “They have gun drill once a month, my young friend, and
-they never say a word about it. Let the right rabble-rouser get hold of
-the story and he might sail into office on a platform of ‘Keep the
-bug-eyed monsters off of Halsey’s Planet.’ You have to have reasonable
-precautions, military and medical, though—and this is the straight
-goods—there’s never been any trouble of either variety.”
-
-The conversation died and there was a long, boring hour of nothing. At
-last Delafield appeared again. One of the decontamination party ran up
-in a jeep with a microphone.
-
-“What’ll it be?” Ross demanded. “Alphabetic order? Or just a rush?”
-
-The announcement floored him. “Representative of the Haarland Trading
-Corporation please report to the decontamination tank.”
-
-The representative of the Haarland Trading Corporation was Marconi.
-
-“Hell,” Ross said bitterly. “Good luck with them, whoever they are.”
-
-Marconi brooded for a moment and then said gruffly, “Come on along.”
-
-“You mean it?”
-
-“Sure. Uh—naturally, Ross, you’ll give me your word not to make any
-commercial offers or inquiries without my permission.”
-
-“Oh. Naturally.” They started across the field and were checked through
-the ready line, Marconi cheerfully presenting his identification and
-vouching for Ross.
-
-Captain Delafield, at the tank, snapped, “What are you doing here, Ross?
-You’re Oldham’s man. I distinctly said——”
-
-“My responsibility, Captain. Will that do it?” Marconi asked.
-
-Delafield snapped, “It’ll be your fundament if Haarland hears about it.
-Actually it’s the damnedest situation—they _asked_ for Haarland’s.”
-
-Marconi looked frightened and his hand involuntarily went to his breast
-pocket. He swallowed and asked, “Where are they from?”
-
-Delafield grimaced and said, “Home.”
-
-Marconi exploded, “Oh, no!”
-
-“That’s all I can get out of them. I suppose their trajectory can be
-analyzed, and there must be books. We haven’t been in the ship yet.
-Nobody goes in until it gets sprayed, rayed, dusted, and busted down
-into its component parts. Too many places for nasty little mutant
-bacteria and viruses to lurk.”
-
-“Sure, Captain. ‘Home,’ eh? They’re pretty simple?”
-
-“Happy little morons. Fifteen of them, ranging in age from one month to
-what looks like a hundred and twenty. All they know is ‘home’ and ‘we
-wish to see the representative of the Haarland Trading Corporation.’
-First the old woman said it. Then the next in line—he must be about a
-hundred—said it. Then a pair of identical twins, fifty-year-old women,
-said it in chorus. Then the rest of them on down to the month-old baby,
-and I swear to God he tried to say it. Well, you’re the Haarland Trading
-Corporation. Go on in.”
-
-
-
-
-..... 2
-
-
-THEY were all naked. Why not? There’s no weather in a space ship. All of
-them laughed when Ross and Marconi came in through the lock except the
-baby, who was nursing at the breast of a handsome woman. Their laughter
-was what attracted Ross immediately. Cheerful—no meanness in it. The
-happy yelping of puppies at play with a red rubber bone.
-
-A stab went through him as the pleasure in their simple happiness turned
-to recollection and recognition. His wife of a decade ago.... Ross
-studied them with amazement, expecting to find her features in their
-features, her figure in theirs. And failed. Yet they reminded him
-inescapably of his miserable year with that half-a-woman, but they were
-physically no kin of hers. They were just cheerful laughers who he knew
-were less than human.
-
-The cheerful laughers exposed unblemished teeth in all their mouths,
-including that of the hundred-and-twenty-year-old matriarch. Why not? If
-you put calcium and fluorides into a closed system, they stay there.
-
-The old woman stopped laughing at them long enough to say to Marconi,
-“We wish to see the representative of the Haarland——”
-
-“Yes, I know. I’m the representative of the Haarland Trading
-Corporation. Welcome to Halsey’s Planet. May I ask what your name is,
-ma’am?”
-
-“Ma,” she said genially.
-
-“Pleased to meet you, Ma. My name’s Marconi.”
-
-Ma said, bewildered, “You just said you were the representative of the
-Haarland Trading——”
-
-“Yes, Ma, but that’s all right. Let’s say that’s my other name. Two
-names—understand?”
-
-She laughed at the idea of two names, wonderingly.
-
-Marconi pressed, “And what’s the name of this gentleman?”
-
-“He isn’t Gentleman. He’s Sonny.”
-
-Sonny was a hundred years old.
-
-“Pleased to meet you, Sonny. And your name, sir?”
-
-“Sonny,” said a redheaded man of eighty or thereabouts.
-
-The identical-twin women were named The Kids. The baby was named Him.
-The rest of the troop were named Girl, Ma, or Sonny. After introductions
-Ross noticed that Him had been passed to another Ma who was placidly
-suckling him. She had milk; it dribbled from the corner of the baby’s
-mouth. “There isn’t another baby left in the ship, is there?” Ross asked
-in alarm.
-
-They laughed and the Ma suckling the baby said: “There was, but she
-died. Mostly they do when you put them into the box after they get born.
-Ma here was lucky. Her Him didn’t die.”
-
-“Put them in the box? What box? Why?”
-
-Marconi was nudging him fiercely in the ribs. He ignored it.
-
-They laughed amiably at his ignorance and explained that the box was the
-box, and that you put your newborn babies into it because you put your
-newborn babies into it.
-
-A beep tone sounded from the ship.
-
-Ma said, “We have to go back now, The Representative of the Haarland
-Trading Corporation Marconi.”
-
-“What for?”
-
-Ma said, “At regular intervals signaled by a tone of six hundred cycles
-and an intermittent downward shifting of the ship lights from standard
-illumination frequency to a signal frequency of 420 millimicrons, ship’s
-operating personnel take up positions at the control boards for
-recalibration of ship-working meters and instruments against the battery
-of standard masters. We’ll be right back.”
-
-They trooped through the hatch, leaving Ross and Marconi staring at each
-other in the decontamination tank.
-
-“Well,” Ross said slowly, “at last I know why the Longliner Departments
-have their little secrets. ‘The box.’ I say it’s murder.”
-
-“Be reasonable,” Marconi told him—but his own face was white under the
-glaring germicidal lamps. “You can’t let them increase without limit or
-they’d all die. And before they died there’d be cannibalism. Which do
-you prefer?”
-
-“Letting kids be born and then snuffing them out if a computer decides
-they’re the wrong sex or over the quota is inhuman.”
-
-“I didn’t say I like it, Ross. But it works.”
-
-“So do pills!”
-
-“Pills are a private matter. A person might privately decide not to take
-hers. The box is a public matter and the group outnumbers and overrules
-a mother who decides not to use it. There’s your question of
-effectiveness answered, but there’s another point. Those people are
-sane, Ross. Preposterously naive, but sane! Saner than childless women
-or sour old bachelors we both know who never had to love anything small
-and helpless, and so come to love nobody but themselves. They’re sane.
-Partly because the women get a periodic biochemical shakeup called
-pregnancy that their biochemical balance is designed to mesh with.
-Partly because the men find tenderness and protectiveness in themselves
-toward the pregnant women. Mostly, I think, because—it’s something to
-do.
-
-“Can you imagine the awful monotony of life in the ship? The work is
-sheer rote and repetition. They can’t read or watch screentapes. They
-were born in the ship, and the books and screentapes are meaningless
-because they know nothing to compare them with. The only change they see
-is each other, aging toward death. Frequent pregnancies are a Godsend to
-them. They compare and discuss them; they wonder who the fathers are;
-they make bets of rations; the men brag and keep score. The girls look
-forward to their first and their last. The jokes they make up about
-them! The way they speculate about twins! The purgative fear, even,
-keeps them sane.”
-
-“And then,” Ross said, “‘the box.’”
-
-Staring straight ahead at the ship’s port Marconi echoed: “Yes. ‘The
-box.’ If there were another way—but there isn’t.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-His breezy young boss, Charles Oldham IV, was not pleased with what Ross
-had to report.
-
-“Asked for Haarland!” he repeated unbelievingly. “Those dummies didn’t
-know where they were going or where they were from, but they knew enough
-to ask for Haarland.” He slammed a ruler on his desk and yelled:
-“God-damn it!”
-
-“Mr. Oldham!” Ross protested, aghast. For a superior to lose his temper
-publicly was unthinkable; it covered you with embarrassment.
-
-“Manners be God-damned too!” Oldham screamed, breaking up fast. “What do
-you know about the state of our books? What do you know about the
-overhead I inherited from my loving father? What the hell do you know
-about the downcurve in sales?”
-
-“These fluctuations——” Ross began soothingly.
-
-“Fluctuations be God-damned! I know a fluctuation when I see one, and I
-know a long-term downtrend when I see one. And that’s what we’re riding,
-right into bankruptcy, fellow. And now these God-damned dummies blow in
-from nowhere with a consignment exclusively for Haarland—I don’t know
-why I don’t get to hell out of this stupid business and go live in a
-shack on Great Blue Lake and let the planet go ahead and rot.”
-
-Ross’s horror at the unseemly outburst was eclipsed by his interest at
-noting how similarly he and Oldham had been thinking. “Sir,” he
-ventured, “I’ve had something on my mind for a while——”
-
-“It can wait,” Oldham growled, collecting himself with a visible effort.
-So there went his chance to resign. “What about customs? I know Haarland
-hasn’t got enough cash to lay out. Who has?”
-
-Ross said glibly: “Usual arrangement, sir. They turn an estimated
-twenty-five per cent of the cargo over to the port authority for
-auction, the receipts to be in full discharge of their import tax. And I
-suppose they enter protective bids. They aren’t wasting any
-time—auction’s 2100 tonight.”
-
-“You handle it,” Oldham muttered. “Don’t go over one hundred thousand
-shields. Diversify the purchases as much as possible. And try to sneak
-some advance information out of the dummies if you get a chance.”
-
-“Yes, sir,” Ross said. As he left he saw Oldham taking a plastic bottle
-from a wall cabinet.
-
-And that, thought Ross as he rode to the Free Port, was the first crack
-he had ever seen in the determined optimism of the trading firm’s top
-level. They were optimists and they were idealists, at least to hear
-them tell it. Interplanetary trading was a cause and a mission; the
-traders kept the flame of commerce alight. Perhaps, thought Ross, they
-had been able to indulge in the hypocrisy of idealism only so long as a
-population upcurve assured them of an expanding market. Perhaps now that
-births were flattening out—some said the dirty word “declining”—they all
-would drop their optimistic creed in favor of fang-and-claw competition
-for the favors of the dwindling pool of consumers.
-
-And that, Ross thought gloomily, was the way he’d go himself if he
-stayed on: junior trader, to senior trader, to master trader, growing
-every year more paranoidally suspicious of his peers, less scrupulous in
-the chase of the shield....
-
-But he was getting out, of course. The purser’s berth awaited. And then,
-perhaps, the awful depressions he had been enduring would lift off him.
-He thought of the master traders he knew: his own man Oldham, none too
-happy in the hereditary business; Leverett, still smug and fat with his
-terrific windfall of the Sirius IV starship fifteen years ago; Marconi’s
-boss Haarland—Haarland broke the sequence all to hell. It just wasn’t
-possible to think of Haarland being driven by avarice and fear. He was
-the oldest of them all, but there was more zest and drive in his
-parchment body than in the rest of them combined.
-
-In the auction hall Ross found a seat near the velvet ropes. One of the
-professional bidders lounging against a wall flicked him an almost
-imperceptible signal, and he answered with another. That was that; he
-had his man, and a good one. They had often worked together in the
-commodity pits, but not so often or so exclusively that the bidder would
-be instantly known as his.
-
-Inside the enclosure Marconi, seated at a bare table, labored over a
-sheaf of papers with one of the “Sonnies” from the ship. Sonny was
-wriggling in coveralls, the first clothes he had ever worn. Ross saw
-they hadn’t been able to get shoes onto him.
-
-Who else did he know? Captain Delafield was sitting somberly within the
-enclosure; Win Fraley, the hottest auctioneer on the Port, was studying
-a list, his lips moving. Every trading firm was represented; the heads
-of the smaller firms were there in person, not daring to delegate the
-bidding job. Plenty of Port personnel, just there for the excitement of
-the first longliner in fifteen years, even though it was well after
-close of the business day.
-
-The goods were in sealed cases against the back wall as usual. Ross
-could only tell that some of them were perforated and therefore ought to
-contain living animals. Only the one Sonny from the starship crew was
-there; presumably the rest were back on the ship. He wouldn’t be able to
-follow Oldham’s orders to snoop out the nature of the freight from them.
-Well, damn Oldham; damn even the auction, Ross thought to himself. His
-mood of gloom did not lift.
-
-The auction was a kind of letdown. All that turmoil and bustle,
-concentrated in a tiny arc around the velvet ropes, contrasted
-unpleasantly with the long, vacant rows of dusty seats that stretched to
-the back of the hall. Maybe a couple of centuries ago Ross would have
-enjoyed the auction more. But now all it made him think of was the thing
-he had been brooding about for a night and a day, the slow emptying of
-the planet, the....
-
-Decay.
-
-But, as usual, no one else seemed to notice or to care.
-
-Captain Delafield consulted his watch and stood up. He rapped the table.
-“In accordance with the rules of the Trade Commission and the
-appropriate governing statutes,” he droned, “certain merchandise will
-now be placed on public auction. The Haarland Trading Corporation,
-consignee, agrees and consents to divest itself of merchandise from
-Consignment 97-W amounting by estimate of the customs authorities to
-twenty-five per cent of the total value of all merchandise in said
-consignment. All receipts of this auction are to be entered as excise
-duties paid by the consignee on said merchandise, said receipts to
-constitute payment in full on excise on Consignment 97-W. The clerk will
-record; if any person here present wishes to enter an objection let him
-do so thank you.” He glanced at a slip of paper in his hand. “I am
-requested to inform you that the Haarland Trading Corporation has
-entered with the clerk a protective bid of five thousand shields on each
-item.” There was a rustle in the hall. Five thousand shields was a lot
-of money. “Your auctioneer, Win Fraley,” said Captain Delafield, and sat
-down in the first row of seats.
-
-The auctioneer took a long, slow swallow of water, his eyes gleaming
-above the glass at the audience. Theatrically he tossed the glass to an
-assistant, smacked his hands together and grinned. “Well,” he boomed
-genially, “I don’t have to tell you gentlemen that somebody’s going to
-get rich tonight. Who knows—maybe it’ll be you? But you can’t make money
-without spending money, so without any further ado, let’s get started. I
-have here,” he rapped out briskly, “Item Number One. Now you don’t know
-and I don’t know exactly what Item Number One contains, but I can tell
-you this, they wouldn’t have sent it two hundred and thirty-one lights
-if they didn’t think it was worth something. Let’s get this started with
-a rush, folks, and I mean with a big bid to get in the right mood. After
-all, the more you spend here the less you have to pay in taxes,” he
-laughed. “You ready? Here’s the dope. Item Number One——” His assistant
-slapped a carton at the extreme left of the line. “——weight two hundred
-and fifteen grams, net; fifteen cubic centimeters; one microfilm reel
-included. Reminds me,” he reminisced, “of an item just about that size
-on the Sirius IV shipment. Turned out to be Maryjane seeds, and I don’t
-suppose I have to tell anybody here how much Mr. Leverett made out of
-Maryjanes; I bet every one of us has been smoking them ever since. What
-do you say, Mr. Leverett? You did all right last time—want to say ten
-thousand as a first big bid on Item Number One? Nine thousand? Do I
-hear——?”
-
-One of the smaller traders, not working through a professional bidder,
-not even decently delegating the work to a junior, bid seventy-five
-hundred shields. Like the spokesmen for the other big traders, Ross sat
-on his hands during the early stages. Let the small fry give themselves
-a thrill and drop out. The big firms knew to a fraction of a shield how
-much the small ones could afford to bid on a blind purchase, and the
-easiest way to handle them was to let them spend their budgets in a
-hurry. Of course the small traders knew all this, and their strategy,
-when they could manage it, was to hold back as long as possible. It was
-a matter of sensing emotion rather than counting costs; of recognizing
-the fraction of a second in which a little fellow made up his mind to
-acquire an item and bidding him up—of knowing when he’d gone his limit
-and letting him have it at a ruinous price. It was an art, and Ross,
-despising it, knew that he did it very, very well.
-
-He yawned and pretended to read a magazine while the first six items
-went on the block; the little traders seemed desperate enough to force
-the price up without help. He bid on Item Seven partly to squeeze a runt
-trader and partly to test his liaison with his professional bidder. It
-was perfect; the pro caught his signal—a bored inspection of his
-fingernails—while seeming to peek clumsily at the man from Leverett’s.
-
-Ross let the next two pass and then acquired three items in rapid
-succession. The fever had spread to most of the bidders by then; they
-were starting at ten thousand and up. One or two of the early birds had
-spent their budgets and were leaving, looking sandbagged—as indeed they
-had been. Ross signaled “take five” to his professional and strolled out
-for a cup of coffee.
-
-On the way back he stopped for a moment outside the hall to look at the
-stars and breathe. There were the familiar constellations—The Plowman,
-the Rocket Fleet, Marilyn Monroe. He stood smoking a cigarette and
-yearning toward them until somebody moved in the darkness near him.
-“Nice night, Ross,” the man said gloomily.
-
-It was Captain Delafield. “Oh, hello, sir,” Ross said, the world
-descending around him again like a too-substantial curtain. “Taking a
-breather?”
-
-“Had to,” the captain growled. “Ten more minutes in that place and I
-would have thrown. Damned money-grabbing traders. No offense, Ross; just
-that I don’t see how you stand the life. Seems to have got worse in my
-time. Much worse. You high-rollers goading the pee-wees into shooting
-their wads—it didn’t use to be like that. Gallantry. Not stomping a
-downed man. I don’t see how you stand it.”
-
-“I can’t stand it,” Ross said quietly. “Captain Delafield, you don’t
-know—I’m so sick to death of the life I’m leading and the work I’m doing
-that I’d do anything to get away. Mr. Fallon offered me a purser’s spot
-on his ship; I’ve been thinking about it very seriously.”
-
-“Purser? A dirty job. There’s nothing to do except when you’re in port,
-and then there’s so much to do that you never get to see the planet. I
-don’t recommend it, Ross.”
-
-Ross grunted, thinking. If even the purser’s berth was no way out, what
-was left for him? Sixty more years of waiting for a starship and
-scheming how to make a profit from its contents? Sixty more years
-watching Ghost Town grow by nibbles on Halsey City, watching the traders
-wax in savagery as they battled for the ever-diminishing pool of
-consumers, watching obscene comedies like Lurline of the Old Landowners
-graciously consenting to wed Marconi of the New Nobodies? He said
-wearily: “Then what shall I do, Captain? Rot here with the rest of the
-planet?”
-
-Delafield shrugged, suprisingly gentle. “You feel it too, Ross? I’m glad
-to hear it. I’m not sensitive, thank God, but I know they talk about me.
-They say I quit the space-going fleet as soon as I had a chance to grab
-off the port captaincy. They’re right; I did. Because I was frightened.”
-
-“Frightened? You?” Delafield’s ribbons for a dozen heroic rescues
-gleamed in the light that escaped from the hall.
-
-“Sure, Ross.” He flicked the ribbons. “Each one of these means I and my
-men pulled some people out of a jam they got into because of somebody’s
-damned stupidity or slow reflexes or defective memory. No; I withdraw
-that. The ‘Thetis’ got stove in because of mechanical failure, but all
-the rest were human error. There got to be too many for me; I want to
-enjoy my old age.
-
-“Ready to face that if you become a purser? I can tell you that if you
-don’t like it here you won’t be happy on Sunward and you won’t like the
-moons. And you most especially and particularly won’t like being a
-purser. It’s the same job you’re doing now, but it pays less, offers you
-a six-by-eight cubicle to work and live in, and gives you nothing
-resembling a future to aim at. Now if you’ll excuse me I’d better get
-back inside. I’ve enjoyed our talk.”
-
-Ross followed the captain gloomily. Nothing had changed inside; Ross
-lounged in the doorway inconspicuously picking up the eye of his bidder.
-Marconi was gone from the enclosure. Ross looked around hopefully and
-found his friend in agitated conversation with an unrecognizable but
-also agitated man at the back of the hall. Ross drifted over. Heads were
-turning in the front rows. As Ross got within range he heard a couple of
-phrases. “——in the ship. Mr. Haarland specially asked for you. Please,
-Mr. Marconi!”
-
-“Oh, hell,” Marconi said disgustedly. “Go on. Tell him I’ll be there.
-But how he expects me to take care of things here and——” He trailed off
-as he caught sight of Ross.
-
-“Trouble?” Ross asked.
-
-“Not exactly. The hell with it.” Marconi stared indecisively at the
-auctioneer for a moment. He said obscurely, “Taking your life isn’t
-enough; he wants more. And I thought I’d be able to see Lurline tonight.
-Excuse me, Ross. I’ve got to get over to the ship.” He hurried out.
-
-Ross looked wonderingly after him, caught the eye of his bidder, and
-went back to work. By the time the auction was over and dawn was
-breaking in the west, Oldham Trading had bought nine lots of
-merchandise: three breathing, five flowering, and one a roll of
-microfilm. Ross took his prizes to the office where Charles Oldham was
-waiting, much the better for a few drinks and a long nap.
-
-“How much?” demanded Oldham. Evidently they were both supposed to ignore
-his hysteria of the night before.
-
-“Fifty-seven thousand,” Ross said dully.
-
-“For nine lots? Good man! With any kind of luck at all——” And Oldham
-babbled on and on. He wanted Ross to stay and view the microfilm
-projection, stand by for a report from a zoologist and a botanist on the
-living acquisitions. He pleaded weariness and Oldham became conciliatory
-to the wonderful young up-and-comer who had bid in the merchandise at a
-whopping bargain price.
-
-Ross dragged himself from the building, into a cab, and home. Morosely
-undressing he lit a cigarette and brooded: well, that was it. What you’d
-been waiting for since you were a junior apprentice. The starship came,
-you had the alien prizes in your hands and you realized they were as
-tawdry as the cheap gimcracks you export every week to Sunward.
-
-He stared out the window, over Ghost Town, to the Field. The sun was
-high over the surrounding mountains; he imagined he could pick out the
-reflected glimmer from the starship a dozen miles away. Marconi at least
-got to examine the ship. Marconi might be there now; he’d been headed
-that way when Ross saw him last. And evidently not enjoying it much.
-Ross wondered vaguely if anybody really enjoyed anything. He stubbed out
-his cigarette.
-
-As he fell asleep he was remembering what Delafield had told him about
-the moons and the planet ports. His dreams were of the cities of other
-planets, and every one of them was populated by aloof Delafields and
-avaricious Oldhams.
-
-
-
-
-..... 3
-
-
-“WAKE up, Ross,” Marconi was saying, joggling him. “Come on, wake up.”
-
-Ross thrust himself up on an elbow and opened his eyes. He said with a
-tongue the size of his forearm in a dust-lined mouth: “Wha’ time is it?
-Wha’ the hell are you doing here, for that matter?”
-
-“It’s around noon. You’ve slept for three hours; you can get up.”
-
-“Uh.” Ross automatically reached for a cigarette. The smoke got in his
-eyes and he rubbed them; it dehydrated and seared what little healthy
-tissue appeared to be left in his mouth. But it woke him up a little.
-“What are you doing here?” he demanded.
-
-Marconi’s hand was involuntarily on his breast pocket again, the one in
-which he carried Lurline’s picture. He said harshly: “You want a job?
-Topside? Better than purser?” He wasn’t meeting Ross’s eye. His gaze
-roved around the apartment and lighted on a coffee maker. He filled it
-and snapped it on. “Get dressed, will you?” he demanded.
-
-Ross sat up. “What’s this all about, Marconi? What do you want, anyway?”
-
-Marconi, for his own reasons, became violently angry. “You’re the
-damnedest question-asker I ever did meet, Ross. I’m trying to do you a
-favor.”
-
-“What favor?” Ross asked suspiciously.
-
-“You’ll find out. You’ve been bellyaching to me long enough about how
-dull your poor little life is. Well, I’m offering you a chance to do
-something big and different. And what do you do? You crawfish. Are you
-interested or aren’t you? I told you: It’s a space job, and a big one.
-Bigger than being a purser for Fallon. Bigger than you can imagine.”
-
-Ross began to struggle into his clothes, no more than half
-comprehending, but stimulated by the magic words. He asked, puzzling
-sleepily over what Marconi had said, “What are you sore about?” His
-guess was that Lurline had broken a date—but it seemed to be the wrong
-time of day for that.
-
-“Nothing,” Marconi said grumpily. “Only I have my own life to live.” He
-poured two cups of coffee. He wouldn’t answer questions while they
-sipped the scalding stuff. But somehow Ross was not surprised when,
-downstairs, Marconi headed his car along the winding road through Ghost
-Town that led to the Yards.
-
-Every muscle of Ross’s body was stiff and creaky; another six hours of
-sleep would have been a wonderful thing. But as they drove through the
-rutted streets of Ghost Town he began to feel alive again. He stared out
-the window at the flashing ruins, piecing together the things Marconi
-had said.
-
-“Watch it!” he yelled, and Marconi swerved the car around a tumbled
-wall. Ross was shaking, but Marconi only drove faster. This was crazy!
-You didn’t race through Ghost Town as though you were on the pleasure
-parkways around the Great Blue Lake; it wasn’t safe. The buildings had
-to fall over from time to time—nobody, certainly, bothered to keep them
-in repair. And nobody bothered to pick up the pieces when they fell,
-either, until the infrequent road-mending teams made their rounds.
-
-But at last they were out of Ghost Town, on the broad highway from
-Halsey City to the port. The administration building and car park was
-just ahead.
-
-It was there that Marconi spoke again. “I’m assuming, Ross, that you
-weren’t snowing me when you said you wanted thrills, chills, and change
-galore.”
-
-“That’s not the way I put it. But I wasn’t snowing you.”
-
-“You’ll get them. Come on.”
-
-He led Ross across the field to the longliner, past a gaggle of
-laughing, chattering Sonnies and Mas. He ignored them.
-
-The longliner was a giant of a ship, a blunt torpedo a hundred meters
-tall. It had no ports—naturally enough; the designers of the ship
-certainly didn’t find any reason for its idiot crew to look out into
-space, and landings and takeoffs would be remote-controlled. Two hundred
-years old it was; but its metal was as bright, its edges as sharp, as
-the newest of the moon freighters at the other end of the hardstand. Two
-hundred years—a long trip, but an almost unimaginably long distance that
-trip covered. For the star that spawned it was undoubtedly almost as far
-away as light would travel in two centuries’ time. At 186,000 miles per
-second, sixty seconds in a minute, sixty minutes in an hour. Ross’s
-imagination gave up the task. It was far.
-
-He stared about him in fascination as they entered the ship. He gaped at
-sterile, gray-walled cubicles, each of which contained the same chair
-and cot—no screen or projector for longliners. Ross remembered his rash
-words of the day before about shipping out on a longliner, and
-shuddered.
-
-“Here we are,” said Marconi stopping before a closed door. He knocked
-and entered.
-
-It was a cubicle like the others, but there were reels stacked on the
-floor and a projector. Sitting on the cot in a just-awakened attitude
-was old man Haarland himself. Beady-eyed, Ross thought. Watchful.
-
-Haarland asked: “Ross?”
-
-“Yes, sir,” Marconi said. There was tension in his voice and attitude.
-“Do you want me to stay, sir?”
-
-Haarland growled: “Good God, no. You can get out. Sit down, Ross.”
-
-Ross sat down. Marconi, carefully looking neither to right or left, went
-out and closed the door. Haarland stretched, scratched, and yawned. He
-said: “Ross, Marconi tells me you’re quite a fellow. Sincere, competent,
-a good man to give a tough job to. Namely, his.”
-
-“Junior-Fourth Trader?” Ross asked, bewildered.
-
-“A little more dramatic than that—but we’ll come to the details in a
-minute. I’m told you were ready to quit Oldham for a purser’s berth.
-That’s ethical. Would you consider it unethical to quit Oldham for
-Haarland?”
-
-“Yes—I think I would.”
-
-“Glad to hear it! What if the work had absolutely nothing to do with
-trading and never brings you into a competitive situation with Oldham?”
-
-“Well——” Ross scratched his jaw. “Well, I think that would be all right.
-But a Junior Fourth’s job, Mr. Haarland——” The floor bucked and surged
-under him. He gasped, “What was that?”
-
-“Blastoff, I imagine,” Haarland said calmly. “We’re taking off. Better
-lie down.”
-
-Ross flopped to the floor. It was no time to argue, not with the
-first-stage pumps thundering and the preheaters roaring their threat of
-an imminent four-G thrust.
-
-It came like thunder, slapping Ross against the floor plates as though
-he were glued to them. He felt every tiny wrinkle in every weld he lay
-on, and one arm had fallen across a film reel. He heaved, and succeeded
-in levering it off the reel. It thwacked to the floor as though sandbags
-were stacked meters-high atop it.
-
-Blackout came very soon.
-
-He awoke in free fall. He was orbiting aimlessly about the cubicle.
-
-Haarland was strapped to the cot, absorbed in manipulating the portable
-projector, trying to thread a free-floating film. Ross bumped against
-the old man; Haarland abstractedly shoved him off.
-
-He careened from a bulkhead and flailed for a grip.
-
-“Oh,” said Haarland, looking up. “Awake?”
-
-“Yes, awake!” Ross said bitterly. “What is all this? Where are we?”
-
-The old man said formally, “Please forgive my cavalier treatment of you.
-You must not blame your friend Marconi; he had no idea that I was
-planning an immediate blastoff with you. I had an assignment for him
-which he—he preferred not to accept. Not to mince words, Ross, he quit.”
-
-“Quit his job?”
-
-The old man shook his head. “No, Ross. Quit much more than the job of
-working for me. He quit on an assignment which is—I am sorry if it
-sounds melodramatic—absolutely vital to the human race.” He suddenly
-frowned. “I—I think,” he added weakly. “Bear with me, Ross. I’ll try to
-explain as I go along. But, you see, Marconi left me in the lurch. I
-needed him and he failed me. He felt that you would be glad to take it
-on, and he told me something about you.” Haarland glowered at Ross and
-said, with a touch of bitterness, “A recommendation from Marconi, at
-this particular point, is hardly any recommendation at all. But I
-haven’t much choice—and, besides, I took the liberty of calling that
-pompous young fool you work for.”
-
-“Mister Haarland!” Ross cried, outraged. “Oldham may not be any prize
-but really——”
-
-“Oh, you know he’s a fool. But he had a lot to say about you. Enough so
-that, if you want the assignment, it’s yours. As to the nature of the
-assignment itself——” Haarland hesitated, then said briskly, “The
-assignment itself has to do with a message my organization received via
-this longliner. Yes, a message. You’ll see. It has also to do with
-certain facts I’ve found in its log which, if I can ever get this damned
-thing working——There we are.”
-
-He had succeeded in threading the film.
-
-He snapped on the projector. On the screen appeared a densely packed
-block of numerals, rolling up and being replaced by new lines as fast as
-the eye could take them in. Haarland said, “Notice anything?”
-
-Ross swallowed. “If that stuff is supposed to mean anything to me,” he
-declared, “it doesn’t.”
-
-Haarland frowned. “But Marconi said——Well, never mind.” He snapped off
-the projector. “That was the ship’s log, Ross. It doesn’t matter if you
-can’t read it; you wouldn’t, I suppose, have had much call for that sort
-of thing working for Oldham. It is a mathematical description of the
-routing of this ship, from the time it was space-launched until it
-arrived here yesterday. It took a long time, Ross. The reason that it
-took a long time is partly that it came from far away. But, even more,
-there is another reason. We were not this ship’s destination! Not the
-original destination. We weren’t even the first alternate—or the second
-alternate. To be exact, Ross, we were the seventh choice for this ship.”
-
-Ross let go of his stanchion, floated a yard, and flailed back to it.
-“That’s ridiculous, Mr. Haarland,” he protested. “Besides, what has all
-this to do with——”
-
-“Bear with an old man,” said Haarland, with an amused gleam in his eye.
-
-There was very little he could do but bear with him, Ross thought
-sourly. “Go on,” he said.
-
-Haarland said professorially, “It is conceivable, of course, that a
-planet might be asleep at the switch. We could believe it, I suppose, if
-it seemed that the first-choice planet somehow didn’t pick the ship up
-when this longliner came into radar range. In that event, of course, it
-would orbit once or twice on automatics, and then select for its first
-alternate target—which it did. It might be a human failure in the GCA
-station—once.” He nodded earnestly. “Once, Ross. Not six times. No
-planet passes up a trading ship.”
-
-“Mr. Haarland,” Ross exploded, “it seems to me that you’re contradicting
-yourself all over the place. Did six planets pass this ship up or didn’t
-six planets pass this ship up? Which is it? And why would anybody pass a
-longliner up anyhow?”
-
-Haarland asked, “Suppose the planets were vacant?”
-
-“What?” Ross was shaken. “But that’s silly! I mean, even I know that the
-star charts show which planets are inhabited and which aren’t.”
-
-“And suppose the star charts are wrong. Suppose the planets have become
-vacant. The people have died off, perhaps; their culture decayed.”
-
-Decay. Death and decay.
-
-Ross was silent for a long time. He took a deep breath. He said at last,
-“Sorry. I won’t interrupt again.”
-
-Haarland’s expression was a weft of triumph and relief. “Six planets
-passed this ship up. Remember Leverett’s ship fifteen years ago? Three
-planets passed that one before it came to us. Nine different planets,
-all listed on the traditional star charts as inhabited, civilized,
-equipped with GCA radars, and everything else needed. Nine planets out
-of communication, Ross.”
-
-Decay, thought Ross. Aloud he said, “Tell me why.”
-
-Haarland shook his head. “No,” he said strongly, “I want you to tell me.
-I’ll tell you what I can. I’ll tell you the message that this ship
-brought to me. I’ll tell you all I know, all I’ve told Marconi that he
-isn’t man enough to use, and the things that Marconi will never learn,
-as well. But why nine planets that used to be pretty much like our own
-planet are now out of communication, that you’ll have to tell me.”
-
-Forward rockets boomed; the braking blasts hurled Ross against the
-forward bulkhead. Haarland rummaged under the cot for space suits. He
-flung one at Ross.
-
-“Put it on,” he ordered. “Come to the airlock. I’ll show you what you
-can use to find out the answers.” He slid into the pressure suit, dived
-weightless down the corridor, Ross zooming after.
-
-They stood in the airlock, helmets sealed. Wordlessly Haarland opened
-the pet cocks, heaved on the lock door. He gestured with an arm.
-
-Floating alongside them was a ship, a ship like none Ross had ever seen
-before.
-
-
-
-
-..... 4
-
-
-PICTURE Leif’s longboat bobbing in the swells outside Ambrose Light,
-while the twentieth-century liners steam past; a tiny, ancient thing,
-related to the new giants only as the Eohippus resembles the horse.
-
-The ship that Haarland revealed was fully as great a contrast. Ross knew
-spaceships as well as any grounder could, both the lumbering interplanet
-freighters and the titanic longliners. But the ship that swung around
-Halsey’s Planet was a midget (fueled rocket ships must be huge); its
-jets were absurdly tiny, clearly incapable of blasting away from
-planetary gravity; its entire hull length was unbroken and sheer (did
-the pilot dare fly blind?).
-
-The coupling connections were being rigged between the ships. “Come
-aboard,” said Haarland, spryly wriggling through the passage. Ross,
-swallowing his astonishment, followed.
-
-The ship was tiny indeed. When Ross and Haarland, clutching handholds,
-were drifting weightlessly in its central control cabin, they very
-nearly filled it. There was one other cabin, Ross saw; and the two
-compartments accounted for a good nine-tenths of the cubage of the ship.
-Where that left space for the combustion chambers and the fuel tanks,
-the crew quarters, and the cargo holds, Ross could not imagine. He said:
-“All right, Mr. Haarland. Talk.”
-
-Haarland grinned toothily, his expression eerie in the flickering violet
-light that issued from a gutter around the cabin’s wall.
-
-“This is a spaceship, Ross. It’s a pretty old one—fourteen hundred
-years, give or take a little. It’s not much to look at, compared with
-the up-to-date models you’re used to, but it’s got a few features that
-you won’t find on the new ones. For one thing, Ross, it doesn’t use
-rockets.” He hesitated. “Ask me what it does use,” he admitted, “and I
-can’t tell you. I know the name, because I read it: nucleophoretic
-drive. What nucleophoresis is and how it works, I can’t say. They call
-it the Wesley Effect, and the tech manual says something about squared
-miles of acceleration. Does that mean anything to you? No. How could it?
-But it works, Ross. It works well enough so that this little ship will
-get you where you’re going very quickly. The stars, Ross—it will take
-you to the stars. Faster than light. What the top speed is I have no
-idea; but there is a ship’s log here, too. And it has a three-month
-entry—three months, Ross!—in which this little ship explored the solar
-systems of fourteen stars.”
-
-Wide-eyed, Ross held motionless. Haarland paused. “Fourteen hundred
-years,” he repeated. “Fourteen hundred years this ship has been floating
-out here. And for all that time, the longliners have been crawling from
-star to star, while little hidden ships like this one could have carried
-a thousand times as much goods a million times faster. Maybe the time
-has come to get the ships out of hiding. I don’t know. I want to find
-out; I want you to find out for me. I’ll be specific, Ross. I need a
-pilot. I’m too old, and Marconi turned it down. Someone has to go out
-there——” he gestured to the blind hull and the unseen stars beyond—“and
-find out why nine planets are out of communication. Will you do it?”
-
-Ross opened his mouth to speak, and a thousand questions competed for
-utterance. But what he said, barely aloud, was only: “Yes.”
-
-The far-off stars—more than a thousand million of them in our galaxy
-alone. By far the greatest number of them drifted alone through space,
-or with only a stellar companion as utterly unlivable by reason of heat
-and crushing gravity as themselves. Fewer than one in a million had a
-family of planets, and most even of those could never become a home for
-human life.
-
-But out of a thousand million, any fraction may be a very large number,
-and the number of habitable planets was in the hundreds.
-
-Ross had seen the master charts of the inhabited universe often enough
-to recognize the names as Haarland mentioned them: Tau Ceti II, Earth,
-the eight inhabitable worlds of Capella. But to realize that this
-ship—this ship!—had touched down on each of them, and on a hundred more,
-was beyond astonishment; it was a dream thing, impossible but
-unquestioned.
-
-Through Haarland’s burning, old eyes, Ross looked back through fourteen
-centuries, to the time when this ship was a scout vessel for a
-colonizing colossus. The lumbering giant drove slowly through space on
-its one-way trip from the planet that built it—was it semi-mythical
-Earth? The records were not clear—while the tiny scout probed each star
-and solar system as it drew within range. While the mother ship was
-covering a few hundred million miles, the scout might flash across
-parsecs to scan half a dozen worlds. And when the scout came back with
-word of a planet where humans could survive, they christened it with the
-name of the scout’s pilot, and the chartroom labored, and the ship’s
-officers gave orders, and the giant’s nose swerved through a half a
-degree and began its long, slow deceleration.
-
-“Why slow?” Ross demanded. “Why not use the faster-than-light drive for
-the big ships?”
-
-Haarland grimaced. “I’ve got to answer that one for you sooner or
-later,” he said, “but let me make it later. Anyway, that’s what this
-ship was: a faster-than-light scout ship for a real longliner. What
-happened to the longliner the records don’t show; my guess is the
-colonists cannibalized it to get a start in constructing homes for
-themselves. But the scout ship was exempted. The captain of the
-expedition had it put in an orbit out here, and left alone. It’s been
-used a little bit, now and then—my great-grandfather’s father went clear
-to 40 Eridani when my great-grandfather was a little boy, but by and
-large it has been left alone. It had to be, Ross. For one thing, it’s
-dangerous to the man who pilots it. For another, it’s dangerous to—the
-Galaxy.”
-
-Haarland’s view was anthropomorphic; the danger was not to the immense
-and uncaring galaxy, but to the sparse fester of life that called itself
-humanity.
-
-When the race abandoned Earth, it was a gesture of revulsion. Behind
-them they left a planet that had decimated itself in wars; ahead lay a
-cosmos that, in all their searches, had revealed no truly sentient life.
-
-Earth was a crippled world, the victim of its playing with nuclear
-fission and fusion. But the techniques that gave them a
-faster-than-light drive gave them as well a weapon that threatened solar
-systems, not cities; that could detonate a sun as readily as uranium
-could destroy a building. The child with his forbidden matches was now
-sitting atop a munitions dump; the danger was no longer a seared hand or
-blinded eye, but annihilation.
-
-And the decision had been made: secrecy. By what condign struggles the
-secrecy had been enforced, the secrecy itself concealed. But it had
-worked. Once the radiating colonizers had reached their goals, the
-nucleophoretic effect had been obliterated from their records and,
-except for a single man on each planet, from their minds.
-
-Why the single man? Why not bury it entirely?
-
-Haarland said slowly, “There was always the chance that something would
-go wrong, you see. And—it has.”
-
-Ross said hesitantly, “You mean the nine planets that have gone out of
-communication?”
-
-Haarland nodded. He hesitated. “Do you understand it now?” he asked.
-
-Ross shook his head dizzily. “I’m trying,” he said. “This little ship—it
-travels faster than light. It has been circling out here—how long?
-Fourteen hundred years? And you kept it secret—you and your ancestors
-before you because you were afraid it might be used in war?” He was
-frowning.
-
-“Not ‘afraid’ it would be used,” Haarland corrected gently. “We knew it
-would be used.”
-
-Ross grimaced. “Well, why tell me about it now? Do you expect me to keep
-it secret all the rest of my life?”
-
-“I think you would,” Haarland said soberly.
-
-“But suppose I didn’t? Suppose I blabbed all over the Galaxy, and it was
-used in war?”
-
-Haarland’s face was suddenly, queerly gray. He said, almost to himself,
-“It seems that there are things worse than war.” Abruptly he smiled.
-“Let’s find Ma.”
-
-They returned through the coupling and searched the longliner for the
-old woman. A Sonny told them, “Ma usually hangs around the meter room.
-Likes to see them blinking.” And there they found her.
-
-“Hello, Haarland,” she smiled, flashing her superb teeth. “Did you find
-what you were looking for?”
-
-“Perfect, Ma. I want to talk to you under the seal.”
-
-She looked at Ross. “Him?” she asked.
-
-“I vouch for him,” Haarland said gravely. “Wesley.”
-
-She answered, “The limiting velocity is C.”
-
-“But C^2 is not a velocity,” Haarland said. He turned to Ross. “Sorry
-to make a mystery,” he apologized. “It’s a recognition formula. It
-identifies one member of what we call the Wesley families, or its
-messenger, to another. And these people are messengers. They were
-dispatched a couple of centuries ago by a Wesley family whose ship, for
-some reason, no longer could be used. Why?—I don’t know why. Try your
-luck, maybe you can figure it out. Ma, tell us the history again.”
-
-She knitted her brows and began to chant slowly:
-
- “In great-grandfather’s time the target was Clyde,
- Rocketry firm and ores on the side.
- If we hadn’t of seen them direct we’d of missed ’em;
- There wasn’t a blip from the whole damn system.
- That was the first.
- Before great-grandfather’s day was done
- We cut the orbit of Cyrnus One.
- The contact there was Trader McCue,
- But the sons o’ bitches missed us too.
- That was the second.
- My grandpa lived to see the green
- Of Target Three through the high-powered screen.
- But where in hell was Builder Carruthers?
- They let us go by like all the others.
- That was the——”
-
-“Ma,” said Haarland. “Thanks very much, but would you skip to the last
-one?”
-
-Ma grinned.
-
- The Haarland Trading Corp. was last
- With the fuel down low and going fast.
- I’m glad it was me who saw the day
- When they brought us down on GCA.
- I told him the message; he called it a mystery,
- But anyway this is the end of the history.
- And it’s about time!
-
-“The message, please,” Haarland said broodingly.
-
-Ma took a deep breath and rattled off: “L-sub-T equals L-sub-zero e to
-the minus-T-over-two-N.”
-
-Ross gaped. “That’s the message?”
-
-“Used to be more to it,” Ma said cheerfully “That’s all there is now,
-though. The darn thing doesn’t rhyme or anything. I guess that’s the
-most important part. Anyway, it’s the hardest.”
-
-“It’s not as bad as it seems,” Haarland told Ross. “I’ve asked around.
-It makes a very little sense.”
-
-“It does?”
-
-“Well, up to a point,” Haarland qualified. “It seems to be a formula in
-genetics. The notation is peculiar, but it’s all explained, of course.
-It has something to do with gene loss. Now, maybe that means something
-and maybe it doesn’t. But I know something that does mean something:
-some member of a Wesley Family a couple of hundred years ago thought it
-was important enough to want to get it across to other Wesley families.
-Something’s happening. Let’s find out what it is, Ross.” The old man
-suddenly buried his face in his hands. In a cracked voice he mumbled,
-“Gene loss and war. Gene loss or war. God, I wish somebody would take
-this right out of my hands—or that I could drop with a heart attack this
-minute. You ever think of war, Ross?”
-
-Shocked and embarrassed, Ross mumbled some kind of answer. One might
-think of war, good breeding taught, but one never talked about it.
-
-“You should,” the old man said hoarsely. “War is what this
-faster-than-light secrecy and identification rigmarole is all about.
-Right now war is impossible—between solar systems, anyhow, and that’s
-what counts. A planet might just barely manage to fit an invading
-multigeneration expedition at gigantic cost, but it never would. The
-fruits of victory—loot, political domination, maybe slaves—would never
-come back to the fitters of the expedition but to their remote
-descendants. A firm will take a flyer on a commercial deal like that,
-but no nation would accept a war on any such basis—because a conqueror
-is a man, and men die. With F-T-L—faster-than-light travel—they might
-invade Curnus or Azor or any of those other tempting dots on the master
-maps. Why not? Take the marginal population, hop them up with patriotic
-fervor and lust for booty, and ship them off to pillage and destroy.
-There’s at least a fifty per cent chance of coming out ahead on the
-investment, isn’t there? Much more attractive deal commercially speaking
-than our present longliners.”
-
-Ross had never seen a war. The last on Halsey’s planet had been the
-Peninsular Rebellion about a century and a half ago. Some half a million
-constitutional psychopathic inferiors had started themselves an ideal
-society with theocratic trimmings in a remote and unfruitful corner of
-the planet. Starved and frustrated by an unrealistic moral creed they
-finally exploded to devastate their neighboring areas and were quickly
-quarantined by a radioactive zone. They disintegrated internally,
-massacred their priesthood, and were permitted to disperse. It was
-regarded as a shameful episode by every dweller on the planet. It wasn’t
-a subject for popular filmreels; if you wanted to find out about the
-Peninsular Rebellion you went through many successive library doors and
-signed your name on lists, and were sternly questioned as to your age
-and scholarly qualifications and reasons for sniffing around such an
-unsavory mess.
-
-Ross therefore had not the slightest comprehension of Haarland’s
-anxiety. He told him so.
-
-“I hope you’re right,” was all the old man would say. “I hope you don’t
-learn worse.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-The rest was work.
-
-He had the Yard worker’s familiarity with conventional rocketry, which
-saved him some study of the fine-maneuvering apparatus of the F-T-L
-craft—but not much. For a week under Haarland’s merciless drilling he
-jetted the ship about its remote area of space, far from the commerce
-lanes, until the old man grudgingly pronounced himself satisfied.
-
-There were skull-busting sessions with the Wesley drive, or rather with
-a first derivative of it, an insane-looking object which you could
-vaguely describe as a fan-shaped slide rule taller than a man. There
-were twenty-seven main tracks, analogues of the twenty-seven main
-geodesics of Wesley Space—whatever they were and whatever that was. Your
-cursor settings on the main tracks depended on a thirty-two step
-computation based on the apparent magnitudes of the twenty-seven nearest
-celestial bodies above a certain mass which varied according to yet
-another lengthy relationship. Then, having cleared the preliminaries out
-of the way, you began to solve for your actual setting on the F-T-L
-drive controls.
-
-Somehow he mastered it, while Haarland, driving himself harder than he
-drove the youth who was to be his exploring eyes and ears, coached him
-and cursed him and—somehow!—kept his own complicated affairs going back
-on Halsey’s Planet. When Ross had finally got the theory of the Wesley
-Drive in some kind of order in his mind, and had learned all there was
-to learn about the other worlds, and had cut his few important ties with
-Halsey’s Planet, he showed up in Haarland’s planet-based office for a
-final, repetitive briefing.
-
-Marconi was there.
-
-He had trouble meeting Ross’s eyes, but his handclasp was firm and his
-voice warmly friendly—and a little envious. “The very best, Ross,” he
-said. “I—I wish——” He hesitated and stammered. He said, in a flood,
-“Damn it, I should be going! Do a good job, Ross—and I hope you don’t
-hate me.” And he left while Ross, disturbed, went in to see old man
-Haarland.
-
-Haarland spared no time for sentiment. “You’re cleared for space
-flight,” he growled. “According to the visa, you’re going to Sunward—in
-case anyone asks you between here and the port. Actually, let’s hear
-where you _are_ going.”
-
-Ross said promptly, “I am going on a mission of exploration and
-reconnaissance. My first proposed destination is Ragansworld; second
-Gemser, third Azor. If I cannot make contact with any of these three
-planets, I will select planets at random from the master charts until I
-find some Wesley Drive families somewhere. The contacts for the first
-three planets are: On Ragansworld, Foley Associates; on Gemser, the
-Franklin Foundation; on Azor, Cavallo Machine Tool Company. F-T-L
-contacts on other planets are listed in the appendix to the master
-charts. The co-ordinates for Ragansworld are——”
-
-“Skip the co-ordinates,” mumbled Haarland, rubbing his eyes. “What do
-you do when you get in contact with a Wesley Drive family?”
-
-Ross hesitated and licked his lips. “I—well, it’s a little hard——”
-
-“Dammit,” roared Haarland, “I’ve told you a _thousand_ times——”
-
-“Yessir, I know. All I meant was I don’t exactly understand what I’m
-looking for.”
-
-“If I knew what you were to look for,” Haarland rasped, “I wouldn’t have
-to send you out looking! Can’t you get it through your thick head?
-_Something_ is wrong. I don’t know what. Maybe I’m crazy for bothering
-about it—heaven knows, I’ve got troubles enough right here—but we
-Haarlands have a tradition of service, and maybe it’s so old that we’ve
-kind of forgotten just what it’s all about. But it’s not so old that
-I’ve forgotten the family tradition. If I had a son, he’d be doing this.
-I counted on Marconi to be my son; now all I have left is you. And
-that’s little enough, heaven knows,” he finished bitterly.
-
-Ross, wounded, said by rote: “On landing, I will attempt at once to make
-contact with the local Wesley Drive family, using the recognition codes
-given me. I will report to them on all the data at hand and suggest the
-need for action.”
-
-Haarland stood up. “All right,” he said. “Sorry I snapped at you. Come
-on; I’ll go up to the ship with you.”
-
-And that was the way it happened. Ross found himself in the longliner,
-then with Haarland in the tiny, ancient, faster-than-light ship which
-had once been tender to the ship that colonized Halsey’s Planet. He
-found himself shaking hands with a red-eyed, suddenly-old Haarland,
-watching him crawl through the coupling to the longliner, watching the
-longliner blast away.
-
-He found himself setting up the F-T-L course and throwing in the drive.
-
-
-
-
-..... 5
-
-
-ROSS was lucky. The second listed inhabited planet was still inhabited.
-
-He had not quite stopped shuddering from the first when the approach
-radar caught him. The first planet was given in the master charts as
-“Ragansworld. Pop. 900,000,000; diam. 9400 m.; mean orbit 0.8 AU,” and
-its co-ordinates went on to describe it as the fourth planet of a small
-G-type sun. There had been some changes made: the co-ordinates now
-intersected well inside a bright and turbulent gas cloud.
-
-It appeared that suppressing the F-T-L drive had not quite annihilated
-war.
-
-But the second planet, Gemser—there, he was sure, was a world where
-nothing was seriously awry.
-
-He left the ship mumbling a name to himself: “Franklin Foundation.” And
-he was greeted by a corporal’s guard of dignified and ceremonially
-dressed men; they smiled at him, welcomed him, shook his hand, and
-invited him to what seemed to be the local equivalent of the
-administration building. He noticed disapprovingly that they didn’t seem
-to go in for the elaborate decontamination procedures of Halsey’s
-Planet, but perhaps, he thought, they had bred disease-resistance into
-their bloodlines. Certainly the four men in his guide party seemed hale
-and well-preserved, though the youngest of them was not less than sixty.
-
-“I would like,” he said, “to be put in touch with the Franklin
-Foundation, please.”
-
-“Come right in here,” beamed one of the four, and another said:
-
-“Don’t worry about a thing.” They held the door for him, and he walked
-into a small and sybaritically furnished room. The second man said,
-“Just a few questions. Where are you from?”
-
-Ross said simply, “Halsey’s Planet,” and waited.
-
-Nothing happened, except that all four men nodded comprehendingly, and
-the questioner made a mark on a sheet of paper. Ross amplified,
-“Fifty-three light years away. You know—another star.”
-
-“Certainly,” the man said briskly. “Your name?”
-
-Ross told him, but with a considerable feeling of deflation. He thought
-wryly of his own feelings about the longlines and the far stars; he
-remembered the stir and community excitement that a starship meant back
-home. Still, Ross told himself. Halsey’s Planet might be just a back
-eddy in the main currents of civilization. Quite possibly on another
-world—this one, for instance—travelers from the stars were a
-commonplace. The field hadn’t seemed overly busy, though; and there was
-nothing resembling a spaceship. Unless—he thought with a sudden sense of
-shock—those rusting hulks clumped together at the edge of the field had
-once been spaceships. But that was hardly likely, he reassured himself.
-You just don’t let spaceships rust.
-
-“Sex?” the man asked, and “Age?” “Education?” “Marital status?” The
-questions went on for more time than Ross quite understood; and they
-seemed far from relevant questions for the most part; and some of them
-were hard questions to answer. “Tau quotient?” for instance; Ross
-blinked and said, with an edge to his voice:
-
-“I don’t know what a tau quotient is.”
-
-“Put him down as zero,” one of the men advised, and the interlocutor
-nodded happily.
-
-“Working-with-others rating?” he asked, beaming.
-
-Ross said with controlled irritation, “Look, I don’t know anything about
-these ratings. Will you take me to somebody who can put me in touch with
-the Franklin Foundation?”
-
-The man who was sitting next to him patted him gently on the shoulder.
-“Just answer the questions,” he said comfortably. “Everything will be
-all right.”
-
-Ross flared, “The hell everything will——”
-
-Something with electrified spikes in it hit him on the back of the neck.
-
-Ross yelled and ducked away; the man next to him returned a little rod
-to his pocket. He smiled at Ross. “Don’t feel bad,” he said
-sympathetically. “Go ahead now, answer the questions.”
-
-Ross shook his head dazedly. The pain was already leaving his neck, but
-he felt nauseated by the suddenness and sharpness of it; he could not
-remember any pain quite like that in his life. He stood up waveringly
-and said, “Wait a minute, now——”
-
-This time it was the man on the other side, and the pain was about twice
-as sharp. Ross found himself on the floor, looking up through a haze.
-The man on his right kept the rod in his hand, and the expression on his
-face, while in no way angry, was stern. “Bad boy,” he said tenderly.
-“Why don’t you want to answer the questions?”
-
-Ross gasped, “God damn it, all I want is to see somebody! Keep your
-dirty hands off me, you old fools!” And that was a mistake, as he
-learned in the blessedly few minutes before he passed out completely
-under the little rods held by the gentle but determined men.
-
-He answered all the questions—bound to a chair, with two of the men
-behind him, when he had regained consciousness. He answered every one.
-They only had to hit him twice.
-
-When they untied him the next morning, Ross had caught on to the local
-folkways quite well. The fatherly fellow who released him said, “Follow
-me,” and stood back, smiling but with one hand on one of the little
-rods. And Ross was careful to say:
-
-“Yes, sir!”
-
-They rode in a three-wheeled car, and entered a barracks-like building.
-Ross was left alone next to a bed in a dormitory with half a hundred
-beds. “Just wait here,” the man said, smiling. “The rest of your group
-is out at their morning session now. When they come in for lunch you can
-join them. They’ll show you what to do.”
-
-Ross didn’t have too long to wait. He spent the time in conjecture as
-confused as it was fruitless; he had obviously done something wrong, but
-just what was it?
-
-If he had had twice as long he would have got no farther toward an
-answer than he was: nowhere. But a noise outside ended his speculations.
-He glanced toward the curiously shaped door—all the doors on this planet
-seemed to be rectangular. A girl of about eighteen was peering inside.
-
-She stared at Ross and said, “Oh!” Then she disappeared. There were
-footsteps and whispers, and more heads appeared and blinked at him and
-were jerked back.
-
-Ross stood up in wretched apprehension. All of a sudden he was fourteen
-years old again, and entering a new school where the old hands were
-giggling and whispering about the new boy. He swore sullenly to himself.
-
-A new face appeared, halted for an inspection of Ross, and walked
-confidently in. The man was a good forty years old, Ross thought;
-perhaps a kind of overseer in this institution—whatever kind of
-institution it was. He approached Ross at a sedate pace, and he was
-followed through the door in single file by a couple score men and
-women. They ranged in age, Ross thought wonderingly, from the leader’s
-forty down to the late teens of the girl who had first peered in the
-door, and now was at the end of the procession.
-
-The leader said, “How old are you?”
-
-“Why, uh——” Ross figured confusedly: this planet’s annual orbital period
-was roughly forty per cent longer than his own; fourteen into his age,
-multiplied by ten, making his age in their local calculations....
-
-“Why, I’m nineteen of your years old, about. And a half.”
-
-“Yes. And what can you do?”
-
-“Look here, sir. I’ve been through all this once. Why don’t you go and
-ask those gentlemen who brought me here? And can anybody tell me where
-the Franklin Foundation is?”
-
-The fortyish fellow, with a look of outrage, slapped Ross across the
-mouth. Ross knocked him down with a roundhouse right.
-
-A girl yelled, “Good for you, Junior!” and jumped like a wildcat onto a
-slim, gray-haired lady, clawing, and slapping. The throng dissolved
-immediately into a wild melee. Ross, busily fighting off the fortyish
-fellow and a couple of his stocky buddies, noted only that the scrap was
-youth against age, whatever it meant.
-
-“How _dare_ you?” a voice thundered, and the rioters froze.
-
-A decrepit wreck was standing in the doorway, surrounded by three or
-four gerontological textbook cases only a little less spavined than he.
-“Glory,” a girl muttered despairingly. “It would be the minister.”
-
-“What is the meaning of this brawl?” rolled from the wreck’s shriveled
-lips in a rich basso—no; rolled, Ross noted, from a flat perforated
-plate on his chest. There was a small, flesh-colored mike slung before
-his lips. “Who is responsible here?” asked the golden basso.
-
-Ross’s fortyish assailant said humbly: “I am, sir. This new fellow
-here——”
-
-“Manners! Speak when you’re spoken to.”
-
-Abjectly: “Yes, sir. I’m sorry, sir.”
-
-“Silly fools!” the senile wreck hectored them. “I’m going to take no
-official notice of this since I’m merely passing through. Luckily for
-you this is no formal inspection. But you’ve lost your lunch hour with
-your asinine pranks. Now get back to your work and never let me hear of
-a disgraceful incident like this again from Junior Unit Twenty-Three.”
-
-He swept out with his retinue. Ross noted that some of the younger girls
-were crying and that the older men and women were glaring at him
-murderously.
-
-“We’ll teach you manners, you pup,” the foreman-type said. “You go on
-the dye vats this afternoon. Any more trouble and you’ll miss a few
-meals.”
-
-Ross told him: “Just keep your hands off me, mister.”
-
-The foreman-type expanded into a beam of pleasure. “I thought you’d be
-sensible,” he said. “Everybody to the plant, now!” He collared a pretty
-girl of about Ross’s age. “Helena here is working out a bit of insolence
-on the dye vats herself. She’ll show you.” The girl stood with downcast
-eyes. Ross liked her face and wondered about her figure. Whatever it was
-like, it was covered from neck to knee by a loose shirt. But the older
-women wore fitted clothes.
-
-The foreman-type led a grand procession through the door. Helena told
-Ross: “I guess you’d better get in front of me in line. I go here——” She
-slipped in deftly, and Ross understood a little more of what went on
-here. The procession was in order of age.
-
-He had determined to drift for a day or two—not that he seemed to have
-much choice. The Franklin Foundation, supposedly having endured a good
-many years, would last another week while he explored the baffling mores
-of this place and found out how to circumvent them and find his way to
-the keepers of F-T-L on this world. Nobody would go anywhere with his
-own ship—not without first running up a setting for the Wesley Drive!
-
-The line filed into a factory whose like Ross had never before seen. He
-had a fair knowledge of and eye for industrial processes; it was clear
-that the place was an electric-cable works. But why was the concrete
-floor dangerously cracked and sloppily patched? Why was the big
-enameling oven rumbling and stinking? Why were the rolling mills in a
-far corner unsupplied with guards and big, easy-to-hit emergency
-cutoffs? Why was the light bad and the air full of lint? Why did the
-pickling tank fume and make the workers around it cough hackingly? Most
-pointed of all, why did the dye vats to which Helena led him stink and
-slop over?
-
-There were grimy signs everywhere, including the isolated bay where
-braiding cord was dyed the standard code colors. The signs said things
-like: AGE IS A PRIVILEGE AND NOT A RIGHT. AGE MUST BE EARNED BY WORK.
-GRATITUDE IS THE INDEX OF YOUR PROGRESS TO MATURITY.
-
-Helena said girlishly as she took his arm and hooked him out of the
-moving line: “Here’s Stinkville. Believe me, I’m not going to talk back
-again. After all, one’s maturity is measured by one’s acceptance of
-one’s environment, isn’t it?”
-
-“Yeah,” said Ross. “Listen, Helena, have you ever heard of a place
-called the Franklin Foundation?”
-
-“No,” she said. “First you climb up here—golly! I don’t even know your
-name.”
-
-“Ross.”
-
-“All right, Ross. First you climb up here and make sure the yarn’s
-running over the rollers right; sometimes it gets twisted around and
-then it breaks. Then you take one of the thermometers from the wall and
-you check the vat temperature. It says right on the thermometers what it
-should be for the different colors. If it’s off you turn that gas tap up
-or down, just a little. Then you check the wringer rolls where the yarn
-comes out. Watch your fingers when you do! The yarn comes in different
-thicknesses on the same thread so you have to adjust the wringer rolls
-so too much dye doesn’t get squeezed out. You can tell by the color; it
-shouldn’t be lighter after it goes through the rolls. But the yarn
-shouldn’t come through sloppy and drip dye on the floor while it travels
-to the bobbin——”
-
-There was some more, equally uncomplicated. He took the yellow and green
-vats; she took the red and blue. They had worked in the choking stench
-and heat for perhaps three hours before Ross finished one temperature
-check and descended to adjust a gas tap. He found Helena, spent and
-gasping, on the floor, hidden from the rest of the shop by the bulky
-tanks.
-
-“Heat knock you out?” he asked briskly. “Don’t try to talk. I’ll tote
-you over by the wall away from the burners. Maybe we’ll catch a little
-breeze from the windows there.” She nodded weakly.
-
-He picked her up without too much trouble, carried her three yards or so
-to the wall, still isolated from the rest of the shop. She was ripely
-curved under that loose shirt, he learned. He set her down easily,
-crouching himself, and did not take his hands away.
-
-It’s been a long time, he thought—and she was responding! Whether she
-knew it or not, there was a drowsy smile on her face and her body moved
-a little against his hands, pleasurably. She was breathing harder.
-
-Ross did the sensible thing and kissed her.
-
-Wildcat!
-
-Ross reeled back from her fright and anger, his face copiously
-scratched. “I’m dreadfully sorry,” he sputtered. “Please accept my
-sincerest——”
-
-The flare-up of rage ended; she was sobbing bitterly, leaning against
-the wall, wailing that nobody had ever treated her like that before,
-that she’d be set back three years if he told anybody, that she was a
-good, self-controlled girl and he had no _right_ to treat her that way,
-and what kind of degenerate was he, not yet twenty and going around
-kissing girls when _everybody_ knew you went crazy from it.
-
-He soothed her—from a distance. Her sobbing dropped to a bilious croon
-as she climbed the ladder to the yellow vat, tears still on her face,
-and checked its temperature.
-
-Ross, wondering if he were already crazy from too much kissing of girls,
-mechanically resumed his duties. But she had responded. And how long had
-they been working? And wasn’t this shift ever going to end?
-
-All the shifts ended in time. But there was a catch to it: There was
-always another shift. After the afternoon shift on the dye vats came
-dinner—porridge!—and then came the evening shift on the dye vats, and
-then sleep. The foreman was lenient, though; he let Ross off the vats
-after the end of the second day. Then it was kitchen orderly, and only
-two shifts a day. And besides, you got plenty to eat.
-
-But it was a long, long way, Ross thought sardonically to himself, from
-the shining pictures he had painted to himself back on Halsey’s Planet.
-Ross the explorer, Ross the hero, Ross the savior of humanity....
-
-Ross, the semipermanent KP.
-
-He had to admit it to himself: The expedition thus far had been a bust.
-Not only was it perfectly clear that there no longer was a Franklin
-Foundation on Gemser, but more had been lost than time and effort. For
-Ross himself, he silently admitted, was as close to lost as he ever
-wanted to be. He was, in effect, a prisoner, in a prison from which
-there was no easy escape as long as he was cursed with youthfulness....
-
-Of course, the implications of that were that there was a perfectly easy
-escape in time. All he had to do was get old enough to matter, on this
-insane planet. Ninety, maybe. And then he would be perfectly free to
-totter out to the spaceport, dragoon a squad of juniors into lifting him
-into the ship, and take off....
-
-Helena was some help. But only psychologically; she was pleasant
-company, but neither she nor anyone else in the roster of forty-eight to
-whom he was permitted to speak had ever heard of the Franklin
-Foundation, or F-T-L travel, or anything. Helena said, “Wait for
-Holiday. Maybe one of the grownups will tell you then?”
-
-“Holiday?” Ross slid back and scratched his shoulder blades against the
-corner of his bed. Helena was sprawled on the floor, half watching a
-projected picture on the screen at the end of the dormitory.
-
-“Yes. You’re lucky, it’s only eight days off. That’s when Dobermann——”
-she pointed to the foreman——“graduates; he’s the only one this year. And
-we all move up a step, and the new classes come in, and then we all get
-everything we want. Well, pretty near,” she amended. “We can’t do
-anything _bad_. But you’ll see; it’s nice.”
-
-Then the picture ended, and it was calisthenics time, and then lights
-out. Forty-eight men and women on their forty-eight bunks—the honor
-system appeared to work beautifully; there had been no signs of sex play
-that Ross had been able to see—slept the sleep of the innocent. While
-Ross, the forty-ninth, lay staring into the dark with rising hope.
-
-In the kitchen the next morning he got more information from Helena.
-Holiday seemed to be a cross between saturnalia and Boy’s Week; for one
-day of the year the elders slightly relaxed their grip on the reins. On
-that day alone one could Speak Before Being Spoken To, Interrupt One’s
-Elders, even Leave the Room without Being Excused.
-
-Whee, Ross thought sourly. But still....
-
-The foreman, Dobermann, once you learned how to handle him, wasn’t
-such a bad guy. Ross, studying his habits, learned the proper
-approach and used it. Dobermann’s commonest complaint was of
-irresponsibility—irresponsibility when some thirty-year-old junior
-was caught sneaking into line ahead of his proper place,
-irresponsibility when Ross forgot to make his bed before stumbling
-out in the dark to his kitchen shift, one awful case of
-irresponsibility when Helena thoughtlessly poured cold water into
-the cooking vat while it was turned on. There was a sizzle, a
-crackle, and a puff of steam, and Helena was weeping over a broken
-heating element.
-
-Dobermann came storming over, and Ross saw his chance. “That is very
-irresponsible of you, Helena,” he said coldly, back to Dobermann but
-entirely conscious of his presence. “If Junior Unit Twenty-Three was all
-as irresponsible as you, it would reflect badly on Mr. Dobermann. You
-don’t know how lucky you are that Mr. Dobermann is so kind to you.”
-
-Helena’s weeping dried up instantly; she gave Ross one furious glance,
-and lowered her eyes before Dobermann. Dobermann nodded approvingly to
-Ross as he waded into Helena; it was a memorable tirade, but Ross heard
-only part of it. He was looking at the cooking vat; it was a
-simple-minded bit of construction, a spiral of resistance wire around a
-ceramic core. The core had cracked and one end of the wire was loose; if
-it could be reconnected, the cracked core shouldn’t matter much—the wire
-was covered with insulation anyhow. He looked up and opened his mouth to
-say something, then remembered and merely stood looking brightly
-attentive.
-
-“——looks like you want to go back to the vats,” the foreman was
-finishing. “Well, Helena, if that’s what you want we can make you happy.
-This time you’ll be by yourself, too; you won’t have Ross to help you
-out when the going’s rough. Will she, Ross?”
-
-“No, sir,” Ross said immediately. “Sir?”
-
-Dobermann looked back at him, frowning. “What?”
-
-“I think I can fix this,” Ross said modestly.
-
-Dobermann’s eyes bulged. “Fix it?”
-
-“Yes, sir. It’s only a loose wire. Back where I come from, we all
-learned how to take care of things like that when we were still in
-school. It’s just a matter of——”
-
-“Now, hold on, Ross”; the foreman howled. “Tampering with a machine is
-bad enough, but if you’re going to turn out to be a liar, too, you’re
-going just too far! School, indeed! You know perfectly well, Ross, that
-even I won’t be ready for school until after Holiday. Ross, I knew you
-were a troublemaker, knew it the first day I set eyes on you. School!
-Well, we’ll see how you like the school I’m going to send you to!”
-
-The vats weren’t so bad the second time. Even though the porridge was
-cold for two days, until somebody got around to delivering a different
-though equally worn-out cooking vat.
-
-Helena passed out from the heat three times. And when, on the third
-time, Ross, goaded beyond endurance, kissed her again, there were no
-hysterics.
-
-
-
-
-..... 6
-
-
-FROM birth to puberty you were an infant. From puberty to Dobermann’s
-age, a junior. For ten years after that you went to school, learning the
-things you had neither the need nor the right to know before.
-
-And then you were Of Age.
-
-Being Of Age meant much, much more than voting, Ross found out. For one
-thing, it meant freedom to marry—after the enforced sexlessness of the
-junior years and the directed breeding via artificial insemination of
-the Scholars. It meant a healthy head start on seniority, which carried
-with it all offices and all power.
-
-It meant freedom.
-
-As a bare beginning, it meant the freedom to command any number of
-juniors or scholars. On Ross’s last punitive day in the dye vats, a
-happy ancient commandeered the entire staff to help set shrubs in his
-front lawn—a good dozen acres of careful landscaping it was, and the
-prettiest sight Ross had seen on this ugly planet.
-
-When they got back to the dye vats, the yellow and blue had boiled over,
-and broken strands of yarn had fouled all the bobbins. Dobermann
-raged—at the juniors.
-
-But then Dobermann’s raging came to an end forever. It was the night
-before Holiday, and there was a pretty ceremony as he packed his kit and
-got ready to turn Junior Unit Twenty-three over to his successor.
-Everyone was scrubbed, and though a certain amount of license in regard
-to neatness was allowed between dinner and lights out, each bunk was
-made and carefully smoothed free of wrinkles. After half an hour of
-fidgety waiting, Dobermann called—needlessly—for attention, and the
-minister came in with his ancient retinue.
-
-The rich mechanical voice boomed out from his breastplate: “Junior
-Dobermann, today you are a man!”
-
-Dobermann stood with his head bowed, silent and content. Junior Unit
-Twenty-Three chanted antiphonally: “Good-by, Junior Dobermann!”
-
-The retinue took three steps forward, and the minister boomed, “Beauty
-comes with age. Age is beauty!”
-
-And the chorus: “Old heads are wisest!” Ross, standing as straight as
-any of them, faked the words with his lips and tongue, and wondered how
-many repetitions had drilled those sentiments into Junior Unit
-Twenty-Three.
-
-There were five more chants, and five responses, and then the minister
-and his court of four were standing next to Dobermann. Breathing heavily
-from his exertions, the minister reached behind him and took a book from
-the hands of the nearest of his retinue. He said, panting, “Scholar
-Dobermann, in the Book lies the words of the Fathers. Read them and
-learn.”
-
-The chorus cried thrice, “The Word of the Fathers Is Law.” And then the
-minister touched Dobermann’s hand, and in solemn silence, left.
-
-As soon as the elders had gone, the juniors flocked around Dobermann to
-wish him well. There was excited laughter in the congratulations, and a
-touch of apprehension too: Dobermann, with all his faults, was a known
-quantity, and the members of Junior Unit Twenty-Three were beginning to
-look a little fearfully at the short, redheaded youth who, from the next
-day on, would be Dobermann’s successor.
-
-Ross promised himself: He can be good or bad, a blessing or a problem.
-But he won’t be _my_ problem. I’m getting out of here tomorrow!
-
-Holiday.
-
-“Oh, it’s fun,” Helena told him enthusiastically. “First you get up
-early to get the voting out of the way——”
-
-“Voting?”
-
-“Sure. Don’t they vote where you come from? I thought everybody voted.
-That’s democracy, like we have it here.”
-
-He sardonically quoted one of the omnipresent wall signs: “THE HAPPINESS
-OF THE MAJORITY MEANS THE HAPPINESS OF THE MINORITY.” He had often
-wondered what, if anything, it meant. But Helena solemnly nodded.
-
-They were whispering from their adjoining cots by dim, false dawn
-filtering through the windows on Holiday morning. They were not the only
-whisperers. Things were relaxing already.
-
-“Ross,” Helena said.
-
-“Yes?”
-
-“I thought maybe you might not know. On Holiday if you, ah, want to do
-that again you don’t have to wait until I faint. Ah, of course you don’t
-do it right out in the open.” Overcome by her own daring she buried her
-head under the coarse blanket.
-
-Fine, thought Ross wearily. Once a year—or did Holiday come once a
-year?—the kids were allowed to play “Spin The Bottle.” No doubt their
-elders thought it was too cute for words: mere tots of thirty and
-thirty-five childishly and innocently experimenting with sex. Of course
-it would be discreetly supervised so that nobody would Get In Trouble.
-
-He was quite sure Helena’s last two faints had been unconvincing
-phonies.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The wake-up whistle blew at last. The chattering members of Junior Unit
-Twenty-Three dawdled while they dressed, and the new foreman indulgently
-passed out shabby, smutted ribbons which the girls tied in their hair.
-They had sugar on their mush for breakfast, and Ross’s stomach came near
-turning as he heard burbles of gratitude at the feast.
-
-With pushing and a certain amount of inexpert horseplay they formed a
-column of fours and hiked from the hall—from the whole factory complex,
-indeed, along a rubberized highway.
-
-Once you got out of the factory area things became pleasanter by the
-mile. Hortatory roadside signs thinned out and vanished. Stinking
-middens of industrial waste were left behind. And then the landscape was
-rolling, sodded acres with the road pleasantly springy underfoot, the
-air clean and crisp.
-
-They oohed and aahed at houses glimpsed occasionally in the
-distance—always rambling, one-story affairs that looked spanking-new.
-
-Once a car overhauled them on the highway and slowed to a crawl. It was
-a huge thing, richly upholstered within. A pair of grimlooking youths
-were respectively chauffeur and footman; the passenger waved at the
-troop from Junior Twenty-Three and grinned out of a fantastic landscape
-of wrinkles. Ross gaped. Had he thought the visiting minister was old?
-This creature, male or female, was _old_.
-
-After the car sped on, to the cheers of the marchers, there was happy
-twittering speculation. Junior Twenty-Three didn’t recognize the Citizen
-who had graciously waved to them, but they thought he—or she?—was
-wonderful. So dignified, so distinguished, so learned, so gracious, so
-democratic!
-
-“Wasn’t it sweet of him?” Helena burbled. “And I’m sure he must be
-somebody important connected with the voting, otherwise he’d just vote
-from home.”
-
-Ross’s feet were beginning to hurt when they reached the suburban
-center. To the best of his recollection, they were no more than eight or
-ten kilos from the field and his starship. Backtrack on the road to the
-suburban center about three kilos, take the fork to the right, and that
-would be that.
-
-Junior Twenty-Three reached a pitch of near-ecstasy marveling at the
-low, spacious buildings of the center. Through sweeping, transparent
-windows they saw acres of food and clothing in the shopping center; the
-Drive-In Theater was an architectural miracle. The Civic Center almost
-finished them off, with its statue of Equal Justice Under the Law (a
-dignified beldame whose chin and nose almost met, leaning on a
-gem-crusted crutch) and Civic Virtue (in a motorized wheelchair equipped
-with an emergency oxygen tent, Lindbergh-Carrel auxiliary blood pump and
-an artificial kidney).
-
-Merry oldsters were everywhere in their cars and wheelchairs, gaily
-waving at the kids. Only one untoward incident marred their prevoting
-tour of inspection. A thick-headed young man mistakenly called out a
-cheerful: “Life and wisdom, ma’am!” to a beaming oldster.
-
-“Ma’am, is it?” the oldster roared through his throat mike and amplifier
-in an unmistakable baritone. “I’ll ma’am you, you wise punk!” He spun
-his wheelchair on a decishield, threw it into high and roared down on
-the offender, running him over. The boy covered himself as well as he
-could while the raging old man backed over him again and ran over him
-again. His ordeal ended when the oldster collapsed forward in the chair,
-hanging from his safety belt.
-
-The boy got up with tire marks on him and groaned: “Oh, lord! I’ve hurt
-him.” He appealed hysterically: “What’ll I do? Is he dead?”
-
-Another Senior Citizen buzzed up and snapped: “Cut in his L-C heart, you
-booby!”
-
-The boy turned on the Lindbergh-Carrel pump, trembling. The white-faced
-juniors of Twenty-Three watched as the tubes to the oldster’s left arm
-throbbed and pulsed. A massive sigh went up when the old man’s eyes
-opened and he sat up groggily. “What happened?”
-
-“You died again, Sherrington,” said the other elder. “Third time this
-week—good thing there was a responsible person around. Now get over to
-the medical center this minute and have a complete checkup. Hear me?”
-
-“Yes, Dad,” Sherrington said weakly. He rolled off in low gear.
-
-His father turned to the youngster who stood vacantly rubbing the tire
-marks on his face. “Since it’s Holiday,” he grated, “I’ll let this pass.
-On any other day I would have seen to it that you were set back fifteen
-years for your disgraceful negligence.”
-
-Ross knew by then what that meant, and shuddered with the rest. It
-amounted to a death sentence, did fifteen additional years of the
-grinding toil and marginal diet of a junior.
-
-Somewhat dampened they proceeded to the Hall of Democracy, a glittering
-place replete with slogans, statues, and heroic portraits of the heroic
-aged. Twenty-Three huddled together as it joined with a stream of
-juniors from the area’s other factory units. Most of them were larger
-than the cable works; many of them, apparently, involved more wearing
-and hazardous occupations. Some groups coughed incessantly and were
-red-eyed from the irritation of some chemical. Others must have been
-heavy-manual-labor specialists. They were divided into the hale, whose
-muscles bulged amazingly, and the dying—men and women who obviously
-could not take the work but who were doing it anyway.
-
-They seated themselves at long benches, with push buttons at each
-station. Helena, next to him, explained the system to Ross. Voting was
-universal and simultaneous, in all the Halls of Democracy around the
-planet and from all the homes of the Senior Citizens who did not choose
-to vote from a Hall. Simultaneously the votes were counted at a central
-station and the results were flashed to screens in the Centers and
-homes. She said a number of enthusiastic things about Democracy while
-Ross studied a sheet on which the candidates and propositions were
-listed.
-
-The names meant nothing to him. He noted only that each of three
-candidates for Chief of State was one hundred thirty years old, that
-each of three candidates for First Assistant Chief was one hundred and
-twenty-seven years old, and so on. Obviously the nominating conventions
-by agreement named candidates of the same age for each office to keep it
-a contest.
-
-Proposition One read: “To dismantle seven pediatric centers and apply
-the salvage value to the construction of, and the funds no longer
-required for their maintenance to the maintenance of, a new wing of the
-Gerontological Center, said wing to be devoted to basic research in the
-extension of human life.”
-
-Proposition Two was worse. Ross didn’t bother to read the rest of them.
-He whispered hoarsely to Helena, “What next?”
-
-“Ssh!” She pointed to a screen at the front of the Hall. “It’s
-starting.”
-
-A Senior Citizen of a very high rank (his face was entirely hidden by an
-oxygen mask) was speaking from the screen. There was what seemed to be a
-ritual speech of invocation, then he got down to business. “Citizens,”
-he said through his throat mike, “behold Democracy in Action! I give you
-three candidates for Chief of State—look them over, and make up your
-minds. First, Citizen Raphael Flexner, age one century, three decades,
-seven months, ten days.” Senior Citizen Flexner rolled on screen, spoke
-briefly through his throat mike and rolled off. The first speaker said
-again, “Behold Democracy in Action! See now Citizen Sheridan Farnsworth,
-age one century, three decades, ten months, forty-two days.” Applause
-boomed louder; some of the younger juniors yelled hysterically and
-drummed their heels on the floor.
-
-Helena was panting with excitement, eyes bright on the screen. “Isn’t it
-_wonderful_?” she gasped ecstatically. “Oh, look at _him_!”
-
-“Him” was the third candidate, and the first oldster Ross had seen whose
-gocart was a wheeled stretcher. Prone and almost invisible through the
-clusters of tubing and chromed equipment, Senior Citizen Immanuel
-Appleby acknowledged his introduction—“Age one century, three decades,
-eleven months and five days!” The crowd went mad; Helena broke from
-Ross’s side and joined a long yelling snake dance through the corridors.
-
-Ross yelled experimentally as protective coloration, then found himself
-yelling because everybody was yelling, because he couldn’t help it. By
-the time the speaker on the screen began to call for order, Ross was
-standing on top of the voting bench and screaming his head off.
-
-Helena, weeping with excitement, tugged at his leg. “Vote now, Ross,”
-she begged, and all over the hall the cry was “Vote! Vote!”
-
-Ross reached out for the voting buttons. “What do we do now?” he asked
-Helena.
-
-“Push the button marked ‘Appleby,’ of course. Hurry!”
-
-“But why Appleby?” Ross objected. “That fellow Flexner, for instance——”
-
-“Hush, Ross! Somebody might be listening.” There was sickening fright on
-Helena’s face. “Didn’t you hear? We _have_ to vote for the best man.
-‘Oldest Is Bestest,’ you know. That’s what Democracy _means_, the
-freedom of choice. They read us the ages, and we choose which is oldest.
-Now please, Ross, hurry before somebody starts asking questions!”
-
-The voting was over, and the best man had won in every case. It was a
-triumph for informed public opinion. The mob poured out of the hall in
-happy-go-lucky order, all precedences and formalities suspended for
-Holiday.
-
-Helena grasped Ross firmly by the arm. The crowd was spreading over the
-quiet acres surrounding the Center, each little cluster heedlessly
-intent on a long-planned project of its own. Under the pressure of
-Helena’s arm, Ross found himself swerving toward a clump of shrubbery.
-
-He said violently, “No! That is, I mean I’m sorry, Helena, but I’ve got
-something to do.”
-
-She stared at him with shock in her eyes. “On Holiday?”
-
-“On Holiday. Truly, Helena, I’m sorry. Look, what you said last
-night—from now till tomorrow morning, I can do what I want, right?”
-
-Sullenly, “Yes. I _thought_, Ross, that I _knew_ what——”
-
-“Okay.” He jerked his arm away, feeling like all of the hundred possible
-kinds of a skunk. “See you around,” he said over his shoulder. He did
-not look back.
-
-Three kilos back, he told himself firmly, then the right-hand fork in
-the road. And not more than a dozen kilos, at the most, to the
-spaceport. He could do it in a couple of hours.
-
-One thing had been established for certain: If ever there had been a
-“Franklin Foundation” on this planet, it was gone for good now.
-Dismantled, no doubt, to provide building materials for an eartrumpet
-plant. No doubt the little F-T-L ship that the Franklin Foundation was
-supposed to cover for was still swinging in an orbit within easy range
-of the spaceport; but the chance that anybody would ever find it, or use
-it if found, was pretty close to zero. If they bothered to maintain a
-radar watch at all—any other watch than the fully automatic one set to
-respond only to highvelocity interstellar ships—and if anyone ever took
-time to look at the radar plot, no doubt the F-T-L ship was charted. As
-an asteroid, satellite, derelict or “body of unknown origin.” Certainly
-no one of these smug oldsters would take the trouble to investigate.
-
-The only problem to solve on this planet was how to get off it—fast.
-
-On the road ahead of him was what appeared to be a combination sex orgy
-and free-for-all. It rolled in a yelling, milling mob of half a hundred
-excited juniors across the road toward him, then swerved into the fields
-as a cluster of screaming women broke free and ran, and the rest of the
-crowd roared after them.
-
-Ross quickened his step. If he ever did get off this planet, it would
-have to be today; he was not fool enough to think that any ordinary day
-would give him the freedom to poke around the spaceport’s defenses. And
-it would be just his luck, he thought bitterly, to get involved in a
-gang fight on the way to the port.
-
-There was a squeal of tires behind him, and a little vehicle screeched
-to a halt. Ross threw up a defensive arm in automatic reflex.
-
-But it was only Helena, awkwardly fumbling open the door of the car.
-“Get in,” she said sourly. “You’ve spoiled _my_ Holiday. Might as well
-do what _you_ want to do.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-“What’s that?”
-
-Helena looked where he was pointing, and shrugged. “Guard box,” she
-guessed. “How would I know? Nobody’s in it, anyhow.”
-
-Ross nodded. They had abandoned the car and were standing outside a
-long, seamless fence that surrounded the spaceport. The main gates were
-closed and locked; a few hundred feet to the right was a smaller gate
-with a sort of pillbox, but that had every appearance of being locked
-too.
-
-“All right,” said Ross. “See that shed with the boxes outside it? Over
-we go.”
-
-The shed was right up against the fence; the metal boxes gave a sort of
-rough and just barely climbable foothold. Helena was easy enough to lift
-to the top of the shed; Ross, grunting, managed to clamber after her.
-
-They looked down at the ground on the other side, a dozen feet away.
-“You don’t have to come along,” Ross told her.
-
-“That’s just _like_ you!” she flared. “Cast me aside—trample on me!”
-
-“All right, all right.” Ross looked around, but neither junior nor elder
-was anywhere in sight. “Hang by your hands and then drop,” he advised
-her. “Get moving before somebody shows up.”
-
-“On Holiday?” she asked bitterly. She squirmed over the narrow top of
-the fence, legs dangling, let herself down as far as she could, and let
-go. Ross watched anxiously, but she got up quickly enough and moved to
-one side.
-
-Ross plopped down next to her, knocking the wind out of himself. He got
-up dizzily.
-
-His ship, in lonesome quiet, was less than a quarter of a mile away.
-“Let’s go,” Ross panted, and clutched her hand. They skirted another
-shed and were in the clear, running as fast as they could.
-
-Almost in the clear.
-
-Ross heard the whine of the little scooter before he felt the blow, but
-it was too late. He sprawled on the ground, dragging Helena after him.
-
-A Senior Citizen with a long-handled rod of the sort Ross remembered all
-too well was scowling down at them. “Children,” he rumbled through his
-breast-speaker in a voice of awful disgust, “is this the way to act on
-Holiday?”
-
-Helena, gibbering in terror, was beyond words. Ross croaked, “Sorry,
-sir. We—we were just——”
-
-Crash! The rod came down again, and every muscle in Ross’s body
-convulsed. He rolled helplessly away, the elder following him. Crash!
-“We give you Holiday,” the elder boomed, “and——” crash “——you act like
-animals. Terrible! Don’t you know that freedom of play on Holiday——”
-crash “——is the most sacred right of every junior——” crash “——and heaven
-help you——” crash “——if you abuse it!”
-
-The wrenching punishment and the caressing voice stopped together. Ross
-lay blinking into the terrible silence that followed. He became
-conscious of Helena’s weeping, and forced his head to turn to look at
-her.
-
-She was standing behind the elder’s scooter, a length of wire in her
-hand. The senior lay slumped against his safety strap. “Ross!” she
-moaned. “Ross, what have I done? _I turned him off!_”
-
-He stood up, coughing and retching. No one else was in sight, only the
-two of them and the silent, slack form of the old man. He grabbed her
-arm. “Come on,” he said fuzzily, and started toward the starship.
-
-She hung back, mumbling to herself, her eyes saucers. She was in a state
-of grievous shock, it was clear.
-
-Ross hesitated, rubbing his back. He knew that she might never pull out
-of it. Even if she did, she was certain to be a frightful handicap. But
-it was crystal-clear that she had declared herself on his side. Even if
-the elder could be revived, the punishment in store for Helena would be
-awful to contemplate....
-
-Come what may, he was now responsible for Helena.
-
-He towed her to the starship. She climbed in docilely enough, sat
-staring blankly as he sealed ship and sent it blasting off the face of
-the planet.
-
- * * * * *
-
-She didn’t speak until they were well into deep space. Then the blank
-stare abruptly clouded and she exploded in a fit of tears. Ross said
-ineffectually, “There, there.” It had no effect; until, in its own time,
-the storm ended.
-
-Helena said hoarsely, “Wh-what do I do now?”
-
-“Why, I guess you come right along with me,” Ross said heartily, cursing
-his luck.
-
-“Where’s that?”
-
-“Where? You mean, where?” Ross scratched his head. “Well, let’s see.
-Frankly, Helena, your planet was quite a disappointment to me. I had
-hoped——Well, no matter. I suppose the best thing to do is to look up the
-next planet on the list.”
-
-“What list?”
-
-Ross hesitated, then shrugged and plunged into the explanation. All
-about the longliners and the message and faster-than-light travel and
-the Wesley Families—and none of it, while he was talking, seemed
-convincing at all. But perhaps Helena was less critical; or perhaps
-Helena simply did not care. She listened attentively and made no
-comment. She only said, at the end, “What’s the name of the next
-planet?”
-
-He consulted the master charts. Haarland’s listing showed a place called
-Azor, conveniently near at hand in the strange geodesics of the Wesley
-Effect, where the far galaxies might be near at hand in the warped
-space-lines, and the void just beyond the viewplates be infinitely
-distant. The F-T-L family of Azor was named Cavallo; when last heard
-from, they had been builders of machine tools.
-
-Ross told Helena about it. She shrugged and watched curiously as he
-began to set up the F-T-L problem on the huge board.
-
-
-
-
-..... 7
-
-
-THEY were well within detection range of Azor’s radar, if any, and yet
-there had been no beeping signal that the planet’s GCA had taken over
-and would pilot them down. Another blank? He studied the surface of the
-world under his highest magnification and saw no signs that it had been
-devastated by war. There were cities—intact, as far as he could tell,
-but not very attractive. The design ran to huge, gloomy piles that
-mounted toward central towers.
-
-Azor was a big world which showed not much water and a great deal of
-black rock. It was the fifth of its system and reportedly had colonized
-its four adjacent neighbors and their moons.
-
-His own search radar pinged. The signal was followed at once by a
-guarded voice from his ship-to-ship communicator: “What ship are you? Do
-you receive me? The band is 798.44.”
-
-He hastily dialed the frequency on his transmitter and called, “I
-receive you. We are a vessel from outside your solar system, home planet
-Halsey. We want to contact a family named Cavallo of the planet Azor
-believed to be engaged in building machine tools. Can you help us?”
-
-“You are a male?” the voice asked cautiously. “In command or simply the
-communicator?”
-
-“I’m a male and I’m in command of this vessel.”
-
-The voice said: “Then sheer off this system and go elsewhere, my
-friend.”
-
-“What is this? Who are you?”
-
-“My name does not matter. I happen to be on watch aboard the prison
-orbital station ‘Minerva.’ Get going, my friend, before the planetary
-GCA picks you up.”
-
-Prison orbital station? A very sensible idea. “Thanks for the advice,”
-he parried. “Can you tell me anything about the Cavallo family?”
-
-“I have heard of them. My friend, your time is running out. If you do
-not sheer off very soon they will land you. And I judge from the tone of
-your voice that it will not be long before you join the rest of us
-criminals aboard ‘Minerva.’ It is not pleasant here. Good-by.”
-
-“Wait, please!” Ross had no intention at all of committing any crimes
-that would land him aboard a prison hulk, and he had every intention of
-fulfilling his mission. “Tell me about the Cavallo family—and why you
-expect me to get in trouble on Azor.”
-
-“The time is running out, my friend, but—the Cavallo family of machine
-tool builders is located in Novj Grad. And the crime of which all of us
-aboard ‘Minerva’ were convicted is conspiracy to advocate equality of
-the sexes. Now go!”
-
-The carrier-wave hum of the communicator died, but immediately there was
-another electronic noise to fill the cabin—the beep of a GCA radar
-taking over the sealed landing controls of the craft.
-
-Helena had been listening with very little comprehension. “Who was your
-friend, Ross?” she asked. “Where are we?”
-
-“I think,” Ross said, “he _was_ my friend. And I think we are—in
-trouble.”
-
-The ship began to jet tentative bursts of reaction mass, nosing toward
-the big, gloomy planet.
-
-“That’s all right,” Helena said comfortably. “At least they won’t know I
-disconnected a Senior Citizen.” She thought a moment. “They won’t, will
-they? I mean, the Senior Citizens here won’t know about the Senior
-Citizens there, will they?”
-
-He tried to break it to her gently as the ship picked up speed. “Helena,
-it’s possible that the old people here won’t be Senior Citizens—not in
-your planet’s sense. They may just be old people, with no special
-authority over young people. I think, in fact, that we may find you
-outranking older people who happen to be males.”
-
-She took it as a joke. “You are funny, Ross. Old means Senior, doesn’t
-it? And Senior means better, wiser, abler, and in charge, doesn’t it?”
-
-“We’ll see,” he said thoughtfully as the main reaction drive cut in.
-“We’ll see very shortly.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-The spaceport was bustling, busy, and efficient. Ross marveled at the
-speed and dexterity with which the anonymous ground operator whipped his
-ship into a braking orbit and set it down. And he stared enviously at
-the crawling clamshells on treads, bigger than houses, that cupped
-around his ship; the ship was completely and hermetically surrounded,
-and bathed in a mist of germicides and prophylactic rays.
-
-A helmeted figure riding a little platform on the inside of one of the
-clamshells turned a series of knobs, climbed down, and rapped on the
-ship’s entrance port.
-
-Ross opened it diffidently, and almost strangled in the antiseptic
-fumes. Helena choked and wheezed behind him as the figure threw back its
-helmet and said, “Where’s the captain?”
-
-“I am he,” said Ross meticulously. “I would like to be put in touch with
-the Cavallo Machine-Tool Company of Novj Grad.”
-
-The figure shook its long hair loose, which provided Ross with the
-necessary clue: it was a woman. Not a very attractive-looking woman, for
-she wore no makeup; but by the hair, by the brows and by the smoothness
-of her chin, a woman all the same. She said coldly, “If you’re the
-captain, who’s that?”
-
-Helena said in a small voice, “I’m Helena, from Junior Unit
-Twenty-Three.”
-
-“Indeed.” Suddenly the woman smiled. “Well, come ashore, dear,” she
-said. “You must be tired from your trip. Both of you come ashore,” she
-added graciously.
-
-She led the way out of the clamshells to a waiting closed car. Azor’s
-sun had an unpleasant bluish cast to it, not a type-G at all; Ross
-thought that the lighting made the woman look uglier than she really had
-to be. Even Helena looked pinched and bloodless, which he knew well was
-not the case at all.
-
-All around them was activity. Whatever this planet’s faults, it was not
-a stagnant home for graybeards. Ross, craning, saw nothing that was
-shoddy, nothing that would have looked out of place in the best-equipped
-port of Halsey’s Planet. And the reception lounge, or whatever it was,
-that the woman took them to was a handsome and prettily furnished
-construction. “Some lunch?” the woman asked, directing her attention to
-Helena. “A cup of tribrew, maybe? Let me have the boy bring some.”
-Helena looked to Ross for signals, and Ross, gritting his teeth, nodded
-to her to agree. Too young the last time, too male this time; was there
-ever going to be a planet where he mattered to anyone?
-
-He said desperately, “Madam, forgive my interruption, but this lady and
-myself need urgently to get in touch with the Cavallo company. Is this
-Novj Grad?”
-
-The woman’s pale brows arched. She said, with an effort, “No, it is
-not.”
-
-“Then can you tell us where Novj Grad is?” Ross persisted. “If they have
-a spaceport, we can hop over there in our ship——”
-
-The woman gasped something that sounded like, “Well!” She stood up and
-said pointedly to Helena, “If you’ll excuse me, I have something to
-attend to.” And swept out.
-
-Helena stared wide-eyed at Ross. “She must’ve been a real Senior
-Citizen, huh?”
-
-“Not exactly,” said Ross despairingly. “Look, Helena, things are
-different here. I need your help.”
-
-“Help?”
-
-“Yes, help!” he bellowed. “Get a grip on yourself, girl. Remember what I
-told you about the planet I came from? It was different from yours,
-remember? The old people were just like anybody else.” She giggled in
-embarrassment. “They were!” he yelled. “And they are here, too. Old
-people, young people, doesn’t matter. On my planet, the richest people
-were—well, never mind. On this planet, women are the bosses. Get it?
-Women are like elders. So you’ll have to take over, Helena.”
-
-She was looking at him with a puzzled frown. She objected, “But if women
-are——”
-
-“They are. Never mind about that part of it now; just remember that for
-the purposes of getting along here, you’re going to be my boss. You tell
-me what to do. You talk to everybody. And what you have to say to them
-is this: You must get to Novj Grad immediately, and talk to a
-high-ranking member of the Cavallo Machine-Tool Company. Clear? Once we
-get there, I’ll take over; everything will be under control then.” He
-added prayerfully, “I hope.”
-
-Helena blinked at him. “I’m going to be your boss?” she asked.
-
-“That’s right.”
-
-“Like an elder bosses a junior? And it’s legal?”
-
-Ross started to repeat, “That’s right,” impatiently again. But there was
-a peculiar look in Helena’s round eyes. “Helena!” he said warningly.
-
-She was all concern. “Why, what is it, Ross?” she asked solicitously.
-“You look upset. Just leave everything to me, dear.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-They got started on the way to Novj Grad—not in their ship (the woman
-had said there was no spaceport in Novj Grad), and not alone, so that
-Ross could not confirm his unhappy opinion of Helena’s inner thoughts.
-But at least they were on their way to Novj Grad in the Azorian
-equivalent of a chartered aircraft, with Helena chatting happily with
-the female pilot, and Ross sitting uncomfortably on a narrow,
-upholstered strip behind.
-
-Everything he saw in Azor confirmed his first impressions. The planet
-was busy and prosperous. Nobody seemed to be doing anything very
-productive, he thought, but somehow everything seemed to get done.
-Automatic machinery, he guessed; if women were to have any chance of
-gaining the upper hand on a planet, most of the hard physical work would
-have to be fairly well mechanized anyhow. And particularly on this
-planet. They had been flying for six hours, at a speed he guessed to be
-not much below that of sound, and fully half of the territory they
-passed over was bare, black rock.
-
-The ship began losing altitude, and the pilot, who had been curled up in
-a relaxed position, totally ignoring the aircraft, glanced at her
-instrument panel. “Coming in for a landing,” she warned. “Don’t distract
-me right now, dear, I’ve got a thousand things to do.”
-
-She didn’t seem to be doing any of them, Ross thought disapprovingly;
-all she did was watch varicolored lights blink on and off. But no doubt
-the ship landing, too, was as automatic as the piloting.
-
-Helena turned and leaned back to Ross. “We’re coming in for a landing,”
-she relayed.
-
-Ross said sourly, “I heard.”
-
-Helena gave him a look of reprimand and forgiveness. “I’m hungry,” she
-mused.
-
-The pilot turned from her controls. “You can get something at the
-airport,” she offered eagerly. “I’ll show you.”
-
-Helena looked at Ross. “Would you like something?”
-
-But the pilot frowned. “I don’t believe there’s any place for men,” she
-said disapprovingly. “Perhaps we can get something sent out for him if
-you like. Although, really, it’s probably against the rules, you know.”
-
-Ross started to say with great dignity, “Thank you, but that won’t be
-necessary.” But he didn’t quite get it out. The ship came in for its
-landing. There was an enormous jolt and a squawk of alarm bells and
-flashing lights. The ship careened crazily, and stopped.
-
-“Oh, darn,” complained the pilot mildly. “It’s always doing that. Come
-on, dear, let’s get something to eat. We’ll come back for _him_ later.”
-
-And Ross was left alone to stare apprehensively at the unceasingly
-flashing lights and to listen to the strident alarms for three-quarters
-of an hour.
-
-His luck was in, though. The ship didn’t explode. And eventually a
-pallid young man in a greasy apron appeared with a tray of sandwiches
-and a vacuum jug.
-
-“Up here, boy,” Ross called.
-
-He gaped through the port. “You mean come in?”
-
-“Sure. It’s all right.”
-
-The young man put down the tray. Something in the way he looked at it
-prompted Ross to invite him: “Have some with me? More here than I can
-handle.”
-
-“Thanks; I believe I will. I, uh, was supposed to take my break after I
-brought you this stuff.” He poured steaming brew into the cup that
-covered the jug, politely pushed it to Ross and swigged from the jug
-himself. “You’re with the starship?” he asked, around a mouthful of
-sandwich.
-
-“Yes. I—the captain, that is—wants to contact an outfit called Cavallo
-Machine-Tool. You know where they are?”
-
-“Sure. Biggest firm on the south side. Fifteen Street; you can’t miss
-them. The captain—is she the lady who was with Pilot Breuer?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-The youngster’s eyes widened. “You mean you were in space—alone—with a
-lady?”
-
-Ross nodded and chewed.
-
-“And she didn’t—uh—there wasn’t—well—any problem?”
-
-“No,” said Ross. “You have much trouble with that kind of thing?”
-
-The boy winced. “If I’ve asked once I’ve asked a hundred times for a
-transfer. Oh, those jet pilots! I used to work in a roadside truck stop.
-I know truckers are supposed to be rough and tough; maybe they are. But
-you can’t tell me that deep down a trucker isn’t a lady. When you tell
-them no, that’s that. But a pilot—it just eggs them on. Azor City today,
-Novj Grad tomorrow—what do they care?”
-
-Ross was fascinated and baffled. It seemed to him that they should care
-and care plenty. Back where he came from, it was the woman who paid and
-he couldn’t imagine any cultural setup which could alter that biological
-fact. He asked cautiously: “Have you ever been—in trouble?”
-
-The boy stiffened and looked disapproving. Then he said with a sigh: “I
-might as well tell you. It’s all over the station anyway; they call me
-‘Bernie the Pullover.’ Yes. Twice. Pilots both times. I can’t seem to
-say no——” He took another long pull from the jug and a savage bite from
-a second sandwich.
-
-“I’m sure,” Ross said numbly, “it wasn’t your fault.”
-
-“Try telling that to the judge,” Bernie the Pullover said bitterly. “The
-pilot speaks her piece, the medic puts the blood group tests in
-evidence, the doctor and crèche director depose that the child was born
-and is still living. Then the judge says, without even looking up,
-‘Paternity judgment to the plaintiff, defendant ordered to pay one
-thousand credits annual support, let this be a warning to you, young
-man, next case.’ I shouldn’t have joined you and eaten your sandwiches,
-but the fact is I was hungry. I had to sell my meal voucher yesterday to
-meet my payment. Miss three payments and——” He jerked his thumb
-heavenward.
-
-Ross thought and realized that the thumb must indicate the orbiting
-prison hulk “Minerva.” It _was_ the man who paid here.
-
-He demanded: “How did all this happen?”
-
-Bernie, having admitted his hunger, had stopped stalling and seized a
-third sandwich. “All what?” he asked indistinctly.
-
-Ross thought hard and long. He realized first that he could probably
-never explain what he meant to Bernie, and second that if he did they’d
-probably both wind up aboard “Minerva” for conspiracy to advocate
-equality. He shifted his ground. “Of course everybody agrees on the
-natural superiority of women,” he said, “but people seem to differ from
-planet to planet as to the reasons. What do they say here on Azor?”
-
-“Oh—nothing special or fancy. Just the common-sense, logical thing.
-They’re smaller, for one thing, and haven’t got the muscles of men, so
-they’re natural supervisors. They accumulate money as a matter of course
-because men die younger and women are the beneficiaries. Then, women
-have a natural aptitude for all the interesting jobs. I saw a broadcast
-about that just the other night. The biggest specialist on the planet in
-vocational aptitude. I forget her name, but she proved it conclusively.”
-
-He looked at the empty platter before them. “I’ve got to go now. Thanks
-for everything.”
-
-“The pleasure was mine.” Ross watched his undernourished figure head for
-the station. He swore a little, and then buckled down to some hard
-thinking. Helena was his key to this world. He’d have to have a long
-skull-session or two with her; he couldn’t be constantly prompting her
-or there would be serious trouble. She would be the front and he would
-be the very inconspicuous brains of the outfit, trailing humbly behind.
-But was she capable of absorbing a brand-new, rather complicated
-concept? She seemed to be, he told himself uncomfortably, in love with
-him. That would help considerably....
-
-Helena and Pilot Breuer showed up, walking with a languor that suggested
-a large and pleasant meal disposed of. Helena’s first words disposed
-with shocking speed of Ross’s doubts that she was able to acquire a
-brand-new sociological concept. They were: “Ah, there you are, my dear.
-Did the boy bring you something or other to eat?”
-
-“Yes. Thanks. Very thoughtful of you,” he said pointedly, with one eye
-on Breuer’s reaction. There was none; he seemed to have struck the right
-note.
-
-“Pilot Breuer,” said Helena blandly, “thinks I’d enjoy an evening doing
-the town with her and a few friends.”
-
-“But the Cavallo people——”
-
-“Ross,” she said gently, “don’t _nag_.”
-
-He shut up. And thought: wait until I get her out into space. _If_ I get
-her out into space. She’d be a damned fool to leave this wacked-up
-culture....
-
-Breuer was saying, with an altogether too-innocent air, “I’d better get
-you two settled in a hotel for the night; then I’ll pick up Helena and a
-few friends and we’ll show her what old Novj Grad has to offer in the
-way of night life. Can’t have her batting around the universe saying
-Azor’s sidewalks are rolled up at 2100, can we? And then she can do her
-trading or whatever it is with Cavallo bright and early tomorrow, eh?”
-
-Ross realized that he was being jollied out of an attack of the sulks.
-He didn’t like it.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The hotel was small and comfortable, with a bar crowded by roistering
-pilots and their dates. The glimpses Ross got of social life on Azor
-added up to a damnably unfair picture. It was the man who paid. Breuer
-roguishly tested the mattress in their room, nudging Helena, and then
-announced, “Get settled, kids, while I visit the bar.”
-
-When the door rolled shut behind her Ross said furiously: “Look, you!
-Protective mimicry’s fine up to a point, but let’s not forget what this
-mission is all about. We seem to be suckered into spending the night,
-but by hell tomorrow morning bright and early we find those Cavallo
-people—”
-
-“There,” Helena said soothingly. “Don’t be angry, Ross. I promise I
-won’t be out late, and she really did insist.”
-
-“I suppose so,” he grumbled. “Just remember it’s no pleasure trip.”
-
-“Not for you, perhaps,” she smiled sweetly.
-
-He let it drop there, afraid to push the matter.
-
-Breuer returned in about ten minutes with a slight glow on. “It’s all
-fixed,” she told Helena. “Got a swell crowd lined up. Table at Virgin
-Willie’s—oops!” She glanced at Ross. “No harm in it, of course,” she
-said. “Anything you want, Ross, just dial service. It’s on my account. I
-fixed it with the desk.”
-
-“Thanks.”
-
-They left, and Ross went grumpily to bed.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A secretive rustle in the room awoke him. “Helena?” he asked drowsily.
-
-Pilot Breuer’s voice giggled drunkenly, “Nope. Helena’s passed out at
-Virgin Willie’s, kind of the way I figured she would be on triple
-antigravs. Had my eye on you since Azor City, baby. You gonna be nice to
-me?”
-
-“Get out of here!” Ross hissed furiously. “Out of here or I’ll yell like
-hell.”
-
-“So yell,” she giggled. “I got the house dick fixed. They know me here,
-baby——”
-
-He fumbled for the bedside light and snapped it on. “I’ll pitch you
-right through the door,” he announced. “And if you give me any more lip
-I won’t bother to open it before I do.”
-
-She hiccupped and said, “A spirited lad. That’s the way I like ’em.”
-With one hand she drew a nasty-looking little pistol. With the other she
-pulled a long zipper and stepped out of her pilot’s coveralls.
-
-Ross gulped. There were three ways to play this, the smart way, the
-stupid way, and the way that all of a sudden began to look attractive.
-He tried the stupid way.
-
-He got the pistol barrel alongside his ear for his pains. “Don’t jump
-me,” Pilot Breuer giggled. “The boys that’ve tried to take this gun away
-from me are stretched end to end from here to Azor City. By me, baby.”
-
-Ross blinked through a red-spotted haze. He took a deep breath and got
-smart. “You’re pretty tough,” he said admiringly.
-
-“Oh, sure.” She kicked the coveralls across the room and moved in on
-him. “Baby,” she said caressingly, “if I seem to sort of forget myself
-in the next couple of minutes, don’t get any ideas. I _never_ let go of
-my gun. Move over.”
-
-“Sure,” Ross said hollowly. This, he told himself disgustedly, was the
-damnedest, silliest, ridiculousest....
-
-There was a furious hiccup from the door. “So!” Helena said venomously,
-pushing the door wide and almost falling to the floor. “So!”
-
-Ross flailed out of the bed, kicking the pistol out of Pilot Breuer’s
-hand in the process. He cried enthusiastically, “Helena, dear!”
-
-“Don’t you ‘Helena-dear’ me!” she said, moving in and kicking the door
-shut behind her. “I leave you alone for one little minute, and what
-happens? And _you_!”
-
-“Sorry,” Pilot Breuer muttered, climbing into her coveralls. “Wrong
-room. Must’ve had one anti-grav too many.” She licked her lips
-apprehensively, zipping her coveralls and sidling toward the door. With
-one hand on the knob, she said diffidently, “If I could have my gun
-back——? No, you’re right! I’ll get it tomorrow.” She got through the
-door just ahead of a lamp.
-
-“Hussy!” spat Helena. “And you, Ross——”
-
-It was the last straw. As Ross lurched toward her he regretted only one
-thing: that he didn’t have a hairbrush.
-
-Pilot Breuer had been right. Nobody paid any attention to the noise.
-
- * * * * *
-
-“Yes, Ross.” Helena had hardly touched her breakfast; she sat with her
-eyes downcast.
-
-“‘Yes, Ross’,” he mimicked bitterly. “It better be ‘Yes, Ross.’ This
-place may look all right to you, but it’s trouble. You don’t want to
-find yourself stuck here all your life, do you? Then do what I tell
-you.”
-
-“Yes, Ross.”
-
-He pushed the remains of his food away. “Oh, the hell with it,” he said
-dispiritedly. “I wish I’d never started out on this fool’s errand. And I
-double damn well wish I’d left you in the dye vats.”
-
-“Yes, Ro——I mean, I’m glad you didn’t, Ross,” she said in a small voice.
-
-He stood up and patted her shoulder absently. “Come on,” he said, “we’ve
-got to get over to the Cavallo place. I wish you had let me talk to them
-on the phone.”
-
-She said reasonably, “But you said——”
-
-“I know what I said. When we get there, remember that I do the talking.”
-
-They walked through green-lit streets, filled with proud-looking women
-and sad-eyed men. The Cavallo Machine-Tool Corporation was only a few
-intersections away, by the map the desk clerk had drawn for Helena; they
-found it without trouble. It was a smallish sort of building for a
-factory, Ross thought, but perhaps that was how factories went on Azor.
-Besides, it was well constructed and beautifully landscaped with the
-purplish lawns these people seemed to prefer.
-
-Helena led him through the door, as was right and proper. She said to
-the busy little bald-headed man who seemed to be the receptionist,
-“We’re expected. Miss Cavallo, please.”
-
-“Certainly, Ma’am,” he said with a gap-toothed smile, and worked a
-combination of rods and buttons on the desk beside him. In a moment, he
-said, “Go right in. Three up and four over; can’t miss it.”
-
-They passed through a noisy territory of machines where metal was
-sliced, spun, hacked, and planed; no one seemed to be paying any
-attention to them. Ross wondered who had built the machines, and had a
-sudden flash of realization as to where those builders were now: On
-“Minerva,” staring at the unattainable free sky.
-
-Miss Cavallo was a motherly type with a large black cigar. “Sit right
-down,” she said heartily. “You, too, young man. Tell me what we in
-Cavallo Company can do for you.”
-
-Helena opened her mouth, but Ross stopped her with a gesture. “That’s
-enough,” he said quietly. “I’ll take over. Miss Cavallo,” he declaimed
-from memory, “what follows is under the seal.”
-
-“Is it indeed! What do you know,” she said.
-
-Ross said, “Wesley.”
-
-Miss Cavallo slapped her thigh admiringly. “Son of a gun,” she said
-admiringly. “How this takes me back—those long-ago childhood days,
-learning these things at my mother’s knee. Let’s see. Uh—the limiting
-velocity is C.”
-
-“But C^2 is not a velocity,” Ross finished triumphantly. And, from the
-heart, “Miss Cavallo, you don’t begin to know how happy this makes me.”
-
-Miss Cavallo reached over and pumped his hand, then Helena’s. To the
-girl she said, “You’ve got a right to be a proud woman, believe me. The
-way he got through it, without a single stumble! Never saw anything like
-it in my life. Well, just tell me what I can do for you, now that that’s
-over.”
-
-Ross took a deep, deep breath. He said earnestly, “A great deal. I don’t
-know where to begin. You see, it all goes back to Halsey’s Planet, where
-I come from. This, uh, this ship came in, a longliner, and it got some
-of us a little worried because, well, it seemed that some of the planets
-were no longer in communication. We—uh, Miss Cavallo?” She was smiling
-pleasantly enough, but Ross had the crazy feeling that he just wasn’t
-getting through to her.
-
-“Go right ahead,” she boomed. “God knows, I’ve got nothing against men
-in business; that’s old-fashioned prejudice. Take your time. I won’t
-bite you. Get on with your proposition, young man.”
-
-“It isn’t exactly a proposition,” Ross said weakly. All of a sudden the
-words seemed hard to find. What did you say to a potential partner in
-the salvation of the human race when she just nodded and blew cigar
-smoke at you?
-
-He made an effort. “Halsey’s Planet was the seventh alternate
-destination for this ship, and so we figured——That is, Miss Cavallo, it
-kind of looked like there was some sort of trouble. So Mr. Haarland—he’s
-the one who has the F-T-L secret on Halsey, like you do here on Azor—he
-passed it on to me, of course—well, he asked me to, well, sort of take a
-look around.” He stopped. The words by then were just barely audible
-anyhow; and Miss Cavallo had been looking furtively at her watch.
-
-Miss Cavallo shrugged sympathetically to Helena. “They’re all like that
-under the skin, aren’t they?” she observed ambiguously. “Well, if men
-could take our jobs away from us, what would we do? Stay home and mind
-the kids?” She roared and poked a box of cigars at Helena.
-
-“Now,” she said briskly, “let’s get down to cases. I really enjoyed
-hearing those lines from you, young man, and I want you to know that I’m
-prepared to help you in any possible way because of them. Open a line of
-credit, speed up deliveries, send along some of our technical people to
-help you get set up—anything. Now, what can I do for you? Turret lathes?
-Grinders? Screw machines?”
-
-“Miss Cavallo,” Ross said desperately, “don’t you know anything about
-the faster-than-light secret?”
-
-She said impatiently, “Of course I do, young man. Said the responses,
-didn’t I? There’s no call for that item, though.”
-
-“I don’t want to _buy_ one,” Ross cried. “I have one. Don’t you realize
-that the human race is in danger? Populations are dying out or going out
-of communication all over the galaxy. Don’t you want to do something
-about it before we all go under?”
-
-Miss Cavallo dropped all traces of a smile. Her face was like flint as
-she stood up and pointed to the window. “Young man,” she said icily,
-“take a look out there. That’s the Cavallo Machine-Tool Company. Does
-that look as if we’re going under?”
-
-“I know, but Clyde, Cyrnus One, Ragansworld—at least a dozen planets I
-can name—are _gone_. Didn’t you ever think that you might be next?”
-
-Miss Cavallo kept her voice level, but only with a visible effort.
-
-She said flatly, “No. Never. Young man, I have plenty to do right here
-on Azor without bothering my head about those places you’re talking
-about. Seventy-five years ago there was another fellow just like you;
-Flarney, some name like that; my grandmother told me about him. He came
-bustling in here causing trouble, with that old silly jingle about
-Wesley and C-square and so on, with some cock-and-bull story about a
-planet that was starving to death, stirring up a lot of commotion. Well,
-he wound up on ‘Minerva,’ because he wouldn’t take no for an answer.
-Watch out that you don’t do the same.”
-
-She marched majestically to the door. “And now,” she said, “if you’ve
-wasted quite enough of my time, kindly leave.”
-
-
-
-
-..... 8
-
-
-“STUPID old bat,” Ross muttered. They were walking aimlessly down
-Fifteen Street, the nicely-landscaped machine tool works behind them.
-
-Helena said timidly: “You really shouldn’t talk that way, Ross. She _is_
-older than you, after all. Old heads are——”
-
-“——wisest,” he wearily agreed. “Also the most conservative. Also the
-most rigidly inflexible; also the most firmly closed to the reception of
-new ideas. With one exception.”
-
-She reeled under the triple blasphemy and then faintly asked: “What’s
-the exception?”
-
-Ross became aware that they were not alone. Their very manner of
-walking, he a little ahead, obviously leading the way, was drawing
-unfavorable attention from passers-by. Nothing organized or even
-definite—just looks ranging from puzzled distaste to anger. He said,
-“Somebody named Haarland. Never mind,” and in a lower voice: “Straighten
-up. Step out a little ahead of me. Scowl.”
-
-She managed it all except the scowl. The expression on her face got some
-stupefied looks from other pedestrians, but nothing worse.
-
-Helena said loudly and plaintively: “I don’t like it here after all,
-Ross. Can’t we get away from all these women?”
-
-Should the impulse seize you, placard ancient Brooklyn with twenty-four
-sheets proclaiming the Dodgers to be cellar-dwelling bums. Mount a
-detergent box and inform a crowd of Altairians that they are degenerate
-slith-fondlers if you must. Announce in a crowded Cephean bar room that
-Sadkia Revall is no better than she should be. From these situations you
-have some chance of emerging intact. But never, never pronounce the word
-“women” as Helena pronounced it on Fifteen Street, Novj Grad, Azor.
-
-The mob took only seconds to form.
-
-Ross and Helena found themselves with their backs to the glass doors of
-a food store. The handful of women who had actually heard the remark
-were all talking to them simultaneously, with fist-shaking. Behind them
-stood as many as a dozen women who knew only that something had happened
-and that there were comfortably outnumbered victims available. The noise
-was deafening, and Helena began to cry. Ross first wondered if he could
-bring himself to knock down a woman; then realized after studying the
-hulking virago in their foreground that he might bring himself to try
-but probably would not succeed.
-
-She seemed to be accusing Helena of masquerading, of advocating
-equality, of uttering obscenely antisocial statements in the public
-road, to the affront of all decent-minded girls.
-
-There was violence in the air. Ross was on the point of blocking a
-roundhouse right when the glass doors opened behind them. The small
-diversion distracted the imbecile collective brain of the mob.
-
-“What’s going on here?” a suety voice demanded. “Ladies, may I please
-get through?”
-
-It was a man trying to emerge from the food shop with a double armful of
-cartons. He was a great fat slob, quite hairless, and smelling
-powerfully of kitchen. He wore the gravy-spotted whites of any cook
-anywhere.
-
-The virago said to him, “Keep out of this, Willie. This fellow here’s a
-masquerader. The thing I heard him say——!”
-
-“I’m not,” Helena wept. “I’m not!”
-
-The cook stooped to look into her face and turned on the mob. “She
-isn’t,” he said definitely. “She’s a lady from another system. She was
-slopping up triple antigravs at my place last night with a gang of jet
-pilots.”
-
-“That doesn’t prove a thing!” the virago yelled.
-
-“Madam,” the cook said wearily, “after her third antigrav I had to trip
-her up and crown her. She was about to climb the bar and corner my
-barman.”
-
-Ross looked at her fixedly. She stopped crying and nervously cleared her
-throat.
-
-“So if you’ll just let us through,” the cook bustled, seizing the
-psychological moment of doubt. His enormous belly bulldozed a lane for
-them. “Beg pardon. Excuse us. Madam, will you—thank you. Beg pardon——”
-
-The lynchers were beginning to drift away, embarrassed. The party had
-collapsed. “Faster,” the cook hissed at them. “Beg pardon——” And they
-were in the clear and well down the street.
-
-“Thank you, Sir,” Helena said humbly.
-
-“Just ‘Willie’, _if_ you please,” the fat man said.
-
-One hand descended on Ross’s shoulder and another on Helena’s. They both
-belonged to the virago. She spun them around, glaring. “_I’m_ not
-satisfied with the brush-off,” she snapped. “Exactly what did you mean
-by that remark you made?”
-
-Helena wailed, “It’s just that you and all these other women here seem
-so _young_.”
-
-The virago’s granite face softened. She let go and tucked in a strand of
-steel-wool hair. “Did you really think so, dear?” she asked, beaming.
-“There, I’m sorry I got excited. A wee bit jealous, were you? Well,
-we’re broad-minded here in Novj Grad.” She patted Helena’s arm and
-walked off, smiling and jaunty.
-
-Virgin Willie led off and they followed him. Ross’s knees were shaky.
-The virago had not known that to Helena “young” meant “stupid.”
-
-The cook absently acknowledged smiles and nods as they walked. He was,
-obviously, a character. Between salutes he delivered a low-voiced,
-rapid-fire reaming to Ross and Helena. “Silly stunt. Didn’t you hear
-about the riots? Supposed to be arms caches somewhere here on the south
-side. Everybody’s nerves absolutely ragged. Somebody gets smashed up in
-traffic, they blame it on us. Don’t care _where_ you’re from. Watch it
-next time.”
-
-“We will, Willie,” Helena said contritely. “And I think you run an
-awfully nice restaurant.”
-
-“Yeah,” said Ross, looking at her.
-
-Willie muttered, “I guess you’re clear. You still staying at that hot
-pilot’s hangout? This is where we say good-by, then. You turn left.”
-
-He waddled on down the street. Helena said instantly, “I don’t remember
-a thing, Ross.”
-
-“Okay,” he said. “You don’t remember a thing.”
-
-She looked relieved and said brightly, “So let’s get back to the hotel.”
-
-“Okay,” he said. Climbed the bar and tried to corner the.... Halfway to
-the hotel he slowed, then stopped, and said, “I just thought of
-something. Maybe we’re not staying there any more. After last night why
-should Breuer carry us on her tab? I thought we’d have some money to
-carry us from the Cavallos by now——”
-
-“The ship?” she asked in a small voice.
-
-“Across the continent. Hell! Maybe Breuer forgave and forgot. Let’s try,
-anyway.”
-
-They never got as far as the hotel. When they reached the square it
-stood on, there was a breathless rush and Bernie stood before them,
-panting and holding a hand over his chest. “In here,” he gasped, and
-nodded at a shopfront that announced hot brew. Ross thoughtlessly
-started first through the door and caught Bernie’s look of alarm. He
-opened the door for Helena, who went through smiling nervously.
-
-They settled at a small table in an empty corner in stiff silence. “I’ve
-been walking around that square all morning,” Bernie said, with a cowed
-look at Helena.
-
-Ross told her: “This young man and I had a talk yesterday at the plane
-while you were eating. What is it, Bernie?”
-
-He still couldn’t believe that he was doing it, but Bernie said in a
-scared whisper: “Wanted to head you off and warn you. Breuer was down at
-the field cafe this morning, talking loud to the other hot-shots. She
-said you—both of you—talked equality. Said she got up with a hangover
-and you were gone. But she said there’d be six policewomen waiting in
-your room when you got back.” He leaned forward on the table. Ross
-remembered that he had been forced to sell his ration card.
-
-“Here comes the waiter,” he said softly. “Order something for all of us.
-We have a little money. And thanks, Bernie.”
-
-Helena asked, “What do we _do_?”
-
-“We eat,” Ross said practically. “Then we think. Shut up; let Bernie
-order.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-They ate; and then they thought. Nothing much seemed to come from all
-the thinking, though.
-
-They were a long, long way from the spaceship. Ross commandeered all of
-Helena’s leftover cash. It was almost, not quite, enough for one person
-to get halfway back to Azor City. He and Bernie turned out their pockets
-and added everything they had, including pawnable valuables. That
-helped. It made the total almost enough for one person to get
-three-quarters of the way back.
-
-It didn’t help enough.
-
-Ross said, “Bernie, what would happen if we, well, stole something?”
-
-Bernie shrugged. “It’s against the law, of course. They probably
-wouldn’t prosecute, though.”
-
-“They wouldn’t?”
-
-“Not if they can prove egalitarianism on you. Stealing’s against the
-law; preaching equality is against the _state_. You get the maximum
-penalty for that.”
-
-Helena choked on her drink, but Ross merely nodded. “So we might as well
-take a chance,” he said. “Thanks, Bernie. We won’t bother you any more.
-You’ll forget you heard this, won’t you?”
-
-“The hell I will!” Bernie squawked. “If you’re getting out of here, I
-want to go with you! You aren’t leaving _me_ behind!”
-
-“But Bernie——” Ross started. He was interrupted by the manager, a
-battleship-class female with a mighty prow, who came scowling toward
-them.
-
-“Pipe down,” she ordered coarsely. “This place is for decent people; we
-don’t want no disturbances here. If you can’t act decent, get out.”
-
-“Awk,” said Helena as Ross kicked her under the table. “I mean, yes
-ma’am. Sorry if we were talking too loud.” They watched the manager walk
-away in silence.
-
-As soon as she was fairly away, Ross hissed, “It’s out of the question,
-Bernie. You might be jumping from the frying-pan into the fire.”
-
-Bernie asked, startled, “The what?”
-
-“The—never mind, it’s just an expression where I come from. It means you
-might get out of this place and find yourself somewhere worse. We don’t
-know where we’re going next; you might wish to God you were back here
-within the next three days.”
-
-“I’ll take that chance,” Bernie said earnestly. “Look, Ross, I played
-square with you. I didn’t have to stick my neck out and warn you. How
-about giving me a break too?”
-
-Helena interrupted, “He’s right, Ross. After all, we owe him that much,
-don’t we? I mean, if a person does that much for a person, a person
-ought to——”
-
-“Oh, shut up.” Ross glared at both of them. “You two seem to think this
-is a game,” he said bitterly. “Let me set you straight, both of you. It
-isn’t. More hangs on what happens to me than either of you realize. The
-fate of the human race, for instance.”
-
-Helena flashed a look at Bernie. “Of _course_, Ross,” she said
-soothingly. “Both of us know that, don’t we, Bernie?”
-
-Bernie stammered, “Sure—sure we do, Ross.” He rubbed his ankle. He went
-on, “Honest, Ross, I want to get the hell away from Azor once and for
-all. I don’t care _where_ you’re going. Anything would be better than
-this place and the damned female bloodsuckers that——”
-
-He stopped, petrified. His eyes, looking over Ross’s shoulder, were
-enormous.
-
-“Go on, sonny,” said a rich female voice from behind Ross. “Don’t let me
-and the lieutenant stop you just when you’re going good.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-“It must have been that damn manager,” Bernie said for the fifteenth
-time.
-
-Ross uncrossed his legs painfully and tried lying on the floor on his
-side. “What’s the difference?” he asked. “They got us; we’re in the jug.
-And face it: somebody would have caught us sooner or later, and we might
-have wound up in a worse jail than this one.” He shifted uncomfortably.
-“If that’s possible, I mean. Why don’t they at least have beds in these
-places?”
-
-“Oh,” said Bernie immediately, “some do. The jails in Azor City and
-Nuevo Reykjavik have beds; Novj Grad, Eleanor, and Milo don’t. I mean,
-that’s what they tell me,” he added virtuously.
-
-“Sure,” Ross growled. “Well, what do they tell you usually happens
-next?”
-
-Bernie spread his hands. “Different things. First there’s a hearing.
-That’s all over by now. Then an indictment and trial. Maybe that’s
-started already; sometimes they get it in on the same day as the
-hearing, sometimes not. Then—tomorrow sometime, most likely—comes the
-sentencing. We’ll know about that, though, because we’ll be there. The
-law’s very strict on that—they always have you in the court for
-sentencing.”
-
-Ross cried, “You mean the trial might be going on right now without us?”
-
-“Of course. What else? Think they’d take a chance on having the
-prisoners creating a disturbance during the trial?”
-
-Ross groaned and turned his face to the wall. For this, he thought, he
-had come the better part of a hundred light years; for this he had left
-a comfortable job with a brilliant future. He spent a measurable period
-of time cursing the memory of old Haarland and his double-jointed,
-persuasive tongue.
-
-Back in the days of Ross’s early teens he had seen a good many
-situations like this in the tri-dis, and the hero had never failed to
-extricate himself by a simple exercise of superhuman strength,
-intellect, and ingenuity. That, Ross told himself, was just what he
-needed now. The trouble was, he didn’t have them.
-
-All he had was the secret of faster-than-light travel. And, here on Azor
-as on the planet of the graybeards, it had laid a king-sized egg. Women,
-Ross thought bitterly, women were basically inward-directed and
-self-seeking; trust them with the secret of F-T-L; make them, like the
-Cavallos, custodians of a universe-racking truth; and see the secret
-lost or embalmed in sterile custom. What, he silently demanded of
-himself, did the greatest of scientific discoveries mean to a biological
-baby-foundry? How could any female—no single member of which class had
-ever painted a great picture, written a great book, composed a great
-sonata, or discovered a great scientific truth—appreciate the ultimate
-importance of the F-T-L drive? It was like entrusting a first-folio
-Shakespeare to a broody hen; the shredded scraps would be made into a
-nest. For the egg came first. Motherhood was all.
-
-That explained it, of course. That, Ross told himself moodily, explained
-everything except why the F-T-L secret had fallen into apparently equal
-or worse desuetude on such planets as Gemsel, Clyde, Cyrnus One,
-Ragansworld, Tau Ceti II, Capella’s family of eight, and perhaps a
-hundred others.
-
-Ragansworld was gone entirely, drowned in a planetary nebula.
-
-The planet of the graybeard had gone to seed; nothing new, nothing not
-hallowed by tradition had a chance in its decrepit social order.
-
-His home, Halsey’s Planet, was rapidly, calmly, inevitably depopulating
-itself.
-
-And Azor had fallen into a rigid, self-centered matriarchal order that
-only an act of God could break.
-
-Was there a pattern? Were there any similarities?
-
-Ross searched desperately in his mind; but without result. The image of
-Helena kept intruding itself between him and his thoughts. Was he
-getting sentimental about that sweet little chucklehead? Who, he hastily
-added, had come near to criminally assaulting him, who had climbed
-the....
-
-He turned to the little waiter and demanded: “Will she—Helena—be on the
-orbital station with us if we’re all convicted?”
-
-“Hmm—no, I should think not. As a responsible person, she gets the
-supreme penalty.”
-
-Ross numbly asked after a long pause, “How? Nothing—painful?” It was
-hard to think of Helena dangling grotesquely at a rope’s end or jolting
-as she sat strapped in a large, ugly chair. But there were things he had
-heard of which were horribly worse.
-
-Bernie had been watching him. “I’m sorry,” the little man said soberly.
-“It’s up to the judge. She’s a foreigner, so they may consider that an
-extenuating circumstance and place some quick-acting poison aboard for
-her to take. Otherwise it’s slow starvation.”
-
-A faint, irrational hope had begun to dawn in Ross’s mind. “Aboard what?
-Exactly how does it work?”
-
-“They’ll put her aboard some hulk with the rockets disabled, fire it off
-into space—and that’s that. I suppose they’ll use the ship she came
-in——”
-
-Ross was frantically searching his pockets. He had a stylus. “Got any
-paper?” he briskly demanded of Bernie.
-
-“Yes, but——?” The waiter blankly passed over an order book. Ross
-sprawled on the floor and began to scribble: “Never mind how or why this
-works. Do it. You saw me work the big fan-shaped computer in the center
-room and you can do it too. Find the master star maps in the chart room.
-Look up the co-ordinates of Halsey’s System. Set these co-ordinates on
-the twenty-seven dials marked Proximate Mass. Take the readings on the
-windows above the dials and set them on the cursors of the computer——”
-He scribbled furiously, from time to time forcing himself deliberately
-to slow down as the writing became an unreadable scrawl. He filled the
-ruled fronts of the order pages and then the backs—perhaps ten thousand
-closely-written words, and not one of them wasted. Haarland’s precise
-instructions, mercilessly drilled into him, flowed out again.
-
-He flung the stylus down at last and read through the book again,
-ignoring the gaping Bernie. It was all there, as far as he could tell.
-Grant her a lot of luck and more brains than he privately credited her
-with, and she had a fighting chance of winding up within radar range of
-Halsey’s Planet. GCA could take her down from there; an annoying
-ship-like object hanging on the radarscopes would provoke a
-reconnaissance.
-
-She knew absolutely nothing about F-T-L or the Wesley drive, but
-then—neither did he. That fact itself was no handicap.
-
-He might rot on “Minerva,” but some word might get back to Haarland. And
-so would the ship. And Helena would not perish miserably in a drifting
-hulk.
-
-Bernie saw the mysterious job was ended and dared to ask, “A letter?”
-
-“No,” Ross said jubilantly. “By God, if things break right they won’t
-get her. It’s like this——”
-
-He happily began to explain that his F-T-L ship’s rockets were only
-auxiliaries for fine maneuvering, but he counted on the court not
-knowing that. If he and Helena could persuade....
-
-As he went on the look on Bernie’s face changed very slowly from hope to
-pity to politely-simulated interest. Correspondingly Ross’s accounting
-became labored and faulty. The pauses became longer and at last he broke
-off, filled with self-contempt at his folly. He said bitterly, “You
-don’t think it’ll work.”
-
-“Oh, no!” Bernie protested with too much heartiness. “I could see she’s
-awfully mechanically-minded for a woman, even if it wouldn’t be polite
-to say so. Sure it’ll work, Ross. Sure!”
-
-The hell it would.
-
-At least he had disposed of a few hours. And—perhaps some bungling
-setting would explode the ship, or end a Wesley Jump in the heart of a
-white dwarf star—sudden annihilation, whiffing Helena out of existence
-before her body could realize that it had died, before the beginning of
-apprehension could darken happy absorption with a task she thought would
-bring her to safety.
-
-For that reason alone he had to carry the scheme through.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The courtroom was a chintzy place bright with spring flowers. Ross and
-Helena looked numbly at one another from opposite corners while the
-previous order of business was cleared from the docket. A wedding.
-
-The judge, unexpectedly sweet-faced and slender though gray, obviously
-took such parts of her work seriously. “Marylyn and Kent,” she was
-saying earnestly to the happy couple, “I suppose you know my reputation.
-I lecture people a bit before I tie the knot. Evidently it’s not such a
-bad idea because my marriages turn out well. Last week in Eleanor one of
-my girls was arrested and reprimanded for gross infidelity and a couple
-of years ago right here in Novj Grad one of my boys got five hundred
-lashes for nonsupport. Let’s hope it did them some good, but the cases
-were unusual. My people, I like to think, know their rights and
-responsibilities when they walk out of my court, and I think the record
-bears me out.
-
-“Marylyn, you have chosen to share part of your life with this man. You
-intend to bear his children. This should not be because your animal
-appetites have overcome you and you can’t win his consent in any other
-way but because you know, down deep in your womanly heart, that you can
-make him happy. Never forget this. If you should thoughtlessly conceive
-by some other man, don’t tell him. He would only brood. Be thrifty,
-Marylyn. I have seen more marriages broken up by finances than any other
-reason. If your husband earns a hundred Eleanors a week, spend only that
-and no more. If he makes _fifty_ Eleanors a week spend only that and no
-more. Honorable poverty is preferable to debt. And, from a practical
-standpoint, if you spend more than your husband earns he will be jailed
-for debt sooner or later, with resulting loss to your own pocket.
-
-“Kent, you have accepted the proposal of this woman. I see by your
-dossier that you got in just under the wire. In your income group the
-antibachelor laws would have caught up with you in one more week. I must
-say I don’t like the look of it, but I’ll give you the benefit of the
-doubt. I want to talk to you about the meaning of marriage. Not just the
-wage assignment, not just the insurance policy, not just the waiver of
-paternity and copulation ‘rights’, so-called. Those, as a good citizen,
-you will abide by automatically—Heaven help you if you don’t. But there
-is more to marriage than that. The honor you have been done by this
-woman who sees you as desirable and who wishes to make you happy over
-the years is not a sterile legalism. Marriage is like a rocket, I
-sometimes think. The brute, unreasoning strength of the main jets
-representing the husband’s share and the delicate precise steering and
-stabilizing jets the wife’s. We have all of us seen too many marriages
-crash to the ground like a rocket when these roles were reversed. It is
-not reasonable to expect the wife to provide the drive—that is, the
-income. It is not reasonable to expect the husband to provide the
-steering—that is, the direction of the personal and household
-expenditures. So much for the material side of things. On the spiritual
-side, I have little to say. The laws are most explicit; see that you
-obey them—and if you don’t, you had better pray that you wind up in some
-court other than mine. I have no patience with the obsolete doctrine
-that there is such a legal entity as seduction by female, despite the
-mouthings of certain so-called jurists who disgrace the bench of a
-certain nearby city.
-
-“Having heard these things, Marylyn and Kent, step forward and join
-hands.”
-
-They did. The ceremony was short and simple; the couple then walked from
-the courtroom under the beaming smile of the judge.
-
-A burly guard next to Ross pointed at the groom. “Look,” she said
-sentimentally. “He’s crying. Cute!”
-
-“I don’t blame the poor sucker,” Ross flared, and then, being a man of
-conscience, wondered suddenly if that was why, on Halsey’s Planet, women
-cried at weddings.
-
-A clerk called: “Dear, let’s have those egalitarians front and center,
-please. Her honor’s terribly rushed.”
-
-Helena was escorted forward from one side, while Ross and Bernie were
-jostled to the fore from the other. The judge turned from the happy
-couple. As she looked down at the three of them the smile that curved
-her lips turned into something quite different. Ross, quailing, suddenly
-realized that he had seen just that expression once before. It was when
-he was very, very young, when a friend of his mother’s had come bustling
-into the kitchen where he was playing, just after she had smelled, and
-just before she had seen, the long-dead rat he had fetched up from the
-abandoned cellar across the street.
-
-While the clerk was reading the orders and indictment, the judge’s stare
-never wavered. And when the clerk had finished, the judge’s silent stare
-remained, for a long, terrible time.
-
-In the quietest of voices, the judge said, “So.”
-
-Ross caught a flicker of motion out of the corner of his eye. He turned
-just in time to see Bernie, knees buckling, slip white-faced and
-unconscious to the floor. The guards rushed forward, but the judge
-raised a peremptory hand. “Leave him alone,” she ordered soberly. “It is
-kinder. Defendants, you are charged with the gravest of crimes. Have you
-anything to say before sentence is passed on you?”
-
-Ross tried to force words—any words, to protest, to plead, to
-vilify—through his clogged throat. All he managed was a croaking sound;
-and Helena, by his side, nudged him sharply to silence. He turned to her
-sharply, and realized that this was the best chance he’d be likely to
-get. He clutched at her, rolled up his eyes, slumped to the floor in as
-close an imitation of Bernie’s swoon as he could manage.
-
-The judge was visibly annoyed, and this time she didn’t stop the
-attendants when they rushed in to kick him erect. But he had the
-consolation of seeing a flash of understanding cross Helena’s face, and
-her hand dart to a pocket with the paper he had handed her. In the
-confusion no one saw.
-
-The rest of the courtroom scene was kaleidoscopic in Ross’s
-recollection. The only part he remembered clearly was the judge’s voice
-as she said to him and Bernie, “——for the rest of your lives, as long as
-Almighty God shall, in Her infinite wisdom, permit you the breath of
-life, be banished from Azor and all of its allied worlds to the prison
-hulk in ‘Orbit Minerva.’”
-
-And they were hustled out as the judge, even more wrathful than before,
-turned to pronounce sentence on Helena.
-
-
-
-
-..... 9
-
-
-THE guard spat disgustedly. “Fine lot of wrecks we’re getting,” she
-complained. “Not like the old days. They used to send real men here.”
-She glowered at Ross and Bernie, holding their commitment papers loosely
-in her hand. “And for treason, too!” she added. “Used to be it took guts
-to commit a crime against the state.” She shook her head, then made a
-noise of distaste and scribbled initials on the commitment papers. She
-handed them back to the pilot who had brought them up from Azor, who
-grinned, waved, and got out of there. “All right,” said the guard, “we
-have to take what we get. I’ll have to put you two on construction;
-you’ll never stand up under hard work. Keep your noses clean, that’s
-all. Up at 0500; breakfast till 0510; work detail till 1950; dinner and
-recreation till 2005; then lights out. Miss a formation and you miss a
-meal. Miss two, and you get punishment detail. Nobody misses three.”
-
-Ross and Bernie found themselves sharing a communal cell. They had all
-of five minutes to look around and get oriented; then they were out on
-their first work detail.
-
-It wasn’t so bad as it sounded. Their shiftmates were a couple of dozen
-ragged-looking wrecks, half-heartedly assembling a sort of meccano-toy
-wall out of sheets of perforated steel and clip-spring bolts. All the
-parts seemed well worn; some of the bolts hardly closed. It took Ross
-the better part of his first detail, whispering when the guards were
-looking the other way, to find out why. Their half of the prisoners were
-Construction; the other half was Demolition. What Construction in the
-morning put up, Demolition in the evening tore down. Neither side was
-anxious to set any speed records, and the guards without exception were
-too bored to care.
-
-With any kind of luck, Ross found, he could hope eventually to get a
-real job—manning the “Minerva’s” radar, signal, or generating
-facilities, working in the kitchens or service shops, perhaps even as an
-orderly in the guard quarters. (Although Ross quite by accident chanced
-to see a guard’s orderly as he passed through a corridor near the work
-area, a handkerchief held daintily to his nose. And though the orderly’s
-clothing was neat and his plump cheeks indicated good eating, the
-haunted expression in his eyes made Ross think twice.)
-
-The one thing he could not do, according to the testimony of every man
-he spoke to, was escape.
-
-The fifth time Ross got that answer, the guard had stepped out of the
-room. Ross took the opportunity to thrash the thing through. “Why?” he
-demanded. “Back where I come from we’ve got lots of prisons. I never
-heard of one nobody escaped from.”
-
-The other prisoner laughed shortly. “Now you have,” he said. “Go ahead,
-try. Every one of us has tried, one time or another. There’s only one
-thing stopping you—there’s no place to go. You can get past the guards
-easy enough—they’re lazy, when they’re not either drunk or boy-chasing.
-You can roam around ‘Minerva’ all you like. You can even get to the
-spacelock, and if you want to you can walk right through it. But not in
-a spacesuit, because there aren’t any on board. And not into the tender
-that brings us up from Azor, because you aren’t built right.”
-
-Ross looked puzzled. “Not built right?”
-
-“That’s right. There’s telescreens and remote-control locks built into
-that tender. The pilot brings you up, but once she couples with
-‘Minerva’ the controls lock. And the only way they get unlocked is when
-three women, in three different substations down on Azor, push the RC
-releases. And they don’t do that until they look in their screens, and
-see that everybody who has turned up in the tender has stripped down to
-nothing at all, and every one of them is by-God female. Any further
-questions?” He grinned wryly. “Don’t even think about plastic surgery,
-if that happens to cross your mind,” he said. “We have two men here who
-tried it. You don’t have much equipment here; you can’t do a neat enough
-job.”
-
-Ross gulped. “Hadn’t given it a thought,” he assured the other man. “You
-can’t even hide away in a trunk or something?”
-
-The prisoner shook his head. “Aren’t any trunks. Everything’s one
-way—Azor to ‘Minerva’—except pilots and guards. No men ever go back.
-When you die, you go out the lock—without a ship. Same with everything
-else that they want to get rid of.”
-
-Ross thought hard. “What if they—well, what if you’re sent up here and
-all, and then some new evidence turns up and you’re found innocent?
-Don’t they send you back then?”
-
-“Found innocent?” The man looked at Ross pityingly. “Man, you _are_ new.
-Hey,” he called. “Hey, Chuck! This guy wants to know what happens if
-they find out back on Azor that he’s innocent!”
-
-Chuck exploded into laughter. Wiping his eyes, he walked over to Ross.
-“Thanks,” he grinned. “Haven’t had a good laugh in fifteen years.”
-
-“I don’t see that that’s so funny,” Ross said defensively. “After all,
-the judge can make a mistake, none of us is per—awk!”
-
-“Shut up!” Chuck hissed, holding a hand over Ross’s mouth. “Do you want
-to get us all in _real_ trouble? Some of these guys would rat to the
-guards for an extra hunk of bread! The judges never make a mistake.” And
-his lips formed the silent word: “Officially.”
-
-He let go of Ross and stood back, but didn’t walk away. He scratched his
-head. “Say,” he said, “you ask some stupid questions. Where are you
-from, anyhow?”
-
-Ross said bitterly, “What’s the use? You won’t believe me. I happen to
-be from a place called Halsey’s Planet, which is a good long distance
-from here. About as far as light will travel in two hundred years, if
-that gives you an idea. I came here in an F-T-L—that is, a
-faster-than-light ship. You don’t know what that is, of course, but I
-did. It was a mistake, I admit it. But here I am.”
-
-Somewhat to Ross’s surprise, Chuck didn’t laugh again. He looked
-dubious, and he scratched his head some more, but he didn’t laugh. To
-the other prisoner he said, “What do you think, Sam?”
-
-Sam shrugged. “So maybe we were wrong,” he observed.
-
-Ross demanded, “Wrong about what?”
-
-“Well,” Chuck said hesitantly, “there’s a guy here named Flarney. He’s a
-pretty old son-of-a-gun by now, must be at least ninety, and he’s been
-here a good long time. Dunno how long. But he talks crazy, just like
-you. No offense,” he added, “it’s just that we all thought he’d gone
-space-happy. But maybe we’re wrong. Unless——” his eyes narrowed “unless
-the two of you are both space-happy, or trying to kid us, or something.”
-
-Ross said urgently, “I swear, Chuck, there’s no such thing. It’s true.
-Who’s this Flarney? Where does he say he came from?”
-
-“Who can make sense out of what he says? All I know is, he talked a lot
-about something faster than light. That’s crazy; that’s like saying
-slower than dark, or bigger than green, or something. But I don’t know,
-maybe it means something.”
-
-“Believe me, Chuck, it does! Where is this man—can I see him?”
-
-Chuck looked uncertain. “Well, sure. That is, you can see him all right.
-But it isn’t going to do you a whole hell of a lot of good, because he’s
-dead. Died yesterday; they’re going to pitch him out into space sometime
-today.”
-
-Sam said, “This is when Whitker flips. One week without his old pal
-Flarney and he’ll begin to look funny. Two weeks and he starts acting
-funny. Three and he’s talking funny and the guards begin to crack down.
-I give him a month to get shot down and heaved through the locker.”
-
-Old pal? Ross demanded, “Who’s this Whitker? Where can I get in touch
-with him?”
-
-“Him and Flarney were both latrine orderlies. That’s where they put the
-feeble old men, mopping and polishing. Number Two head, any hour of the
-day or night. Old buzzard has his racket—we’re supposed to get a hank of
-cellosponge per man per day, but he’s always ‘fresh out’—unless you slip
-him your saccharine ration every once in a while.”
-
-Ross asked the way to Number Two head and the routine. But it was an
-hour before he could bring himself to ask the hulking guard for
-permission.
-
-“Sure, sonny,” she boomed. “I’ll show you the way. Need any help?”
-
-“No, thanks, ma’am,” he said hastily, and she roared with laughter. So
-did the members of the construction gang; it must have been an ancient
-gag. He hurried on his way thinking dark and bloody thoughts.
-
-“Whitker?” he asked a tottering ancient who nodded and drowsed amid the
-facilities of the head.
-
-The old man looked up blearily and squeaked: “Fresh out. Fresh out. You
-should’ve saved some from yesterday.”
-
-“That’s all right. I’m a new man here. I want to ask you about your
-friend Flarney——”
-
-Whitker bowed his head and began to cry noiselessly.
-
-“I’m sorry, Mr. Whitker. I heard. But there’s something we can do about
-it—maybe. Flarney was a faster-than-light man. He must have told you
-that. So am I. Ross, from Halsey’s Planet.”
-
-He hadn’t the faintest idea as to whether any of this was getting
-through to the ancient.
-
-“It seems Flarney and I were both on the same mission, finding out how
-and why planets were dropping out of communication. You and he used to
-talk a lot, they tell me. Did he ever tell you anything about that?”
-
-Whitker looked up and squeaked dimly. “Oh, yes. All the time. I humored
-him. He was an old man, you know. And now he’s dead.” The tears leaked
-from his rheumy eyes and traced the sad furrows beside his nose.
-
-Was he getting through? “What did he _say_, Mr. Whitker? About
-faster-than-light?”
-
-The old man said, “L-sub-T equals L-sub-zero e to the minus
-T-over-two-N.”
-
-That damned formula again! “But what does it mean, Mr. Whitker? What did
-he say it meant?” Ross softly urged.
-
-The old man looked surprised. “Genes?” he asked himself hazily.
-“Generations? I don’t remember. But you go to Earth, young man. Flarney
-said _they’d_ know, and know what to do about it, too, which is more
-than he did. His very words, young man!”
-
-Ross didn’t dare stay longer. Furthermore he suspected that the old
-man’s attention span had been exhausted. He started from the room with a
-muttered thanks, and was stopped at the door by Whitker’s hand on his
-shoulder.
-
-“You’re a good boy,” Whitker squeaked. “Here.”
-
-Ross found himself walking down the corridor with an enormous wad of
-cellosponge in his hand.
-
-The bunks were hard, but that didn’t matter. Dormitories were the
-outermost layer of the hulk, pseudogravity varies inversely as the
-fourth power of the distance, and the field generator was conventionally
-located near “Minerva’s” center. When your relative weight is
-one-quarter normal you can sleep deliciously on a gravel driveway. This
-was the dormitory’s only attractive feature. Otherwise it was too many
-steel slabs, tiered and spotted too close, too many unwashed males, too
-much weary snoring. The only things in short supply were headroom and
-air.
-
-Not everybody slept. Insomniacs turned and grunted; those who had given
-up the struggle talked from bunk to bunk in considerately low tones.
-
-Bernie muttered from a third-tier bunk facing Ross’s: “I wonder if she
-made it.”
-
-Ross knew what he meant. “Unlikeliest thing in the world,” he said. “But
-I think she went fast and never knew what hit her.” He thought of the
-formula and “They’d know on Earth—and know what to do about it too.”
-Earth the enigma, from which all planetary peoples were supposed to be
-derived. Earth—the dot on the traditional master charts, Earth—from
-which and to which no longliners ever seemed to travel. Haarland had
-told him no F-T-L ship had in recent centuries ever reported again after
-setting out for Earth. Another world sunk in barbarism? But Flarney had
-said—no; that was not data. That was the confused recollections of a
-very old man, possibly based on the confused recollections of another
-very old man. Perhaps it had got mixed up with the semilegendary origin
-story.
-
-Poor sweet Helena! He hoped it had happened fast, that she had been
-thinking of some pleasant prospect on Halsey’s Planet. In her naïve way
-she’d think it just around the corner, a mere matter of following
-instructions....
-
- * * * * *
-
-So thought Ross, the pessimist.
-
-In his gloom he had forgotten that this was exactly what it was. In his
-snobbishness he never realized that he was guilty of the most frightful
-arrogance in assuming that what he could do, she could not. In his
-ignorance he was not aware that since navigation began, every new
-instrument, every technique, has drawn the shuddery warnings of savants
-that uneducated skippers, working by rote, could not be expected to
-master these latest fruits of science—or that uneducated skippers since
-navigation began have cheerfully adopted new instruments and techniques
-at the drop of a hat and that never once have the shuddery warnings been
-justified by the facts.
-
-Up the aisle somebody was saying in a low, argumentative tone, “I saw
-the drum myself. Naturally it was marked Dulsheen Creme, but the guards
-here never did give a damn whether their noses were dull or bright
-enough to flag down a freighter and I don’t think they’ve suddenly
-changed. It was booze, I tell you. Fifty liters of it.”
-
-“Gawd! The hangovers tomorrow.”
-
-“We’ll all have to watch our steps. I hope they don’t do anything worse
-than getting quietly drunk in their quarters. Those foot-kissing
-orderlies’ll get a workout, but who cares what happens to an orderly?”
-
-“They haven’t been on a real tear since I’ve been here.”
-
-“Lucky you. Let’s hope they don’t bust loose tonight. It’s a break in
-the monotony, sure—but those girls play rough. Five prisoners died last
-time.”
-
-“They beat them up?”
-
-“One of them.”
-
-“What about the others? Oh! Oh, Gawd—fifty liters, you said?”
-
-Bernie began to whimper: “Not again! Not those plug-uglies! I swear I’ll
-throw myself through the spacelock if they make a pass at me. Ross,
-isn’t there anything we can do?”
-
-“Seems not, Bernie. Maybe they won’t come in. Or if they do, maybe
-they’ll pass you by. There certainly isn’t any place to hide.”
-
-A raucous female voice roared through the annunciator: “Bed check five
-minutes, boys. Anybody got any li’l thing to do down the hall, better do
-it now. See you lay-terrr!” Hiccup and drunken giggle.
-
-For the first time in his life Ross suddenly and spontaneously acted
-like a tri-di hero, with the exception that he felt like a silly ass
-through it all.
-
-“Got an idea,” he muttered. “Get out of your bunk.” He pulled the wad of
-cellosponge, old Whitker’s present, from his pocket and yanked it in
-half, one for him and one for Bernie.
-
-The Pullover said faintly: “Thanks, but I don’t have to——”
-
-Ross didn’t bother to answer. He was carefully fluffing the stuff out to
-its maximum dimensions. He unzipped his coveralls and began wadding them
-with cellosponge.
-
-“I get it,” Bernard said softly. He stepped out of his one-piece garment
-and followed suit. In less than a minute they had creditable dummies
-lying on their bunks.
-
-The others watched their activity with emotions ranging between awe and
-envy. One giant of a man proclaimed grimly to whoever cared to listen:
-“These are a couple of smart guys. I wish them luck. And I want you guys
-to know that I will personally break the back of any sneaking rat who
-tips off a guard about this.”
-
-“Sure, Ox. Sure,” came a muted chorus.
-
-Arranged in a fetal sleeping position, face down, the dummies astonished
-even their creators. It would take a lucky look in a fair light to note
-that the heads were earless, fibrous globes.
-
-“They’ll do,” Ross snapped. “Come on, Bernie.”
-
-They walked quietly from the dormitory in their singlet underwear toward
-the dormitory latrine—and past it. Into the corridor. Through a doorless
-opening into a storeroom piled with crates of rations. “This’ll do,”
-Ross said quietly. They ducked into a small cavern formed by sloppy
-issuing of stock and hunched down.
-
-“The dummies will fool the bed check. It’s only a sweep with a
-hundred-line TV system. If the guards do raid the dormitory tonight
-we’ll have to count on them ignoring the dummies or thinking they’re a
-joke or being too busy with other things to care. They’ll be drunk,
-after all. Then in the morning things’ll be plenty disorganized. We’ll
-be able to sneak back into formation—and that’ll be that for a matter of
-years. They can’t often bribe the pilots with enough to guarantee a real
-ripsnorting drunk. Now try and get some sleep. There’s nothing more we
-can do.”
-
-They actually did doze off for a couple of hours, and then were awakened
-by drunken war whoops.
-
-“It’s them!” Bernie wailed.
-
-“Shut up. They’re heading for the dormitory. We’re safe.”
-
-“Safe!” Bernie echoed derisively. “Safe until when?”
-
-Ross threatened him with the side of his hand and Bernie was quiet,
-though his lips were mumbling soundlessly. The guards lurched giggling
-past and Ross said:
-
-“We’ll sneak into the lockroom. There won’t be anybody there tonight; at
-least we’ll get a night’s sleep.”
-
-“Big deal,” grumbled Bernie, but he followed, complaining inarticulately
-to himself. Ross thought tiredly: All this work for a night’s sleep! And
-saw, half-formed, the dreadful procession of days and nights and years
-ahead....
-
-They reached the lockroom and stumbled in breathlessly.
-
-“Dearie!” Two guards, playing a card game on the floor with a ring of
-empty bottles around them, looked up in drunken delight. “Dearie!”
-repeated the bigger of the two. “Angela, _look_ what _we’ve_ got!”
-
-Ross said stupidly. “But you shouldn’t be here——”
-
-The guard made a clumsy pass at fluffing up her back hair and giggled.
-“Duty comes first, dearie. Angela, just lock that door, will you?” The
-other guard scrambled unevenly to her feet and weaved over to the door.
-It was locked before Ross or Bernie could move.
-
-The big guard stood up too, leering at Bernie. “Wow!” she said. “New
-merchandise. Just be patient, dearie. We’ve got a little something to
-attend to in a couple of minutes, but we’ll have _lots_ of time after
-that.”
-
-Then things began to happen rapidly. There was Angela the guard,
-inarticulate, falling-down drunk; she waved bonelessly at a brightly
-flickering light on the far side of the lockroom. There was the other
-guard, reaching out for Bernie with one hand, pawing at a bottle with
-the other. There was Ross, a paralyzed spectator.
-
-And there was Bernie.
-
-Bernie’s eyes bulged wide as the guard came toward him. He babbled
-hysterically, “No! Nonononono! I said I’d kill myself and I——”
-
-He stiff-armed the big guard and leaped for the lock door. Ross suddenly
-came to life. “Bernie!” he bellowed. “Hold it! Don’t jump!”
-
-But it was too late. The one guard sprawling, the other staggering
-helplessly across the floor, Bernie was clear. He scrabbled at the
-lockwheels, spun them open. Ross tensed himself for the sudden, awful
-rush of expanding air; he leaped after Bernie just as Bernie flung the
-lock door open and jumped.
-
-Ross jumped after.
-
-There was no rush of air. They were not in space. Around them was no
-ripping, sucking void, no flaming backdrop of stars; around them were
-six walls and a Wesley board, and Helena peering at them wide-eyed and
-delighted.
-
-“Well!” she said. “_That_ was fast!”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Ross said, “But——”
-
-Helena, hanging from the acceleration loops, smiled maternally. “Oh, it
-was nothing,” she said. “Ross don’t you think we’re far enough away
-yet?”
-
-Ross said hopelessly, “All right,” and cut the drive. The starship hung
-in space in the limbo between stars. Azor, “Minerva,” and the rest were
-light-years behind, far out of range of challenge.
-
-Helena wriggled free from the loops and rubbed her arms where the
-retaining straps had gripped them. “After all,” she said demurely, “you
-_told_ me how to run the ship, and _really_, Ross, I’m not quite
-_stupid_.”
-
-Ross said, “But——”
-
-“But what, Ross? It isn’t as if I were some sort of brainless little
-thing that had never run a machine in her life. My goodness, Ross——” She
-wrinkled her nose. “_You_ should remember. All those days in the dye
-vats? Don’t you think I had to learn a little something about machines
-_there_?”
-
-Ross swore incredulously. To compare those clumsy constructs of wheels
-and rollers with the subtle subelectronic flows of the Wesley force—and
-to make it work! He said, unbelievingly, “And the ‘Minerva’ helped you
-vector in? They gave you the co-ordinates and radared your course?”
-
-“Certainly.” Helena turned to Bernie, who was staring dazedly around
-him. “Are you all right, dear?” she asked.
-
-Ross turned his back on them and faced the Wesley Christmas tree of
-controls. Don’t question it, he told himself; take a miracle for what it
-is. God wanted you out of “Minerva”—and God moves in most mysterious
-ways His wonders to perform.
-
-Anyway, they had to get going. When the court had exiled Helena in the
-starship they had gone through the customary rituals; not only was
-everything that looked like a weapon gone, along with all but a teacup
-of fuel for the auxiliary jets, but the food locker was stripped
-entirely. He put everything else out of his mind and began to calculate
-a setting.
-
-Bernie said over his shoulder, “Home, huh? That place you call Halsey’s
-Planet?”
-
-Ross shook his head. “Not this time. I got this far and I’m still alive;
-maybe I can finish the job. Anyway, I’ll try. The first solid suggestion
-I’ve had ever since I took off was what that half-witted old moron——” He
-ignored a little gasp from Helena. “——said back on ‘Minerva.’ If Flarney
-had lived, he would have gone there; we’ll go there now.” He finished
-manipulating the calculator and began to set it up on the board. He
-said, “The name of the place is—Earth.”
-
-
-
-
-..... 10
-
-
-IT took Ross a while to learn a lesson, but when he learned it, it
-stuck. This time, he promised himself, _no spaceport_.
-
-They sneaked into the solar system that held fabulous old Earth from far
-outside the ecliptic, where the chance of radar detection was least;
-they came to a relative dead halt millions of miles from the planet and
-cautiously scanned the surrounding volume of space with their own radar.
-
-No ships seemed to be in space. Earth’s solar system turned out to be a
-trivial affair, only five planets, scarcely a half-dozen moons among
-them. None of the planets except Earth itself was anything like
-inhabitable.
-
-“Hold tight,” said Ross grimly, “I’m not so good at this fine
-navigation.” He cautiously applied power along a single vector; the
-starship leaped and bucked. He corrected with another; and the distant
-sun swelled in their view plates with frightening rapidity. The alarm
-beeps bleated furiously, and the automatic cutoff restored all controls
-to neutral.
-
-Ross, sweating, picked himself up from the floor and staggered back to
-the panel. Helena said carefully, “You’re doing _fine_, Ross, but if
-you’d like _me_ to take over for a minute——”
-
-Ross swallowed his pride and stood back. After one wide-eyed stare of
-shock—she wasn’t even calculating!—he gripped the loops and closed his
-eyes and waited for death.
-
-There was a punishing bump and his eyes flew open. Helena was looking at
-him apologetically. “You would have done it better,” she lied, “but
-anyway we’re down.”
-
-Ross lied, “Of course, but I’m glad you had the practice. Where—uh,
-where are we?”
-
-Helena silently showed him the radar plot. Earth, it seemed, had a
-confusing multiplicity of continents; they were on one in the northern
-hemisphere, a large one as Earth’s continents went, and smack in the
-middle of it. It was night on their side of Earth just then; and, by the
-plot, a largish city was only a dozen or so miles away.
-
-“Okay,” said Ross wearily, “landing party away. Helena, you stay here
-while Bernie and I——”
-
-Helena said simply, “No.”
-
-Ross stared at her a minute, then shrugged. “All right. Then Bernie will
-stay while——”
-
-“I will not!” said Bernie.
-
-Clearly it was time for a showdown. Ross roared: “Who’s the captain
-here, anyway?”
-
-“You are,” Helena said promptly. “As long as I don’t have to stay here
-alone.”
-
-“Yeah,” said Bernie.
-
-Ross said, “Oh.” He thought for a while and then said, “Well, let’s all
-go.” They thought it was a wonderful idea.
-
-Earth wasn’t a very unusual planet—lots of green sand and purple
-vegetation. Either the master star chart was wrong or the gravity meter
-was off; the former, strangely enough, gave Earth’s gravity as 1.000000
-and the latter as 0.8952, a whopping ten per cent discrepancy. Further,
-the principal inert gas in Earth’s atmosphere was, according to the
-master chart’s planetary supplement, nitrogen; and according to the
-ship’s instruments was indubitably neon. A terrific aurora polaris
-display constantly flickering in the northern sky bore that out.
-
-But the gap between the chart and the facts didn’t particularly worry
-Ross as they swung along overland. So the chart was off, or perhaps
-things had changed. This was—according to Flarney via Whitker—the place
-where people knew about the formula, where his questions would be
-answered. After this, he thought happily, it’s off to Halsey’s Planet
-and an unspecified glorious future, revered as the savior of humanity
-instead of a lousy Yards clerk pushing invoices around. And Helena, he
-thought sentimentally....
-
-He turned to smile at her and found she and Bernie were giggling.
-
-“Listen, you two!” Captain Ross roared. “Haven’t you learned anything
-yet? What’s the good of us exploring if we stroll along with our silly
-heads in the clouds, not paying attention? Do you realize that this
-place may be as dangerous as Azor or worse?”
-
-“Ross——” Helena said.
-
-“Don’t interrupt! What this outfit needs is some discipline—tightening
-up. You two have got to accept your responsibilities. Keep alert! Be on
-the lookout! Any single thing out of the ordinary may be a deathtrap.
-Watch for——”
-
-Helena was looking not at Ross but over his shoulder. Bernie was making
-strangled noises and pointing.
-
-Ross turned. Behind him stood a mechanical monstrosity vaguely
-recognizable as a heavily-armed truck, its motor faintly humming. A man
-leaned darkly from the cab and transfixed them to the ground with a
-powerful spotlight. From the dazzling circle of light his voice came,
-hasty and furtive. “Thought it was two women and a man, but I guess
-you’re the ones. Ugh, those faces on you! Yes, you’re the ones. Get in.
-Fast.”
-
-The light blinked out. When their eyes adjusted to the dimmer
-illumination of the stars and the aurora display they saw a side door in
-the body of the truck standing open. Too, one of the long, slim gun
-barrels with which the truck seemed copiously supplied swiveled to cover
-them.
-
-Ross stupidly read aloud a sign on the truck: “Jones Floor-Cover
-Company. Finest Tile on Jones. Wall-to-Wall a Specialty. ‘Rugs Fit For a
-Jones’.”
-
-“Yeah,” the man said. “Yeah, yeah. Just don’t try to buy any. Get in,
-for Jones’ sake! If I’d of known you were half-wits I wouldn’t of taken
-this job for a million Joneses, cash. Get in!” His voice was hysterical
-and the gun covering them moved ominously. “If this is a frame——” he
-began to shrill.
-
-“Get in,” Ross said shakily to the others. They climbed in and the door
-slammed violently and automatically. Helena began to cry in a
-preoccupied sort of way and Bernie began a long, mumbling inventory of
-his own mental weaknesses for ever getting involved in this
-crackbrained, imbecilic, feeble-minded....
-
-There were windows in the truck body and Ross turned from one to
-another. He saw the guns on the cab telescope into stubs, the stubs fold
-into the mounts, the mounts smoothly descend flush with the sheet metal.
-He saw the cursing driver manipulate a dozen levers as the car began to
-glide across the green sand, purple-dotted with vegetation. Finally,
-through the rear window, he saw three figures racing across the sand
-waving their arms, rapidly being left behind. All he could make out was
-that they seemed to be two women and a man.
-
-Helena was wailing softly, “——and I am _not_ ugly and just because we’re
-young and we’re strangers isn’t any reason to go around insulting
-people——”
-
-From Bernie: “——fatheaded, goggly-eyed, no-browed, slobber-lipped,
-dim-witted——”
-
-“Shut up,” Ross said softly. “Before I bang both your heads together.”
-
-They stared.
-
-“Thank you. We’ve got to think. What’s this spot we’re in? What can we
-do about it? I don’t have any F-T-L contact name for Earth and obviously
-this fellow picked us up by mistake. I saw two women and a man—remember
-what he said?—just now trying to catch up with us. He seems to be some
-kind of criminal. Otherwise why a disguised gun-carrier? Why floor
-coverings ‘but don’t try to buy any’? And Jones seems to be the name of
-the local political subdivision, the name of the local deity and the
-currency. That’s important. It points to a rigid one-man
-dictatorship—Jones, of course, or possibly his dynasty. What course of
-action should we take? Kick it around. Helena, what do you think?”
-
-“He shouldn’t have said we were ugly,” she pouted. “Isn’t _that_
-important?”
-
-“Women!” Ross said grimly. “If you’ll kindly forget the trivial affront
-to your vanity perhaps we can figure something out.”
-
-Helena said stubbornly: “But he _shouldn’t_. We’re not. What if they
-just _think_ we are because they all look alike and we don’t look like
-them?”
-
-Ross collapsed. After a long pause during which he tried and almost
-failed to control his temper he said slowly: “Thank you, Helena. You’re
-wrong, of course, but it was a contribution. You see, you can’t build up
-such a wild, far-fetched theory from the few facts available.” His voice
-was beginning to choke with anger. “It isn’t reasonable and it isn’t
-really any help. In fact it’s the God-damndest stupidest imitation of
-reasoning I have ever——”
-
-“City,” Bernard croaked, pointing. The jolting ride had become smoother,
-and gliding past the windows were green tiled buildings and street
-lights.
-
-“Fine,” Ross said bitterly. “We had a few clear minutes to think and now
-we find they were wasted by the crackpot dissertation of a female and my
-reasonable attempt to show her the elements of logical thinking.” He put
-his head in his hands and tried to ignore them, tried to reason it out.
-But the truck made a couple of sharp turns and jolted to a stop.
-
-The door opened and the voice of their driver said, again from behind a
-flashlight’s dazzling circle: “Out. Walk ahead of me.”
-
-They did, into a fair-sized, well-lighted room with eight people in it
-whom they studied in amazement. Every one of the eight was exactly the
-same height—six feet. Every one had straight red hair of exactly the
-same shade, sprouting from an identical hairline. Every one had
-precisely the same build—gangling but broad-shouldered. Their sixteen
-eyes were the identical blue under sixteen identical eyebrows. Head to
-toe, they were duplicates. One of them spoke—in exactly the same voice
-as the truckdriver’s.
-
-“So you want to be Joneses, do you?” he said.
-
-“Absolutely impossible.”
-
-“But we took their money.”
-
-“Give it back. Reasonable changes, yes, but look at them!”
-
-“We can’t give it back. Look what we spent already. Anyway, Sam,——” It
-sounded like “Sam” to Ross. “——anyway, Sam, look at some of the work
-you’ve done already. You can do it. I doubt if anybody else could, but
-you can.”
-
-Ross felt his eyes crossing, and gave up the effort of trying to tell
-which Jones was speaking to which. Even the clothing was nearly
-identical—purple pantaloons, scarlet jacket, black cummerbund sash,
-black shoes. Then he noticed that Third-from-the-left Jones—the one who
-seemed to be named Sam—wore a frilly shirt of white under the scarlet
-jacket. Only a lacy edge showed at the open collar; but where his was
-white, the others were all muted pastels of pink and green.
-
-Sam said coldly, “I know nobody else can do it. Anybody else! Who else
-_is_ there?”
-
-A Jones with a frill of chartreuse pursed his lips. “Well,” he said
-thoughtfully, “there’s Northside Tim Jones——”
-
-“Northside Tim Jones,” Sam mimicked. “Eight of his jobs are in the
-stockade right now! Paraffin, for Jones’s sake—he still uses paraffin to
-mold a face!”
-
-“I know, Sam, but after all, these people need help. If you won’t do it
-for them, what’s left?”
-
-Sam shrugged morosely. “Well——” he said. Then he shook his head, sighed,
-and came forward to look at the three travelers. With an expression of
-revulsion he said, “Strip.”
-
-Ross hesitated. “Hold it!” he said sharply to Helena, already half out
-of her coveralls. “Sir, there may have been some mistake. Would you mind
-explaining just what you propose to do?”
-
-“The usual thing,” Sam said irritably. “Fix your hair, build up your
-frames, level you off at standard Jones height. The works. Though I must
-say,” he added bitterly, “I never saw such unpromising specimens in my
-life. How the Jones have you managed to stay out of trouble this long?
-Whose garrets have you been hiding in?”
-
-Ross licked his lips. “You mean,” he said, “you want to make us look
-more like you gentlemen, is that it?”
-
-“_I_ want!” Sam repeated in bafflement. Over his shoulder he roared,
-“Ben, what kind of creeps are you saddling me with?”
-
-Ben, looking worried, said, “Holy Jones, Sam, I don’t get it either. It
-was a perfectly normal deal. This guy came up to me in Jones’s Joint and
-made a pitch. He knew the setup all right, and he had the money with
-him. Six hundred Joneses, cold cash; and it wasn’t funny money, either.”
-His face clouded. “I did think, though,” he mentioned, “that he said two
-women and one man. But Paul Jones picked them up right at the
-rendezvous, so it must’ve been the right ones.”
-
-He glowered suspiciously at Ross and the others. “Come to think of it,”
-he said, “maybe not. Tell you what, Sam, you just sit tight here for
-twenty minutes or so.” And he hurried out of the room.
-
-One of the other Joneses said curtly, “Sit down.” Ross, Bernie, and
-Helena found chairs lined up against a wall; they sat. A different Jones
-rummaged in a stack of papers on a table; he handed something to each of
-them. “Relax,” he advised. Obediently the three spacefarers opened the
-magazines he gave them. When they were settled, most of the Joneses,
-after a whispered conference, went out. The one that was left said, “No
-talking. If we made a mistake, we’re sorry. Meanwhile, you do what
-you’re told.”
-
-Ross found that his magazine was called _By Jones_; it seemed to be a
-periodical devoted to entertaining news and gossip of sports, fashion,
-and culture. He stared at an article headed “Be Glad the People’s Police
-Are Watching YOU!”, but the words made little sense. He tried to think;
-but somehow he couldn’t find a point at which to grasp the flickering
-mass of impressions that were circling through his brain. Nothing seemed
-to make a great deal of sense any more; and Ross suddenly realized that
-he was very, very tired.
-
-His mind an utter blank, he sat and waited.
-
-It was twenty minutes and a bit more. Then the door flew open and half a
-dozen Joneses burst in. Even at first sight, Ross could tell that three
-of them were newcomers. For one thing, two were women; and the third,
-though red-haired, tall and gangling, had a nose a full centimeter
-shorter than any of the others, and his hair was crisply curled.
-
-“All right, you Peepeece!” snarled the first Jones. “You found what you
-were looking for—now try to get out!”
-
-Helena did the talking. It wasn’t Ross’s idea, but when her heel
-crunched down on his instep he was too startled to object, and from then
-on he didn’t get a chance to get a word in edgewise.
-
-He had to admit that her act was getting across with the audience. Long
-before she had finished reporting their meeting, their flight to Azor,
-the escape from “Minerva,” and the flight here, most of the Joneses had
-put their guns away, and all were showing signs of stupefaction. “——And
-then,” she finished, “we saw this truck, and that very good-looking man
-picked us up. And so we’re here on Earth; and, honest to goodness,
-that’s the exact truth.”
-
-There was silence while the Joneses looked at each other. Then the
-plastic-surgeon-type Jones, Sam with the white shirt front, stepped
-forward. “Hold still, my dear,” he ordered. Helena bravely stood rigid
-while the surgeon raked searchingly through the roots of her hair,
-peered into her eyes, expertly traced the configuration of her ribs.
-
-He stepped back, shaken. “One thing is for sure,” he told the others,
-“they’re not Peepeece. Not with those bones. They’d never get in.”
-
-Ben Jones beat his forehead and moaned. “How do I get into these
-things?” he demanded.
-
-One of the female Joneses said shrilly, “We didn’t expect anything like
-this. We’re honest Jones-fearing Joneses and——”
-
-“Shut up!” Ben Jones roared. “What about the other two, Sam? They all
-right too?”
-
-“Oh, for Jones’s sake, Ben,” Sam said disgustedly, “just look at them,
-will you? Do you think the police would take in a five-inch height
-deviation like that one——” he pointed to Bernie——“or a half-bald
-scarecrow like that?” Ross, stung, opened his mouth to object; but
-swiftly closed it again. Nobody was paying much attention to him,
-anyhow, except as Exhibit A.
-
-“So what do we do?” Ben demanded.
-
-Sam shrugged. “The first thing we do,” he said wearily, “is to take care
-of our, uh, clients here. We get them out of the way, and then we decide
-what to do next.” He looked around at the other Joneses. “If you three
-will come this way,” he said, “we’ll finish up your job and get you back
-home. I needn’t remind you, of course, that if you should happen to
-mention anything you’ve seen here tonight to the Peepeece it would——”
-His voice was cut off by the closing door before Ross could catch the
-nature of the threat.
-
-Ben Jones stayed behind, scowling to himself. “You people got any
-Joneses?” he demanded abruptly.
-
-“You mean money? Not any at all,” Helena said honestly. Ross could have
-kicked her.
-
-Ben Jones growled deep in his throat. “Always it happens to me!” he
-complained. “I suppose we’re going to have to feed you, too.”
-
-“Well,” Helena said diffidently, “we haven’t eaten in a long time——”
-
-Ben Jones swore to his god, whose name was Jones, but he stepped to the
-door and ordered food. When it came it was surprisingly good; each of
-the three, with their diverse backgrounds, found it delicious. While
-they were eating, Ben Jones sat watching them, refreshing himself from
-time to time with a greenish bubbling liquid out of a jug. He offered
-some to Ross; who clutched his throat as though he’d swallowed molten
-steel.
-
-Ben Jones guffawed till his eyes ran. “First taste of Jones’s Juice,
-hey? Kind of gets right down inside, doesn’t it?” He wiped his eyes,
-then sobered. “I guess you people are all right,” he admitted. “What I’m
-going to do with you I don’t know. I can’t take you to Earth, and I
-can’t keep you here, and I can’t throw you out on the street—the
-Peepeece would have you in the stockade in ten minutes.”
-
-Ross, startled, said, “Aren’t we on Earth?”
-
-“Naw,” Ben Jones said disgustedly. “Didn’t you hear me? You’re on Jones,
-halfway between Jones’s Forks and Jonesgrad. But you came pretty close,
-at that. Earth’s about fifty miles out the Jones Pike past Jonesgrad,
-turn right at Jonesboro Minor.”
-
-Ross said bewilderedly, “The planet Earth is fifty miles along the
-Pike?”
-
-“Not a planet,” Ben Jones said. “It’s an old city, kind of. Nobody lives
-there any more; the Peepeece don’t permit it. I’ve never been there, but
-they say it’s kind of, you know, different. Some of the buildings——” he
-seemed actually to be blushing——“are as much as fifteen, twenty stories
-high; and the walls aren’t even all green. Excuse me,” he added, looking
-at Helena.
-
-Sam Jones returned and said to Ben, “It’s all right. All finished.
-Trivial alterations. Maybe they could have gone along for the rest of
-their lives on wigs and pads—but we don’t tell them that, do we? And
-anyway now they won’t worry. Healy Jones, the older man, for instance.
-Very bright fellow, but it seems he was working as a snathe-handler’s
-apprentice. Afraid to take the master’s test, afraid to change his line
-of work—might be noticed and questioned.” He heaved a tremendous sigh
-and poured himself a tremendous slug of the green fluid. Ben Jones gave
-Ross a cynical wink and shrug.
-
-“Look at my hand!” the surgeon exploded. It was shaking. He gulped the
-Jones Juice and poured himself another. “Nothing physical,” he said.
-“Neurosis. The subconscious coldly counting up my crimes and coldly
-imposing and executing sentence. I’m a surgeon, so my hand trembles.” He
-drank. “Jones is not mocked,” he said broodingly. “Jones is not mocked.
-Think those three are going to be happy? Think they’re going to be
-folded in Jones’s bosom just because they’re Joneses externally now? No.
-Watch them five years, ten years. Maybe they’ll sentence themselves to
-be hateful, vitriol-tempered lice and wonder why nobody loves them.
-Maybe they’ll sentence themselves to penal servitude and wonder why
-everybody pushes them around, why they haven’t the guts to hit
-back—Jones is not mocked,” he told the jug of green liquid, ignoring the
-others, and drank again.
-
-Ben Jones said softly to them, “Come on,” and led them into an adjoining
-room furnished with sleeping pads. He said apologetically, “The doctor’s
-nerves are shot tonight. Trouble is, he’s too Jones-fearing. Me, I can
-take it or leave it alone.” His laugh had a little too much bravado in
-it. “There’s a little bit of nonJones in the best of us, I always
-say—but not to the doctor. And not when he’s hitting the Jones juice.”
-He shrugged cynically and said, “What the hell? L-sub-T equals
-L-sub-zero e to the minus T-over-two-N.”
-
-Ross had him by his shirt frill. “Say that again!”
-
-Ben Jones shoved him away. “What’s the matter with you, boy?”
-
-“I’m sorry. Would you please repeat that formula? What you said?” he
-hastily amended when the word “formula” obviously failed to register.
-
-Ben Jones repeated the formula wonderingly.
-
-“What does it mean?” Ross demanded. “I’ve been chasing the damned thing
-across the Galaxy.” He hastily filled Ben Jones in on its previous
-appearances.
-
-“Well,” Ben Jones said, “it means what it says, of course. I mean, it’s
-obvious, isn’t it?” He studied their faces and added uncertainly, “Isn’t
-it?”
-
-“What does it mean to _you_, Ben?” Ross asked softly.
-
-“Why, what it means to anybody, pal. Right’s right, wrong’s wrong, Jones
-is in his Heaven, conform or else—it means morality, man. What else
-could it mean?”
-
-Ross then proceeded to make an unmannerly nuisance of himself. He
-grilled their involuntary host mercilessly, shrugging aside all
-attempted diversions of the talk into what they were going to do with
-the three visitors. He ignored protestations that Ben was no
-Jonesologist, Jones knew, and drilled in. By the time Ben Jones
-exploded, stamped out, and locked them in for the night, he had elicited
-the following:
-
-Everybody knew the formula; they were taught it at their mother’s knee.
-It was recited antiphonally before and after Jones Meetings. Ben knew it
-was right, of course, and some day he was going to get right with Jones
-and live up to it, but not just yet, because if he didn’t make money in
-the prosthesis racket somebody else would. The formula was everywhere:
-on the lintels of public buildings, hanging in classrooms, and on the
-bedroom walls of the most Jones-fearing old ladies where they could see
-its comforting message last thing at night and first thing in the
-morning.
-
-From a book? Well yes, he guessed so; sure it was in the Book of
-Joneses, but who could say whether that was where it started. Most
-people thought it was just Handed Down. Way back during the war—what
-war? The War of the Joneses, of course! Anyway, in the war the last of
-the holdouts against the formula had been destroyed. No, he didn’t know
-anything about the war. No, not his grandfather’s time or his
-grandfather’s grandfather’s time. Long ago, that war was. Maybe there
-were records in the old museum in Earth. The city, of course, not some
-damn planet he never heard of!
-
-After Ben Jones slammed out and the room darkened Helena and Bernie
-exchanged comforting words from adjoining sleeping pads, to Ross’s
-intense displeasure. They fell asleep and at last he fell asleep still
-churning over the problem.
-
-When he woke he found that evidently the doctor, Sam Jones, had stumbled
-in during the night and passed out on the pad next to him. The white
-frill was stiff and green with dried Jones Juice. Helena and Bernie
-still slept. He tried the door.
-
-It was locked, but there was a tantalizing hum of voices beyond it. He
-put his ear to the cold steel. The fruits of his eavesdropping were
-scanty but alarming.
-
-“——cut ’em down mumble found someplace mumble.”
-
-“——mumble never killed yet mumble prosthesis racket.”
-
-“——Jones’s sake, it’s their lives or mumble mumble time to get scared
-mumble Peepeece are you?”
-
-And then apparently the speakers moved out of range. Ross was cold with
-sweat, and there was an abnormal hollow in the pit of his stomach that
-breakfast would never fill.
-
-He spun around as a Jones voice croaked painfully: “Hear anything good,
-stranger?”
-
-The surgeon, looking very dilapidated, was sitting up and regarding him
-through bloodshot eyes. “They’re talking about killing us,” he said
-shortly.
-
-“They are not really intelligent,” Sam Jones said wearily. “They were
-just bright enough to entangle me to the point where I had to work for
-them—and to keep me copiously supplied with that green stuff I haven’t
-the intelligence to use in moderation.”
-
-Ross said, “How’d you like to break away from this?”
-
-Sam Jones mutely extended his hand. It trembled like a leaf. He said,
-“For his own inscrutable reason, Jones grants me steadiness of hand
-during an operation designed to frustrate his grand design. He then
-overwhelms me with a titanic thirst for oblivion to my shame.”
-
-“There’s no design,” Ross said. “Or if there is, luckily this planet is
-a trifling part of it. I have never heard of such arrogant pip-squeakery
-in my life. You flyspecks in your shabby corner of the Galaxy think your
-own fouled-up mess is the pattern of universal life. You’re wrong! I’ve
-seen life elsewhere and I know it isn’t.”
-
-The doctor passed his trembling hand over his eyes. “Jones is not
-mocked,” he croaked. “L-sub-T equals L-sub-zero e to the minus
-T-over-two-N. You can’t fight _that_, stranger. You can’t fight that.”
-
-Ross realized he was silently crying behind his covering hand.
-
-He said, much more gently, “It’s nothing you have to fight. It’s
-something you have to understand.” He told Sam Jones of his two previous
-encounters with the formula. The doctor looked up, his eyes full of
-wonder. Ross said, “How would you like to be free, doctor? Free of your
-shaking hands, free of your guilt, free of these killers? How would you
-like to know the truth?”
-
-The doctor said faintly, “If I dared——”
-
-Ross pressed, “The museum in Earth city. Get me records, facts, anything
-about the War of the Joneses. If there’s any meaning to the formula
-it’ll have to lie in that. It seems there was a battle about its
-interpretation and we know who won. Let’s find out what the other side
-said. Get me in there.” He was thinking of the disgraceful war of
-fanaticism that had marred his own planet’s history. The doctor’s weak
-Jones jaw was firming up, though his eyes were still haunted. “Stall
-your killer friends, doctor,” Ross urged. “Tell them you can use us for
-experiments that’ll cut the cost of the operations. That ought to bring
-them around. And get me the facts!”
-
-“To be free,” the doctor said wistfully. He said after a pause, “I’ll
-try. But——” And rapped a code series on the steel door.
-
-
-
-
-..... 11
-
-
-THE doctor said with weak belligerence, “Who do you think I am? Jones? I
-_had_ to leave your friends behind. I had enough trouble getting those
-hoods to let me take _you_ along. After all, I’m not a miracle-worker.”
-
-Ross said sullenly, “Okay, okay.” He glowered out of the car window and
-spat out a tendril of red hair that had come loose from the fringe
-surrounding his mouth. The trouble with a false beard was that it
-itched, worse than the real article, worse than any torment Ross had
-ever known. But at least Ross, externally and at extreme range, was
-enough of a Jones to pass a casual glance.
-
-And what would Helena and Bernie be thinking now? He hadn’t had a chance
-to whisper to them; they’d been just waking when the doctor dragged him
-out. Ross put that problem out of his mind; there were problems enough
-right on hand.
-
-He cautiously felt his red wig to see if it was on straight. The doctor
-didn’t seem to look away from his driving, but he said: “Leave it alone.
-That’s the first thing the Peepeece look for, somebody who obviously
-isn’t sure if his hair is still on or not. It won’t come off.”
-
-“Umph,” said Ross. The road was getting worse, it seemed; they had
-passed no houses for several miles now. They rounded a rutted turn, and
-ahead was a sign.
-
- STOP!
- RESTRICTED AREA AHEAD
- WARNING: THIS ROAD IS MINED
- NO TRAFFIC ALLOWED! DETOUR
- “Trespassers beyond this point will be shot
- without further notice.” Decree #404-5
- People’s Commissariat of
- Culture and Solidarity.
-
-The doctor spat contemptuously out the window and roared past. Ross
-said, “Hey!”
-
-“Oh, relax,” said the doctor. “That’s just the Cultureniks. Nobody pays
-any attention to _them_.”
-
-Ross swallowed and sat as lightly as possible on the green leather
-cushion of the car. By the time they had gone a quarter of a mile, he
-began to feel a little reassured that the doctor knew what he was
-talking about. Then the doctor swerved sharply to miss a rusted hulk and
-almost skidded off the road. He swore and manhandled the wheel until
-they were back on the straightaway.
-
-White lipped, Ross asked, “What was that?”
-
-“Car,” grunted the doctor. “Hit a mine. Silly fools!”
-
-Ross squawked, “But you said——”
-
-“Shut up,” the doctor ordered tensely. “That was weeks ago; they haven’t
-had a chance to lay new mines since then.” Pause. “I hope.”
-
-The car roared on. Ross closed his eyes, limply abandoning himself to
-what was in store. But if it was bad to see what was going on, the
-roaring, swerving, jolting race was ten times worse with his eyes
-closed. He opened them again in time to see another sign flash past,
-gone before he could read it.
-
-“What was that?” he demanded.
-
-“What’s the difference?” the doctor grunted. “Want to go back?”
-
-“Well, no——” Ross thought for a moment. “Do we have to go this fast,
-though?”
-
-“If we want to get there. Crossed a Peepeece radar screen ten miles
-back; they’ll be chasing us by now.”
-
-“Oh, I see,” Ross said weakly. “Look, Doc, tell me one thing—why do they
-make this place so hard to get to?”
-
-“Tabu area,” the doctor said shortly. “Not allowed.”
-
-“Why not allowed?”
-
-“Because it’s not allowed. Don’t want people poking through the old
-records.”
-
-“Why not just put the old records in a safe place—or burn the damn
-things up?”
-
-“Because they didn’t, that’s why. Shut up! Expect me to tell you why the
-Peepeece do anything? They don’t know themselves. It isn’t Jonesly to
-destroy, I guess.”
-
-Ross shut up. He leaned against the window, letting the air rush over
-his head. They were moving through forest, purplish squatty trees with
-long, rustling leaves. The sky overhead was crisp and cool looking; it
-was still early morning. Ross exhaled a long breath. Back on Halsey’s
-Planet he would be getting up about now, rising out of a soft, warm bed,
-taking his leisurely time about breakfast, climbing into a comfortable
-car to make his way to the spaceport where he was safe, respected, and
-at home.... Damn Haarland!
-
-At least, Ross thought, some sort of a pattern was beginning to shape
-up. The planets were going out of communication each for its own reason;
-but wasn’t there a basic reason-for-the-reasons that was the same in
-each case? Wasn’t there some overall design—some explanation that
-covered all the facts, pointed to a way out?
-
-He sat up straight as they approached a string of little signs. He
-scanned them worriedly as they rolled past.
-
- “Workers, Peasants, Joneses all——”
- “By these presents know ye——”
- “If you don’t stop in spite of all——”
- “THIS to hell will blow ye!”
-
-“Duck!” the doctor yelled, crouching down in the seat and guiding the
-careening car with one hand. Ross, startled, followed his example, but
-not before he saw that “THIS” was an automatic, radar-actuated
-rapid-fire gun mounted a few yards past the last sign. There was a
-stuttering roar from the gun and a splatter of metal against the armored
-sides of the car. The doctor sat up again as soon as the burst had hit;
-evidently only one was to be feared. “Yah, yah,” he jeered at the absent
-builders of the gun. “Lousy fifty-millimeters can’t punch their way
-through a tin can!”
-
-Ross, gasping, got up just in time to see the last sign in the series:
-
- “By order of People’s Democratic Council
- Of Arts & Sciences, Small Arms Division.”
-
-He said wildly, “They can’t even write a poem properly. Did you notice
-the first and third line rhyme-words?”
-
-Surprisingly, the doctor glanced at him and laughed with a note of
-respect. He took a hand off the wheel to pat Ross on the shoulder.
-“You’ll make a Jones yet, my boy,” he promised. “Don’t worry about these
-things; I told you this place was restricted. This stuff isn’t worth
-bothering about.”
-
-Ross found that he was able to smile. There was a point, he realized
-with astonishment, where courage came easily; it was the only thing
-left. He sat up straighter and breathed the air more deeply. Then it
-happened.
-
-They rounded another curve; the doctor slammed on the brakes. Suspended
-overhead across the road was a single big sign:
-
- THAT’S ALL, JONES!
- ——PEOPLE’S POLICE
-
-The car bucked, slewed around, and skidded. The wheels locked, but not
-in time to keep it from sliding into the pit, road wide and four feet
-deep, that was dug in front of them.
-
-Ross heard the axles crack and the tires blow; but the springing of the
-car was equal to the challenge. He was jarred clear in the air and
-tumbled to the floor in a heap; but no bones were broken.
-
-Painfully he pushed the door open and crawled out. The doctor limped
-after and the two of them stood on the edge of the pit, looking at the
-ruin of their car.
-
-“That one,” said the doctor, “was worth bothering about.” He motioned
-Ross to silence and cocked an ear. Was there a distant roaring sound,
-like another car following on the road they had traveled? Ross wasn’t
-sure; but the doctor’s expression convinced him. “Peepeece,” he said
-briefly. “From here on it’s on foot. They won’t follow beyond here; but
-let’s get out of sight. They’ll by-Jones _shoot_ beyond here if they see
-us!”
-
-Ross stared unbelievingly. “This is Earth?” he asked.
-
-The doctor fanned himself and blew. “That’s it,” he said, looking around
-curiously. “Heard a lot about it, but I’ve never been here before,” he
-explained. “Funny-looking, isn’t it?” He nudged Ross, indicating a
-shattered concrete structure beside them on the road. “Notice that toll
-booth?” he whispered slyly. “Eight sides!”
-
-Ross said wearily, “Yes, mighty funny! Look, Doc, why don’t you sort of
-wander around by yourself for a while? That big thing up ahead is the
-museum you were talking about, isn’t it?”
-
-The doctor squinted. His eyes were unnaturally bright, and his breathing
-was fast, but he was making an attempt to seem casual in the presence of
-these manifold obscenities of design. He licked his lips. “_Round
-pillars_,” he marveled. “Why, yes, I think that’s the museum. You go on
-up there, like you say. I’ll, uh, sort of see what there is to see.
-Jones, yes!” He staggered off, staring from ribald curbing to
-scatological wall in an orgy of prurience.
-
-Ross sighed and walked through the deserted, weed-grown streets to the
-stone building that bore on its cracked lintel the one surviving word,
-“Earth.” This was all wrong, he was almost certain; Earth _had_ to be a
-planet, not a city. But still....
-
-The museum had to have the answers.
-
-On its moldering double doors was a large lead seal. He read: “Surplus
-Information Repository. Access denied to unauthorized personnel.” But
-the seal had been forced by somebody; one of the doors swung free,
-creaking.
-
-Ross invoked the forcer of the door. If _he_ could do it....
-
-He went in and stumbled over a skeleton, presumably that of the last
-entrant. The skull had been crushed by a falling beam. There was some
-sort of mechanism involved—a trigger, a spring, a release hook. All had
-rusted badly, and the spring had lost its tension over the years. A
-century? Two? Five? Ross prayed that any similar mantraps had likewise
-rusted solid, and cautiously inched through the dismal hall of the
-place, ready for a backward leap at the first whisper of a concealed
-mechanism in action.
-
-It was unnecessary. The place was—dead.
-
-Exploring room after room, he realized slowly that he was stripping off
-history in successive layers. The first had been the booby-trapped road,
-lackadaisically planned to ensure that mere inquisitiveness would be
-discouraged. There had been no real denial of access, for there was
-almost no possibility that anybody would care to visit the place.
-
-Next, the seal and the mantraps. An earlier period. Somebody had once
-said: “This episode is closed. This history is determined. We have all
-reached agreement. Only a dangerous or frivolous meddler would seek to
-rake over these dead ashes.”
-
-And then, prying into the museum, Ross found the era during which
-agreement had been reached, during which it still was necessary to
-insist and demonstrate and cajole.
-
-The outer rooms and open shelves were testimonials to Jones. There were
-books of Jonesology—ingenious, persuasive books divided usually into
-three sections. Human Jonesology would be a painstaking effort to
-determine the exact physical and mental tolerances of a Jones.
-Anatomical atlases minutely gave femur lengths, cranial angles, eye
-color to an angstrom, hair thickness to a micron. Moral Jonesology
-treated of the dangers of deviating from these physical and more elastic
-mental specifications. (Here the formula appeared again, repeatedly
-invoked but never explained. Already it was a truism.) And Sacred
-Jonesology was a series of assertions concerning the nature of The Jones
-in whose image all other Joneses were created.
-
-Subdivisions of the open shelves held works on Geographical Jonesology
-(the distribution across the planet of Joneses) and similar works.
-
-Ross went looking for a lower layer of history and found it in a bale of
-crumbling pamphlets. “Comrades, We Must Now Proceed to Consolidate Our
-Victory”; “Ultra-Jonesism, An Infantile Political Disorder”; “On The
-Fallacy of ‘Jonesism In One Country’.” These Ross devoured. They added
-up to the tale of a savage political battle among the victors of a
-greater war. Clemency was advocated and condemned; extermination of the
-opposition was casually mentioned; the Cultural Faction and the
-Biological Faction had obviously been long locked in a death struggle.
-Across the face of each pamphlet stood a similar logotype: the formula.
-It was enigmatically mentioned in one pamphlet, which almost
-incomprehensibly advanced the claims of the Biological faction to
-supremacy among the Joneses United: “Let us never forget, comrades, that
-the initiation of the great struggle was not caused by our will or by
-the will of our sincere and valiant opponents, the Culturists. The
-inexorable law of nature, L_{T}=L_{O}e-^{T/2N}, was the begetter of that
-holocaust from which our planet has emerged purified——”
-
-Was it now?
-
-The entrance to a musty, airless wing had once been bricked up. The
-mortar was crumbling and a few bricks had fallen. Above the arched
-doorway a sign said Military Archives. On the floor was a fallen metal
-plaque whose inscription said simply Dead Storage. He kicked the loose
-bricks down and stepped through.
-
-That was it. The place was lightless, except for the daylight filtering
-through the violated archway. Ross hauled maps and orders and period
-newspapers and military histories and handbooks into the corridor in
-armfuls and spread them on the floor. It took only minutes for him to
-realize that he had his answer. He ran into the street and shouted for
-the doctor.
-
-Together they pored over the papers, occasionally reading aloud choice
-bits, wonderingly.
-
-The simplest statement of the problem they found was in the paper-backed
-“Why We Fight” pamphlet issued for the enlisted men of the Provisional
-North Continent Government Army.
-
-“What is a Jones?” the pamphlet asked rhetorically. “A Jones is just a
-human being, the same as you and I. Dismiss rumors that a Jones is
-supernatural or unkillable with a laugh when you hear them. They arose
-because of the extraordinary resemblance of one Jones to another.
-Putting a bullet through one Jones in a skirmish and seeing another one
-rise up and come at you with a bayonet is a chilling experience; in the
-confusion of battle it may seem that the dead Jones rose and attacked.
-But this is not the case. Never let the rumor pass unchallenged, and
-never fail to report habitual rumor-mongers.
-
-“How did the Joneses get that way? Many of you were too young when this
-long war began to be aware of the facts. Since then, wartime disruption
-of education and normal communications facilities has left you in the
-dark. This is the authoritative statement in simple language that
-explains why we fight.
-
-“This planet was colonized, presumably from the quasi-legendary planet
-Earth. (The famous Earth Archives Building, incidentally, is supposed to
-derive its puzzling name from this fact.) It is presumed that the number
-of colonists was originally small, probably in the hundreds. Though the
-number of human beings on the planet increased enormously as the
-generations passed, genetically the population remained small. The same
-ones (heredity units) were combined and reshuffled in varying
-combinations, but no new ones were added. Now, it is a law of genetics
-that in small populations, variations tend to smooth out and every
-member of the population tends to become like every other member.
-So-called unfixed genes are lost as the generations pass; the end
-product of this process would theoretically be a population in which
-every member had exactly the same genes as every other member. This is a
-practical impossibility, but the Joneses whom we fight are a tragic
-demonstration of the fact that the process need not be pushed to its
-ultimate extreme to dislocate the life of a planet and cause endless
-misery to its dwellers.
-
-“From our very earliest records there have been Joneses. It is theorized
-that this gangling redheaded type was well represented aboard the
-original colonizing ship, but some experts believe one Jones type and
-the workings of chance would be sufficient to produce the unhappy
-situation of type-dominance.
-
-“Some twenty-five years ago Joneses were everywhere among us and not, as
-now, withdrawn to South Continent and organized into a ruthless
-aggressor nation. They made up about thirty per cent of the population
-and had become a closely knit organization devoted to mutual help. They
-held the balance of political power in every election from the municipal
-to the planetary level and virtually monopolized production and finance.
-There were fanatics and rabble-rousers among them who readily exploited
-a rising tide of discontent over a series of curbing laws, finally
-pushed through by a planetary majority, united at last in self-defense
-against the rapacity and ruthless self-interest of the Joneses.
-
-“The Joneses withdrew en masse to South Continent. Some sincerely wished
-them well; others scoffed at the secession as a sulky and childish
-gesture. Only a handful of citizens guessed the terrible truth, and were
-laughed at for their pains. Five years after their withdrawal the
-Joneses returned across the Vandemeer Peninsula and the war had begun.
-
-“A final word. There has been much loose talk among the troops about the
-slogan of the Joneses, which goes L_{T}=L_{O}e-^{T/2N}. Some uninformed
-people actually believe it is an invocation which gives the Joneses
-supernatural power and invulnerability. It is not. It is merely an
-ancient and well-known formula in genetics which quantitatively
-describes the loss of unfixed genes from a population. By mouthing this
-formula, the Joneses are simply expressing in a compact way their
-ruthless determination that all genes except theirs shall disappear from
-the planet and the Joneses alone survive. In the formula L_{T} means the
-number of genes after the lapse of T years, L_{O} means the original
-number of genes, e means the base of the natural system of logarithms
-and N means number of generations.”
-
-The surgeon said slowly and with wonder: “So _that_ was my God!” He
-stretched out his hands before him. The fingers were rock-steady.
-
-Ross left him and paced the corridor uneasily. Fine. Now he knew. Lost
-genes in genetically small populations. On Halsey’s Planet, some
-fertility gene, no doubt. On Azor, a male-sex-linked gene that provides
-men with the backbone required to come out ahead in the incessant war of
-the genders? Bernie was a gutless character. Here, all too many genes
-determining somatotype. On the planets that had dropped out of
-communication, who knew? Scientific-thought genes? Sex-drive-determining
-genes?
-
-One thing was clear: any gene-loss was bad for the survival of a
-planetary colony. Evolution had——on Earth——worked out in a billion
-trial-and-error years a working mechanism, man. Man exhibited a vast
-range of variation, which was why he survived almost any conceivable
-catastrophe.
-
-Reduce man to a single type and he is certain to succumb, sooner or
-later, to the inevitable disaster that his one type cannot cope with.
-
-The problem, now stated clearly, was bigger than he had dreamed. And now
-he knew only the problem—not the solution.
-
-Go to Earth.
-
-Well, he had tried. There had been no flaw in his calculations, no
-failure in setting up the Wesley panel. Yet—this was Jones, not Earth;
-the city was only a city, not the planet that the star charts logged.
-And the planet, beyond all other considerations, was less like Earth
-than any conceivable chart error could account for. Gravitation, wrong;
-atmosphere, wrong; flora and fauna, wrong.
-
-So. Eliminate the impossible, and what remains, however unlikely, is
-true. So there had been a flaw in his calculations. And the way to check
-that, once and for all, was to get back to the starship.
-
-Ross wheeled and went back into the book room. “Doc,” he called, “how do
-we get out of here?”
-
-The answer was: on their bellies. They trudged through the forest for
-hours, skirting the road, hiding whenever a suspicious noise gave
-warning that someone might be in the vicinity. The Peepeece knew they
-were in the woods; there was no doubt of that. And as soon as they got
-past the tabu area, they had to crawl.
-
-It was well past dark before Ross and the doctor, scratched and aching,
-got to the tiny hamlet of Jonesie-on-the-Pike. By the light from the one
-window in the village that gave any signs of life, the doctor took a
-single horrified look at Ross and shuddered. “You wait here,” he
-ordered. “Hide under a bush or something—your beard rubbed off.”
-
-Ross watched the doctor rap on the door and be admitted. He couldn’t
-hear the conversation that followed, but he saw the doctor’s hand go to
-his pocket, then clasp the hand of the figure in the doorway. That was
-the language all the galaxy understood, Ross realized; he only hoped
-that the householder was an honest man—i. e., one who would stay bribed,
-instead of informing the Peepeece on them. It was beyond doubt that
-their descriptions had long since been broadcast; the road must have
-been lined with TV scanners on the way in.
-
-The door opened again, and the doctor walked briskly out. He strode out
-into the street, walked half a dozen paces down the road, and waited for
-Ross to catch up with him. “Okay,” the doctor whispered. “They’ll pick
-us up in half an hour, down the road about a quarter of a mile. Let’s
-go.”
-
-“What about the man you were talking to?” Ross asked. “Won’t he turn us
-in?”
-
-The doctor chuckled. “I gave him a drink of Jones’s Juice out of my
-private stock,” he said. “No, he won’t turn anybody in, at least not
-until he wakes up.”
-
-Ross nodded invisibly in the dark. He had a thought, and suppressed it.
-But it wouldn’t stay down. Cautiously he let it seep through his
-subconscious again, and looked it over from every angle.
-
-No, there wasn’t any doubt of it. Things were definitely looking up!
-
- * * * * *
-
-Ben Jones roared, “Just what the hell do you think you’re doing, Doc?”
-
-The doctor pushed Ross through the doorway and turned to face the other
-Jones. He asked mildly, “What?”
-
-“You heard me!” Ben Jones blustered. “I let you out with this one, and
-maybe I made a mistake at that. But I by-Jones don’t intend to let you
-get out of here with all three of them. What are you trying to get away
-with anyhow?”
-
-The doctor didn’t change his mild expression. He took a short, unhurried
-step forward. _Smack._
-
-Ben Jones reeled back from the slap, his mouth open, hand to his face.
-“Hey!” he squawked.
-
-The doctor said levelly, “I’m telling you this just one time, Ben.
-_Don’t cross me._ You’ve got the guns, but I’ve got these.” He held up
-his spread hands. “You can shoot me, I won’t deny that. But you can’t
-make me do your dirty work for you. From now on things go my way—with
-these three people, with my own life, with the bootleg plastic surgery
-we do to keep you in armored cars. Or else there won’t _be_ any plastic
-surgery.”
-
-Ben Jones swallowed, and Ross could see the man fighting himself. He
-said after a moment, “No reason to act sore, Doc. Haven’t we always got
-along? The only thing is, maybe you don’t realize how dangerous these
-three——”
-
-“Shut up,” said the doctor. “Right, boys?”
-
-The other two Joneses in the room shuffled and looked uncomfortable. One
-of them said, “Don’t get mad, Ben, but it kind of looks as if he’s
-right. We and the doc had a little talk before you got here. It figures,
-you have to admit it. He does the work; we ought to let him have
-something to say about it.”
-
-The look that Ben Jones gave him was pure poison, but the man stood up
-to it, and in a minute Ben Jones looked away. “Sure,” he said distantly.
-“You go right ahead, Doc. We’ll talk this over again later on, when
-we’ve all had a chance to cool off.”
-
-The doctor nodded coldly and followed Ross out. Helena and Bernie,
-suitably Jonesified for the occasion, were already in the car; Ross and
-the doctor jumped in with them, and they drove away. Now that the strain
-was relaxed a bit the doctor was panting, but there was a grin on his
-lips. “Son-of-a-Jones,” he said happily, “I’ve been waiting five years
-for this day!”
-
-Ross asked, “Is it all right? They won’t chase after us?”
-
-“No, not Ben Jones. He has his own way of handling things. Now if we
-were stupid enough to go back there, after he had a chance to talk to
-the others without me around, that would be something different. But we
-aren’t going back.”
-
-Ross’s eyes widened. “Not even you, Doc?”
-
-“Especially not me.” The doctor concentrated on his driving. Presently:
-“If I take you to the rendezvous, can you find your ship from there?” he
-asked.
-
-“Sure,” said Ross confidently. “And Doc—welcome to our party.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Space had never looked better.
-
-They hung half a million miles off Jones, and Ross fumbled irritatedly
-with the Wesley panel while the other three stood around and made
-helpful suggestions. He set up the integrals for Earth just as he had
-set them up once before; the plot came out the same. He transferred the
-computations to the controls and checked it against the record in the
-log. The same. The ship should have gone straight as a five-dimensional
-geodesic arrow to the planet Earth.
-
-Instead, he found by cross-checking the star atlas, it had gone in
-almost the other direction entirely, to the planet of Jones.
-
-He threw his pencil across the room and swore. “I don’t get it,” he
-complained.
-
-“It’s probably broken, Ross,” Helena told him seriously. “You know how
-machines are. They’re _always_ doing something funny just when you least
-expect it.”
-
-Ross bit down hard on his answer to that. Bernie contributed his morsel,
-and even Dr. Sam Jones, whose race had lost even the memory of
-spaceflight, had a suggestion. Ross swore at them all, then took time to
-swear at the board, at the starship, at Haarland, at Wesley, and most of
-all at himself.
-
-Helena turned her back pointedly. She said to Bernie, “The way Ross acts
-sometimes you’d honestly think he was the _only_ one who’d _ever_ run
-this thing. Why, my goodness, I _know_ you can’t _rely_ on that silly
-board! Didn’t I have just exactly the same experience with it myself?”
-
-Ross gritted his teeth and doggedly started all over again with the
-computations for Earth. Then he did a slow double-take.
-
-“Helena,” he whispered. “What experience did you have?”
-
-“Why, just the same as now! Don’t you _remember_, Ross? When you and
-Bernie were in jail and I had to come rescue you?”
-
-“What happened?” Ross shouted.
-
-“My goodness, Ross don’t _yell_ at me! There was that silly light
-flashing all the time. It was driving me out of my _mind_. Well, I knew
-_perfectly_ well that I wasn’t going to get anywhere if it was going to
-act like _that_, so I just——”
-
-Ross, eyes glazed, robotlike, lifted the cover off the main Wesley unit.
-Down at the socket of the alarm signal, shorting out two delicately
-machined helices that were a basic part of the Wesley drive, wedged
-between an eccentric vernier screw and a curious crystalline lattice,
-was—the hairpin.
-
-He picked it out and stared at it unbelievingly. He marveled, “It says
-in the manual, ‘On no account should any alterations be made in any part
-of the Wesley driving assembly by any technician under a C-Twelve
-rating.’ She didn’t like the alarm going off. So she fixed it. With a
-hairpin.”
-
-Helena giggled and appealed to Bernie. “Doesn’t he _kill_ you?” she
-asked.
-
-Ross’s eyes were glazed and his hands worked convulsively. “Kill,” he
-muttered, advancing on Helena. “Kill, kill, kill——”
-
-“Help!” she screamed.
-
-The two men managed to subdue Ross with the aid of a needle from Dr.
-Jones’s kit-pocket.
-
-Helena was in tears and tried to explain to the others: “Just for no
-reason at _all_——”
-
-She got only icy stares. After a while she sulkily began setting up the
-Wesley board for the Earth jump.
-
-
-
-
-..... 12
-
-
-ROSS awoke, clearheaded and alert. Helena and Bernie were looking at him
-apprehensively.
-
-He understood and said grudgingly, “Sorry I flipped. I didn’t mean to
-scare you. Everything seemed to go black——”
-
-They smothered him with relieved protestations that they understood
-perfectly and Helena wouldn’t stick hairpins into the Wesley Drive ever
-again. Even if the ship hadn’t blown up. Even if she had rescued the men
-from “Minerva.”
-
-“Anyway,” she said happily, “we’re off Earth. At least, it’s _supposed_
-to be Earth, according to the charts.”
-
-He unkinked himself and studied the planet through a vision screen at
-its highest magnification. The apparent distance was one mile; nothing
-was hidden from him.
-
-“Golly,” he said, impressed. “Science! Makes you realize what backward
-gropers we were.”
-
-Obviously they had it, down there on the pleasant, cloud-flecked, green
-and blue planet. Science! White, towering cities whose spires were laced
-by flying bridges—and inexplicably decorated with something that looked
-like cooling fins. Huge superstreamlined vehicles lazily coursing the
-roads and skies. Long, linked-pontoon cities slowly heaving on the
-breasts of the oceans. Science!
-
-Ross said reverently, “We’re here. Flarney was right. Helena, Bernie,
-Doc—maybe this is the parent planet of us all and maybe it isn’t. But
-the people who built those cities _must_ know all the answers. Helena,
-will you please land us?”
-
-“Sure, Ross. Shall I look for a spaceport?”
-
-Ross frowned. “Of course. Do you think _these_ people are savages? We’ll
-go in openly and take our problem to them. Besides, imagine the radar
-setup they must have! We’d never sneak through even if we wanted to.”
-
-Helena casually fingered the controls; there was the sickening swoop
-characteristic of her ship-handling, several times repeated. As she
-jerked them wildly across the planet’s orbit she explained over her
-shoulder, “I had the darnedest time finding a really big spaceport on
-that little radar thing—oops!—but there’s a nice-looking one near that
-coastal city. Whee! That was close! There was one—sorry, Ross—on a big
-lake inland, but I didn’t like——Now everybody be very quiet. This is the
-hard part and I have to concentrate.”
-
-Ross hung on.
-
-Helena landed the ship with her usual timber-shivering crash. “Now,” she
-said briskly, “we’d better allow a little time for it to cool down. This
-_is_ nice, isn’t it?”
-
-Ross dragged himself, bruised, from the floor. He had to agree. It was
-nice. The landing field, rimmed by gracious, light buildings (with the
-cooling fins), was dotted with great, silvery ships. They didn’t, Ross
-thought with a twinge of irritation, seem to be space vessels, though;
-leave it to Helena to get them down at some local airport! Still—the
-ships also, he noticed, were liberally studded with the fins. He peered
-at them with puzzlement and a rising sense of excitement. Certainly they
-had a function, and that function could only be some sort of energy
-receptor. Could it be—dared he imagine that it was the long-dreamed-of
-cosmic energy tap? What a bonus that would be to bring back with him!
-And what other marvels might this polished technology have to give
-them....
-
-Bernie distracted him. He said, “Hey, Ross. Here comes somebody.”
-
-But even Bernie’s tone was awed. A magnificent vehicle was crawling
-toward them across the field. It was long, low, bullet-shaped—and with
-cooling fins. Multiple plates of silvery metal contrasted with a glossy
-black finish. All about its periphery was a lacy pattern of intricate
-crumples and crinkles of metal, as though its skirts had been crushed
-and rumpled. Ross sighed and marveled: What a production problem these
-people had solved, stamping those forms out between dies.
-
-Then he saw the faces of the passengers.
-
-He drew in his breath sharply. Godlike. Two men whose brows were cliffs
-of alabaster, whose chins were strong with the firmness of steady,
-flamelike wisdom. Two women whose calm, lovely features made the heart
-within him melt and course.
-
-The vehicle stopped ten yards from the open spacelock of the ship. From
-its tip gushed upward a ten-foot fountain of sparks that flashed the
-gamut of the rainbow. Simultaneously one of the godlike passengers
-touched the wheel, and there was a sweet, piercing, imperative summons
-like a hundred strings and brasses in unison.
-
-Helena whispered, “They want us to come out. Ross—Ross—I can’t face
-_them_!” She buried her face in her hands.
-
-“Steady,” he said gravely. “They’re only human.”
-
-Ross gripped that belief tightly; he hardly dared permit himself to
-think, even for a second, that perhaps these people were no longer
-merely human. Hoarsely he said, “We need their help. Maybe we should
-send Doc Jones out first. He’s the oldest of us, and he’s the only one
-you could call a scientist; he can talk to them. Where is he?”
-
-A raucous Jones voice bellowed through the domed control room: “Who
-wansh ol’ doc, hargh? Who wansh goo’ ol’ doc?”
-
-Good old doc staggered into the room, obviously loaded to the gills by a
-very enjoyable backslide. He began to sing:
-
- “In A. J. seven thirty-two a Jones from Jones’s Valley, He
- wandered into Jones’s Town to hold a Jonesist Rally. He shocked
- the gents and ladies both; his talk was most disturbing; He spoke
- of seven-sided doors and purple-colored curbing——”
-
-Jones’s eyes focused on Helena. He flushed. “’m deeply sorry,” he
-mumbled. “Unf’rgivable vulgararrity. Mom’ntarily f’rgot ladies were
-present.”
-
-Again that sweet summons sounded.
-
-“Pull yourself together, doctor,” Ross begged. “This is Earth. The
-people seem—very advanced. Don’t disgrace us. Please!”
-
-Jones’s face went pale and perspiration broke out. “’Scuse me,” he
-mumbled, and staggered out again.
-
-Ross closed the door on him and said, “We’ll leave him. He’ll be all
-right; nothing’s going to happen here.” He took a deep breath. “We’ll
-all go out,” he said.
-
-Unconsciously Ross and Helena drew closer together and joined hands.
-They walked together down the unfolding ramp and approached the vehicle.
-
-One of the coolly lovely women scrutinized them and turned to the man
-beside her. She remarked melodiously, “Yuhsehtheybebems!”, and laughed a
-silvery tinkle.
-
-Panic gripped Ross for a long moment. A thing he had never considered,
-but a thing which he should have realized would be inevitable. Of
-course! These folk—older and incomparably more advanced than the rest of
-the peoples in the universe—would have evolved out of the common
-language into a speech of their own, deliberately or naturally rebuilt
-to handle the speed, subtlety, and power of their thoughts.
-
-But perhaps the older speech was merely disused and not lost.
-
-He said formally, quaking: “People of Earth, we are strangers from
-another star. We throw ourselves on your mercy and ask for your
-generosity. Our problem is summed up in the genetic law L-sub-T equals
-L-sub-zero e to the minus T-over-two-N. Of course——”
-
-One of the men was laughing. Ross broke off.
-
-The man smiled: “Wha’s that again?”
-
-They understood! He repeated the formula, slowly, and would have
-explained further, but the man cut him off.
-
-“Math,” the man smiled. “We don’ use that stuff no more. I got a lab
-assistant, maybe he uses it sometimes.”
-
-They were beyond mathematics! They had broken through into some mode of
-symbolic reasoning that must be as far beyond mathematics as math was
-beyond primitive languages!
-
-“Sir,” he said eagerly, “you must be a scientist. May I ask you to——”
-
-“Get in,” he smiled. Gigantic doors unfolded from the vehicle.
-Thought-reading? Had the problem been snatched from his brain even
-before he stated it? Mutely he gestured at Helena and Bernie. Jones
-would be all right where he was for several hours if Ross was any judge
-of blackouts. And you don’t quibble with demigods.
-
-The man, the scientist, did something to a glittering control panel that
-was, literally, more complex than the Wesley board back on the starship.
-Noise filled the vehicle—noise that Ross identified as music for a
-moment. It was a starkly simple music whose skeleton was three thumps
-and a crash, three thumps and a crash. Then followed an antiphonal
-chant—a clear tenor demanding in a monotone: “Is this your car?” and a
-tremendous chorally-shouted: “NO!”
-
-Too deep for him, Ross thought forlornly as the car swerved around and
-sped off. His eyes wandered over the control board and fixed on the
-largest of its dials, where a needle crawled around from a large forty
-to a large fifty and a red sixty, proportional to the velocity of the
-vehicle. Unable to concentrate because of the puzzling music, unable to
-converse, he wondered what the units of time and space were that gave
-readings of fifty and sixty for their very low rate of speed—hardly more
-than a brisk walk, when you noticed the slow passage of objects outside.
-But there seemed to be a whistle of wind that suggested high
-speed—perhaps an effect peculiar to the cooling-fin power system,
-however it worked. He tried to shout a question at the driver, but it
-didn’t get through. The driver smiled, patted his arm and returned to
-his driving.
-
-They nosed past a building—cooling fins—and Ross almost screamed when he
-saw what was on the other side: a curve of highway jammed solid with
-vehicles that were traveling at blinding speed. And the driver wasn’t
-stopping.
-
-Ross closed his eyes and jammed his feet against the floorboards waiting
-for the crash which, somehow, didn’t come. When he opened his eyes they
-were in the traffic and the needle on the speedometer quivered at 275.
-He blew a great breath and thought admiringly: reflexes to match their
-superb intellects, of course. There _couldn’t_ have been a crash.
-
-Just then, across the safety island in the opposing lane, there was a
-crash.
-
-The very brief flash of vision Ross was allowed told him, incredibly,
-that a vehicle had attempted to enter the lane going the wrong way, with
-the consequences you’d expect. He watched, goggle-eyed, as the effects
-of the crash rippled down the line of oncoming traffic. The squeal of
-brakes and rending of metal was audible even above the thumping music:
-“Is this your car?” “NO!”
-
-Thereafter, as they drove, the opposing lane was motionless, but not
-silent. The piercing blasts of strings and trumpets rose to the heavens
-from each vehicle, as did the brilliant pyrotechnic jets. A call for
-help, Ross theorized. The music was beginning to make his head ache. It
-had been going on for at least ten minutes. Suddenly, blessedly, it
-changed. There was a great fanfare of trombones in major thirds that
-seemed to go on forever, but didn’t quite. At the end of forever, the
-same tenor chanted: “You got a Roadmeister?” and the chorus roared:
-“_YES!_”
-
-Ross realized forlornly that the music must contain values and
-subtleties which his coarser senses and undeveloped esthetic background
-could not grasp. But he wished it would stop. It was making him miss all
-the scenery. After perhaps the fifteenth repetition of the Roadmeister
-motif, it ended; the driver, with a look of deep satisfaction, did
-something to the control board that turned off a subsequent voice before
-it could get out more than a syllable.
-
-He turned to Ross and yelled above the suddenly-noticeable rush of air,
-“Talk-talk-talk,” and gave a whimsical shrug.
-
-During the moment his attention wandered from the road, his vehicle
-rammed the one ahead, decelerated sharply and was rammed by the one
-behind, accelerated and rammed the one ahead again and then fell back
-into place.
-
-Ross suddenly realized that he knew what had caused those crumples and
-crinkles around the periphery of the car.
-
-“Subtle,” the driver yelled. “Indirection. Sneak it in.”
-
-“What?” Ross screamed.
-
-“The commersh,” the driver yelled.
-
-It meant nothing to Ross, and he felt miserable because it meant
-nothing. He studied the roadside unhappily and almost beamed when he saw
-a sign coming up. Not advertising, of course, he thought. Perhaps some
-austere reminder of a whole man’s duty to the race and himself, some
-noble phrase that summed up the wisdom of a great thinker....
-
-But the sign—and it had cooling fins—declared:
-
- BE SMUG! SMOKE SMOGS!
-
-And the next one urged:
-
- BEAT YOUR SISTER
- CHEAT YOUR BROTHER
- BUT SEND SOME SMOGS
- TO DEAR OLD MOTHER.
-
-It said it on four signs which, apparently alerted by radar, zinged in
-succession along a roadside track even with the vehicle.
-
-There were more. And worse. They were coming to a city.
-
-Turmoil and magnificence! White pylons, natty belts of green, lacy
-bridges, the roaring traffic, nimble-skipping pedestrians waving at the
-cars and calling—greetings? It sounded like “Suvvabih! Suvvabih!
-Bassa-bassa!” The shops were packed and radiant, dazzling. Ross wondered
-fleetingly how one parked here, and then found out. A car pulled from
-the curb and a hundred cars converged on the spot, shrilling their sweet
-message and spouting their gay sparkles. Theirs too! There were a pair
-of jolting crashes as it shouldered two other vehicles aside and parked,
-two wheels over the curb and on the sidewalk.
-
-“Suvvabih-bassa!” shouted drivers, and the man beside Ross gaily
-repeated the cry. The vehicle’s doors opened and they climbed out into
-the quick tempo of the street.
-
-It was loud with a melodious babble from speaker horns visible
-everywhere. The driver yelled cheerfully at Ross: “C’mon. Party.” He
-followed, dazed and baffled, assailed by sudden doubts and
-contradictions.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It was a party, all right—twenty floors up a shimmering building in a
-large, handsome room whose principal decorative motif seemed to be
-cooling fins.
-
-Perhaps twenty couples were assembled; they turned and applauded as they
-made their appearance.
-
-The vehicle driver, standing grandly at the head of a short flight of
-stairs leading to the room, proclaimed: “I got these rocket flyers like
-on the piece of paper you guys read me. Right off the field. Twenny
-points. How about that?”
-
-A tall, graying man with a noble profile hurried up and beamed: “Good
-show, Joe. I knew we could count on you to try for the high-point combo.
-You was always a real sport. You got the fish?”
-
-“Sure we got the fish.” Joe turned and said to one of the lovely ladies,
-“Elna, show him the fish.”
-
-She unwrapped a ten-pound swordfish and proudly held it up while Ross,
-Bernie, and Helena stared wildly.
-
-The profile took the fish and poked it. “Real enough, Joe. You done
-great. Now if the rocket flyers here are okay you’re okay. Then you got
-twenny points and the prize.
-
-“You’re a rocket flyer, ain’t you, Buster?”
-
-Ross realized he was being addressed. He croaked: “Men of Earth, we come
-from a far-distant star in search of——”
-
-The profile said, “Just a minute, Buster. _Just_ a minute. You ain’t
-from Earth?”
-
-“We come from a far-distant star in search of——”
-
-“Stick to the point, Buster. You ain’t a rocket flyer from Earth? None
-of you?”
-
-“No,” Ross said. He furtively pinched himself. It hurt. Therefore he
-must be awake. Or crazy.
-
-The profile was sorrowfully addressing a downcast Joe. “You should of
-asked them, Joe. You really should of. Now you don’t even get the three
-points for the swordfish, because you went an’ tried for the combo. It
-reely is a pity. Din’t you ask them at all?”
-
-Joe blustered, “He did say sump’m, but I figured a rocket flyer was a
-rocket flyer, and they come out of a rocket.” His lower lip was
-trembling. Both of the ladies of his party were crying openly. “We
-tried,” Joe said, and began to blubber. Ross moved away from him in
-horrified disgust.
-
-The profile shook its head, turned and announced: “Owing to a
-unfortunate mistake, the search group of Dr. Joseph Mulcahy, Sc.D.,
-Ph.D., got disqualified for the combination. They on’y got three points.
-So that’s all the groups in an’ who got the highest?”
-
-“I got fifteen! I got fifteen!” screamed a gorgeous brunette in a
-transport of joy. “A manhole cover from the museum an’ a las’ month
-_Lipreaders Digest_ an’ a steering wheel from a police car! I got
-fifteen!”
-
-The others clustered about her, chattering. Ross said to the profile
-mechanically: “Man of Earth, we come from a far-distant star in search
-of——”
-
-“Sure, Buster,” said the profile. “Sure. Too bad. But you should of told
-Joe. You don’t have to go. You an’ your friends have a drink. Mix. Have
-fun. I gotta go give the prize now.” He hurried off.
-
-A passing blonde, stacked, said to Ross: “Hel-looo, baldy. Wanna see my
-operation?” He began to shake his head and felt Helena’s fingers close
-like steel on his arm. The blonde sniffed and passed on.
-
-“I’ll operate her,” Helena said, and then: “Ross, what’s _wrong_ with
-everybody? They act so young, even the old people!”
-
-“Follow me,” he said, and began to circulate through the party, trailing
-Bernie and a frankly terrified Helena, button-holing and confronting and
-demanding and cajoling. Nothing worked. He was greeted with amused
-tolerance and invited to have a drink and asked what he thought of the
-latest commersh with its tepid trumpets. Nobody gave a damn that he was
-from a far-distant star except Joe, who sullenly watched them wander and
-finally swaggered up to Ross.
-
-“I figured something out,” he said grimly. “You made me lose.” He
-brought up a roundhouse right, and Ross saw the stars and heard the
-birdies.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Bernie and Helena brought him to on the street. He found he had been
-walking for some five minutes with a blanked-out mind. They told him he
-had been saying over and over again, “Men of Earth, I come from a
-far-distant star.” It had got them ejected from the party.
-
-Helena was crying with anger and frustration; she had also got a nasty
-scare when one of the vehicles had swerved up onto the sidewalk and
-almost crushed the three of them against the building wall.
-
-“And,” she wailed, “I’m hungry and we don’t know where the ship is and
-I’ve got to sit down and—and go someplace.”
-
-“So do I,” Bernie said weakly.
-
-So did Ross. He said, “Let’s just go into this restaurant. I know we
-have no money—don’t nag me please, Helena. We’ll order, eat, not pay,
-and get arrested.” He held up his hand at the protests. “I said, get
-arrested. The smartest thing we could do. Obviously somebody’s running
-this place—and it’s not the stoops we’ve seen. The quickest way I know
-of to get to whoever’s in charge is to get in trouble. And once they see
-us we can explain everything.”
-
-It made sense to them. Unfortunately the first restaurant they tried was
-coin-operated—from the front door on. So were the second to seventh.
-Ross tried to talk Bernie into slugging a pedestrian so they could all
-be jugged for disturbing the peace, but failed.
-
-Helena noted at last that the women’s wear shops had live attendants
-who, presumably, would object to trouble. They marched into one of the
-gaudy places, each took a dress from a rack and methodically tore them
-to pieces.
-
-A saleslady approached them dithering and asked tremulously: “What for
-did you do that? Din’t you like the dresses?”
-
-“Well yes, very much,” Helena began apologetically. “But you see, the
-fact is——”
-
-“Shuddup!” Ross told her. He said to the saleslady: “No. We hated them.
-We hate every dress here. We’re going to tear up every dress in the
-place. Why don’t you call the police?”
-
-“Oh,” she said vaguely. “All right,” and vanished into the rear of the
-store. She returned after a minute and said, “He wants to know your
-names.”
-
-“Just say ‘three desperate strangers,’” Ross told her.
-
-“Oh. Thank you.” She vanished again.
-
-The police arrived in five minutes or so. An excited elder man with many
-stripes on his arms strode up to them excitedly as they stood among the
-shredded ruins of the dresses. “Where’d they go?” he demanded. “Didja
-see what they looked like?”
-
-“We’re them. We three. We tore these dresses up. You’d better take them
-along for evidence.”
-
-“Oh,” the cop said. “Okay. Go on into the wagon. And no funny business,
-hear me?”
-
-They offered no funny business. In the wagon Ross expounded on his theme
-that there must be directing intelligences and that they must be at the
-top. Helena was horribly depressed because she had never been arrested
-before and Bernie was almost jaunty. Something about him suggested that
-he felt at home in a patrol wagon.
-
-It stopped and the elderly stripe-wearer opened the door for them. Ross
-looked on the busy street for anything resembling a station house and
-found none.
-
-The cop said, “Okay, you people. Get going. An’ let’s don’t have no
-trouble or I’ll run you in.”
-
-Ross yelled in outrage, “This is a frame-up! You have no right to turn
-us loose. We demand to be arrested and tried!”
-
-“Wise guy,” sneered the cop, climbed into the wagon and drove off.
-
-They stood forlornly as the crowd eddied and swirled around them. “There
-was a plate of sandwiches at that party,” Helena recalled wistfully.
-“And a ladies’ room.” She began to cry. “If only you hadn’t acted so
-darn superior, Ross! I’ll bet they would have let us have all the
-sandwiches we wanted.”
-
-Bernie said unexpectedly, “She’s right. Watch me.”
-
-He buttonholed a pedestrian and said, “Duh.”
-
-“Yeah?” asked the pedestrian with kindly interest.
-
-Bernie concentrated and said, “Duh. I yam losted. I yam broke. I losted
-all my money. Gimme some money, mister, please?”
-
-The pedestrian beamed and said, “That is real tough luck, buddy. If I
-give you some money will you send it to me when you get some more? Here
-is my name wrote on a card.”
-
-Bernie said, “Sure, mister. I will send the money to you.”
-
-“Then,” said the pedestrian, “I will give you some money because you
-will send it back to me. Good luck, buddy.”
-
-Bernie, with quiet pride, showed them a piece of paper that bore the
-interesting legend Twenty Dollars.
-
-“Let’s eat,” Ross said, awed.
-
-A machine on a restaurant door changed the bill for a surprising heap of
-coins and they swaggered in, making beelines for the modest twin doors
-at the rear of the place. Close up the doors were not very modest, but
-after the initial shock Ross realized that there must be many on this
-planet who could not read at all. The washroom attendant, for instance,
-who collected the “dimes” and unlocked the booths. “Dime” seemed to be
-his total vocabulary.
-
-By comparison the machines in the restaurant proper were intelligent.
-The three of them ate and ate and ate. Only after coffee did they spare
-a thought for Dr. Sam Jones, who should about then be awakening with a
-murderous hangover aboard the starship.
-
-Thinking about him did not mean they could think of anything to do.
-
-“He’s in trouble,” Bernie said. “_We’re_ in trouble. First things
-first.”
-
-“What trouble?” asked Helena brightly. “You got twenty dollars by asking
-for it and I suppose you can get plenty more. And I think we wouldn’t
-have got thrown out of that party if—ah—_we_ hadn’t gone swaggering
-around talking as if we knew everything. Maybe these people here aren’t
-very bright——”
-
-Ross snorted.
-
-Helena went on doggedly, “——not _very_ bright, but they certainly can
-tell when somebody’s brighter than they are. And naturally they don’t
-like it. Would you like it? It’s like a really old person talking to a
-really young person about nothing but age. But here when you’re bright
-you make everybody feel bad every time you open your mouth.”
-
-“So,” Ross said impatiently, “we can go on begging and drifting. But
-that’s not what we’re here for. The answer is supposed to be on Earth.
-Obviously none of the people we’ve seen could possibly know anything
-about genetics. Obviously they can’t keep this machine civilization
-going without guidance. There must be people of normal intelligence
-around. In the government, is my guess.”
-
-“No,” said Helena, but she wouldn’t say why. She just thought not.
-
-The inconclusive debate ended with them on the street again. Bernie, who
-seemed to enjoy it, begged a hundred dollars. Ross, who didn’t, got
-eleven dollars in singles and a few threats of violence for acting like
-a wise guy. Helena got no money and three indecent proposals before Ross
-indignantly took her out of circulation.
-
-They found a completely automatic hotel at nightfall. Ross tried to
-inspect Helena’s room for comfort and safety, but was turned back at the
-threshold by a staggering jolt of electricity. “Mechanical house dick,”
-he muttered, picking himself up from the floor. “Well,” he said to her
-sourly, “it’s safe. Good night.”
-
-And later in the gents’ room, to Bernie: “You’d think the damn-fool
-machine could be adjusted so that a person with perfectly innocent
-intentions could visit a lady——”
-
-“Sure,” said Bernie soothingly, “sure. Say, Ross, frankly, is this Earth
-exactly what you expected it to be?”
-
-The attendant moved creakily across the floor and said hopefully,
-“Dime?”
-
-
-
-
-..... 13
-
-
-THEIR second day on the bum they accumulated a great deal of change and
-crowded into a telephone booth. The plan was to try to locate their
-starship and find out what, if anything, could be done for Sam Jones.
-
-An automatic Central conferred with an automatic Information and decided
-that they wanted the Captain of the Port, Baltimore Rocket Field.
-
-They got the Port Captain on the wire and Ross asked after the starship.
-The captain asked, “Who wan’sta know, huh?”
-
-Ross realized he had overdone it and shoved Bernie at the phone. Bernie
-snorted and guggled and finally got out that he jus’ wannit ta know. The
-captain warmed up immediately and said oh, sure, the funny-lookin’ ship,
-it was still there all right.
-
-“How about the fella that’s in it?”
-
-“You mean the funny-lookin’ fella? He went someplace.”
-
-“He went someplace? What place?”
-
-“Someplace. He went away, like. I din’t see him go, mister. I got plenty
-to do without I should watch out for every dummy that comes along.”
-
-“T’anks,” said Bernie hopelessly at Ross’s signal.
-
-They walked the street, deep in thought. Helena sobbed, “Let’s _leave_
-him here, Ross. I don’t like this place.”
-
-“No.”
-
-Bernie growled, “What’s the difference, Ross? He can get a snootful just
-as easy here as anywhere else——”
-
-“No! It isn’t the Doc, don’t you see? But this is the place we’re
-looking for. All the answers we need are here; we’ve got to get them.”
-
-Bernie stepped around two tussling men on the ground, ineffectually
-thumping each other over a chocolate-covered confection. “Yeah,” he said
-shortly.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Helena said: “Isn’t that a silly way to put up a big sign like that?”
-
-Ross looked up. “My God,” he said. A gigantic metal sign with the
-legend, _Buy Smogs_——_You Can SMOKE Them_, was being hoisted across the
-street ahead. The street was nominally closed to traffic by cheerfully
-inattentive men with red flags; a mobile boom hoist was doing the work,
-and quite obviously doing it wrong. The angle of the boom arm with the
-vertical was far too great for stability; the block-long sign was
-tipping the too-light body of the hoisting engine on its treads....
-
-Ross made a flash calculation: when the sign fell, as fall it inevitably
-would, perhaps two hundred people who had wandered uncaringly past the
-warning flags would be under it.
-
-There was a sudden aura of blue light around the engine body.
-
-It tipped back to stability. The boom angle decreased, and the engine
-crawled forward to take up the horizontal difference.
-
-The blue light went out.
-
-Helena choked and coughed and babbled, “But Ross, it _couldn’t_ have
-because——”
-
-Ross said: “It’s them!”
-
-“Who?”
-
-Excitedly: “The people behind all this! The people who built the cities
-and put up the buildings and designed the machines. The people who have
-the answers! Come on, Bernie. I just seem to antagonize these people—I
-want you to ask the boom operator what happened.”
-
-The boom operator cheerfully explained that nah, it was just somep’n
-that happened. Nah, nobody did nothin’ to make it happen. It was in case
-if anything went wrong, like. You know?
-
-They retired and regrouped their forces.
-
-“Foolproof machines,” Ross said slowly. “And I mean really _fool_ proof.
-Friends, I was wrong, I admit it; I thought that those buildings and
-cars were something super-special, and they turned out to be just silly
-gimcracks. But not this blue light thing. That boom _had_ to fall.”
-
-Bernie shrugged rebelliously. “So what? So they’ve got some kinds of
-machines you don’t have on Halsey’s Planet?”
-
-“A different order of machines, Bernie! Believe me, that blue light was
-something as far from any safety device I ever heard of as the starships
-are from oxcarts. When we find the people who designed them——”
-
-“Suppose they’re all dead?”
-
-Ross winced. He said determinedly, “We’ll find them.” They returned to
-their begging and were recognized one day by the gray-haired profile of
-the party. He didn’t remember just who they were or where they were from
-or where he had met them, but he enthusiastically invited them to yet
-another party. He told them he was Hennery Matson, owner of an airline.
-
-Ross asked about accidents and blue lights. Matson jovially said some o’
-his pilots talked about them things but he din’t bother his head none.
-Ya get these planes from the field, see, an’ they got all kinds of
-gadgets on them. Come on to the party!
-
-They went, because Hennery promised them another guest—Sanford Eisner,
-who was a wealthy aircraft manufacturer. But he din’t bother his head
-none either; them rockets was hard to make, you had to feed the
-patterns, like, into the master jigs just so, and, boy!, if you got ’em
-in backwards it was a _mess_. Wheredja get the patterns? Look, mister,
-we _always_ had the patterns, an’ don’t spoil the party, will ya?
-
-The party was a smasher. They all woke with headaches on Matson’s deep
-living room rug.
-
-“You did fine, Ross,” Helena softly assured him. “Nobody would have
-guessed you were any smarter than anybody else here. There wasn’t a bit
-of trouble.”
-
-Ross seemed to have a hiatus in his memory.
-
-The importance of the hiatus faded as time passed. There was a general
-move toward the automatic dispensing bar. It seemed to be regulated by a
-time clock; no matter what you dialed first thing in the morning, it
-ruthlessly poured a double rye with Worcestershire and tabasco and
-plopped a fair imitation of a raw egg into the concoction. It helped!
-
-Along about noon something clicked in the bar’s innards. Guests long
-since surfeited with the prairie oysters joyously dialed martinis and
-manhattans and the day’s serious drinking began.
-
-Ross fuzzily tried to trace the bar’s supply. There were nickel pipes
-that led Heaven knew where. Some vast depot of fermentation tanks and
-stills? Fed grain and cane by crawling harvest-monsters? Grain and cane
-planted from seed the harvest-monsters carefully culled from the crop
-for the plow-and-drag-and-drill-and-fertilize-and-cultivate monsters?
-
-His head was beginning to ache again. A jovial martini-drinker who had
-something to do with a bank—a _bank!_—roared, “Hey, fellas! I got a idea
-what we can do! Less go on over to _my_ place!”
-
-So they all went, and that disposed of another day.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It blended into a dream of irresponsible childhood. When your clothes
-grew shabby you helped yourself to something that fit from your host of
-the moment’s wardrobe. When you grew tired of one host you switched to
-another. They seldom remembered you from day to day, and they never
-asked questions.
-
-Their sex was uninhibited and most of the women were more or less
-pregnant most of the time. They fought and sulked and made up and
-giggled and drank and ate and slept. All of the men had jobs, and all of
-them, once in a while, would remember and stagger over to a phone and
-make a call to an automatic receptionist to find out if everything was
-going all right with their jobs. It always was. They loved their
-children and tolerated anything from them, except shrewd inquisitiveness
-which drew a fast bust in the teeth from the most indulgent daddy or
-adoring mommy. They loved their friends and their guests, as long as
-they weren’t wise guys, and tolerated anything from them—as long as they
-weren’t wise guys.
-
-Did it last a day, a week, a month?
-
-Ross didn’t know. The only things that were really bothering Ross were,
-first, nobody wouldn’t tell him nothin’ about the blue lights and,
-second, that Bernie, he was actin’ like a wise guy.
-
-There came a morning when it ended as it had begun: on somebody’s living
-room rug with a headache pounding between his eyes. Helena was sobbing
-softly, and that wise guy, Bernie, was tugging at him.
-
-“Lea’ me alone,” ordered Captain Ross without opening his eyes. Wouldn’t
-let a man get his rest. What did he have to bring them along for,
-anyway? Should have left them where he found them, not brought them to
-this place Earth where they could act like a couple of wise guys and
-keep getting in his way every time he came close to the blue-light
-people, the intelligent people, the people with the answers to——to——
-
-He lay there, trying to remember what the question was.
-
-“——_have_ to get him out of here,” said Helena’s voice with a touch of
-hysteria.
-
-“——go back and get that fellow Haarland,” said Bernie’s voice, equally
-tense. Ross contemplated the fragments of conversation he had caught,
-ignoring what the two were saying to him. Haarland, he thought fuzzily,
-_that_ wise guy....
-
-Bernie had him on his feet. “Leggo,” ordered Ross, but Bernie was
-tenacious. He stumbled along and found himself in the men’s room of the
-apartment. The tired-looking attendant appeared from nowhere and Bernie
-said something to him. The attendant rummaged in his chest and found
-something that Bernie put into a fizzy drink.
-
-Ross sniffed at it suspiciously. “Wassit?” he asked.
-
-“Please, Ross, drink it. It’ll sober you up. We’ve got to get out of
-here—we’re going nuts, Helena and me. This has been going on for weeks!”
-
-“Nope. Gotta find a blue light,” Ross said obstinately, swaying.
-
-“But you aren’t finding it, Ross. You aren’t doing anything except get
-drunk and pass out and wake up and get drunk. Come on, drink the drink.”
-Ross impatiently dashed it to the floor. Bernie sighed. “All right,
-Ross,” he said wearily. “Helena can run the ship; we’re taking off.”
-
-“Go ’head.”
-
-“Good-by, Ross. We’re going back to Halsey’s Planet, where you came
-from. Maybe Haarland can tell us what to do.”
-
-“Go ’head. _That_ wise guy!” Ross sneered.
-
-The attendant was watching dubiously as Bernie slammed out and Ross
-peered at himself in a mirror. “Dime?” the attendant asked in his tired
-voice. Ross gave him one and went back to the party.
-
-Somehow it was not much fun.
-
-He shuffled back to the bar. The boilermaker didn’t taste too good. He
-set it down and glowered around the room. The party was back in swing
-already; Helena and Bernie were nowhere in sight. Let them go, then....
-
-He drank, but only when he reminded himself to. This party had become a
-costume ball; one of the men lurched out of the room and staggered back
-guffawing. “Looka him!” one of the women shrieked. “He got a woman’s hat
-on! Horace, you get the craziest kinda ideas!”
-
-Ross glowered. He suddenly realized that, while he wasn’t exactly sober,
-he wasn’t drunk either. Those soreheads, they had to go and spoil the
-party....
-
-He began abruptly to get less drunk yet. Back to Halsey’s Planet, they
-said? Ask Haarland what to do, they said? Leave him here——?
-
-He was cold sober.
-
-He found a telephone. The automatic Central checked the automatic
-Information and got him the Captain of the Port, Baltimore Rocket Field.
-The Captain was helpful and sympathetic; caught by the tense note in
-Ross’s voice when he told him who wannit to know, the Captain said,
-“Gee, buddy, if I’d of known I woulda stopped them. Stoled your ship, is
-that what they done? They could get arrested for that. You could call
-the cops an’ maybe they could do something——”
-
-Ross didn’t bother to explain. He hung up.
-
-The party was no fun at all. He left it.
-
-Ross walked along the street, hating himself. He couldn’t hate Helena
-and Bernie; they had done the right thing. It had been his fault, all
-the way down the line. He’d been acting like a silly child; he’d had a
-job of work to do, and he let himself be sidetracked by a crazy round of
-drinking and parties.
-
-Of course, he told himself, something had been accomplished. Somebody
-had built the machines—not the happy morons he had been playing with.
-Somebody had invented whatever it was that flared with blue light and
-repaired the idiot errors the morons made. Somebody, somewhere.
-
-Where?
-
-Well, he had some information. All negative. At the parties had been
-soldiers and politicians and industrialists and clergy and entertainers
-and, heaven save the mark, scientists. And none of them had had the wit
-to do more than push the Number Three Button when the Green Light A
-blinked, by rote. None of them could have given him the answer to the
-question that threatened to end human domination over the cosmos; none
-of them would have known what the words meant.
-
-Maybe—Ross made himself face it—maybe there was no answer. Maybe even if
-he found the intellects that lurked beneath the surface on this ancient
-planet, they could not or would not tell him what he wanted to know.
-Maybe the intellects didn’t exist.
-
-Maybe he was all wrong in all of his assumptions; maybe he was wasting
-his time. But, he told himself wryly, he had fixed it for himself that
-time was all he had left. He might as well waste it. He might as well go
-right on looking....
-
-A migrant party was staggering down the street toward him, a score of
-persons going from one host’s home to another. He crossed to avoid them.
-They were singing drunkenly.
-
-Ross looked at them with the distaste of the recently reformed. One of
-the voices raised in song caught his ear:
-
- “——bobbed his nose and dyed it rose, and kissed his lady fair, And
- sat her down on a cushion brown in a seven-legged chair. ‘By
- Jones,’ he said, ‘my shoes are red, and so’s my overcoat, And with
- buttons nine in a zigzag line, I’ll——’”
-
-“Doc!” Ross bellowed. “Doc Jones! For God’s sake, come over here!”
-
-They got rid of the rest of Doctor Sam Jones’s party, and Ross sobered
-the doctor up in an all-night restaurant. It wasn’t hard; the doctor had
-had plenty of practice.
-
-Ross filled him in, carefully explaining why Bernie and Helena had left
-him. Doc Jones filled Ross in. He didn’t have much to tell. He had come
-to in the ship, waited around until he got hungry, fallen into a
-conversation with a rocket pilot on the field—and that was how _his_
-round of parties had begun.
-
-Like Ross, Doc, in his soberer moments, had come to the conclusion that
-Earth was run by person or persons unseen. He had learned little that
-Ross hadn’t found out or deduced. The blue lights had bothered him, too;
-he’d asked the pilot about it, and found out about what Ross had—there
-appeared to be some sort of built-in safety device which kept the
-inevitable accidents from becoming unduly fatal. How they worked, he
-didn’t know—
-
-But he had an idea.
-
-“It sounds a little ridiculous, I admit,” he said, embarrassed. “But I
-think it might work. It’s a radio program.”
-
-“A radio program?”
-
-“I said it sounded ridiculous. They call it, ‘What’s Biting You,’ and
-one of the fellows was telling me about it. It seems that you can appear
-before the panel on the program with any sort of problem, any sort at
-all, and they guarantee to solve it for you. There’s some sort of bond
-posted—I don’t know much about the details, but this man assured me that
-the bond was only a formality; they never failed. Of course,” Doc
-finished, hearing his own proposal with a touch of doubt, “I don’t know
-whether they ever had any problem like this before, but——”
-
-“Yeah,” said Ross. “What have we got to lose?”
-
-They got into the program. It took the techniques of a doubler on an
-army chow line and a fair amount of brute strength, but they got to the
-head of the queue at the studio and wedged themselves inside. Doc came
-close to throttling the man who prowled through the studio audience,
-selecting the lucky few who would get on stage—but they got on.
-
-The theme music swelled majestically around them, and a chorus crooned,
-“What’s Biting You—Hunh?” It was repeated three times, with crashing
-cymbals under the “Hunh?”
-
-Ross listened to the beginning of the program and cursed himself for
-being persuaded into such a harebrained tactic. But, he had to admit,
-the program offered the only possibility in sight. The central figure
-was a huge, jovially grinning figure of papier-mâché, smoking a Smog and
-billowing smoke rings at the audience. An announcer, for some obscure
-reason in blackface, interviewed the disturbed derelicts who came before
-Smiley Smog, the papier-mâché figure, and propounded their problems to
-Smiley in a sort of doggerel. And in doggerel the answers came back.
-
-The first person to go up before Smiley was a woman, clearly in her last
-month of pregnancy. The announcer introduced her to the audience and
-begged for a real loud holler of hello for this poor mizzuble li’l girl.
-“Awright, honey,” he said. “You just step right up here an’ let ol’
-Uncle Smiley take care of your troubles for you. Less go, now. What’s
-Bitin’ You?”
-
-“Uh,” she sobbed, “it’s like I’m gonna have a baby.”
-
-“Hoddya like that!” the announcer screamed. “She’s gonna have a _baby!_
-Whaddya say to that, folks?” The audience shrieked hysterically.
-“Awright, honey,” the announcer said. “So you’re gonna have a baby, so
-what’s bitin’ you about that?”
-
-“It’s my husband,” the woman sniffled. “He don’t like kids. We got eight
-already,” she explained. “Jack, he says if we have one more kid he’s
-gonna take off an’ marry somebody else.”
-
-“He’s gonna marry somebody else!” the announcer howled. “Hoddya like
-that, folks?” There was a tempest of boos. “Awright, now,” the announcer
-said, “you just sit there, honey, while I tell ol’ Uncle Smiley about
-this. Ya ready? Listen:
-
- “What’s bitin’ this lady is plain to see:
- Her husband don’t want no more family!”
-
-The huge figure’s head rotated on a concealed hinge to look down on the
-woman. From a squawk-box deep in Smiley’s papier-mâché belly, a weary
-voice declaimed:
-
- “If one more baby is your husband’s dread,
- Cross him up, lady. Have twins instead!”
-
-The audience roared its approval. The announcer asked anxiously, “Ya get
-it? When ya get inta the hospital, like, ya jus’ tell the nurse ya want
-to take _two_ kids home with you. See?”
-
-The grateful woman staggered away. Ross gave Doc a poisonous look.
-
-“What else is there to do?” the doctor hissed. “All right, perhaps this
-won’t work out—but let’s try!” He half rose, and staggered against the
-man next to him, who was already starting toward the announcer. “Go on,
-Ross,” Doc hissed venomously, blocking off the other man.
-
-Ross went. What else was there to do?
-
-“What’s biting me,” he said belligerently before the announcer could put
-him through the preliminaries, “is simply this: L-sub-T equals
-L-sub-zero e to the minus-T-over-two-N.”
-
-Dead silence in the studio. The announcer quavered, “Wh-what was that
-again, buddy?”
-
-“I said,” Ross repeated firmly, “L-sub-T equals L-sub-zero e to the——”
-
-“Now, wait a minute, buddy,” the announcer ordered. “We never had no
-stuff like that on _this_ program before. Whaddya, some kind of a wise
-guy?”
-
-There might have been violence; the conditions were right for it. But
-Uncle Smiley Smog saved the day.
-
-The papier-mâché figure puffed a blinding series of smoke rings at Ross.
-From its molded torso, the weary voice said:
-
- “If you’re looking for counsel sagacious and wise,
- The price is ten cents. It’s right under your eyes.”
-
-They left the studio in a storm of animosity.
-
-“Maybe we could have collected the forfeit,” Doc said hopefully.
-
-“Maybe we could have collected some lumps,” Ross growled. “Got any more
-ideas?”
-
-The doctor sipped his coffee. “No,” he admitted. “I wonder—No, I don’t
-suppose that means anything.”
-
-“That jingle? Sure it means something, Doc. It means I should have had
-my head examined for letting you talk me into that performance.”
-
-The doctor said rebelliously, “Maybe I’m wrong, Ross, but I don’t see
-that you’ve had any ideas than panned out much better.”
-
-Ross got up. “All right,” he admitted. “I’m sorry if I gave you a hard
-time. It’s all this coffee and all the liquor underneath it; I swear, if
-I ever get back to a civilized planet I’m going on a solid diet for a
-month.”
-
-They headed for the room marked “Gents,” Ross sullenly quiet, Doc
-thoughtfully quiet.
-
-Doc said reflectively, “‘The price is ten cents.’ Ross, could that mean
-a paper that we could buy on a newsstand, maybe?”
-
-“Yeah,” Ross said in irritation. “Look, Doc, don’t give it another
-thought. There must be some way to straighten this thing out; I’ll think
-of it. Let’s just make believe that whole asinine radio program never
-happened.” The attendant materialized and offered Ross a towel.
-
-“Dime?” he said wearily.
-
-Ross fished absently in his pocket. “The thing that bothers me, Doc,” he
-said, “is that I know there are intelligent people somewhere around. I
-even know what they’re doing, I bet. They’re doing exactly what I tried
-to do: acted as stupid as anybody else, or stupider. I’d make a guess,”
-he said, warming up, “that if we could just make a statistical analysis
-of the whole planet and find the absolute stupidest-seeming people of
-the lot, we’d——”
-
-He ran out of breath all at once. His eyes bulged.
-
-He looked at the men’s-room attendant, and at the ten-cent piece in his
-own hand.
-
-“You!” he breathed.
-
-The attendant’s face suddenly seemed to come to life. In a voice that
-was abruptly richer and deeper than before, the man said: “Yes. You had
-to find us yourself, you know.”
-
-
-
-
-..... 14
-
-
-THERE was a home base, a gigantic island called Australia, to which they
-took Ross and Doc Jones in a little car that sprouted no wings and
-flashed no rockets, but flew.
-
-They lived underground there, invisible to goggling passengers and
-crewmen aboard the “rockets.” (They weren’t rockets. They were
-turbo-jets. But it made the children happy to think that they had
-rockets, so iron filings were added to the hot jet stream, and they
-sparkled in magnificent display.)
-
-There they were born, and there they spent strange childhoods, learning
-such things as psychodynamics and teleportation. By the time they were
-eight months or so old they thought it amusing to converse of Self and
-the Meaning of Meaning. By eighteen months a dozen infants would chat in
-_terza rima_. But by the age of two they had put such toys behind them
-with a sigh of pleasant regret. They would revert to them only for such
-purposes as love-making or choral funeral addresses.
-
-They were then of an age to begin their work.
-
-They were born there, and trained there for terrible tasks. And they
-died there, at whatever risk. For that they would not surrender: their
-right to die among their own.
-
-But their lives between cradle and grave, those they gave away.
-
-Nursemaids? What else can one call them?
-
-They explained it patiently to Ross and the doctor.
-
-“The pattern emerged clearly in the twentieth century. Swarming slums
-abrawl with children, children, children everywhere. Walk down a Chicago
-Southside street, and walk away with the dazed impression that all the
-world was pregnant. Walk through pretty, pleasant Evanston, and find the
-impression wrong. Those who lived in Evanston were reasonable people.
-They waited and thought. Being reasonable, they saved and planned. Being
-reasonable, they resorted to gadgets or chemicals or continence.
-
-“A woman of the period had some three hundred and ninety opportunities
-to conceive a child. In the slums and the hills they took advantage of
-as many of them as they might. But around the universities, in the
-neighborhoods of the well-educated and the well-to-do, what was the
-score?
-
-“First, education, until the age of twenty. This left two hundred and
-ninety-nine opportunities. Then, for perhaps five years, shared work;
-the car, the mortgage, the furniture, that two salaries would pay off
-earlier than one. Two hundred and thirty-four opportunities were left.
-Some of them were seized: a spate of childbearing perhaps would come
-next. But subtract a good ten years more at the end of the cycle, for
-the years when a child would be simply too late—too late for fashion,
-too late for companionship with the first-born. We started with three
-hundred and ninety opportunities. We have, perhaps, one hundred and
-forty-four left.
-
-“Is that the roster complete? No. There is the battle of the budget: No,
-not right now, not until the summer place is paid for. And more. The
-visits from the mothers-in-law, the quarterly tax payments, the
-country-club liaisons and the furtive knives behind the brownstone
-fronts and what becomes of fertility—they have all been charted. But
-these are superfluous. The ratio 390:144 points out the inevitable. As
-three hundred and ninety outweighs one hundred and forty-four, so the
-genes of the slovenly and heedless outweigh the thoughtful and slow to
-act.
-
-“We tampered with the inevitable.
-
-“The planet teemed and burst. The starships went forth. The strong,
-bright, quick ones went out in the ships. Two sorts were left: The
-strong ones who were not bright, the bright ones who were not strong.
-
-“We are the prisoners of the planet. We cannot leave.
-
-“The children—the witless ones outside—can leave. But who would have
-them?”
-
-Ross peered into the shifting shadows. “But,” he said, “you are the
-masters of the planet——”
-
-“_Masters?_ We are slaves! Fully alive only here where we are born and
-die. Abstracted and as witless as they when we are among _them_—well we
-might be. For each of us, square miles to stand guard over. Our minds
-roving across the traps we dare not ignore, ready to leap out and
-straighten these children’s toppling walls of blocks, ready to warn the
-child that sharp things cut and hot things burn. The blue lights—did you
-think they were machines?” They were _us_!
-
-“You’re torturing yourselves!” Ross exploded. “Let them die.”
-
-“Let—ten—billion—children—die? We are not such monsters.”
-
-Ross was humbled before their tragedy. Diffidently he spoke of Halsey’s
-Planet, Ragansworld, Azor, Jones. He warmed to the task and was growing,
-he thought, eloquent when their smiles left him standing ashamed.
-
-“I don’t understand,” he said, almost weeping.
-
-The voice corrected him: “You do. But you do not—yet—know that you do.
-Consider the facts:
-
-“Your planet. Sterile and slowly dying.
-
-“The planets you have seen. One sterile because it is imprisoned by
-ancients, one sterile under an in-driven matriarchal custom, one sterile
-because all traces of divergence have been wiped out.
-
-“Earth. Split into an incurable dichotomy—the sterility of brainless
-health, the sterility of sick intellect.
-
-“Humanity, then, imprisoned in a thousand sterile tubes, cut off each
-from the other, dying. We feared war, and so we isolated the members
-with a wall of time. We have found something worse to fear. What if the
-walls are cracked?”
-
-“Crack the walls? How? Is it too late?”
-
-Somehow the image of Helena was before him.
-
-“Is it too late?” they gently mocked. “Surely you know. How? Perhaps you
-will ask her.”
-
-The image of Helena was blushing.
-
-Ross’s heart leaped. “As simple as that?”
-
-“For you, yes. For others there will be lives spent over the lathes and
-milling machines, eyes gone blind in calculating and refining
-trajectories, daring ones lost screaming in the hearts of stars, or
-gibbering with hunger and pain as the final madness closes down on them,
-stranded between galaxies. There will be martyrs to undergo the worst
-martyrdom of all—which is to say, they will never know of it. They will
-be unhappy traders and stock-chasers, grinding their lives to smooth
-dull blanks against the wearying routine so that the daring ones may go
-forth to the stars. But for you—you have seen the answer.
-
-“Old blood runs thin. Thin blood runs cold. Cold blood dies. Let the
-walls crack.”
-
-There was a murmuring in the shadows that Ross could not hear. Then the
-voice again, saying a sort of good-by.
-
-“We have had a great deal of experience with children, so we know that
-they must not be told too much. There is nothing more you need be told.
-You will go back now——”
-
-Ross dared interrupt. “But our ship—the others have taken it away——”
-
-Again the soundless laughter. “The ship has not been taken far. Did you
-think we would leave you stranded here?”
-
-Ross peered hard into the shadows. But only the shadows were there, and
-then he and Jones were in the shadows no longer.
-
-“Ross!” Helena was hysterical with joy. Even Bernie was stammering and
-shaking his head incredulously. “Ross, dearest! We thought—And the ship
-acted all _funny_, and then it landed here and there just wasn’t anybody
-around, and I couldn’t make it go again——”
-
-“It will go now,” Ross promised. It did. They sealed ship; he took the
-controls; and they hung in space, looking back on a blue-green planet
-with a single moon.
-
-There were questions; but Ross put an end to questions. He said, “We’re
-going back to Halsey’s Planet. Haarland wanted an answer. We’ve found
-it; we’ll bring it to him. The F-T-L families have kept their secret too
-well. No wars between the planets—but stagnation worse than wars. And
-Haarland’s answer is this: He will be the first of the F-T-L traders.
-He’ll build F-T-L ships, and he’ll carelessly let their secrets be
-stolen. We’ll bridge the galaxy with F-T-L transports; and we’ll pack
-the ships with a galaxy of crews! New genes for old; hybrid vigor for
-dreary decay!
-
-“Do you see it?” His voice was ringing loud; Helena’s eyes on him were
-adoring. “Mate Jones to Azor, Halsey’s Planet to Earth. Smash the
-smooth, declining curve! Cross the strains, and then breed them back.
-Let mankind become genetically wild again instead of rabbits isolated in
-their sterile hutches!”
-
-Exultantly he set up the combinations for Halsey’s Planet on the Wesley
-board.
-
-Helena was beside him, proud and close, as he threw in the drive.
-
-
-
-
- ABOUT THE AUTHORS
-
-
-THE SPACE MERCHANTS was not only one of the best-reviewed
-science-fiction novels in 1953, it was one of the most widely reviewed.
-Favorable notices appeared in journals ranging from _Printer’s Ink_ to
-science-fiction magazines, from _Tide_ magazine to the great national
-dailies. That novel firmly established Messrs. Pohl and Kornbluth as a
-team, although they had collaborated before under pen names and had
-established reputations singly. Their new novel, SEARCH THE SKY, has the
-same wit, the same passages of genuinely beautiful writing and—what is
-most important and most characteristic—the same underlying concern for
-human beings, whether they are on future Madison Avenues or in the outer
-galaxies.
-
-This is Mr. Kornbluth’s seventh published novel. Two were written in
-collaboration with Judith Merril under the pen name “Cyril Judd”; one
-was the notable TAKEOFF (Doubleday, 1952); one was not science fiction;
-one was his last collaborative effort with Mr. Pohl; and his most recent
-was THE SYNDIC (Doubleday, 1953). Mr. Kornbluth, still under thirty, now
-lives in an upstate New York farmhouse with his wife and child where he
-devotes himself to writing.
-
-This is Mr. Pohl’s sixth published book. Two of them were reprint
-collections which he edited and two others were the now-celebrated first
-and second volumes of STAR SCIENCE FICTION STORIES, collections of new
-stories published by Ballantine Books. At 34, Mr. Pohl lives in a large
-old house on the Jersey shore—“five rooms for me, four for my wife and
-two apiece for the children.” He has three more books forthcoming in
-1953: two anthologies and his first solo novel.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE
-
-
-Repeated instances of the title in the front of the book have been
-reduced.
-
-Punctuation has been normalized. Variations in hyphenation have been
-retained as they were in the original publication. The following assumed
-printer’s errors were corrected:
-
- look at the stars and breath —> breathe {Page 24}
-
- Halsey City to the ’port —> port {Page 29}
-
- were ready to quit Oldhan —> Oldham {Page 31}
-
- short of meccano-toy —> sort {Page 96}
-
- O.8952, —> 0.8952, {Page 109}
-
- Trouble is, he’s too Jonesfearing. —> Jones-fearing {Page 118}
-
-Italicized phrases are presented by surrounding the text with
-_underscores_.
-
-In the mathematical formulas, superscripts and subscripts are
-represented by surrounding with curly brackets; in the case of
-subscripts, the leading bracket is preceded by an underscore, and in the
-case of superscripts, it is preceded by a caret. In the simple case of a
-single superscripted character, a caret may precede the character
-without any brackets. An example is: L_{T}=L_{O}e-^{T/2N}
-
-
-
-
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-<!DOCTYPE html>
-<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
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- <title>Search the Sky | Project Gutenberg</title>
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-
-
-<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Search the Sky, by Frederik Pohl and C. M. Kornbluth</div>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Search the Sky</div>
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Frederik Pohl
-<br>C. M. Kornbluth</div>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: June 3, 2016 [EBook #52228]<br>
-[Most recently updated: July 23, 2023]</div>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SEARCH THE SKY ***</div>
-
-
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/cover.jpg' alt='' class='ig001'>
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000'>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c001'>
- <div><span class='large'><b>By Frederik Pohl and C. M. Kornbluth</b></span></div>
- <div class='c002'><span class='large'><i>THE SPACE MERCHANTS</i></span></div>
- <div><span class='large'><i>SEARCH THE SKY</i></span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000'>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <h1 class='c003'><span class='xxlarge'><b>SEARCH THE</b></span> <br> <span class='xxlarge'><b>SKY</b></span></h1>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c001'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'><b>by</b></span></div>
- <div><span class='xlarge'><b>Frederik Pohl</b></span></div>
- <div><span class='xlarge'><b>and</b></span></div>
- <div><span class='xlarge'><b>C. M. Kornbluth</b></span></div>
- <div class='c001'><b>BALLANTINE BOOKS · NEW YORK</b></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000'>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c001'>
- <div><span class='small'>COPYRIGHT, 1954, BY</span></div>
- <div><span class='small'>FREDERIK POHL AND C. M. KORNBLUTH</span></div>
- <div><span class='small'>LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGUE CARD NO. 54-6478</span></div>
- <div><span class='small'>PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA</span></div>
- <div class='c002'><span class='small'>BALLANTINE BOOKS, INC.</span></div>
- <div><span class='small'>404 Fifth Avenue, New York 18, N. Y.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c004'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><b>TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE</b></div>
- <div class='c002'>Extensive research did not uncover</div>
- <div>any evidence that the U.S. copyright</div>
- <div>on this publication was renewed.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000'>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c001'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'><b>SEARCH THE</b></span></div>
- <div><span class='xlarge'><b>SKY</b></span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_1'>1</span>
- <h2 class='c005' title='Chapter 1'><span class='xxlarge'><b>..... 1</b></span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>DECAY.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross stood on the traders’ ramp, overlooking the Yards,
-and the word kept bobbing to the top of his mind.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Decay.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>About all of Halsey’s Planet there was the imperceptible
-reek of decay. The clean, big, bustling, efficient spaceport
-only made the sensation stronger. From where he stood on
-the height of the Ramp, he could see the Yards, the spires
-of Halsey City ten kilometers away—and the tumble-down
-gray acres of Ghost Town between.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross wrinkled his nose. He wasn’t a man given to brooding,
-but the scent of decay had saturated his nostrils that
-morning. He had tossed and turned all the night, wrestling
-with a decision. And he had got up early, so early that the
-only thing that made sense was to walk to work.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>And that meant walking through Ghost Town. He hadn’t
-done that in a long time, not since childhood. Ghost Town
-was a wonderful place to play. “Tag,” “Follow My Fuehrer,”
-“Senators and President”—all the ancient games took
-on new life when you could dodge and turn among crumbling
-ruins, dart down unmarked lanes, gallop through sagging
-shacks where you might stir out a screeching, unexpected
-recluse.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But it was clear that—in the fifteen years between childhood
-games and a troubled man’s walk to work—Ghost
-Town had grown.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_2'>2</span>Everybody knew that! Ask the right specialists, and
-they’d tell you how much and how fast. An acre a year, a
-street a month, a block a week, the specialists would twinkle
-at you, convinced that the acre, street, block was under
-control, since they could measure it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ask the right specialists and they would tell you why it
-was happening. One answer per specialist, with an ironclad
-guarantee that there would be no overlapping of replies.
-“A purely psychological phenomenon, Mr. Ross. A
-vibration of the pendulum toward greater municipal compactness,
-a huddling, a mature recognition of the facts of
-interdependence, basically a step forward....”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“A purely biological phenomenon, Mr. Ross. Falling
-birth rate due to biochemical deficiency of trace elements
-processed out of our planetary diet. Fortunately the situation
-has been recognized in time and my bill before the
-Chamber will provide....”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“A purely technological problem, Mr. Ross. Maintenance
-of a sprawling city is inevitably less efficient than that
-of a compact unit. Inevitably there has been a drift back to
-the central areas and the convenience of air-conditioned
-walkways, winterized plazas....”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Yes. It was a purely psychological-biological-technological-educational-demographic
-problem, and it was basically
-a step forward.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross wondered how many Ghost Towns lay corpselike
-on the surface of Halsey’s Planet. Decay, he thought. Decay.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But it had nothing to do with his problem, the problem
-that had kept him awake all the night, the problem that
-blighted the view before him now.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The trading bell clanged. The day’s work began.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>For Ross it might be his last day’s work at the Yards.</p>
-
-<hr class='c008'>
-
-<p class='c007'>He walked slowly from the ramp to the offices of the
-Oldham Trading Corporation. “Morning, Ross boy,” his
-breezy young boss greeted him. Charles Oldham IV’s father
-had always taken a paternal attitude toward his help, and
-Charles Oldham IV was not going to change anything that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_3'>3</span>Daddy had done. He shook Ross’s hand at the door of the
-suite and apologized because they hadn’t been able to find
-a new secretary for him yet. They’d been looking for two
-weeks, but the three applicants they had been able to
-dredge up had all been hopeless. “It’s the damn Chamber,”
-said Charles Oldham IV, winsomely gesturing with his
-hands to show how helpless men of affairs were against
-the blundering interference of Government. “Damn labor
-shortage is nothing but a damn artificial scarcity crisis.
-Daddy saw it; he knew it was coming.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross almost told him he was quitting, but held back.
-Maybe it was because he didn’t want to spoil Oldham’s
-day with bad news, right on top of the opening bell. Or
-maybe it was because, in spite of a sleepless night, he still
-wasn’t quite sure.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The morning’s work helped him to become sure. It was
-the same monotonous grind.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Three freighters had arrived at dawn from Halsey’s third
-moon, but none of them was any affair of his. There was an
-export shipment of jewelry and watches to be attended to,
-but the ship was not to take off for another week. It
-scarcely classified as urgent. Ross worked on the manifests
-for a couple of hours, stared through his window for an
-hour, and then it was time for lunch.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Little Marconi hailed him as he passed through the traders’
-lounge.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Of all the juniors on the Exchange, Marconi was the one
-Ross found easiest to take. He was lean and dark where
-Ross was solid and fair; worse, he stood four ranks above
-Ross in seniority. But, since Ross worked for Oldham, and
-Marconi worked for Haarland’s, the difference could be
-waived in social intercourse.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross suspected that, to Marconi as to him, trading was
-only a job—a dull one, and not a crusade. And he knew
-that Marconi’s reading was not confined to bills of lading.
-“Lunch?” asked Marconi. “Sure,” Ross said. And he knew
-he’d probably spill his secret to the little man from Haarland’s.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The skyroom was crowded—comparatively. All eight of
-the usual tables were taken; they pushed on into the roped-off
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_4'>4</span>area by the windows and found a table overlooking the
-Yards. Marconi blew dust off his chair. “Been a long time
-since this was used,” he grumbled. “Drink?” He raised his
-eyebrows when Ross nodded. It made a break; Marconi
-was the one usually who had a drink with lunch, Ross never
-touched it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When the drinks came, each of them said to the other in
-perfect synchronism: “I’ve got something to tell you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They looked startled—then laughed. “Go ahead,” said
-Ross.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The little man didn’t even argue. Rapturously he drew
-a photo out of his pocket.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>God, thought Ross wearily, Lurline again! He studied
-the picture with a show of interest. “New snap?” he asked
-brightly. “Lovely girl——” Then he noticed the inscription:
-<i>To my fiance, with crates of love.</i> “Well!” he said,
-“Fiance, is it? Congratulations, Marconi!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Marconi was almost drooling on the photo. “Next
-month,” he said happily. “A big, big wedding. For keeps,
-Ross—for keeps. With children!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross made an expression of polite surprise. “You don’t
-say!” he said.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It’s all down in black and white! She agrees to have two
-children in the first five years—no permissive clause, a
-straight guarantee. Fifteen hundred annual allowance per
-child. And, Ross, do you know what? Her lawyer told her
-right in front of me that she ought to ask for three thousand,
-and she told him, ‘No, Mr. Turek. I happen to be in
-love.’ How do you like that, Ross?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“A girl in a million,” Ross said feebly. His private
-thoughts were that Marconi had been gaffed and netted
-like a sugar perch. Lurline was of the Old Landowners,
-who didn’t own anything much but land these days, and
-Marconi was an undersized nobody who happened to make
-a very good living. Sure she happened to be in love. Smartest
-thing she could be. Of course, promising to have children
-sounded pretty special; but the papers were full of
-those things every day. Marconi could reliably be counted
-on to hang himself. He’d promise her breakfast in bed every
-third week end, or the maid that he couldn’t possibly find
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>on the labor market, and the courts would throw all the
-promises on both sides out of the contract as a matter of
-simple equity. But the marriage would stick, all right.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Marconi had himself a final moist, fatuous sigh and returned
-the photo to his pocket. “And now,” he asked
-brightly, craning his neck for the waiter, “what’s your
-news?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross sipped his drink, staring out at the nuzzling freighters
-in their hemispherical slips. He said abruptly, “I might
-be on one of those next week. Fallon’s got a purser’s berth
-open.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Marconi forgot the waiter and gaped. “Quitting?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I’ve got to do something!” Ross exploded. His own
-voice scared him; there was a knife blade of hysteria in the
-sound of it. He gripped the edge of the table and forced
-himself to be calm and deliberate.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Marconi said tardily, “Easy, Ross.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Easy! You’ve said it, Marconi: ‘Easy.’ Everything’s so
-damned easy and so damned boring that I’m just about
-ready to blow! I’ve got to do something,” he repeated. “I’m
-getting nowhere! I push papers around and then I push
-them back again. You know what happens next. You get
-soft and paunchy. You find yourself going by the book
-instead of by your head. You’re covered, if you go by the
-book—no matter what happens. And you might just as
-well be dead!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Now, Ross——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Now, hell!” Ross flared. “Marconi, I swear I think
-there’s something wrong with me! Look, take Ghost Town
-for instance. Ever wonder why nobody lives there, except
-a couple of crazy old hermits?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why, it’s Ghost Town,” Marconi explained. “It’s deserted.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And why is it deserted? What happened to the people
-who used to live there?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Marconi shook his head. “You need a vacation, son,” he
-said sympathetically. “That was a long time ago. Hundreds
-of years, maybe.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But where did the people go?” Ross persisted desperately.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>“All of the city was inhabited hundreds of years ago—the
-city was twice as big as it is now. How come?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Marconi shrugged. “Dunno.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross collapsed. “Don’t know. You don’t know, I don’t
-know, nobody knows. Only thing is, I care! I’m curious.
-Marconi, I get—well, moody. Depressed. I get to worrying
-about crazy things. Ghost Town, for one. And why can’t
-they find a secretary for me? And am I really different from
-everybody else or do I just think so—and doesn’t that
-mean that I’m insane?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He laughed. Marconi said warmly, “Ross, you aren’t the
-only one; don’t ever think you are. I went through it myself.
-Found the answer, too. You wait, Ross.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He paused. Ross said suspiciously, “Yeah?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Marconi tapped the breast pocket with the photo of Lurline.
-“She’ll come along,” he said.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross managed not to sneer in his face. “No,” he said
-wearily. “Look, I don’t advertise it, but I was married once.
-I was eighteen, it lasted for a year and I’m the one who
-walked out. Flat-fee settlement; it took me five years to
-pay off the loan, but I never regretted it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Marconi began gravely, “Sexual incompatibility——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross cut him off with an impatient gesture. “In that department,”
-he said, “it so happens she was a genius.
-But——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross shrugged. “I must have been crazy,” he said shortly.
-“I kept thinking that she was half-dead, dying on the
-vine like the rest of Halsey’s Planet. And I must still be
-crazy, because I still think so.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The little man involuntarily felt his breast pocket. He
-said gently, “Maybe you’ve been working too hard.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Too hard!” Ross laughed, a curious blend of true
-humor and self-disgust. “Well,” he admitted, “I need a
-change, anyhow. I might as well be on a longliner. At least
-I’d have my spree to look back on.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No!” Marconi said, so violently that Ross slopped the
-drink he was lifting to his mouth.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross looked hard at the little man—hard and speculatively.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>“No, then,” he said. “It was just a figure of speech,
-of course. But tell me something, won’t you, Marconi?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Tell you what?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Tell me why such a violent reaction to the word ‘longliner.’
-I want to know.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Hell, Ross,” the little man grumbled, “you know what
-a longliner is. Gutter-scrapings for crews; nothing for a
-man like you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I want to know more,” Ross insisted. “When I ask you
-what a longliner is, what the crew do with themselves for
-two or three centuries, you change the subject. You always
-change the subject! Maybe you know something I don’t
-know. I want to know what it is, and this time the subject
-doesn’t get changed. You don’t get off the hook until I find
-out.” He took a sip of his drink and leaned back. “Tell me
-about longliners,” he said. “I’ve never seen one coming in;
-it’s been fifteen years or so since that bucket from Sirius
-IV, hasn’t it? But you were on the job then.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Marconi was no longer a man in love or one of the few
-people whom Ross considered to be wholly alive—like
-him. He was a hard-eyed little stranger with a stubborn
-mouth and an ingratiating veneer. In short he was again a
-trader, and a good one.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I’ll tell you anything I know,” Marconi declared positively,
-and insincerely. “Tend to that fellow first though,
-will you?” He pointed to a uniformed Yards messenger
-whose eye had just alighted on Ross. The man threaded
-his way, stumbling, through the tables and laid a sealed
-envelope down in the puddle left by Ross’s drink.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Sorry, sir,” he said crisply, wiped off the envelope with
-his handkerchief and, for lagniappe, wiped the puddle off
-the table into Ross’s lap.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Speechless, Ross signed for the envelope on a red-tabbed
-slip marked URGENT * PRIORITY * RUSH. The messenger
-saluted, almost putting his own eye out, and left,
-crashing into tables and chairs.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Half-dead,” Ross muttered, following him with his
-eyes. “How the devil do they stay alive at all?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Marconi said, unsmiling, “You’re taking this kick pretty
-seriously, Ross. I admit he’s a little clumsy, but——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>“But nothing,” said Ross. “Don’t try to tell me you don’t
-know something’s wrong, Marconi! He’s a bumbling incompetent,
-and half his generation is just like him.” He
-looked bitterly at the envelope and dropped it on the table
-again. “More manifests,” he said. “I swear I’ll start throwing
-tableware if I have to check another bill of lading.
-Brighten my day, Marconi; tell me about the longliners.
-You’re not off the hook yet, you know.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Marconi signaled for another drink. “All right,” he said.
-“Marconi tells all about longliners. They’re ships. They go
-from the planet of one star to the planet of another star. It
-takes a long time, because stars are many light-years apart
-and rocket ships cannot travel as fast as light. Einstein said
-so—whoever he was. Do we start with the Sirius IV ship?
-I was around when it came in, all right. Fifteen years ago,
-and Halsey’s Planet is still enjoying the benefits of it. And
-so is Leverett and Sons Trading Corporation. They did
-fine on flowers from seeds that bucket brought, they did
-fine on sugar perch from eggs that bucket brought. I’ve
-never had it myself. Raw fish for dessert! But some people
-swear by it—at five shields a portion. They can have it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The hook, Marconi,” Ross reminded grimly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Trader Marconi laughed amiably. “Sorry. Well, what
-else? Pictures and music, but I’m not much on them. I do
-read, though, and as a reader I say, God bless that bucket
-from Sirius IV. We never had a novelist like Morris Halliday
-on this planet—or an essayist like Jay Waring. Let’s
-see, there have been eight Halliday novels off the microfilms
-so far, and I think Leverett still has a couple in the
-vaults. Leverett must be——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Marconi. I don’t want to hear about Leverett and Sons.
-Or Morris Halliday, or Waring. I want to hear about longliners.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I’m trying to tell you,” Marconi said sullenly, the mask
-down.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, you’re not. You’re telling me that the longline ships
-go from one stellar system to another with merchandise. I
-know that.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then what do you want?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Don’t be difficult, Marconi. I want to know the facts.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>All about longliners. The big hush-hush. The candid explanations
-that explain nothing—except that a starship is
-a starship. I know that they’re closed-system, multigeneration
-jobs; a group of people get in on Sirius IV and their
-great-great-great-great-grandchildren come giggling and
-stumbling out on Halsey’s Planet. I know that every couple
-of generations your firm—and mine, for that matter—builds
-one with profits that would be taxed off anyway and
-slings it out, stocked with seeds and film and sound tape
-and patent designs and manufacturing specifications for
-every new gimmick on the market, in the hope that it’ll be
-back long after we’re dead with a similar cargo to enrich
-your firm’s and my firm’s then-current owners. Sounds silly—but,
-as I say, it’s tax money anyhow. I know that your
-firm and mine staff the ships with half a dozen bums of
-each sex, who are loaded aboard with a dandy case of
-delirium tremens, contracted from spending their bounty
-money the only way they know how. And that’s just about
-all I know. Take it from there, Marconi. And be specific.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The little man shrugged irritably. “That gag’s beginning
-to wear thin, Ross,” he complained. “What do you want
-me to tell you—the number of welds in Bulkhead 47 of
-‘Starship 74’? What’s the difference? As you said, a starship
-is a starship is a longliner. Without them the inhabited
-solar systems would have no means of contact or commerce.
-What else is there to say?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross looked suddenly lost. “I—don’t know,” he said.
-“Don’t you know, Marconi?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Marconi hesitated, and for a moment Ross was sure he
-did know—knew something, at any rate, something that
-might be an answer to the doubts and nagging inconsistencies
-that were bothering him. But then Marconi shrugged
-and looked at his watch and ordered another drink.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But there was something wrong. Ross felt himself in the
-position of a diagnostician whose patient willfully refuses
-to tell where it hurts. The planet was sick—but wouldn’t
-admit it. Sick? Dying! Maybe he was on the wrong track
-entirely. Maybe the starships had nothing to do with it.
-Maybe there was nothing that Marconi knew that would fit
-a piece into the puzzle and make the answer come out all
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>clear—but Ghost Town continued to grow acre by acre,
-year by year. And Oldham still hadn’t found him a secretary
-capable of writing her own name.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“According to the historians, everything fits nicely into
-place,” Ross said, dubiously. “They say we came here ourselves
-in longliners once, Marconi. Our ancestors under
-some man named Halsey colonized this place, fourteen
-hundred years ago. According to the longliners that come
-in from other stars, their ancestors colonized wherever they
-came from in starships from a place called Earth. Where
-is this Earth, Marconi?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Marconi said succinctly, “Look in the star charts. It’s
-there.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, but——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But, hell,” Marconi said in annoyance. “What in the
-world has got into you, Ross? Earth is a planet like any
-other planet. The starship Halsey colonized in was a starship
-like any other starship—only bigger. I guess, that is—I
-wasn’t there. After all, what are the longliners but colonists?
-They happen to be going to planets that are already
-inhabited, that’s all. So a starship is nothing new or even
-very interesting, and this is beginning to bore me, and you
-ought to read your urgent-priority-rush message.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross felt repentant—knowing that that was just how
-Trader Marconi wanted him to feel. He said slowly, “I’m
-sorry if I’m being a nuisance, Marconi. You know how it
-is when you feel stale and restless. I know all the stories—but
-it’s so damned hard to believe them. The famous colonizing
-ships. They must have been absolutely gigantic to
-take any reasonable number of people on a closed-circuit,
-multigeneration ride. We can’t build them that big now!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No reason to.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But we couldn’t if we had to. Imagine shooting those
-things all over the Galaxy. How many inhabited planets in
-the charts—five hundred? A thousand? Think of the technology,
-Marconi. What became of it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“We don’t need that sort of technology any more,” Marconi
-explained. “That job is done. Now we concentrate on
-more important things. Learning to live with each other.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>Developing our own planet. Increasing our understanding
-of social factors and demographic——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross was laughing at last. “Well, Marconi,” he said at
-last, “that takes care of that! We sure have figured out how
-to handle the social factors, all right. Every year there are
-fewer of them to handle. Pretty soon we’ll all be dead, and
-then the problem can be marked ‘solved.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Marconi laughed too—eagerly, as if he’d been waiting
-for the chance. He said, “Now that that’s settled, are you
-going to open your message? Are you at least going to have
-some lunch?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Yards messenger stumbled up to their table again,
-this time with an envelope for Marconi. He looked sharply
-at Ross’s unopened envelope and said nothing, pointedly.
-Ross guiltily picked it up and tore it open. You could act
-like a sulky child in front of a friend, but strangers didn’t
-understand.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The message was from his office. RADAR REPORTS
-HIGH VELOCITY SPACECRAFT ON AUTOCONTROLS.
-FIRST APPROXIMATION TRAJECTORY
-INDICATES INTERSTELLAR ORIGIN. PROBABLE
-ETA YARDS 1500. NO RADIO MESSAGES RECEIVED.
-DON’T HAVE TO TELL YOU TO GET ON
-THIS IMMEDIATELY AND GIVE IT YOUR BEST.
-OLDHAM.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross looked at Marconi, whose expression was perturbed.
-“Bet I know what your message says,” he offered
-with an uneasy quaver in his voice.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Marconi said: “I’ll bet you do. Oldham’s radar setup on
-Sunward always has been better than Haarland’s. Better
-location. Man, you are in trouble! Let’s get out there and
-hope nobody’s missed you so far.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They grabbed sandwiches from the snack bar on the way
-out and munched them while the Yards jeep took them to
-the ready line. Skirting the freighters in their pits, slipping
-past the enormous overhaul sheds, they saw excited debates
-going on. Twice they were passed by Yards vehicles heading
-toward the landing area. Halfway to the line they heard
-the recall sirens warning everybody and everything out of
-the ten seared acres surrounded by homing and Ground-Controlled
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>Approach radars. That was where the big ones
-were landed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The ready line was jammed when they got there. Ships
-from one or another of the five moons that circled Halsey’s
-planet were common; the moons were the mines. Even the
-weekly liner and freighters from the colony on Sunward,
-the planet next in from Halsey’s, were routine to the Yards
-workers. But to anybody an interstellar ship was a sensation,
-a once-or-twice-in-a-lifetime thrill.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Protocols were uncertain. Traders argued about the first
-crack at the strangers and their goods. A dealer named
-Aalborg said the only fair system would be to give every
-trade there an equal opportunity to do business—in alphabetical
-order. Everybody agreed that under no circumstances
-should the man from Leverett and Sons be allowed
-to trade—everybody, except the man from Leverett and
-Sons. He pointed out that his firm was the logical choice
-because it had more and fresher experience in handling
-interstellar goods than any other....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They almost mobbed him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It wasn’t merely money that filled the atmosphere with
-electric tingles. The glamor of time-travel was on them.
-The crew aboard that ship were travelers of time as well as
-space. The crew that had launched the ship was dust. The
-crew that served it now had never seen a planet.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There was even some humility in the crowd. There were
-thoughtful ones among them who reflected that it was not,
-after all, a very great feat to hitch a rocket to a shell and
-lob it across a few million miles to a neighboring planet. It
-was eclipsed by the tremendous deed whose climax they
-were about to witness. The thoughtful ones shrugged and
-sighed as they thought that even the starship booming
-down toward Halsey’s Planet—fitted with the cleverest
-air replenishers and the most miraculously efficient waste
-converters—was only a counter in the game whose great
-rule was the mass-energy formulation of the legendary Einstein:
-that there is no way to push a material object past
-the speed of light.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A report swept the field that left men reeling in its wake.
-Radar Track confirmed that the ship was of unfamiliar pattern.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>All hope that it might be a starship launched from
-this very spot on the last leg of a stupefying round trip was
-officially dead. The starship was foreign.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Wonder what they have?” Marconi muttered.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Trader!” Ross sneered ponderously. He was feeling
-better; the weight of depression had been lifted for the
-time being, either by his confession or the electric atmosphere.
-If every day were like this, he thought vaguely....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Let’s not kid each other,” Marconi was saying exuberantly.
-“This is an event, man! Where are they from, what
-are they peddling? Do I get a good cut at their wares? It
-could be fifty thousand shields for me in commission alone.
-Lurline and I could build a tower house on Great Blue
-Lake with that kind of money, with a whole floor for her
-parents! Ross, you just don’t know what it is to really be
-in love. Everything changes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A jeep roared up and slammed to a stop; Ross blinked
-and yelled: “Here it comes!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They watched the ground-controlled approach with the
-interest of semiprofessionals and concealed their rising excitement
-with shop talk.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Whups! There goes the high-power job into action.”
-Marconi pointed as a huge dish antenna swiveled ponderously
-on its mast. “Seems the medium-output dishes can’t
-handle her.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Maybe the high-power dish can’t either. She might be
-just plain shot.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Standard, sealed GCA doesn’t get shot, my young
-friend. Not in a neon-atmosphere tank it doesn’t.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Maybe along about the fifth generation they forgot
-what it was and cut it open with an acetylene torch to see
-what was inside.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Bad luck for us in that case, Ross.” The ship steadied
-on a due-west course and flashed across the heavens and
-over the horizon.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Somebody decided a braking ellipse or two was in
-order. What about line of sight?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No sweat. The GCA jockey—and I’d bet it’s Delafield
-himself—pushes a button that hooks him into the high-power
-dish at every rocket field on Halsey’s. It’s been all
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>thought out. There’s a potential fortune aboard that longliner
-and Fields Administration wants its percentage for
-servicing and accommodating.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Wonder what they have?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I already asked that one, Ross.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“So you did.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They lapsed into silence until the rocket boomed in
-again from the east, high and slow. The big dish swiveled
-abruptly and began tracking again.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“He’ll try to bring her down this time. Yes! There go fore
-and stabilizing jets.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Flame jutted from the silvery speck high in the blue; its
-apparent speed slowed to a crawl. It vanished for a second
-as steering jets turned her slowly endwise. They caught
-sight of the stern jets when they blasted for the descent.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was uneventful—just the landing of a very, very big
-rocket. When a landing is successful it is like every other
-successful landing ever made.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But the action that the field whirled into immediately
-following the landing was far from routine. The bullhorns
-roared that all traders, wipers, rubbernecks, and visitors
-were to get behind the ready lines and stay there. All Class-Three-and-higher
-Field personnel were to take stations for
-longliner clearance. The weapons and decontamination
-parties were to take their stations immediately. Captain
-Delafield would issue all future orders and don’t let any of
-the traders talk you out of it, men. Captain Delafield would
-issue all future orders.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross watched in considerable surprise as Field men
-working with drilled precision broke out half a dozen sleek,
-needle-nosed guns from an innocent-looking bay of the
-warehouse and manhandled them into position. From another
-bay a large pressure tank was hauled and backed
-against the lock of the starship. Ross could see the station
-medic bustlingly supervise that, and the hosing of white
-gunk onto the juncture between tank and ship.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Delafield crossed the stretch from the GCA complex to
-the tank, vanished into it through a pressure-fitted door and
-that was that. The tank had no windows.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross said to Marconi, wonderingly: “What’s all this
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>about? There was Doc Gibbons handling the pressure tank,
-there was Chunk Blaney rolling out a God-damned cannon
-I never knew was there—how many more little secrets are
-there that I don’t know about?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Marconi grinned. “They have gun drill once a month,
-my young friend, and they never say a word about it. Let
-the right rabble-rouser get hold of the story and he might
-sail into office on a platform of ‘Keep the bug-eyed monsters
-off of Halsey’s Planet.’ You have to have reasonable
-precautions, military and medical, though—and this is the
-straight goods—there’s never been any trouble of either
-variety.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The conversation died and there was a long, boring hour
-of nothing. At last Delafield appeared again. One of the
-decontamination party ran up in a jeep with a microphone.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What’ll it be?” Ross demanded. “Alphabetic order? Or
-just a rush?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The announcement floored him. “Representative of the
-Haarland Trading Corporation please report to the decontamination
-tank.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The representative of the Haarland Trading Corporation
-was Marconi.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Hell,” Ross said bitterly. “Good luck with them, whoever
-they are.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Marconi brooded for a moment and then said gruffly,
-“Come on along.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You mean it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Sure. Uh—naturally, Ross, you’ll give me your word
-not to make any commercial offers or inquiries without my
-permission.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh. Naturally.” They started across the field and were
-checked through the ready line, Marconi cheerfully presenting
-his identification and vouching for Ross.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Captain Delafield, at the tank, snapped, “What are you
-doing here, Ross? You’re Oldham’s man. I distinctly
-said——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My responsibility, Captain. Will that do it?” Marconi
-asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Delafield snapped, “It’ll be your fundament if Haarland
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>hears about it. Actually it’s the damnedest situation—they
-<i>asked</i> for Haarland’s.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Marconi looked frightened and his hand involuntarily
-went to his breast pocket. He swallowed and asked,
-“Where are they from?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Delafield grimaced and said, “Home.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Marconi exploded, “Oh, no!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That’s all I can get out of them. I suppose their trajectory
-can be analyzed, and there must be books. We haven’t
-been in the ship yet. Nobody goes in until it gets sprayed,
-rayed, dusted, and busted down into its component parts.
-Too many places for nasty little mutant bacteria and
-viruses to lurk.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Sure, Captain. ‘Home,’ eh? They’re pretty simple?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Happy little morons. Fifteen of them, ranging in age
-from one month to what looks like a hundred and twenty.
-All they know is ‘home’ and ‘we wish to see the representative
-of the Haarland Trading Corporation.’ First the old
-woman said it. Then the next in line—he must be about a
-hundred—said it. Then a pair of identical twins, fifty-year-old
-women, said it in chorus. Then the rest of them on
-down to the month-old baby, and I swear to God he tried
-to say it. Well, you’re the Haarland Trading Corporation.
-Go on in.”</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>
- <h2 class='c005' title='Chapter 2'><span class='xxlarge'><b>..... 2</b></span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>THEY were all naked. Why not? There’s
-no weather in a space ship. All of them laughed when Ross
-and Marconi came in through the lock except the baby,
-who was nursing at the breast of a handsome woman. Their
-laughter was what attracted Ross immediately. Cheerful—no
-meanness in it. The happy yelping of puppies at play
-with a red rubber bone.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A stab went through him as the pleasure in their simple
-happiness turned to recollection and recognition. His wife
-of a decade ago.... Ross studied them with amazement,
-expecting to find her features in their features, her figure in
-theirs. And failed. Yet they reminded him inescapably of
-his miserable year with that half-a-woman, but they were
-physically no kin of hers. They were just cheerful laughers
-who he knew were less than human.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The cheerful laughers exposed unblemished teeth in all
-their mouths, including that of the hundred-and-twenty-year-old
-matriarch. Why not? If you put calcium and
-fluorides into a closed system, they stay there.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The old woman stopped laughing at them long enough
-to say to Marconi, “We wish to see the representative of
-the Haarland——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, I know. I’m the representative of the Haarland
-Trading Corporation. Welcome to Halsey’s Planet. May I
-ask what your name is, ma’am?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>“Ma,” she said genially.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Pleased to meet you, Ma. My name’s Marconi.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ma said, bewildered, “You just said you were the representative
-of the Haarland Trading——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, Ma, but that’s all right. Let’s say that’s my other
-name. Two names—understand?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She laughed at the idea of two names, wonderingly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Marconi pressed, “And what’s the name of this gentleman?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“He isn’t Gentleman. He’s Sonny.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Sonny was a hundred years old.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Pleased to meet you, Sonny. And your name, sir?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Sonny,” said a redheaded man of eighty or thereabouts.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The identical-twin women were named The Kids. The
-baby was named Him. The rest of the troop were named
-Girl, Ma, or Sonny. After introductions Ross noticed that
-Him had been passed to another Ma who was placidly
-suckling him. She had milk; it dribbled from the corner of
-the baby’s mouth. “There isn’t another baby left in the ship,
-is there?” Ross asked in alarm.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They laughed and the Ma suckling the baby said: “There
-was, but she died. Mostly they do when you put them into
-the box after they get born. Ma here was lucky. Her Him
-didn’t die.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Put them in the box? What box? Why?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Marconi was nudging him fiercely in the ribs. He ignored
-it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They laughed amiably at his ignorance and explained
-that the box was the box, and that you put your newborn
-babies into it because you put your newborn babies into it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A beep tone sounded from the ship.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ma said, “We have to go back now, The Representative
-of the Haarland Trading Corporation Marconi.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What for?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ma said, “At regular intervals signaled by a tone of six
-hundred cycles and an intermittent downward shifting of
-the ship lights from standard illumination frequency to a
-signal frequency of 420 millimicrons, ship’s operating personnel
-take up positions at the control boards for recalibration
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>of ship-working meters and instruments against the
-battery of standard masters. We’ll be right back.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They trooped through the hatch, leaving Ross and Marconi
-staring at each other in the decontamination tank.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well,” Ross said slowly, “at last I know why the Longliner
-Departments have their little secrets. ‘The box.’ I say
-it’s murder.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Be reasonable,” Marconi told him—but his own face
-was white under the glaring germicidal lamps. “You can’t
-let them increase without limit or they’d all die. And before
-they died there’d be cannibalism. Which do you prefer?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Letting kids be born and then snuffing them out if a
-computer decides they’re the wrong sex or over the quota
-is inhuman.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I didn’t say I like it, Ross. But it works.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“So do pills!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Pills are a private matter. A person might privately decide
-not to take hers. The box is a public matter and the
-group outnumbers and overrules a mother who decides not
-to use it. There’s your question of effectiveness answered,
-but there’s another point. Those people are sane, Ross.
-Preposterously naive, but sane! Saner than childless women
-or sour old bachelors we both know who never had to love
-anything small and helpless, and so come to love nobody
-but themselves. They’re sane. Partly because the women
-get a periodic biochemical shakeup called pregnancy that
-their biochemical balance is designed to mesh with. Partly
-because the men find tenderness and protectiveness in
-themselves toward the pregnant women. Mostly, I think,
-because—it’s something to do.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Can you imagine the awful monotony of life in the ship?
-The work is sheer rote and repetition. They can’t read or
-watch screentapes. They were born in the ship, and the
-books and screentapes are meaningless because they know
-nothing to compare them with. The only change they see is
-each other, aging toward death. Frequent pregnancies are
-a Godsend to them. They compare and discuss them; they
-wonder who the fathers are; they make bets of rations; the
-men brag and keep score. The girls look forward to their
-first and their last. The jokes they make up about them!
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>The way they speculate about twins! The purgative fear,
-even, keeps them sane.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And then,” Ross said, “‘the box.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Staring straight ahead at the ship’s port Marconi echoed:
-“Yes. ‘The box.’ If there were another way—but there
-isn’t.”</p>
-
-<hr class='c008'>
-
-<p class='c007'>His breezy young boss, Charles Oldham IV, was not
-pleased with what Ross had to report.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Asked for Haarland!” he repeated unbelievingly.
-“Those dummies didn’t know where they were going or
-where they were from, but they knew enough to ask for
-Haarland.” He slammed a ruler on his desk and yelled:
-“God-damn it!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Mr. Oldham!” Ross protested, aghast. For a superior
-to lose his temper publicly was unthinkable; it covered you
-with embarrassment.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Manners be God-damned too!” Oldham screamed,
-breaking up fast. “What do you know about the state of
-our books? What do you know about the overhead I inherited
-from my loving father? What the hell do you know
-about the downcurve in sales?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“These fluctuations——” Ross began soothingly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Fluctuations be God-damned! I know a fluctuation
-when I see one, and I know a long-term downtrend when I
-see one. And that’s what we’re riding, right into bankruptcy,
-fellow. And now these God-damned dummies blow
-in from nowhere with a consignment exclusively for Haarland—I
-don’t know why I don’t get to hell out of this
-stupid business and go live in a shack on Great Blue Lake
-and let the planet go ahead and rot.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross’s horror at the unseemly outburst was eclipsed by
-his interest at noting how similarly he and Oldham had
-been thinking. “Sir,” he ventured, “I’ve had something on
-my mind for a while——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It can wait,” Oldham growled, collecting himself with
-a visible effort. So there went his chance to resign. “What
-about customs? I know Haarland hasn’t got enough cash
-to lay out. Who has?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross said glibly: “Usual arrangement, sir. They turn an
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>estimated twenty-five per cent of the cargo over to the port
-authority for auction, the receipts to be in full discharge of
-their import tax. And I suppose they enter protective bids.
-They aren’t wasting any time—auction’s 2100 tonight.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You handle it,” Oldham muttered. “Don’t go over one
-hundred thousand shields. Diversify the purchases as much
-as possible. And try to sneak some advance information
-out of the dummies if you get a chance.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, sir,” Ross said. As he left he saw Oldham taking
-a plastic bottle from a wall cabinet.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>And that, thought Ross as he rode to the Free Port, was
-the first crack he had ever seen in the determined optimism
-of the trading firm’s top level. They were optimists and
-they were idealists, at least to hear them tell it. Interplanetary
-trading was a cause and a mission; the traders kept the
-flame of commerce alight. Perhaps, thought Ross, they
-had been able to indulge in the hypocrisy of idealism only
-so long as a population upcurve assured them of an expanding
-market. Perhaps now that births were flattening
-out—some said the dirty word “declining”—they all
-would drop their optimistic creed in favor of fang-and-claw
-competition for the favors of the dwindling pool of consumers.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>And that, Ross thought gloomily, was the way he’d go
-himself if he stayed on: junior trader, to senior trader, to
-master trader, growing every year more paranoidally suspicious
-of his peers, less scrupulous in the chase of the
-shield....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But he was getting out, of course. The purser’s berth
-awaited. And then, perhaps, the awful depressions he had
-been enduring would lift off him. He thought of the master
-traders he knew: his own man Oldham, none too happy in
-the hereditary business; Leverett, still smug and fat with
-his terrific windfall of the Sirius IV starship fifteen years
-ago; Marconi’s boss Haarland—Haarland broke the sequence
-all to hell. It just wasn’t possible to think of Haarland
-being driven by avarice and fear. He was the oldest
-of them all, but there was more zest and drive in his parchment
-body than in the rest of them combined.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the auction hall Ross found a seat near the velvet
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>ropes. One of the professional bidders lounging against a
-wall flicked him an almost imperceptible signal, and he
-answered with another. That was that; he had his man, and
-a good one. They had often worked together in the commodity
-pits, but not so often or so exclusively that the
-bidder would be instantly known as his.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Inside the enclosure Marconi, seated at a bare table,
-labored over a sheaf of papers with one of the “Sonnies”
-from the ship. Sonny was wriggling in coveralls, the first
-clothes he had ever worn. Ross saw they hadn’t been able
-to get shoes onto him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Who else did he know? Captain Delafield was sitting
-somberly within the enclosure; Win Fraley, the hottest
-auctioneer on the Port, was studying a list, his lips moving.
-Every trading firm was represented; the heads of the smaller
-firms were there in person, not daring to delegate the
-bidding job. Plenty of Port personnel, just there for the
-excitement of the first longliner in fifteen years, even
-though it was well after close of the business day.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The goods were in sealed cases against the back wall as
-usual. Ross could only tell that some of them were perforated
-and therefore ought to contain living animals. Only
-the one Sonny from the starship crew was there; presumably
-the rest were back on the ship. He wouldn’t be able to
-follow Oldham’s orders to snoop out the nature of the
-freight from them. Well, damn Oldham; damn even the
-auction, Ross thought to himself. His mood of gloom did
-not lift.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The auction was a kind of letdown. All that turmoil and
-bustle, concentrated in a tiny arc around the velvet ropes,
-contrasted unpleasantly with the long, vacant rows of dusty
-seats that stretched to the back of the hall. Maybe a couple
-of centuries ago Ross would have enjoyed the auction
-more. But now all it made him think of was the thing he
-had been brooding about for a night and a day, the slow
-emptying of the planet, the....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Decay.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But, as usual, no one else seemed to notice or to care.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Captain Delafield consulted his watch and stood up. He
-rapped the table. “In accordance with the rules of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>Trade Commission and the appropriate governing statutes,”
-he droned, “certain merchandise will now be placed
-on public auction. The Haarland Trading Corporation,
-consignee, agrees and consents to divest itself of merchandise
-from Consignment 97-W amounting by estimate of
-the customs authorities to twenty-five per cent of the total
-value of all merchandise in said consignment. All receipts
-of this auction are to be entered as excise duties paid by the
-consignee on said merchandise, said receipts to constitute
-payment in full on excise on Consignment 97-W. The
-clerk will record; if any person here present wishes to enter
-an objection let him do so thank you.” He glanced at a
-slip of paper in his hand. “I am requested to inform you
-that the Haarland Trading Corporation has entered with
-the clerk a protective bid of five thousand shields on each
-item.” There was a rustle in the hall. Five thousand shields
-was a lot of money. “Your auctioneer, Win Fraley,” said
-Captain Delafield, and sat down in the first row of seats.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The auctioneer took a long, slow swallow of water, his
-eyes gleaming above the glass at the audience. Theatrically
-he tossed the glass to an assistant, smacked his hands together
-and grinned. “Well,” he boomed genially, “I don’t
-have to tell you gentlemen that somebody’s going to get
-rich tonight. Who knows—maybe it’ll be you? But you
-can’t make money without spending money, so without any
-further ado, let’s get started. I have here,” he rapped out
-briskly, “Item Number One. Now you don’t know and I
-don’t know exactly what Item Number One contains, but I
-can tell you this, they wouldn’t have sent it two hundred
-and thirty-one lights if they didn’t think it was worth something.
-Let’s get this started with a rush, folks, and I mean
-with a big bid to get in the right mood. After all, the more
-you spend here the less you have to pay in taxes,” he
-laughed. “You ready? Here’s the dope. Item Number
-One——” His assistant slapped a carton at the extreme left
-of the line. “——weight two hundred and fifteen grams,
-net; fifteen cubic centimeters; one microfilm reel included.
-Reminds me,” he reminisced, “of an item just about that
-size on the Sirius IV shipment. Turned out to be Maryjane
-seeds, and I don’t suppose I have to tell anybody here how
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>much Mr. Leverett made out of Maryjanes; I bet every one
-of us has been smoking them ever since. What do you say,
-Mr. Leverett? You did all right last time—want to say
-ten thousand as a first big bid on Item Number One? Nine
-thousand? Do I hear——?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>One of the smaller traders, not working through a professional
-bidder, not even decently delegating the work to
-a junior, bid seventy-five hundred shields. Like the spokesmen
-for the other big traders, Ross sat on his hands during
-the early stages. Let the small fry give themselves a thrill
-and drop out. The big firms knew to a fraction of a shield
-how much the small ones could afford to bid on a blind
-purchase, and the easiest way to handle them was to let
-them spend their budgets in a hurry. Of course the small
-traders knew all this, and their strategy, when they could
-manage it, was to hold back as long as possible. It was a
-matter of sensing emotion rather than counting costs; of
-recognizing the fraction of a second in which a little fellow
-made up his mind to acquire an item and bidding him up—of
-knowing when he’d gone his limit and letting him have it
-at a ruinous price. It was an art, and Ross, despising it,
-knew that he did it very, very well.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He yawned and pretended to read a magazine while the
-first six items went on the block; the little traders seemed
-desperate enough to force the price up without help. He bid
-on Item Seven partly to squeeze a runt trader and partly
-to test his liaison with his professional bidder. It was perfect;
-the pro caught his signal—a bored inspection of his
-fingernails—while seeming to peek clumsily at the man
-from Leverett’s.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross let the next two pass and then acquired three items
-in rapid succession. The fever had spread to most of the
-bidders by then; they were starting at ten thousand and up.
-One or two of the early birds had spent their budgets and
-were leaving, looking sandbagged—as indeed they had
-been. Ross signaled “take five” to his professional and
-strolled out for a cup of coffee.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>On the way back he stopped for a moment outside the
-hall to look at the stars and breathe. There were the familiar
-constellations—The Plowman, the Rocket Fleet, Marilyn
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>Monroe. He stood smoking a cigarette and yearning toward
-them until somebody moved in the darkness near him.
-“Nice night, Ross,” the man said gloomily.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was Captain Delafield. “Oh, hello, sir,” Ross said,
-the world descending around him again like a too-substantial
-curtain. “Taking a breather?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Had to,” the captain growled. “Ten more minutes in
-that place and I would have thrown. Damned money-grabbing
-traders. No offense, Ross; just that I don’t see how you
-stand the life. Seems to have got worse in my time. Much
-worse. You high-rollers goading the pee-wees into shooting
-their wads—it didn’t use to be like that. Gallantry. Not
-stomping a downed man. I don’t see how you stand it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I can’t stand it,” Ross said quietly. “Captain Delafield,
-you don’t know—I’m so sick to death of the life I’m leading
-and the work I’m doing that I’d do anything to get away.
-Mr. Fallon offered me a purser’s spot on his ship; I’ve been
-thinking about it very seriously.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Purser? A dirty job. There’s nothing to do except when
-you’re in port, and then there’s so much to do that you
-never get to see the planet. I don’t recommend it, Ross.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross grunted, thinking. If even the purser’s berth was
-no way out, what was left for him? Sixty more years of
-waiting for a starship and scheming how to make a profit
-from its contents? Sixty more years watching Ghost Town
-grow by nibbles on Halsey City, watching the traders wax
-in savagery as they battled for the ever-diminishing pool
-of consumers, watching obscene comedies like Lurline of
-the Old Landowners graciously consenting to wed Marconi
-of the New Nobodies? He said wearily: “Then what shall I
-do, Captain? Rot here with the rest of the planet?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Delafield shrugged, suprisingly gentle. “You feel it too,
-Ross? I’m glad to hear it. I’m not sensitive, thank God,
-but I know they talk about me. They say I quit the space-going
-fleet as soon as I had a chance to grab off the port
-captaincy. They’re right; I did. Because I was frightened.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Frightened? You?” Delafield’s ribbons for a dozen heroic
-rescues gleamed in the light that escaped from the hall.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Sure, Ross.” He flicked the ribbons. “Each one of these
-means I and my men pulled some people out of a jam they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>got into because of somebody’s damned stupidity or
-slow reflexes or defective memory. No; I withdraw that.
-The ‘Thetis’ got stove in because of mechanical failure, but
-all the rest were human error. There got to be too many
-for me; I want to enjoy my old age.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Ready to face that if you become a purser? I can tell
-you that if you don’t like it here you won’t be happy on
-Sunward and you won’t like the moons. And you most
-especially and particularly won’t like being a purser. It’s the
-same job you’re doing now, but it pays less, offers you a
-six-by-eight cubicle to work and live in, and gives you
-nothing resembling a future to aim at. Now if you’ll excuse
-me I’d better get back inside. I’ve enjoyed our talk.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross followed the captain gloomily. Nothing had
-changed inside; Ross lounged in the doorway inconspicuously
-picking up the eye of his bidder. Marconi was gone
-from the enclosure. Ross looked around hopefully and
-found his friend in agitated conversation with an unrecognizable
-but also agitated man at the back of the hall. Ross
-drifted over. Heads were turning in the front rows. As Ross
-got within range he heard a couple of phrases. “——in the
-ship. Mr. Haarland specially asked for you. Please, Mr.
-Marconi!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, hell,” Marconi said disgustedly. “Go on. Tell him
-I’ll be there. But how he expects me to take care of things
-here and——” He trailed off as he caught sight of Ross.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Trouble?” Ross asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Not exactly. The hell with it.” Marconi stared indecisively
-at the auctioneer for a moment. He said obscurely,
-“Taking your life isn’t enough; he wants more. And I
-thought I’d be able to see Lurline tonight. Excuse me, Ross.
-I’ve got to get over to the ship.” He hurried out.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross looked wonderingly after him, caught the eye of his
-bidder, and went back to work. By the time the auction was
-over and dawn was breaking in the west, Oldham Trading
-had bought nine lots of merchandise: three breathing, five
-flowering, and one a roll of microfilm. Ross took his prizes
-to the office where Charles Oldham was waiting, much the
-better for a few drinks and a long nap.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“How much?” demanded Oldham. Evidently they were
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>both supposed to ignore his hysteria of the night before.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Fifty-seven thousand,” Ross said dully.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“For nine lots? Good man! With any kind of luck at
-all——” And Oldham babbled on and on. He wanted Ross
-to stay and view the microfilm projection, stand by for a
-report from a zoologist and a botanist on the living acquisitions.
-He pleaded weariness and Oldham became conciliatory
-to the wonderful young up-and-comer who had bid in
-the merchandise at a whopping bargain price.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross dragged himself from the building, into a cab, and
-home. Morosely undressing he lit a cigarette and brooded:
-well, that was it. What you’d been waiting for since you
-were a junior apprentice. The starship came, you had the
-alien prizes in your hands and you realized they were as
-tawdry as the cheap gimcracks you export every week to
-Sunward.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He stared out the window, over Ghost Town, to the
-Field. The sun was high over the surrounding mountains;
-he imagined he could pick out the reflected glimmer from
-the starship a dozen miles away. Marconi at least got to
-examine the ship. Marconi might be there now; he’d been
-headed that way when Ross saw him last. And evidently
-not enjoying it much. Ross wondered vaguely if anybody
-really enjoyed anything. He stubbed out his cigarette.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As he fell asleep he was remembering what Delafield
-had told him about the moons and the planet ports. His
-dreams were of the cities of other planets, and every one
-of them was populated by aloof Delafields and avaricious
-Oldhams.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>
- <h2 class='c005' title='Chapter 3'><span class='xxlarge'><b>..... 3</b></span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“WAKE up, Ross,” Marconi was saying,
-joggling him. “Come on, wake up.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross thrust himself up on an elbow and opened his eyes.
-He said with a tongue the size of his forearm in a dust-lined
-mouth: “Wha’ time is it? Wha’ the hell are you doing
-here, for that matter?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It’s around noon. You’ve slept for three hours; you can
-get up.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Uh.” Ross automatically reached for a cigarette. The
-smoke got in his eyes and he rubbed them; it dehydrated
-and seared what little healthy tissue appeared to be left in
-his mouth. But it woke him up a little. “What are you
-doing here?” he demanded.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Marconi’s hand was involuntarily on his breast pocket
-again, the one in which he carried Lurline’s picture. He said
-harshly: “You want a job? Topside? Better than purser?”
-He wasn’t meeting Ross’s eye. His gaze roved around the
-apartment and lighted on a coffee maker. He filled it and
-snapped it on. “Get dressed, will you?” he demanded.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross sat up. “What’s this all about, Marconi? What do
-you want, anyway?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Marconi, for his own reasons, became violently angry.
-“You’re the damnedest question-asker I ever did meet,
-Ross. I’m trying to do you a favor.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>“What favor?” Ross asked suspiciously.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You’ll find out. You’ve been bellyaching to me long
-enough about how dull your poor little life is. Well, I’m
-offering you a chance to do something big and different.
-And what do you do? You crawfish. Are you interested or
-aren’t you? I told you: It’s a space job, and a big one.
-Bigger than being a purser for Fallon. Bigger than you can
-imagine.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross began to struggle into his clothes, no more than
-half comprehending, but stimulated by the magic words.
-He asked, puzzling sleepily over what Marconi had said,
-“What are you sore about?” His guess was that Lurline had
-broken a date—but it seemed to be the wrong time of day
-for that.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Nothing,” Marconi said grumpily. “Only I have my
-own life to live.” He poured two cups of coffee. He wouldn’t
-answer questions while they sipped the scalding stuff. But
-somehow Ross was not surprised when, downstairs, Marconi
-headed his car along the winding road through Ghost
-Town that led to the Yards.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Every muscle of Ross’s body was stiff and creaky; another
-six hours of sleep would have been a wonderful thing.
-But as they drove through the rutted streets of Ghost Town
-he began to feel alive again. He stared out the window at
-the flashing ruins, piecing together the things Marconi had
-said.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Watch it!” he yelled, and Marconi swerved the car
-around a tumbled wall. Ross was shaking, but Marconi
-only drove faster. This was crazy! You didn’t race through
-Ghost Town as though you were on the pleasure parkways
-around the Great Blue Lake; it wasn’t safe. The buildings
-had to fall over from time to time—nobody, certainly,
-bothered to keep them in repair. And nobody bothered to
-pick up the pieces when they fell, either, until the infrequent
-road-mending teams made their rounds.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But at last they were out of Ghost Town, on the broad
-highway from Halsey City to the port. The administration
-building and car park was just ahead.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was there that Marconi spoke again. “I’m assuming,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>Ross, that you weren’t snowing me when you said you
-wanted thrills, chills, and change galore.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That’s not the way I put it. But I wasn’t snowing you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You’ll get them. Come on.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He led Ross across the field to the longliner, past a
-gaggle of laughing, chattering Sonnies and Mas. He ignored
-them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The longliner was a giant of a ship, a blunt torpedo a
-hundred meters tall. It had no ports—naturally enough;
-the designers of the ship certainly didn’t find any reason
-for its idiot crew to look out into space, and landings and
-takeoffs would be remote-controlled. Two hundred years
-old it was; but its metal was as bright, its edges as sharp, as
-the newest of the moon freighters at the other end of the
-hardstand. Two hundred years—a long trip, but an almost
-unimaginably long distance that trip covered. For the star
-that spawned it was undoubtedly almost as far away as
-light would travel in two centuries’ time. At 186,000 miles
-per second, sixty seconds in a minute, sixty minutes in an
-hour. Ross’s imagination gave up the task. It was far.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He stared about him in fascination as they entered the
-ship. He gaped at sterile, gray-walled cubicles, each of
-which contained the same chair and cot—no screen or projector
-for longliners. Ross remembered his rash words of
-the day before about shipping out on a longliner, and shuddered.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Here we are,” said Marconi stopping before a closed
-door. He knocked and entered.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was a cubicle like the others, but there were reels
-stacked on the floor and a projector. Sitting on the cot in a
-just-awakened attitude was old man Haarland himself.
-Beady-eyed, Ross thought. Watchful.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Haarland asked: “Ross?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, sir,” Marconi said. There was tension in his voice
-and attitude. “Do you want me to stay, sir?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Haarland growled: “Good God, no. You can get out.
-Sit down, Ross.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross sat down. Marconi, carefully looking neither to
-right or left, went out and closed the door. Haarland
-stretched, scratched, and yawned. He said: “Ross, Marconi
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>tells me you’re quite a fellow. Sincere, competent, a
-good man to give a tough job to. Namely, his.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Junior-Fourth Trader?” Ross asked, bewildered.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“A little more dramatic than that—but we’ll come to the
-details in a minute. I’m told you were ready to quit Oldham
-for a purser’s berth. That’s ethical. Would you consider it
-unethical to quit Oldham for Haarland?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes—I think I would.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Glad to hear it! What if the work had absolutely nothing
-to do with trading and never brings you into a competitive
-situation with Oldham?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well——” Ross scratched his jaw. “Well, I think that
-would be all right. But a Junior Fourth’s job, Mr. Haarland——”
-The floor bucked and surged under him. He
-gasped, “What was that?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Blastoff, I imagine,” Haarland said calmly. “We’re taking
-off. Better lie down.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross flopped to the floor. It was no time to argue, not
-with the first-stage pumps thundering and the preheaters
-roaring their threat of an imminent four-G thrust.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It came like thunder, slapping Ross against the floor
-plates as though he were glued to them. He felt every tiny
-wrinkle in every weld he lay on, and one arm had fallen
-across a film reel. He heaved, and succeeded in levering
-it off the reel. It thwacked to the floor as though sandbags
-were stacked meters-high atop it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Blackout came very soon.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He awoke in free fall. He was orbiting aimlessly about
-the cubicle.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Haarland was strapped to the cot, absorbed in manipulating
-the portable projector, trying to thread a free-floating
-film. Ross bumped against the old man; Haarland abstractedly
-shoved him off.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He careened from a bulkhead and flailed for a grip.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh,” said Haarland, looking up. “Awake?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, awake!” Ross said bitterly. “What is all this?
-Where are we?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The old man said formally, “Please forgive my cavalier
-treatment of you. You must not blame your friend Marconi;
-he had no idea that I was planning an immediate
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>blastoff with you. I had an assignment for him which he—he
-preferred not to accept. Not to mince words, Ross, he
-quit.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Quit his job?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The old man shook his head. “No, Ross. Quit much
-more than the job of working for me. He quit on an assignment
-which is—I am sorry if it sounds melodramatic—absolutely
-vital to the human race.” He suddenly frowned.
-“I—I think,” he added weakly. “Bear with me, Ross. I’ll
-try to explain as I go along. But, you see, Marconi left me
-in the lurch. I needed him and he failed me. He felt that
-you would be glad to take it on, and he told me something
-about you.” Haarland glowered at Ross and said, with a
-touch of bitterness, “A recommendation from Marconi, at
-this particular point, is hardly any recommendation at all.
-But I haven’t much choice—and, besides, I took the liberty
-of calling that pompous young fool you work for.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Mister Haarland!” Ross cried, outraged. “Oldham may
-not be any prize but really——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, you know he’s a fool. But he had a lot to say about
-you. Enough so that, if you want the assignment, it’s yours.
-As to the nature of the assignment itself——” Haarland
-hesitated, then said briskly, “The assignment itself has to
-do with a message my organization received via this longliner.
-Yes, a message. You’ll see. It has also to do with certain
-facts I’ve found in its log which, if I can ever get this
-damned thing working——There we are.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He had succeeded in threading the film.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He snapped on the projector. On the screen appeared a
-densely packed block of numerals, rolling up and being replaced
-by new lines as fast as the eye could take them in.
-Haarland said, “Notice anything?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross swallowed. “If that stuff is supposed to mean anything
-to me,” he declared, “it doesn’t.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Haarland frowned. “But Marconi said——Well, never
-mind.” He snapped off the projector. “That was the ship’s
-log, Ross. It doesn’t matter if you can’t read it; you
-wouldn’t, I suppose, have had much call for that sort of
-thing working for Oldham. It is a mathematical description
-of the routing of this ship, from the time it was space-launched
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>until it arrived here yesterday. It took a long time,
-Ross. The reason that it took a long time is partly that it
-came from far away. But, even more, there is another
-reason. We were not this ship’s destination! Not the original
-destination. We weren’t even the first alternate—or the
-second alternate. To be exact, Ross, we were the seventh
-choice for this ship.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross let go of his stanchion, floated a yard, and flailed
-back to it. “That’s ridiculous, Mr. Haarland,” he protested.
-“Besides, what has all this to do with——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Bear with an old man,” said Haarland, with an amused
-gleam in his eye.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There was very little he could do but bear with him,
-Ross thought sourly. “Go on,” he said.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Haarland said professorially, “It is conceivable, of
-course, that a planet might be asleep at the switch. We
-could believe it, I suppose, if it seemed that the first-choice
-planet somehow didn’t pick the ship up when this longliner
-came into radar range. In that event, of course, it would
-orbit once or twice on automatics, and then select for its
-first alternate target—which it did. It might be a human
-failure in the GCA station—once.” He nodded earnestly.
-“Once, Ross. Not six times. No planet passes up a trading
-ship.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Mr. Haarland,” Ross exploded, “it seems to me that
-you’re contradicting yourself all over the place. Did six
-planets pass this ship up or didn’t six planets pass this ship
-up? Which is it? And why would anybody pass a longliner
-up anyhow?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Haarland asked, “Suppose the planets were vacant?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What?” Ross was shaken. “But that’s silly! I mean, even
-I know that the star charts show which planets are inhabited
-and which aren’t.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And suppose the star charts are wrong. Suppose the
-planets have become vacant. The people have died off,
-perhaps; their culture decayed.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Decay. Death and decay.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross was silent for a long time. He took a deep breath.
-He said at last, “Sorry. I won’t interrupt again.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Haarland’s expression was a weft of triumph and relief.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>“Six planets passed this ship up. Remember Leverett’s
-ship fifteen years ago? Three planets passed that one before
-it came to us. Nine different planets, all listed on the traditional
-star charts as inhabited, civilized, equipped with
-GCA radars, and everything else needed. Nine planets out
-of communication, Ross.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Decay, thought Ross. Aloud he said, “Tell me why.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Haarland shook his head. “No,” he said strongly, “I want
-you to tell me. I’ll tell you what I can. I’ll tell you the
-message that this ship brought to me. I’ll tell you all I
-know, all I’ve told Marconi that he isn’t man enough to
-use, and the things that Marconi will never learn, as well.
-But why nine planets that used to be pretty much like our
-own planet are now out of communication, that you’ll have
-to tell me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Forward rockets boomed; the braking blasts hurled Ross
-against the forward bulkhead. Haarland rummaged under
-the cot for space suits. He flung one at Ross.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Put it on,” he ordered. “Come to the airlock. I’ll show
-you what you can use to find out the answers.” He slid
-into the pressure suit, dived weightless down the corridor,
-Ross zooming after.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They stood in the airlock, helmets sealed. Wordlessly
-Haarland opened the pet cocks, heaved on the lock door.
-He gestured with an arm.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Floating alongside them was a ship, a ship like none Ross
-had ever seen before.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>
- <h2 class='c005' title='Chapter 4'><span class='xxlarge'><b>..... 4</b></span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>PICTURE Leif’s longboat bobbing in the
-swells outside Ambrose Light, while the twentieth-century
-liners steam past; a tiny, ancient thing, related to the new
-giants only as the Eohippus resembles the horse.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The ship that Haarland revealed was fully as great a
-contrast. Ross knew spaceships as well as any grounder
-could, both the lumbering interplanet freighters and the
-titanic longliners. But the ship that swung around Halsey’s
-Planet was a midget (fueled rocket ships must be huge);
-its jets were absurdly tiny, clearly incapable of blasting
-away from planetary gravity; its entire hull length was
-unbroken and sheer (did the pilot dare fly blind?).</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The coupling connections were being rigged between the
-ships. “Come aboard,” said Haarland, spryly wriggling
-through the passage. Ross, swallowing his astonishment,
-followed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The ship was tiny indeed. When Ross and Haarland,
-clutching handholds, were drifting weightlessly in its central
-control cabin, they very nearly filled it. There was one
-other cabin, Ross saw; and the two compartments accounted
-for a good nine-tenths of the cubage of the ship.
-Where that left space for the combustion chambers and
-the fuel tanks, the crew quarters, and the cargo holds, Ross
-could not imagine. He said: “All right, Mr. Haarland.
-Talk.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>Haarland grinned toothily, his expression eerie in the
-flickering violet light that issued from a gutter around the
-cabin’s wall.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“This is a spaceship, Ross. It’s a pretty old one—fourteen
-hundred years, give or take a little. It’s not much to
-look at, compared with the up-to-date models you’re used
-to, but it’s got a few features that you won’t find on the
-new ones. For one thing, Ross, it doesn’t use rockets.”
-He hesitated. “Ask me what it does use,” he admitted, “and
-I can’t tell you. I know the name, because I read it: nucleophoretic
-drive. What nucleophoresis is and how it
-works, I can’t say. They call it the Wesley Effect, and the
-tech manual says something about squared miles of acceleration.
-Does that mean anything to you? No. How could
-it? But it works, Ross. It works well enough so that this
-little ship will get you where you’re going very quickly.
-The stars, Ross—it will take you to the stars. Faster than
-light. What the top speed is I have no idea; but there is a
-ship’s log here, too. And it has a three-month entry—three
-months, Ross!—in which this little ship explored the solar
-systems of fourteen stars.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Wide-eyed, Ross held motionless. Haarland paused.
-“Fourteen hundred years,” he repeated. “Fourteen hundred
-years this ship has been floating out here. And for all that
-time, the longliners have been crawling from star to star,
-while little hidden ships like this one could have carried a
-thousand times as much goods a million times faster. Maybe
-the time has come to get the ships out of hiding. I don’t
-know. I want to find out; I want you to find out for me.
-I’ll be specific, Ross. I need a pilot. I’m too old, and Marconi
-turned it down. Someone has to go out there——”
-he gestured to the blind hull and the unseen stars beyond—“and
-find out why nine planets are out of communication.
-Will you do it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross opened his mouth to speak, and a thousand questions
-competed for utterance. But what he said, barely
-aloud, was only: “Yes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The far-off stars—more than a thousand million of them
-in our galaxy alone. By far the greatest number of them
-drifted alone through space, or with only a stellar companion
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>as utterly unlivable by reason of heat and crushing
-gravity as themselves. Fewer than one in a million had a
-family of planets, and most even of those could never become
-a home for human life.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But out of a thousand million, any fraction may be a
-very large number, and the number of habitable planets
-was in the hundreds.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross had seen the master charts of the inhabited universe
-often enough to recognize the names as Haarland mentioned
-them: Tau Ceti II, Earth, the eight inhabitable
-worlds of Capella. But to realize that this ship—this ship!—had
-touched down on each of them, and on a hundred
-more, was beyond astonishment; it was a dream thing, impossible
-but unquestioned.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Through Haarland’s burning, old eyes, Ross looked back
-through fourteen centuries, to the time when this ship was
-a scout vessel for a colonizing colossus. The lumbering
-giant drove slowly through space on its one-way trip from
-the planet that built it—was it semi-mythical Earth? The
-records were not clear—while the tiny scout probed each
-star and solar system as it drew within range. While the
-mother ship was covering a few hundred million miles, the
-scout might flash across parsecs to scan half a dozen
-worlds. And when the scout came back with word of a
-planet where humans could survive, they christened it
-with the name of the scout’s pilot, and the chartroom labored,
-and the ship’s officers gave orders, and the giant’s
-nose swerved through a half a degree and began its long,
-slow deceleration.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why slow?” Ross demanded. “Why not use the faster-than-light
-drive for the big ships?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Haarland grimaced. “I’ve got to answer that one for you
-sooner or later,” he said, “but let me make it later. Anyway,
-that’s what this ship was: a faster-than-light scout ship for
-a real longliner. What happened to the longliner the records
-don’t show; my guess is the colonists cannibalized it to get
-a start in constructing homes for themselves. But the scout
-ship was exempted. The captain of the expedition had it
-put in an orbit out here, and left alone. It’s been used a
-little bit, now and then—my great-grandfather’s father
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>went clear to 40 Eridani when my great-grandfather was a
-little boy, but by and large it has been left alone. It had to
-be, Ross. For one thing, it’s dangerous to the man who
-pilots it. For another, it’s dangerous to—the Galaxy.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Haarland’s view was anthropomorphic; the danger
-was not to the immense and uncaring galaxy, but to the
-sparse fester of life that called itself humanity.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When the race abandoned Earth, it was a gesture of
-revulsion. Behind them they left a planet that had decimated
-itself in wars; ahead lay a cosmos that, in all their
-searches, had revealed no truly sentient life.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Earth was a crippled world, the victim of its playing
-with nuclear fission and fusion. But the techniques that gave
-them a faster-than-light drive gave them as well a weapon
-that threatened solar systems, not cities; that could detonate
-a sun as readily as uranium could destroy a building. The
-child with his forbidden matches was now sitting atop a
-munitions dump; the danger was no longer a seared hand
-or blinded eye, but annihilation.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>And the decision had been made: secrecy. By what condign
-struggles the secrecy had been enforced, the secrecy
-itself concealed. But it had worked. Once the radiating
-colonizers had reached their goals, the nucleophoretic effect
-had been obliterated from their records and, except for a
-single man on each planet, from their minds.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Why the single man? Why not bury it entirely?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Haarland said slowly, “There was always the chance
-that something would go wrong, you see. And—it has.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross said hesitantly, “You mean the nine planets that
-have gone out of communication?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Haarland nodded. He hesitated. “Do you understand it
-now?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross shook his head dizzily. “I’m trying,” he said. “This
-little ship—it travels faster than light. It has been circling
-out here—how long? Fourteen hundred years? And you
-kept it secret—you and your ancestors before you because
-you were afraid it might be used in war?” He was frowning.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Not ‘afraid’ it would be used,” Haarland corrected
-gently. “We knew it would be used.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>Ross grimaced. “Well, why tell me about it now? Do you
-expect me to keep it secret all the rest of my life?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I think you would,” Haarland said soberly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But suppose I didn’t? Suppose I blabbed all over the
-Galaxy, and it was used in war?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Haarland’s face was suddenly, queerly gray. He said,
-almost to himself, “It seems that there are things worse than
-war.” Abruptly he smiled. “Let’s find Ma.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They returned through the coupling and searched the
-longliner for the old woman. A Sonny told them, “Ma
-usually hangs around the meter room. Likes to see them
-blinking.” And there they found her.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Hello, Haarland,” she smiled, flashing her superb teeth.
-“Did you find what you were looking for?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Perfect, Ma. I want to talk to you under the seal.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She looked at Ross. “Him?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I vouch for him,” Haarland said gravely. “Wesley.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She answered, “The limiting velocity is C.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But C<sup>2</sup> is not a velocity,” Haarland said. He turned to
-Ross. “Sorry to make a mystery,” he apologized. “It’s a
-recognition formula. It identifies one member of what we
-call the Wesley families, or its messenger, to another. And
-these people are messengers. They were dispatched a couple
-of centuries ago by a Wesley family whose ship, for
-some reason, no longer could be used. Why?—I don’t know
-why. Try your luck, maybe you can figure it out. Ma, tell
-us the history again.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She knitted her brows and began to chant slowly:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c000'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“In great-grandfather’s time the target was Clyde,</div>
- <div class='line'>Rocketry firm and ores on the side.</div>
- <div class='line'>If we hadn’t of seen them direct we’d of missed ’em;</div>
- <div class='line'>There wasn’t a blip from the whole damn system.</div>
- <div class='line in4'>That was the first.</div>
- <div class='line'>Before great-grandfather’s day was done</div>
- <div class='line'>We cut the orbit of Cyrnus One.</div>
- <div class='line'>The contact there was Trader McCue,</div>
- <div class='line'>But the sons o’ bitches missed us too.</div>
- <div class='line in4'>That was the second.</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>My grandpa lived to see the green</div>
- <div class='line'>Of Target Three through the high-powered screen.</div>
- <div class='line'>But where in hell was Builder Carruthers?</div>
- <div class='line'>They let us go by like all the others.</div>
- <div class='line in4'>That was the——”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Ma,” said Haarland. “Thanks very much, but would
-you skip to the last one?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ma grinned.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c000'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>The Haarland Trading Corp. was last</div>
- <div class='line'>With the fuel down low and going fast.</div>
- <div class='line'>I’m glad it was me who saw the day</div>
- <div class='line'>When they brought us down on GCA.</div>
- <div class='line'>I told him the message; he called it a mystery,</div>
- <div class='line'>But anyway this is the end of the history.</div>
- <div class='line in4'>And it’s about time!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The message, please,” Haarland said broodingly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ma took a deep breath and rattled off: “L-sub-T equals
-L-sub-zero e to the minus-T-over-two-N.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross gaped. “That’s the message?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Used to be more to it,” Ma said cheerfully “That’s all
-there is now, though. The darn thing doesn’t rhyme or anything.
-I guess that’s the most important part. Anyway, it’s
-the hardest.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It’s not as bad as it seems,” Haarland told Ross. “I’ve
-asked around. It makes a very little sense.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It does?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, up to a point,” Haarland qualified. “It seems to
-be a formula in genetics. The notation is peculiar, but it’s
-all explained, of course. It has something to do with gene
-loss. Now, maybe that means something and maybe it
-doesn’t. But I know something that does mean something:
-some member of a Wesley Family a couple of hundred
-years ago thought it was important enough to want to get
-it across to other Wesley families. Something’s happening.
-Let’s find out what it is, Ross.” The old man suddenly
-buried his face in his hands. In a cracked voice he mumbled,
-“Gene loss and war. Gene loss or war. God, I wish
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>somebody would take this right out of my hands—or that
-I could drop with a heart attack this minute. You ever
-think of war, Ross?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Shocked and embarrassed, Ross mumbled some kind of
-answer. One might think of war, good breeding taught, but
-one never talked about it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You should,” the old man said hoarsely. “War is what
-this faster-than-light secrecy and identification rigmarole is
-all about. Right now war is impossible—between solar systems,
-anyhow, and that’s what counts. A planet might just
-barely manage to fit an invading multigeneration expedition
-at gigantic cost, but it never would. The fruits of victory—loot,
-political domination, maybe slaves—would never
-come back to the fitters of the expedition but to their remote
-descendants. A firm will take a flyer on a commercial
-deal like that, but no nation would accept a war on any
-such basis—because a conqueror is a man, and men die.
-With F-T-L—faster-than-light travel—they might invade
-Curnus or Azor or any of those other tempting dots on the
-master maps. Why not? Take the marginal population, hop
-them up with patriotic fervor and lust for booty, and ship
-them off to pillage and destroy. There’s at least a fifty per
-cent chance of coming out ahead on the investment, isn’t
-there? Much more attractive deal commercially speaking
-than our present longliners.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross had never seen a war. The last on Halsey’s planet
-had been the Peninsular Rebellion about a century and a
-half ago. Some half a million constitutional psychopathic
-inferiors had started themselves an ideal society with theocratic
-trimmings in a remote and unfruitful corner of the
-planet. Starved and frustrated by an unrealistic moral creed
-they finally exploded to devastate their neighboring areas
-and were quickly quarantined by a radioactive zone. They
-disintegrated internally, massacred their priesthood, and
-were permitted to disperse. It was regarded as a shameful
-episode by every dweller on the planet. It wasn’t a subject
-for popular filmreels; if you wanted to find out about the
-Peninsular Rebellion you went through many successive
-library doors and signed your name on lists, and were
-sternly questioned as to your age and scholarly qualifications
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>and reasons for sniffing around such an unsavory
-mess.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross therefore had not the slightest comprehension of
-Haarland’s anxiety. He told him so.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I hope you’re right,” was all the old man would say. “I
-hope you don’t learn worse.”</p>
-
-<hr class='c008'>
-
-<p class='c007'>The rest was work.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He had the Yard worker’s familiarity with conventional
-rocketry, which saved him some study of the fine-maneuvering
-apparatus of the F-T-L craft—but not much. For
-a week under Haarland’s merciless drilling he jetted the
-ship about its remote area of space, far from the commerce
-lanes, until the old man grudgingly pronounced himself
-satisfied.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There were skull-busting sessions with the Wesley drive,
-or rather with a first derivative of it, an insane-looking object
-which you could vaguely describe as a fan-shaped
-slide rule taller than a man. There were twenty-seven main
-tracks, analogues of the twenty-seven main geodesics of
-Wesley Space—whatever they were and whatever that was.
-Your cursor settings on the main tracks depended on a
-thirty-two step computation based on the apparent magnitudes
-of the twenty-seven nearest celestial bodies above a
-certain mass which varied according to yet another lengthy
-relationship. Then, having cleared the preliminaries out of
-the way, you began to solve for your actual setting on the
-F-T-L drive controls.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Somehow he mastered it, while Haarland, driving himself
-harder than he drove the youth who was to be his
-exploring eyes and ears, coached him and cursed him and—somehow!—kept
-his own complicated affairs going back
-on Halsey’s Planet. When Ross had finally got the theory of
-the Wesley Drive in some kind of order in his mind, and
-had learned all there was to learn about the other worlds,
-and had cut his few important ties with Halsey’s Planet, he
-showed up in Haarland’s planet-based office for a final, repetitive
-briefing.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Marconi was there.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He had trouble meeting Ross’s eyes, but his handclasp
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>was firm and his voice warmly friendly—and a little envious.
-“The very best, Ross,” he said. “I—I wish——” He
-hesitated and stammered. He said, in a flood, “Damn it,
-I should be going! Do a good job, Ross—and I hope you
-don’t hate me.” And he left while Ross, disturbed, went in
-to see old man Haarland.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Haarland spared no time for sentiment. “You’re cleared
-for space flight,” he growled. “According to the visa, you’re
-going to Sunward—in case anyone asks you between here
-and the port. Actually, let’s hear where you <i>are</i> going.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross said promptly, “I am going on a mission of exploration
-and reconnaissance. My first proposed destination
-is Ragansworld; second Gemser, third Azor. If I cannot
-make contact with any of these three planets, I will
-select planets at random from the master charts until I find
-some Wesley Drive families somewhere. The contacts for
-the first three planets are: On Ragansworld, Foley Associates;
-on Gemser, the Franklin Foundation; on Azor,
-Cavallo Machine Tool Company. F-T-L contacts on other
-planets are listed in the appendix to the master charts. The
-co-ordinates for Ragansworld are——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Skip the co-ordinates,” mumbled Haarland, rubbing
-his eyes. “What do you do when you get in contact with a
-Wesley Drive family?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross hesitated and licked his lips. “I—well, it’s a little
-hard——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Dammit,” roared Haarland, “I’ve told you a <i>thousand</i>
-times——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yessir, I know. All I meant was I don’t exactly understand
-what I’m looking for.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If I knew what you were to look for,” Haarland rasped,
-“I wouldn’t have to send you out looking! Can’t you get it
-through your thick head? <i>Something</i> is wrong. I don’t know
-what. Maybe I’m crazy for bothering about it—heaven
-knows, I’ve got troubles enough right here—but we Haarlands
-have a tradition of service, and maybe it’s so old
-that we’ve kind of forgotten just what it’s all about. But
-it’s not so old that I’ve forgotten the family tradition. If I
-had a son, he’d be doing this. I counted on Marconi to be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>my son; now all I have left is you. And that’s little enough,
-heaven knows,” he finished bitterly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross, wounded, said by rote: “On landing, I will attempt
-at once to make contact with the local Wesley Drive
-family, using the recognition codes given me. I will report
-to them on all the data at hand and suggest the need for
-action.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Haarland stood up. “All right,” he said. “Sorry I
-snapped at you. Come on; I’ll go up to the ship with you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>And that was the way it happened. Ross found himself
-in the longliner, then with Haarland in the tiny, ancient,
-faster-than-light ship which had once been tender to the
-ship that colonized Halsey’s Planet. He found himself
-shaking hands with a red-eyed, suddenly-old Haarland,
-watching him crawl through the coupling to the longliner,
-watching the longliner blast away.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He found himself setting up the F-T-L course and throwing
-in the drive.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>
- <h2 class='c005' title='Chapter 5'><span class='xxlarge'><b>..... 5</b></span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>ROSS was lucky. The second listed inhabited
-planet was still inhabited.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He had not quite stopped shuddering from the first
-when the approach radar caught him. The first planet was
-given in the master charts as “Ragansworld. Pop. 900,000,000;
-diam. 9400 m.; mean orbit 0.8 AU,” and its co-ordinates
-went on to describe it as the fourth planet of a
-small G-type sun. There had been some changes made:
-the co-ordinates now intersected well inside a bright and
-turbulent gas cloud.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It appeared that suppressing the F-T-L drive had not
-quite annihilated war.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But the second planet, Gemser—there, he was sure, was
-a world where nothing was seriously awry.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He left the ship mumbling a name to himself: “Franklin
-Foundation.” And he was greeted by a corporal’s guard
-of dignified and ceremonially dressed men; they smiled at
-him, welcomed him, shook his hand, and invited him to
-what seemed to be the local equivalent of the administration
-building. He noticed disapprovingly that they didn’t
-seem to go in for the elaborate decontamination procedures
-of Halsey’s Planet, but perhaps, he thought, they had bred
-disease-resistance into their bloodlines. Certainly the four
-men in his guide party seemed hale and well-preserved,
-though the youngest of them was not less than sixty.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>“I would like,” he said, “to be put in touch with the
-Franklin Foundation, please.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Come right in here,” beamed one of the four, and another
-said:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Don’t worry about a thing.” They held the door for
-him, and he walked into a small and sybaritically furnished
-room. The second man said, “Just a few questions. Where
-are you from?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross said simply, “Halsey’s Planet,” and waited.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Nothing happened, except that all four men nodded
-comprehendingly, and the questioner made a mark on a
-sheet of paper. Ross amplified, “Fifty-three light years
-away. You know—another star.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Certainly,” the man said briskly. “Your name?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross told him, but with a considerable feeling of deflation.
-He thought wryly of his own feelings about the longlines
-and the far stars; he remembered the stir and community
-excitement that a starship meant back home. Still,
-Ross told himself. Halsey’s Planet might be just a back
-eddy in the main currents of civilization. Quite possibly on
-another world—this one, for instance—travelers from the
-stars were a commonplace. The field hadn’t seemed overly
-busy, though; and there was nothing resembling a spaceship.
-Unless—he thought with a sudden sense of shock—those
-rusting hulks clumped together at the edge of the
-field had once been spaceships. But that was hardly likely,
-he reassured himself. You just don’t let spaceships rust.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Sex?” the man asked, and “Age?” “Education?” “Marital
-status?” The questions went on for more time than
-Ross quite understood; and they seemed far from relevant
-questions for the most part; and some of them were hard
-questions to answer. “Tau quotient?” for instance; Ross
-blinked and said, with an edge to his voice:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t know what a tau quotient is.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Put him down as zero,” one of the men advised, and
-the interlocutor nodded happily.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Working-with-others rating?” he asked, beaming.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross said with controlled irritation, “Look, I don’t know
-anything about these ratings. Will you take me to somebody
-who can put me in touch with the Franklin Foundation?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>The man who was sitting next to him patted him gently
-on the shoulder. “Just answer the questions,” he said comfortably.
-“Everything will be all right.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross flared, “The hell everything will——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Something with electrified spikes in it hit him on the
-back of the neck.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross yelled and ducked away; the man next to him returned
-a little rod to his pocket. He smiled at Ross. “Don’t
-feel bad,” he said sympathetically. “Go ahead now, answer
-the questions.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross shook his head dazedly. The pain was already
-leaving his neck, but he felt nauseated by the suddenness
-and sharpness of it; he could not remember any pain quite
-like that in his life. He stood up waveringly and said,
-“Wait a minute, now——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This time it was the man on the other side, and the
-pain was about twice as sharp. Ross found himself on the
-floor, looking up through a haze. The man on his right
-kept the rod in his hand, and the expression on his face,
-while in no way angry, was stern. “Bad boy,” he said tenderly.
-“Why don’t you want to answer the questions?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross gasped, “God damn it, all I want is to see somebody!
-Keep your dirty hands off me, you old fools!” And
-that was a mistake, as he learned in the blessedly few minutes
-before he passed out completely under the little rods
-held by the gentle but determined men.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He answered all the questions—bound to a chair, with
-two of the men behind him, when he had regained consciousness.
-He answered every one. They only had to hit
-him twice.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When they untied him the next morning, Ross had
-caught on to the local folkways quite well. The fatherly
-fellow who released him said, “Follow me,” and stood
-back, smiling but with one hand on one of the little rods.
-And Ross was careful to say:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, sir!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They rode in a three-wheeled car, and entered a barracks-like
-building. Ross was left alone next to a bed in a dormitory
-with half a hundred beds. “Just wait here,” the man
-said, smiling. “The rest of your group is out at their morning
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>session now. When they come in for lunch you can join
-them. They’ll show you what to do.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross didn’t have too long to wait. He spent the time in
-conjecture as confused as it was fruitless; he had obviously
-done something wrong, but just what was it?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>If he had had twice as long he would have got no farther
-toward an answer than he was: nowhere. But a noise outside
-ended his speculations. He glanced toward the curiously
-shaped door—all the doors on this planet seemed
-to be rectangular. A girl of about eighteen was peering inside.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She stared at Ross and said, “Oh!” Then she disappeared.
-There were footsteps and whispers, and more heads
-appeared and blinked at him and were jerked back.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross stood up in wretched apprehension. All of a sudden
-he was fourteen years old again, and entering a new
-school where the old hands were giggling and whispering
-about the new boy. He swore sullenly to himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A new face appeared, halted for an inspection of Ross,
-and walked confidently in. The man was a good forty
-years old, Ross thought; perhaps a kind of overseer in this
-institution—whatever kind of institution it was. He approached
-Ross at a sedate pace, and he was followed
-through the door in single file by a couple score men and
-women. They ranged in age, Ross thought wonderingly,
-from the leader’s forty down to the late teens of the girl
-who had first peered in the door, and now was at the end
-of the procession.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The leader said, “How old are you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why, uh——” Ross figured confusedly: this planet’s
-annual orbital period was roughly forty per cent longer
-than his own; fourteen into his age, multiplied by ten,
-making his age in their local calculations....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why, I’m nineteen of your years old, about. And a
-half.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes. And what can you do?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Look here, sir. I’ve been through all this once. Why
-don’t you go and ask those gentlemen who brought me
-here? And can anybody tell me where the Franklin Foundation
-is?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>The fortyish fellow, with a look of outrage, slapped Ross
-across the mouth. Ross knocked him down with a roundhouse
-right.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A girl yelled, “Good for you, Junior!” and jumped like
-a wildcat onto a slim, gray-haired lady, clawing, and slapping.
-The throng dissolved immediately into a wild melee.
-Ross, busily fighting off the fortyish fellow and a couple of
-his stocky buddies, noted only that the scrap was youth
-against age, whatever it meant.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“How <i>dare</i> you?” a voice thundered, and the rioters
-froze.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A decrepit wreck was standing in the doorway, surrounded
-by three or four gerontological textbook cases
-only a little less spavined than he. “Glory,” a girl muttered
-despairingly. “It would be the minister.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What is the meaning of this brawl?” rolled from the
-wreck’s shriveled lips in a rich basso—no; rolled, Ross
-noted, from a flat perforated plate on his chest. There was
-a small, flesh-colored mike slung before his lips. “Who is
-responsible here?” asked the golden basso.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross’s fortyish assailant said humbly: “I am, sir. This
-new fellow here——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Manners! Speak when you’re spoken to.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Abjectly: “Yes, sir. I’m sorry, sir.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Silly fools!” the senile wreck hectored them. “I’m going
-to take no official notice of this since I’m merely passing
-through. Luckily for you this is no formal inspection. But
-you’ve lost your lunch hour with your asinine pranks. Now
-get back to your work and never let me hear of a disgraceful
-incident like this again from Junior Unit Twenty-Three.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He swept out with his retinue. Ross noted that some of
-the younger girls were crying and that the older men and
-women were glaring at him murderously.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“We’ll teach you manners, you pup,” the foreman-type
-said. “You go on the dye vats this afternoon. Any more
-trouble and you’ll miss a few meals.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross told him: “Just keep your hands off me, mister.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The foreman-type expanded into a beam of pleasure. “I
-thought you’d be sensible,” he said. “Everybody to the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>plant, now!” He collared a pretty girl of about Ross’s age.
-“Helena here is working out a bit of insolence on the dye
-vats herself. She’ll show you.” The girl stood with downcast
-eyes. Ross liked her face and wondered about her
-figure. Whatever it was like, it was covered from neck to
-knee by a loose shirt. But the older women wore fitted
-clothes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The foreman-type led a grand procession through the
-door. Helena told Ross: “I guess you’d better get in front
-of me in line. I go here——” She slipped in deftly, and
-Ross understood a little more of what went on here. The
-procession was in order of age.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He had determined to drift for a day or two—not that
-he seemed to have much choice. The Franklin Foundation,
-supposedly having endured a good many years, would
-last another week while he explored the baffling mores of
-this place and found out how to circumvent them and find
-his way to the keepers of F-T-L on this world. Nobody
-would go anywhere with his own ship—not without first
-running up a setting for the Wesley Drive!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The line filed into a factory whose like Ross had never
-before seen. He had a fair knowledge of and eye for industrial
-processes; it was clear that the place was an electric-cable
-works. But why was the concrete floor dangerously
-cracked and sloppily patched? Why was the big enameling
-oven rumbling and stinking? Why were the rolling mills in
-a far corner unsupplied with guards and big, easy-to-hit
-emergency cutoffs? Why was the light bad and the air full
-of lint? Why did the pickling tank fume and make the
-workers around it cough hackingly? Most pointed of all,
-why did the dye vats to which Helena led him stink and
-slop over?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There were grimy signs everywhere, including the isolated
-bay where braiding cord was dyed the standard code
-colors. The signs said things like: AGE IS A PRIVILEGE
-AND NOT A RIGHT. AGE MUST BE EARNED BY
-WORK. GRATITUDE IS THE INDEX OF YOUR
-PROGRESS TO MATURITY.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena said girlishly as she took his arm and hooked
-him out of the moving line: “Here’s Stinkville. Believe me,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>I’m not going to talk back again. After all, one’s maturity
-is measured by one’s acceptance of one’s environment,
-isn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yeah,” said Ross. “Listen, Helena, have you ever heard
-of a place called the Franklin Foundation?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No,” she said. “First you climb up here—golly! I don’t
-even know your name.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Ross.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“All right, Ross. First you climb up here and make sure
-the yarn’s running over the rollers right; sometimes it gets
-twisted around and then it breaks. Then you take one of the
-thermometers from the wall and you check the vat temperature.
-It says right on the thermometers what it should be
-for the different colors. If it’s off you turn that gas tap up
-or down, just a little. Then you check the wringer rolls
-where the yarn comes out. Watch your fingers when you
-do! The yarn comes in different thicknesses on the same
-thread so you have to adjust the wringer rolls so too much
-dye doesn’t get squeezed out. You can tell by the color; it
-shouldn’t be lighter after it goes through the rolls. But the
-yarn shouldn’t come through sloppy and drip dye on the
-floor while it travels to the bobbin——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There was some more, equally uncomplicated. He took
-the yellow and green vats; she took the red and blue. They
-had worked in the choking stench and heat for perhaps
-three hours before Ross finished one temperature check
-and descended to adjust a gas tap. He found Helena, spent
-and gasping, on the floor, hidden from the rest of the shop
-by the bulky tanks.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Heat knock you out?” he asked briskly. “Don’t try to
-talk. I’ll tote you over by the wall away from the burners.
-Maybe we’ll catch a little breeze from the windows there.”
-She nodded weakly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He picked her up without too much trouble, carried her
-three yards or so to the wall, still isolated from the rest of
-the shop. She was ripely curved under that loose shirt, he
-learned. He set her down easily, crouching himself, and did
-not take his hands away.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It’s been a long time, he thought—and she was responding!
-Whether she knew it or not, there was a drowsy smile
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>on her face and her body moved a little against his hands,
-pleasurably. She was breathing harder.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross did the sensible thing and kissed her.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Wildcat!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross reeled back from her fright and anger, his face
-copiously scratched. “I’m dreadfully sorry,” he sputtered.
-“Please accept my sincerest——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The flare-up of rage ended; she was sobbing bitterly,
-leaning against the wall, wailing that nobody had ever
-treated her like that before, that she’d be set back three
-years if he told anybody, that she was a good, self-controlled
-girl and he had no <i>right</i> to treat her that way, and
-what kind of degenerate was he, not yet twenty and going
-around kissing girls when <i>everybody</i> knew you went crazy
-from it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He soothed her—from a distance. Her sobbing dropped
-to a bilious croon as she climbed the ladder to the yellow
-vat, tears still on her face, and checked its temperature.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross, wondering if he were already crazy from too much
-kissing of girls, mechanically resumed his duties. But she
-had responded. And how long had they been working? And
-wasn’t this shift ever going to end?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>All the shifts ended in time. But there was a catch to it:
-There was always another shift. After the afternoon shift
-on the dye vats came dinner—porridge!—and then came
-the evening shift on the dye vats, and then sleep. The foreman
-was lenient, though; he let Ross off the vats after the
-end of the second day. Then it was kitchen orderly, and
-only two shifts a day. And besides, you got plenty to eat.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But it was a long, long way, Ross thought sardonically to
-himself, from the shining pictures he had painted to himself
-back on Halsey’s Planet. Ross the explorer, Ross the hero,
-Ross the savior of humanity....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross, the semipermanent KP.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He had to admit it to himself: The expedition thus far
-had been a bust. Not only was it perfectly clear that there
-no longer was a Franklin Foundation on Gemser, but more
-had been lost than time and effort. For Ross himself, he
-silently admitted, was as close to lost as he ever wanted to
-be. He was, in effect, a prisoner, in a prison from which
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>there was no easy escape as long as he was cursed with
-youthfulness....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Of course, the implications of that were that there was a
-perfectly easy escape in time. All he had to do was get old
-enough to matter, on this insane planet. Ninety, maybe.
-And then he would be perfectly free to totter out to the
-spaceport, dragoon a squad of juniors into lifting him into
-the ship, and take off....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena was some help. But only psychologically; she was
-pleasant company, but neither she nor anyone else in the
-roster of forty-eight to whom he was permitted to speak had
-ever heard of the Franklin Foundation, or F-T-L travel, or
-anything. Helena said, “Wait for Holiday. Maybe one of
-the grownups will tell you then?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Holiday?” Ross slid back and scratched his shoulder
-blades against the corner of his bed. Helena was sprawled
-on the floor, half watching a projected picture on the screen
-at the end of the dormitory.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes. You’re lucky, it’s only eight days off. That’s when
-Dobermann——” she pointed to the foreman——“graduates;
-he’s the only one this year. And we all move up a step,
-and the new classes come in, and then we all get everything
-we want. Well, pretty near,” she amended. “We can’t do
-anything <i>bad</i>. But you’ll see; it’s nice.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Then the picture ended, and it was calisthenics time, and
-then lights out. Forty-eight men and women on their forty-eight
-bunks—the honor system appeared to work beautifully;
-there had been no signs of sex play that Ross had
-been able to see—slept the sleep of the innocent. While
-Ross, the forty-ninth, lay staring into the dark with rising
-hope.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the kitchen the next morning he got more information
-from Helena. Holiday seemed to be a cross between saturnalia
-and Boy’s Week; for one day of the year the elders
-slightly relaxed their grip on the reins. On that day alone
-one could Speak Before Being Spoken To, Interrupt One’s
-Elders, even Leave the Room without Being Excused.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Whee, Ross thought sourly. But still....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The foreman, Dobermann, once you learned how to handle
-him, wasn’t such a bad guy. Ross, studying his habits,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>learned the proper approach and used it. Dobermann’s
-commonest complaint was of irresponsibility—irresponsibility
-when some thirty-year-old junior was caught sneaking
-into line ahead of his proper place, irresponsibility when
-Ross forgot to make his bed before stumbling out in the
-dark to his kitchen shift, one awful case of irresponsibility
-when Helena thoughtlessly poured cold water into the cooking
-vat while it was turned on. There was a sizzle, a crackle,
-and a puff of steam, and Helena was weeping over a broken
-heating element.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Dobermann came storming over, and Ross saw his
-chance. “That is very irresponsible of you, Helena,” he said
-coldly, back to Dobermann but entirely conscious of his
-presence. “If Junior Unit Twenty-Three was all as irresponsible
-as you, it would reflect badly on Mr. Dobermann.
-You don’t know how lucky you are that Mr. Dobermann
-is so kind to you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena’s weeping dried up instantly; she gave Ross one
-furious glance, and lowered her eyes before Dobermann.
-Dobermann nodded approvingly to Ross as he waded into
-Helena; it was a memorable tirade, but Ross heard only
-part of it. He was looking at the cooking vat; it was a
-simple-minded bit of construction, a spiral of resistance
-wire around a ceramic core. The core had cracked and one
-end of the wire was loose; if it could be reconnected, the
-cracked core shouldn’t matter much—the wire was covered
-with insulation anyhow. He looked up and opened his
-mouth to say something, then remembered and merely
-stood looking brightly attentive.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“——looks like you want to go back to the vats,” the
-foreman was finishing. “Well, Helena, if that’s what you
-want we can make you happy. This time you’ll be by yourself,
-too; you won’t have Ross to help you out when the
-going’s rough. Will she, Ross?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, sir,” Ross said immediately. “Sir?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Dobermann looked back at him, frowning. “What?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I think I can fix this,” Ross said modestly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Dobermann’s eyes bulged. “Fix it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, sir. It’s only a loose wire. Back where I come from,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>we all learned how to take care of things like that when we
-were still in school. It’s just a matter of——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Now, hold on, Ross”; the foreman howled. “Tampering
-with a machine is bad enough, but if you’re going to turn
-out to be a liar, too, you’re going just too far! School, indeed!
-You know perfectly well, Ross, that even I won’t
-be ready for school until after Holiday. Ross, I knew you
-were a troublemaker, knew it the first day I set eyes on you.
-School! Well, we’ll see how you like the school I’m going
-to send you to!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The vats weren’t so bad the second time. Even though
-the porridge was cold for two days, until somebody got
-around to delivering a different though equally worn-out
-cooking vat.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena passed out from the heat three times. And when,
-on the third time, Ross, goaded beyond endurance, kissed
-her again, there were no hysterics.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>
- <h2 class='c005' title='Chapter 6'><span class='xxlarge'><b>..... 6</b></span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>FROM birth to puberty you were an infant.
-From puberty to Dobermann’s age, a junior. For ten
-years after that you went to school, learning the things you
-had neither the need nor the right to know before.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>And then you were Of Age.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Being Of Age meant much, much more than voting, Ross
-found out. For one thing, it meant freedom to marry—after
-the enforced sexlessness of the junior years and the
-directed breeding via artificial insemination of the Scholars.
-It meant a healthy head start on seniority, which carried
-with it all offices and all power.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It meant freedom.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As a bare beginning, it meant the freedom to command
-any number of juniors or scholars. On Ross’s last punitive
-day in the dye vats, a happy ancient commandeered the entire
-staff to help set shrubs in his front lawn—a good dozen
-acres of careful landscaping it was, and the prettiest sight
-Ross had seen on this ugly planet.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When they got back to the dye vats, the yellow and blue
-had boiled over, and broken strands of yarn had fouled
-all the bobbins. Dobermann raged—at the juniors.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But then Dobermann’s raging came to an end forever.
-It was the night before Holiday, and there was a pretty ceremony
-as he packed his kit and got ready to turn Junior Unit
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>Twenty-three over to his successor. Everyone was scrubbed,
-and though a certain amount of license in regard to neatness
-was allowed between dinner and lights out, each
-bunk was made and carefully smoothed free of wrinkles.
-After half an hour of fidgety waiting, Dobermann called—needlessly—for
-attention, and the minister came in with
-his ancient retinue.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The rich mechanical voice boomed out from his breastplate:
-“Junior Dobermann, today you are a man!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Dobermann stood with his head bowed, silent and content.
-Junior Unit Twenty-Three chanted antiphonally:
-“Good-by, Junior Dobermann!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The retinue took three steps forward, and the minister
-boomed, “Beauty comes with age. Age is beauty!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>And the chorus: “Old heads are wisest!” Ross, standing
-as straight as any of them, faked the words with his lips
-and tongue, and wondered how many repetitions had drilled
-those sentiments into Junior Unit Twenty-Three.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There were five more chants, and five responses, and
-then the minister and his court of four were standing next
-to Dobermann. Breathing heavily from his exertions, the
-minister reached behind him and took a book from the
-hands of the nearest of his retinue. He said, panting,
-“Scholar Dobermann, in the Book lies the words of the
-Fathers. Read them and learn.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The chorus cried thrice, “The Word of the Fathers Is
-Law.” And then the minister touched Dobermann’s hand,
-and in solemn silence, left.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As soon as the elders had gone, the juniors flocked
-around Dobermann to wish him well. There was excited
-laughter in the congratulations, and a touch of apprehension
-too: Dobermann, with all his faults, was a known
-quantity, and the members of Junior Unit Twenty-Three
-were beginning to look a little fearfully at the short, redheaded
-youth who, from the next day on, would be Dobermann’s
-successor.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross promised himself: He can be good or bad, a blessing
-or a problem. But he won’t be <i>my</i> problem. I’m getting
-out of here tomorrow!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Holiday.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>“Oh, it’s fun,” Helena told him enthusiastically. “First
-you get up early to get the voting out of the way——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Voting?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Sure. Don’t they vote where you come from? I thought
-everybody voted. That’s democracy, like we have it here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He sardonically quoted one of the omnipresent wall
-signs: “THE HAPPINESS OF THE MAJORITY
-MEANS THE HAPPINESS OF THE MINORITY.” He
-had often wondered what, if anything, it meant. But Helena
-solemnly nodded.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They were whispering from their adjoining cots by dim,
-false dawn filtering through the windows on Holiday morning.
-They were not the only whisperers. Things were relaxing
-already.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Ross,” Helena said.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I thought maybe you might not know. On Holiday if
-you, ah, want to do that again you don’t have to wait until
-I faint. Ah, of course you don’t do it right out in the open.”
-Overcome by her own daring she buried her head under
-the coarse blanket.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Fine, thought Ross wearily. Once a year—or did Holiday
-come once a year?—the kids were allowed to play
-“Spin The Bottle.” No doubt their elders thought it was
-too cute for words: mere tots of thirty and thirty-five
-childishly and innocently experimenting with sex. Of course
-it would be discreetly supervised so that nobody would
-Get In Trouble.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He was quite sure Helena’s last two faints had been unconvincing
-phonies.</p>
-
-<hr class='c008'>
-
-<p class='c007'>The wake-up whistle blew at last. The chattering members
-of Junior Unit Twenty-Three dawdled while they
-dressed, and the new foreman indulgently passed out shabby,
-smutted ribbons which the girls tied in their hair. They
-had sugar on their mush for breakfast, and Ross’s stomach
-came near turning as he heard burbles of gratitude at the
-feast.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>With pushing and a certain amount of inexpert horseplay
-they formed a column of fours and hiked from the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>hall—from the whole factory complex, indeed, along a
-rubberized highway.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Once you got out of the factory area things became
-pleasanter by the mile. Hortatory roadside signs thinned
-out and vanished. Stinking middens of industrial waste
-were left behind. And then the landscape was rolling,
-sodded acres with the road pleasantly springy underfoot,
-the air clean and crisp.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They oohed and aahed at houses glimpsed occasionally
-in the distance—always rambling, one-story affairs that
-looked spanking-new.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Once a car overhauled them on the highway and slowed
-to a crawl. It was a huge thing, richly upholstered within.
-A pair of grimlooking youths were respectively chauffeur
-and footman; the passenger waved at the troop from Junior
-Twenty-Three and grinned out of a fantastic landscape of
-wrinkles. Ross gaped. Had he thought the visiting minister
-was old? This creature, male or female, was <i>old</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>After the car sped on, to the cheers of the marchers,
-there was happy twittering speculation. Junior Twenty-Three
-didn’t recognize the Citizen who had graciously
-waved to them, but they thought he—or she?—was wonderful.
-So dignified, so distinguished, so learned, so gracious,
-so democratic!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Wasn’t it sweet of him?” Helena burbled. “And I’m sure
-he must be somebody important connected with the voting,
-otherwise he’d just vote from home.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross’s feet were beginning to hurt when they reached the
-suburban center. To the best of his recollection, they were
-no more than eight or ten kilos from the field and his starship.
-Backtrack on the road to the suburban center about
-three kilos, take the fork to the right, and that would be
-that.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Junior Twenty-Three reached a pitch of near-ecstasy
-marveling at the low, spacious buildings of the center.
-Through sweeping, transparent windows they saw acres of
-food and clothing in the shopping center; the Drive-In
-Theater was an architectural miracle. The Civic Center almost
-finished them off, with its statue of Equal Justice
-Under the Law (a dignified beldame whose chin and nose
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>almost met, leaning on a gem-crusted crutch) and Civic
-Virtue (in a motorized wheelchair equipped with an emergency
-oxygen tent, Lindbergh-Carrel auxiliary blood pump
-and an artificial kidney).</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Merry oldsters were everywhere in their cars and wheelchairs,
-gaily waving at the kids. Only one untoward incident
-marred their prevoting tour of inspection. A thick-headed
-young man mistakenly called out a cheerful: “Life
-and wisdom, ma’am!” to a beaming oldster.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Ma’am, is it?” the oldster roared through his throat
-mike and amplifier in an unmistakable baritone. “I’ll
-ma’am you, you wise punk!” He spun his wheelchair on a
-decishield, threw it into high and roared down on the
-offender, running him over. The boy covered himself as
-well as he could while the raging old man backed over him
-again and ran over him again. His ordeal ended when the
-oldster collapsed forward in the chair, hanging from his
-safety belt.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The boy got up with tire marks on him and groaned:
-“Oh, lord! I’ve hurt him.” He appealed hysterically:
-“What’ll I do? Is he dead?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Another Senior Citizen buzzed up and snapped: “Cut in
-his L-C heart, you booby!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The boy turned on the Lindbergh-Carrel pump, trembling.
-The white-faced juniors of Twenty-Three watched as
-the tubes to the oldster’s left arm throbbed and pulsed. A
-massive sigh went up when the old man’s eyes opened and
-he sat up groggily. “What happened?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You died again, Sherrington,” said the other elder.
-“Third time this week—good thing there was a responsible
-person around. Now get over to the medical center this
-minute and have a complete checkup. Hear me?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, Dad,” Sherrington said weakly. He rolled off in
-low gear.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>His father turned to the youngster who stood vacantly
-rubbing the tire marks on his face. “Since it’s Holiday,” he
-grated, “I’ll let this pass. On any other day I would have
-seen to it that you were set back fifteen years for your disgraceful
-negligence.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross knew by then what that meant, and shuddered with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>the rest. It amounted to a death sentence, did fifteen additional
-years of the grinding toil and marginal diet of a
-junior.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Somewhat dampened they proceeded to the Hall of
-Democracy, a glittering place replete with slogans, statues,
-and heroic portraits of the heroic aged. Twenty-Three huddled
-together as it joined with a stream of juniors from the
-area’s other factory units. Most of them were larger than
-the cable works; many of them, apparently, involved more
-wearing and hazardous occupations. Some groups coughed
-incessantly and were red-eyed from the irritation of some
-chemical. Others must have been heavy-manual-labor specialists.
-They were divided into the hale, whose muscles
-bulged amazingly, and the dying—men and women who
-obviously could not take the work but who were doing it
-anyway.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They seated themselves at long benches, with push buttons
-at each station. Helena, next to him, explained the
-system to Ross. Voting was universal and simultaneous, in
-all the Halls of Democracy around the planet and from all
-the homes of the Senior Citizens who did not choose to
-vote from a Hall. Simultaneously the votes were counted
-at a central station and the results were flashed to screens
-in the Centers and homes. She said a number of enthusiastic
-things about Democracy while Ross studied a sheet on
-which the candidates and propositions were listed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The names meant nothing to him. He noted only that
-each of three candidates for Chief of State was one hundred
-thirty years old, that each of three candidates for First Assistant
-Chief was one hundred and twenty-seven years old,
-and so on. Obviously the nominating conventions by agreement
-named candidates of the same age for each office to
-keep it a contest.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Proposition One read: “To dismantle seven pediatric
-centers and apply the salvage value to the construction of,
-and the funds no longer required for their maintenance to
-the maintenance of, a new wing of the Gerontological Center,
-said wing to be devoted to basic research in the extension
-of human life.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Proposition Two was worse. Ross didn’t bother to read
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>the rest of them. He whispered hoarsely to Helena, “What
-next?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Ssh!” She pointed to a screen at the front of the Hall.
-“It’s starting.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A Senior Citizen of a very high rank (his face was entirely
-hidden by an oxygen mask) was speaking from the
-screen. There was what seemed to be a ritual speech of invocation,
-then he got down to business. “Citizens,” he said
-through his throat mike, “behold Democracy in Action! I
-give you three candidates for Chief of State—look them
-over, and make up your minds. First, Citizen Raphael
-Flexner, age one century, three decades, seven months,
-ten days.” Senior Citizen Flexner rolled on screen, spoke
-briefly through his throat mike and rolled off. The first
-speaker said again, “Behold Democracy in Action! See
-now Citizen Sheridan Farnsworth, age one century, three
-decades, ten months, forty-two days.” Applause boomed
-louder; some of the younger juniors yelled hysterically and
-drummed their heels on the floor.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena was panting with excitement, eyes bright on the
-screen. “Isn’t it <i>wonderful</i>?” she gasped ecstatically. “Oh,
-look at <i>him</i>!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Him” was the third candidate, and the first oldster
-Ross had seen whose gocart was a wheeled stretcher. Prone
-and almost invisible through the clusters of tubing and
-chromed equipment, Senior Citizen Immanuel Appleby
-acknowledged his introduction—“Age one century, three
-decades, eleven months and five days!” The crowd went
-mad; Helena broke from Ross’s side and joined a long
-yelling snake dance through the corridors.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross yelled experimentally as protective coloration, then
-found himself yelling because everybody was yelling, because
-he couldn’t help it. By the time the speaker on the
-screen began to call for order, Ross was standing on top
-of the voting bench and screaming his head off.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena, weeping with excitement, tugged at his leg.
-“Vote now, Ross,” she begged, and all over the hall the
-cry was “Vote! Vote!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross reached out for the voting buttons. “What do we
-do now?” he asked Helena.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>“Push the button marked ‘Appleby,’ of course. Hurry!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But why Appleby?” Ross objected. “That fellow Flexner,
-for instance——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Hush, Ross! Somebody might be listening.” There was
-sickening fright on Helena’s face. “Didn’t you hear? We
-<i>have</i> to vote for the best man. ‘Oldest Is Bestest,’ you know.
-That’s what Democracy <i>means</i>, the freedom of choice.
-They read us the ages, and we choose which is oldest. Now
-please, Ross, hurry before somebody starts asking questions!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The voting was over, and the best man had won in
-every case. It was a triumph for informed public opinion.
-The mob poured out of the hall in happy-go-lucky order,
-all precedences and formalities suspended for Holiday.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena grasped Ross firmly by the arm. The crowd was
-spreading over the quiet acres surrounding the Center,
-each little cluster heedlessly intent on a long-planned project
-of its own. Under the pressure of Helena’s arm, Ross
-found himself swerving toward a clump of shrubbery.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He said violently, “No! That is, I mean I’m sorry,
-Helena, but I’ve got something to do.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She stared at him with shock in her eyes. “On Holiday?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“On Holiday. Truly, Helena, I’m sorry. Look, what you
-said last night—from now till tomorrow morning, I can do
-what I want, right?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Sullenly, “Yes. I <i>thought</i>, Ross, that I <i>knew</i> what——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Okay.” He jerked his arm away, feeling like all of the
-hundred possible kinds of a skunk. “See you around,” he
-said over his shoulder. He did not look back.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Three kilos back, he told himself firmly, then the right-hand
-fork in the road. And not more than a dozen kilos,
-at the most, to the spaceport. He could do it in a couple of
-hours.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>One thing had been established for certain: If ever there
-had been a “Franklin Foundation” on this planet, it was
-gone for good now. Dismantled, no doubt, to provide
-building materials for an eartrumpet plant. No doubt the
-little F-T-L ship that the Franklin Foundation was supposed
-to cover for was still swinging in an orbit within
-easy range of the spaceport; but the chance that anybody
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>would ever find it, or use it if found, was pretty close to
-zero. If they bothered to maintain a radar watch at all—any
-other watch than the fully automatic one set to respond
-only to highvelocity interstellar ships—and if anyone ever
-took time to look at the radar plot, no doubt the F-T-L ship
-was charted. As an asteroid, satellite, derelict or “body of
-unknown origin.” Certainly no one of these smug oldsters
-would take the trouble to investigate.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The only problem to solve on this planet was how to
-get off it—fast.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>On the road ahead of him was what appeared to be a
-combination sex orgy and free-for-all. It rolled in a yelling,
-milling mob of half a hundred excited juniors across the
-road toward him, then swerved into the fields as a cluster
-of screaming women broke free and ran, and the rest of
-the crowd roared after them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross quickened his step. If he ever did get off this planet,
-it would have to be today; he was not fool enough to think
-that any ordinary day would give him the freedom to poke
-around the spaceport’s defenses. And it would be just his
-luck, he thought bitterly, to get involved in a gang fight
-on the way to the port.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There was a squeal of tires behind him, and a little vehicle
-screeched to a halt. Ross threw up a defensive arm
-in automatic reflex.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But it was only Helena, awkwardly fumbling open the
-door of the car. “Get in,” she said sourly. “You’ve spoiled
-<i>my</i> Holiday. Might as well do what <i>you</i> want to do.”</p>
-
-<hr class='c008'>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What’s that?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena looked where he was pointing, and shrugged.
-“Guard box,” she guessed. “How would I know? Nobody’s
-in it, anyhow.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross nodded. They had abandoned the car and were
-standing outside a long, seamless fence that surrounded
-the spaceport. The main gates were closed and locked; a
-few hundred feet to the right was a smaller gate with a sort
-of pillbox, but that had every appearance of being locked
-too.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>“All right,” said Ross. “See that shed with the boxes
-outside it? Over we go.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The shed was right up against the fence; the metal boxes
-gave a sort of rough and just barely climbable foothold.
-Helena was easy enough to lift to the top of the shed; Ross,
-grunting, managed to clamber after her.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They looked down at the ground on the other side, a
-dozen feet away. “You don’t have to come along,” Ross
-told her.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That’s just <i>like</i> you!” she flared. “Cast me aside—trample
-on me!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“All right, all right.” Ross looked around, but neither
-junior nor elder was anywhere in sight. “Hang by your
-hands and then drop,” he advised her. “Get moving before
-somebody shows up.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“On Holiday?” she asked bitterly. She squirmed over
-the narrow top of the fence, legs dangling, let herself
-down as far as she could, and let go. Ross watched anxiously,
-but she got up quickly enough and moved to one
-side.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross plopped down next to her, knocking the wind out
-of himself. He got up dizzily.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>His ship, in lonesome quiet, was less than a quarter of a
-mile away. “Let’s go,” Ross panted, and clutched her
-hand. They skirted another shed and were in the clear,
-running as fast as they could.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Almost in the clear.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross heard the whine of the little scooter before he felt
-the blow, but it was too late. He sprawled on the ground,
-dragging Helena after him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A Senior Citizen with a long-handled rod of the sort
-Ross remembered all too well was scowling down at them.
-“Children,” he rumbled through his breast-speaker in a
-voice of awful disgust, “is this the way to act on Holiday?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena, gibbering in terror, was beyond words. Ross
-croaked, “Sorry, sir. We—we were just——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Crash! The rod came down again, and every muscle in
-Ross’s body convulsed. He rolled helplessly away, the elder
-following him. Crash! “We give you Holiday,” the elder
-boomed, “and——” crash “——you act like animals.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>Terrible! Don’t you know that freedom of play on Holiday——”
-crash “——is the most sacred right of every
-junior——” crash “——and heaven help you——” crash
-“——if you abuse it!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The wrenching punishment and the caressing voice
-stopped together. Ross lay blinking into the terrible silence
-that followed. He became conscious of Helena’s weeping,
-and forced his head to turn to look at her.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She was standing behind the elder’s scooter, a length of
-wire in her hand. The senior lay slumped against his safety
-strap. “Ross!” she moaned. “Ross, what have I done? <i>I
-turned him off!</i>”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He stood up, coughing and retching. No one else was
-in sight, only the two of them and the silent, slack form of
-the old man. He grabbed her arm. “Come on,” he said
-fuzzily, and started toward the starship.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She hung back, mumbling to herself, her eyes saucers.
-She was in a state of grievous shock, it was clear.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross hesitated, rubbing his back. He knew that she
-might never pull out of it. Even if she did, she was certain
-to be a frightful handicap. But it was crystal-clear that she
-had declared herself on his side. Even if the elder could be
-revived, the punishment in store for Helena would be awful
-to contemplate....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Come what may, he was now responsible for Helena.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He towed her to the starship. She climbed in docilely
-enough, sat staring blankly as he sealed ship and sent it
-blasting off the face of the planet.</p>
-
-<hr class='c008'>
-
-<p class='c007'>She didn’t speak until they were well into deep space.
-Then the blank stare abruptly clouded and she exploded
-in a fit of tears. Ross said ineffectually, “There, there.” It
-had no effect; until, in its own time, the storm ended.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena said hoarsely, “Wh-what do I do now?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why, I guess you come right along with me,” Ross said
-heartily, cursing his luck.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Where’s that?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Where? You mean, where?” Ross scratched his head.
-“Well, let’s see. Frankly, Helena, your planet was quite a
-disappointment to me. I had hoped——Well, no matter.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>I suppose the best thing to do is to look up the next planet
-on the list.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What list?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross hesitated, then shrugged and plunged into the explanation.
-All about the longliners and the message and
-faster-than-light travel and the Wesley Families—and none
-of it, while he was talking, seemed convincing at all. But
-perhaps Helena was less critical; or perhaps Helena simply
-did not care. She listened attentively and made no comment.
-She only said, at the end, “What’s the name of the
-next planet?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He consulted the master charts. Haarland’s listing
-showed a place called Azor, conveniently near at hand in
-the strange geodesics of the Wesley Effect, where the far
-galaxies might be near at hand in the warped space-lines,
-and the void just beyond the viewplates be infinitely distant.
-The F-T-L family of Azor was named Cavallo; when
-last heard from, they had been builders of machine tools.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross told Helena about it. She shrugged and watched
-curiously as he began to set up the F-T-L problem on the
-huge board.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>
- <h2 class='c005' title='Chapter 7'><span class='xxlarge'><b>..... 7</b></span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>THEY were well within detection range
-of Azor’s radar, if any, and yet there had been no beeping
-signal that the planet’s GCA had taken over and would
-pilot them down. Another blank? He studied the surface
-of the world under his highest magnification and saw no
-signs that it had been devastated by war. There were
-cities—intact, as far as he could tell, but not very attractive.
-The design ran to huge, gloomy piles that mounted toward
-central towers.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Azor was a big world which showed not much water
-and a great deal of black rock. It was the fifth of its system
-and reportedly had colonized its four adjacent neighbors
-and their moons.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>His own search radar pinged. The signal was followed at
-once by a guarded voice from his ship-to-ship communicator:
-“What ship are you? Do you receive me? The band is
-798.44.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He hastily dialed the frequency on his transmitter and
-called, “I receive you. We are a vessel from outside your
-solar system, home planet Halsey. We want to contact a
-family named Cavallo of the planet Azor believed to be
-engaged in building machine tools. Can you help us?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You are a male?” the voice asked cautiously. “In command
-or simply the communicator?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>“I’m a male and I’m in command of this vessel.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The voice said: “Then sheer off this system and go elsewhere,
-my friend.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What is this? Who are you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My name does not matter. I happen to be on watch
-aboard the prison orbital station ‘Minerva.’ Get going, my
-friend, before the planetary GCA picks you up.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Prison orbital station? A very sensible idea. “Thanks for
-the advice,” he parried. “Can you tell me anything about
-the Cavallo family?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I have heard of them. My friend, your time is running
-out. If you do not sheer off very soon they will land you.
-And I judge from the tone of your voice that it will not
-be long before you join the rest of us criminals aboard
-‘Minerva.’ It is not pleasant here. Good-by.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Wait, please!” Ross had no intention at all of committing
-any crimes that would land him aboard a prison
-hulk, and he had every intention of fulfilling his mission.
-“Tell me about the Cavallo family—and why you expect
-me to get in trouble on Azor.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The time is running out, my friend, but—the Cavallo
-family of machine tool builders is located in Novj Grad.
-And the crime of which all of us aboard ‘Minerva’ were
-convicted is conspiracy to advocate equality of the sexes.
-Now go!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The carrier-wave hum of the communicator died, but
-immediately there was another electronic noise to fill the
-cabin—the beep of a GCA radar taking over the sealed
-landing controls of the craft.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena had been listening with very little comprehension.
-“Who was your friend, Ross?” she asked. “Where
-are we?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I think,” Ross said, “he <i>was</i> my friend. And I think
-we are—in trouble.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The ship began to jet tentative bursts of reaction mass,
-nosing toward the big, gloomy planet.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That’s all right,” Helena said comfortably. “At least
-they won’t know I disconnected a Senior Citizen.” She
-thought a moment. “They won’t, will they? I mean, the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>Senior Citizens here won’t know about the Senior Citizens
-there, will they?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He tried to break it to her gently as the ship picked up
-speed. “Helena, it’s possible that the old people here won’t
-be Senior Citizens—not in your planet’s sense. They may
-just be old people, with no special authority over young
-people. I think, in fact, that we may find you outranking
-older people who happen to be males.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She took it as a joke. “You are funny, Ross. Old means
-Senior, doesn’t it? And Senior means better, wiser, abler,
-and in charge, doesn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“We’ll see,” he said thoughtfully as the main reaction
-drive cut in. “We’ll see very shortly.”</p>
-
-<hr class='c008'>
-
-<p class='c007'>The spaceport was bustling, busy, and efficient. Ross
-marveled at the speed and dexterity with which the anonymous
-ground operator whipped his ship into a braking orbit
-and set it down. And he stared enviously at the crawling
-clamshells on treads, bigger than houses, that cupped
-around his ship; the ship was completely and hermetically
-surrounded, and bathed in a mist of germicides and prophylactic
-rays.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A helmeted figure riding a little platform on the inside
-of one of the clamshells turned a series of knobs, climbed
-down, and rapped on the ship’s entrance port.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross opened it diffidently, and almost strangled in the
-antiseptic fumes. Helena choked and wheezed behind him
-as the figure threw back its helmet and said, “Where’s the
-captain?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I am he,” said Ross meticulously. “I would like to be
-put in touch with the Cavallo Machine-Tool Company of
-Novj Grad.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The figure shook its long hair loose, which provided Ross
-with the necessary clue: it was a woman. Not a very attractive-looking
-woman, for she wore no makeup; but by
-the hair, by the brows and by the smoothness of her chin,
-a woman all the same. She said coldly, “If you’re the captain,
-who’s that?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena said in a small voice, “I’m Helena, from Junior
-Unit Twenty-Three.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>“Indeed.” Suddenly the woman smiled. “Well, come
-ashore, dear,” she said. “You must be tired from your
-trip. Both of you come ashore,” she added graciously.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She led the way out of the clamshells to a waiting closed
-car. Azor’s sun had an unpleasant bluish cast to it, not a
-type-G at all; Ross thought that the lighting made the woman
-look uglier than she really had to be. Even Helena
-looked pinched and bloodless, which he knew well was
-not the case at all.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>All around them was activity. Whatever this planet’s
-faults, it was not a stagnant home for graybeards. Ross,
-craning, saw nothing that was shoddy, nothing that would
-have looked out of place in the best-equipped port of
-Halsey’s Planet. And the reception lounge, or whatever it
-was, that the woman took them to was a handsome and
-prettily furnished construction. “Some lunch?” the woman
-asked, directing her attention to Helena. “A cup of tribrew,
-maybe? Let me have the boy bring some.” Helena looked
-to Ross for signals, and Ross, gritting his teeth, nodded
-to her to agree. Too young the last time, too male this
-time; was there ever going to be a planet where he mattered
-to anyone?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He said desperately, “Madam, forgive my interruption,
-but this lady and myself need urgently to get in touch with
-the Cavallo company. Is this Novj Grad?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The woman’s pale brows arched. She said, with an effort,
-“No, it is not.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then can you tell us where Novj Grad is?” Ross persisted.
-“If they have a spaceport, we can hop over there
-in our ship——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The woman gasped something that sounded like, “Well!”
-She stood up and said pointedly to Helena, “If you’ll excuse
-me, I have something to attend to.” And swept out.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena stared wide-eyed at Ross. “She must’ve been a
-real Senior Citizen, huh?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Not exactly,” said Ross despairingly. “Look, Helena,
-things are different here. I need your help.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Help?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, help!” he bellowed. “Get a grip on yourself, girl.
-Remember what I told you about the planet I came from?
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>It was different from yours, remember? The old people
-were just like anybody else.” She giggled in embarrassment.
-“They were!” he yelled. “And they are here, too.
-Old people, young people, doesn’t matter. On my planet,
-the richest people were—well, never mind. On this planet,
-women are the bosses. Get it? Women are like elders. So
-you’ll have to take over, Helena.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She was looking at him with a puzzled frown. She objected,
-“But if women are——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“They are. Never mind about that part of it now; just
-remember that for the purposes of getting along here,
-you’re going to be my boss. You tell me what to do. You
-talk to everybody. And what you have to say to them is
-this: You must get to Novj Grad immediately, and talk
-to a high-ranking member of the Cavallo Machine-Tool
-Company. Clear? Once we get there, I’ll take over; everything
-will be under control then.” He added prayerfully,
-“I hope.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena blinked at him. “I’m going to be your boss?”
-she asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That’s right.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Like an elder bosses a junior? And it’s legal?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross started to repeat, “That’s right,” impatiently again.
-But there was a peculiar look in Helena’s round eyes.
-“Helena!” he said warningly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She was all concern. “Why, what is it, Ross?” she asked
-solicitously. “You look upset. Just leave everything to me,
-dear.”</p>
-
-<hr class='c008'>
-
-<p class='c007'>They got started on the way to Novj Grad—not in their
-ship (the woman had said there was no spaceport in Novj
-Grad), and not alone, so that Ross could not confirm his
-unhappy opinion of Helena’s inner thoughts. But at least
-they were on their way to Novj Grad in the Azorian
-equivalent of a chartered aircraft, with Helena chatting
-happily with the female pilot, and Ross sitting uncomfortably
-on a narrow, upholstered strip behind.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Everything he saw in Azor confirmed his first impressions.
-The planet was busy and prosperous. Nobody
-seemed to be doing anything very productive, he thought,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>but somehow everything seemed to get done. Automatic
-machinery, he guessed; if women were to have any chance
-of gaining the upper hand on a planet, most of the hard
-physical work would have to be fairly well mechanized
-anyhow. And particularly on this planet. They had been
-flying for six hours, at a speed he guessed to be not much
-below that of sound, and fully half of the territory they
-passed over was bare, black rock.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The ship began losing altitude, and the pilot, who had
-been curled up in a relaxed position, totally ignoring the
-aircraft, glanced at her instrument panel. “Coming in for
-a landing,” she warned. “Don’t distract me right now,
-dear, I’ve got a thousand things to do.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She didn’t seem to be doing any of them, Ross thought
-disapprovingly; all she did was watch varicolored lights
-blink on and off. But no doubt the ship landing, too, was
-as automatic as the piloting.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena turned and leaned back to Ross. “We’re coming
-in for a landing,” she relayed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross said sourly, “I heard.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena gave him a look of reprimand and forgiveness.
-“I’m hungry,” she mused.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The pilot turned from her controls. “You can get something
-at the airport,” she offered eagerly. “I’ll show you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena looked at Ross. “Would you like something?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But the pilot frowned. “I don’t believe there’s any place
-for men,” she said disapprovingly. “Perhaps we can get
-something sent out for him if you like. Although, really,
-it’s probably against the rules, you know.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross started to say with great dignity, “Thank you, but
-that won’t be necessary.” But he didn’t quite get it out.
-The ship came in for its landing. There was an enormous
-jolt and a squawk of alarm bells and flashing lights. The
-ship careened crazily, and stopped.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, darn,” complained the pilot mildly. “It’s always
-doing that. Come on, dear, let’s get something to eat.
-We’ll come back for <i>him</i> later.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>And Ross was left alone to stare apprehensively at the
-unceasingly flashing lights and to listen to the strident
-alarms for three-quarters of an hour.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>His luck was in, though. The ship didn’t explode. And
-eventually a pallid young man in a greasy apron appeared
-with a tray of sandwiches and a vacuum jug.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Up here, boy,” Ross called.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He gaped through the port. “You mean come in?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Sure. It’s all right.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The young man put down the tray. Something in the
-way he looked at it prompted Ross to invite him: “Have
-some with me? More here than I can handle.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Thanks; I believe I will. I, uh, was supposed to take
-my break after I brought you this stuff.” He poured steaming
-brew into the cup that covered the jug, politely pushed
-it to Ross and swigged from the jug himself. “You’re with
-the starship?” he asked, around a mouthful of sandwich.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes. I—the captain, that is—wants to contact an outfit
-called Cavallo Machine-Tool. You know where they
-are?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Sure. Biggest firm on the south side. Fifteen Street;
-you can’t miss them. The captain—is she the lady who
-was with Pilot Breuer?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The youngster’s eyes widened. “You mean you were in
-space—alone—with a lady?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross nodded and chewed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And she didn’t—uh—there wasn’t—well—any problem?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No,” said Ross. “You have much trouble with that
-kind of thing?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The boy winced. “If I’ve asked once I’ve asked a hundred
-times for a transfer. Oh, those jet pilots! I used to
-work in a roadside truck stop. I know truckers are supposed
-to be rough and tough; maybe they are. But you
-can’t tell me that deep down a trucker isn’t a lady. When
-you tell them no, that’s that. But a pilot—it just eggs them
-on. Azor City today, Novj Grad tomorrow—what do they
-care?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross was fascinated and baffled. It seemed to him that
-they should care and care plenty. Back where he came
-from, it was the woman who paid and he couldn’t imagine
-any cultural setup which could alter that biological fact.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>He asked cautiously: “Have you ever been—in trouble?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The boy stiffened and looked disapproving. Then he
-said with a sigh: “I might as well tell you. It’s all over the
-station anyway; they call me ‘Bernie the Pullover.’ Yes.
-Twice. Pilots both times. I can’t seem to say no——” He
-took another long pull from the jug and a savage bite
-from a second sandwich.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I’m sure,” Ross said numbly, “it wasn’t your fault.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Try telling that to the judge,” Bernie the Pullover said
-bitterly. “The pilot speaks her piece, the medic puts the
-blood group tests in evidence, the doctor and crèche director
-depose that the child was born and is still living.
-Then the judge says, without even looking up, ‘Paternity
-judgment to the plaintiff, defendant ordered to pay one
-thousand credits annual support, let this be a warning to
-you, young man, next case.’ I shouldn’t have joined you
-and eaten your sandwiches, but the fact is I was hungry.
-I had to sell my meal voucher yesterday to meet my payment.
-Miss three payments and——” He jerked his thumb
-heavenward.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross thought and realized that the thumb must indicate
-the orbiting prison hulk “Minerva.” It <i>was</i> the man who
-paid here.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He demanded: “How did all this happen?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Bernie, having admitted his hunger, had stopped stalling
-and seized a third sandwich. “All what?” he asked indistinctly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross thought hard and long. He realized first that he
-could probably never explain what he meant to Bernie,
-and second that if he did they’d probably both wind up
-aboard “Minerva” for conspiracy to advocate equality.
-He shifted his ground. “Of course everybody agrees on
-the natural superiority of women,” he said, “but people
-seem to differ from planet to planet as to the reasons.
-What do they say here on Azor?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh—nothing special or fancy. Just the common-sense,
-logical thing. They’re smaller, for one thing, and haven’t
-got the muscles of men, so they’re natural supervisors.
-They accumulate money as a matter of course because
-men die younger and women are the beneficiaries. Then,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>women have a natural aptitude for all the interesting jobs.
-I saw a broadcast about that just the other night. The biggest
-specialist on the planet in vocational aptitude. I forget
-her name, but she proved it conclusively.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He looked at the empty platter before them. “I’ve got
-to go now. Thanks for everything.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The pleasure was mine.” Ross watched his undernourished
-figure head for the station. He swore a little, and
-then buckled down to some hard thinking. Helena was his
-key to this world. He’d have to have a long skull-session
-or two with her; he couldn’t be constantly prompting her
-or there would be serious trouble. She would be the front
-and he would be the very inconspicuous brains of the outfit,
-trailing humbly behind. But was she capable of absorbing
-a brand-new, rather complicated concept? She seemed
-to be, he told himself uncomfortably, in love with him.
-That would help considerably....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena and Pilot Breuer showed up, walking with a
-languor that suggested a large and pleasant meal disposed
-of. Helena’s first words disposed with shocking speed of
-Ross’s doubts that she was able to acquire a brand-new
-sociological concept. They were: “Ah, there you are, my
-dear. Did the boy bring you something or other to eat?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes. Thanks. Very thoughtful of you,” he said pointedly,
-with one eye on Breuer’s reaction. There was none;
-he seemed to have struck the right note.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Pilot Breuer,” said Helena blandly, “thinks I’d enjoy
-an evening doing the town with her and a few friends.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But the Cavallo people——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Ross,” she said gently, “don’t <i>nag</i>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He shut up. And thought: wait until I get her out into
-space. <i>If</i> I get her out into space. She’d be a damned fool
-to leave this wacked-up culture....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Breuer was saying, with an altogether too-innocent air,
-“I’d better get you two settled in a hotel for the night; then
-I’ll pick up Helena and a few friends and we’ll show her
-what old Novj Grad has to offer in the way of night life.
-Can’t have her batting around the universe saying Azor’s
-sidewalks are rolled up at 2100, can we? And then she can
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>do her trading or whatever it is with Cavallo bright and
-early tomorrow, eh?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross realized that he was being jollied out of an attack
-of the sulks. He didn’t like it.</p>
-
-<hr class='c008'>
-
-<p class='c007'>The hotel was small and comfortable, with a bar crowded
-by roistering pilots and their dates. The glimpses Ross got
-of social life on Azor added up to a damnably unfair picture.
-It was the man who paid. Breuer roguishly tested the
-mattress in their room, nudging Helena, and then announced,
-“Get settled, kids, while I visit the bar.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When the door rolled shut behind her Ross said furiously:
-“Look, you! Protective mimicry’s fine up to a point,
-but let’s not forget what this mission is all about. We seem
-to be suckered into spending the night, but by hell tomorrow
-morning bright and early we find those Cavallo people—”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“There,” Helena said soothingly. “Don’t be angry, Ross.
-I promise I won’t be out late, and she really did insist.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I suppose so,” he grumbled. “Just remember it’s no
-pleasure trip.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Not for you, perhaps,” she smiled sweetly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He let it drop there, afraid to push the matter.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Breuer returned in about ten minutes with a slight glow
-on. “It’s all fixed,” she told Helena. “Got a swell crowd
-lined up. Table at Virgin Willie’s—oops!” She glanced at
-Ross. “No harm in it, of course,” she said. “Anything you
-want, Ross, just dial service. It’s on my account. I fixed it
-with the desk.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Thanks.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They left, and Ross went grumpily to bed.</p>
-
-<hr class='c008'>
-
-<p class='c007'>A secretive rustle in the room awoke him. “Helena?” he
-asked drowsily.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Pilot Breuer’s voice giggled drunkenly, “Nope. Helena’s
-passed out at Virgin Willie’s, kind of the way I figured she
-would be on triple antigravs. Had my eye on you since Azor
-City, baby. You gonna be nice to me?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Get out of here!” Ross hissed furiously. “Out of here or
-I’ll yell like hell.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>“So yell,” she giggled. “I got the house dick fixed. They
-know me here, baby——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He fumbled for the bedside light and snapped it on. “I’ll
-pitch you right through the door,” he announced. “And if
-you give me any more lip I won’t bother to open it before
-I do.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She hiccupped and said, “A spirited lad. That’s the way
-I like ’em.” With one hand she drew a nasty-looking little
-pistol. With the other she pulled a long zipper and stepped
-out of her pilot’s coveralls.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross gulped. There were three ways to play this, the
-smart way, the stupid way, and the way that all of a sudden
-began to look attractive. He tried the stupid way.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He got the pistol barrel alongside his ear for his pains.
-“Don’t jump me,” Pilot Breuer giggled. “The boys that’ve
-tried to take this gun away from me are stretched end to
-end from here to Azor City. By me, baby.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross blinked through a red-spotted haze. He took a deep
-breath and got smart. “You’re pretty tough,” he said admiringly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, sure.” She kicked the coveralls across the room and
-moved in on him. “Baby,” she said caressingly, “if I seem
-to sort of forget myself in the next couple of minutes, don’t
-get any ideas. I <i>never</i> let go of my gun. Move over.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Sure,” Ross said hollowly. This, he told himself disgustedly,
-was the damnedest, silliest, ridiculousest....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There was a furious hiccup from the door. “So!” Helena
-said venomously, pushing the door wide and almost falling
-to the floor. “So!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross flailed out of the bed, kicking the pistol out of
-Pilot Breuer’s hand in the process. He cried enthusiastically,
-“Helena, dear!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Don’t you ‘Helena-dear’ me!” she said, moving in and
-kicking the door shut behind her. “I leave you alone for
-one little minute, and what happens? And <i>you</i>!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Sorry,” Pilot Breuer muttered, climbing into her coveralls.
-“Wrong room. Must’ve had one anti-grav too many.”
-She licked her lips apprehensively, zipping her coveralls
-and sidling toward the door. With one hand on the knob,
-she said diffidently, “If I could have my gun back——?
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>No, you’re right! I’ll get it tomorrow.” She got through the
-door just ahead of a lamp.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Hussy!” spat Helena. “And you, Ross——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was the last straw. As Ross lurched toward her he
-regretted only one thing: that he didn’t have a hairbrush.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Pilot Breuer had been right. Nobody paid any attention
-to the noise.</p>
-
-<hr class='c008'>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, Ross.” Helena had hardly touched her breakfast;
-she sat with her eyes downcast.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“‘Yes, Ross’,” he mimicked bitterly. “It better be ‘Yes,
-Ross.’ This place may look all right to you, but it’s trouble.
-You don’t want to find yourself stuck here all your life, do
-you? Then do what I tell you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, Ross.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He pushed the remains of his food away. “Oh, the hell
-with it,” he said dispiritedly. “I wish I’d never started out
-on this fool’s errand. And I double damn well wish I’d left
-you in the dye vats.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, Ro——I mean, I’m glad you didn’t, Ross,” she
-said in a small voice.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He stood up and patted her shoulder absently. “Come
-on,” he said, “we’ve got to get over to the Cavallo place.
-I wish you had let me talk to them on the phone.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She said reasonably, “But you said——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I know what I said. When we get there, remember that
-I do the talking.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They walked through green-lit streets, filled with proud-looking
-women and sad-eyed men. The Cavallo Machine-Tool
-Corporation was only a few intersections away, by the
-map the desk clerk had drawn for Helena; they found it
-without trouble. It was a smallish sort of building for a
-factory, Ross thought, but perhaps that was how factories
-went on Azor. Besides, it was well constructed and beautifully
-landscaped with the purplish lawns these people
-seemed to prefer.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena led him through the door, as was right and
-proper. She said to the busy little bald-headed man who
-seemed to be the receptionist, “We’re expected. Miss Cavallo,
-please.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>“Certainly, Ma’am,” he said with a gap-toothed smile,
-and worked a combination of rods and buttons on the desk
-beside him. In a moment, he said, “Go right in. Three up
-and four over; can’t miss it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They passed through a noisy territory of machines where
-metal was sliced, spun, hacked, and planed; no one seemed
-to be paying any attention to them. Ross wondered who had
-built the machines, and had a sudden flash of realization as
-to where those builders were now: On “Minerva,” staring
-at the unattainable free sky.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Miss Cavallo was a motherly type with a large black
-cigar. “Sit right down,” she said heartily. “You, too, young
-man. Tell me what we in Cavallo Company can do for you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena opened her mouth, but Ross stopped her with
-a gesture. “That’s enough,” he said quietly. “I’ll take over.
-Miss Cavallo,” he declaimed from memory, “what follows
-is under the seal.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Is it indeed! What do you know,” she said.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross said, “Wesley.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Miss Cavallo slapped her thigh admiringly. “Son of a
-gun,” she said admiringly. “How this takes me back—those
-long-ago childhood days, learning these things at my mother’s
-knee. Let’s see. Uh—the limiting velocity is C.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But C<sup>2</sup> is not a velocity,” Ross finished triumphantly.
-And, from the heart, “Miss Cavallo, you don’t begin to
-know how happy this makes me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Miss Cavallo reached over and pumped his hand, then
-Helena’s. To the girl she said, “You’ve got a right to be a
-proud woman, believe me. The way he got through it,
-without a single stumble! Never saw anything like it in my
-life. Well, just tell me what I can do for you, now that that’s
-over.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross took a deep, deep breath. He said earnestly, “A
-great deal. I don’t know where to begin. You see, it all goes
-back to Halsey’s Planet, where I come from. This, uh, this
-ship came in, a longliner, and it got some of us a little
-worried because, well, it seemed that some of the planets
-were no longer in communication. We—uh, Miss Cavallo?”
-She was smiling pleasantly enough, but Ross had the
-crazy feeling that he just wasn’t getting through to her.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>“Go right ahead,” she boomed. “God knows, I’ve got
-nothing against men in business; that’s old-fashioned prejudice.
-Take your time. I won’t bite you. Get on with your
-proposition, young man.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It isn’t exactly a proposition,” Ross said weakly. All of
-a sudden the words seemed hard to find. What did you say
-to a potential partner in the salvation of the human race
-when she just nodded and blew cigar smoke at you?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He made an effort. “Halsey’s Planet was the seventh alternate
-destination for this ship, and so we figured——That
-is, Miss Cavallo, it kind of looked like there was some
-sort of trouble. So Mr. Haarland—he’s the one who has the
-F-T-L secret on Halsey, like you do here on Azor—he
-passed it on to me, of course—well, he asked me to, well,
-sort of take a look around.” He stopped. The words by then
-were just barely audible anyhow; and Miss Cavallo had
-been looking furtively at her watch.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Miss Cavallo shrugged sympathetically to Helena.
-“They’re all like that under the skin, aren’t they?” she
-observed ambiguously. “Well, if men could take our jobs
-away from us, what would we do? Stay home and mind the
-kids?” She roared and poked a box of cigars at Helena.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Now,” she said briskly, “let’s get down to cases. I
-really enjoyed hearing those lines from you, young man,
-and I want you to know that I’m prepared to help you in
-any possible way because of them. Open a line of credit,
-speed up deliveries, send along some of our technical
-people to help you get set up—anything. Now, what can
-I do for you? Turret lathes? Grinders? Screw machines?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Miss Cavallo,” Ross said desperately, “don’t you know
-anything about the faster-than-light secret?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She said impatiently, “Of course I do, young man. Said
-the responses, didn’t I? There’s no call for that item,
-though.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t want to <i>buy</i> one,” Ross cried. “I have one. Don’t
-you realize that the human race is in danger? Populations
-are dying out or going out of communication all over the
-galaxy. Don’t you want to do something about it before we
-all go under?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Miss Cavallo dropped all traces of a smile. Her face was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>like flint as she stood up and pointed to the window.
-“Young man,” she said icily, “take a look out there. That’s
-the Cavallo Machine-Tool Company. Does that look as if
-we’re going under?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I know, but Clyde, Cyrnus One, Ragansworld—at least
-a dozen planets I can name—are <i>gone</i>. Didn’t you ever
-think that you might be next?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Miss Cavallo kept her voice level, but only with a visible
-effort.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She said flatly, “No. Never. Young man, I have plenty to
-do right here on Azor without bothering my head about
-those places you’re talking about. Seventy-five years ago
-there was another fellow just like you; Flarney, some name
-like that; my grandmother told me about him. He came
-bustling in here causing trouble, with that old silly jingle
-about Wesley and C-square and so on, with some cock-and-bull
-story about a planet that was starving to death, stirring
-up a lot of commotion. Well, he wound up on ‘Minerva,’
-because he wouldn’t take no for an answer. Watch
-out that you don’t do the same.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She marched majestically to the door. “And now,” she
-said, “if you’ve wasted quite enough of my time, kindly
-leave.”</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>
- <h2 class='c005' title='Chapter 8'><span class='xxlarge'><b>..... 8</b></span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“STUPID old bat,” Ross muttered. They
-were walking aimlessly down Fifteen Street, the nicely-landscaped
-machine tool works behind them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena said timidly: “You really shouldn’t talk that way,
-Ross. She <i>is</i> older than you, after all. Old heads are——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“——wisest,” he wearily agreed. “Also the most conservative.
-Also the most rigidly inflexible; also the most
-firmly closed to the reception of new ideas. With one exception.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She reeled under the triple blasphemy and then faintly
-asked: “What’s the exception?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross became aware that they were not alone. Their very
-manner of walking, he a little ahead, obviously leading the
-way, was drawing unfavorable attention from passers-by.
-Nothing organized or even definite—just looks ranging
-from puzzled distaste to anger. He said, “Somebody named
-Haarland. Never mind,” and in a lower voice: “Straighten
-up. Step out a little ahead of me. Scowl.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She managed it all except the scowl. The expression on
-her face got some stupefied looks from other pedestrians,
-but nothing worse.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena said loudly and plaintively: “I don’t like it here
-after all, Ross. Can’t we get away from all these women?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Should the impulse seize you, placard ancient Brooklyn
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>with twenty-four sheets proclaiming the Dodgers to be
-cellar-dwelling bums. Mount a detergent box and inform a
-crowd of Altairians that they are degenerate slith-fondlers
-if you must. Announce in a crowded Cephean bar room
-that Sadkia Revall is no better than she should be. From
-these situations you have some chance of emerging intact.
-But never, never pronounce the word “women” as Helena
-pronounced it on Fifteen Street, Novj Grad, Azor.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The mob took only seconds to form.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross and Helena found themselves with their backs to
-the glass doors of a food store. The handful of women who
-had actually heard the remark were all talking to them
-simultaneously, with fist-shaking. Behind them stood as
-many as a dozen women who knew only that something had
-happened and that there were comfortably outnumbered
-victims available. The noise was deafening, and Helena
-began to cry. Ross first wondered if he could bring himself
-to knock down a woman; then realized after studying the
-hulking virago in their foreground that he might bring
-himself to try but probably would not succeed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She seemed to be accusing Helena of masquerading, of
-advocating equality, of uttering obscenely antisocial statements
-in the public road, to the affront of all decent-minded
-girls.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There was violence in the air. Ross was on the point of
-blocking a roundhouse right when the glass doors opened
-behind them. The small diversion distracted the imbecile
-collective brain of the mob.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What’s going on here?” a suety voice demanded. “Ladies,
-may I please get through?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was a man trying to emerge from the food shop with
-a double armful of cartons. He was a great fat slob, quite
-hairless, and smelling powerfully of kitchen. He wore the
-gravy-spotted whites of any cook anywhere.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The virago said to him, “Keep out of this, Willie. This
-fellow here’s a masquerader. The thing I heard him
-say——!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I’m not,” Helena wept. “I’m not!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The cook stooped to look into her face and turned on
-the mob. “She isn’t,” he said definitely. “She’s a lady from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>another system. She was slopping up triple antigravs at my
-place last night with a gang of jet pilots.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That doesn’t prove a thing!” the virago yelled.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Madam,” the cook said wearily, “after her third antigrav
-I had to trip her up and crown her. She was about to
-climb the bar and corner my barman.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross looked at her fixedly. She stopped crying and nervously
-cleared her throat.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“So if you’ll just let us through,” the cook bustled, seizing
-the psychological moment of doubt. His enormous belly
-bulldozed a lane for them. “Beg pardon. Excuse us.
-Madam, will you—thank you. Beg pardon——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The lynchers were beginning to drift away, embarrassed.
-The party had collapsed. “Faster,” the cook hissed at them.
-“Beg pardon——” And they were in the clear and well
-down the street.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Thank you, Sir,” Helena said humbly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Just ‘Willie’, <i>if</i> you please,” the fat man said.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>One hand descended on Ross’s shoulder and another on
-Helena’s. They both belonged to the virago. She spun them
-around, glaring. “<i>I’m</i> not satisfied with the brush-off,” she
-snapped. “Exactly what did you mean by that remark you
-made?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena wailed, “It’s just that you and all these other
-women here seem so <i>young</i>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The virago’s granite face softened. She let go and tucked
-in a strand of steel-wool hair. “Did you really think so,
-dear?” she asked, beaming. “There, I’m sorry I got excited.
-A wee bit jealous, were you? Well, we’re broad-minded
-here in Novj Grad.” She patted Helena’s arm and walked
-off, smiling and jaunty.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Virgin Willie led off and they followed him. Ross’s knees
-were shaky. The virago had not known that to Helena
-“young” meant “stupid.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The cook absently acknowledged smiles and nods as they
-walked. He was, obviously, a character. Between salutes
-he delivered a low-voiced, rapid-fire reaming to Ross and
-Helena. “Silly stunt. Didn’t you hear about the riots? Supposed
-to be arms caches somewhere here on the south side.
-Everybody’s nerves absolutely ragged. Somebody gets
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>smashed up in traffic, they blame it on us. Don’t care <i>where</i>
-you’re from. Watch it next time.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“We will, Willie,” Helena said contritely. “And I think
-you run an awfully nice restaurant.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yeah,” said Ross, looking at her.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Willie muttered, “I guess you’re clear. You still staying
-at that hot pilot’s hangout? This is where we say good-by,
-then. You turn left.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He waddled on down the street. Helena said instantly,
-“I don’t remember a thing, Ross.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Okay,” he said. “You don’t remember a thing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She looked relieved and said brightly, “So let’s get back
-to the hotel.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Okay,” he said. Climbed the bar and tried to corner
-the.... Halfway to the hotel he slowed, then stopped, and
-said, “I just thought of something. Maybe we’re not staying
-there any more. After last night why should Breuer carry
-us on her tab? I thought we’d have some money to carry us
-from the Cavallos by now——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The ship?” she asked in a small voice.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Across the continent. Hell! Maybe Breuer forgave and
-forgot. Let’s try, anyway.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They never got as far as the hotel. When they reached
-the square it stood on, there was a breathless rush and Bernie
-stood before them, panting and holding a hand over his
-chest. “In here,” he gasped, and nodded at a shopfront that
-announced hot brew. Ross thoughtlessly started first
-through the door and caught Bernie’s look of alarm. He
-opened the door for Helena, who went through smiling
-nervously.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They settled at a small table in an empty corner in stiff
-silence. “I’ve been walking around that square all morning,”
-Bernie said, with a cowed look at Helena.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross told her: “This young man and I had a talk yesterday
-at the plane while you were eating. What is it, Bernie?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He still couldn’t believe that he was doing it, but Bernie
-said in a scared whisper: “Wanted to head you off and warn
-you. Breuer was down at the field cafe this morning, talking
-loud to the other hot-shots. She said you—both of you—talked
-equality. Said she got up with a hangover and you
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>were gone. But she said there’d be six policewomen waiting
-in your room when you got back.” He leaned forward
-on the table. Ross remembered that he had been forced to
-sell his ration card.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Here comes the waiter,” he said softly. “Order something
-for all of us. We have a little money. And thanks,
-Bernie.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena asked, “What do we <i>do</i>?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“We eat,” Ross said practically. “Then we think. Shut
-up; let Bernie order.”</p>
-
-<hr class='c008'>
-
-<p class='c007'>They ate; and then they thought. Nothing much seemed
-to come from all the thinking, though.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They were a long, long way from the spaceship. Ross
-commandeered all of Helena’s leftover cash. It was almost,
-not quite, enough for one person to get halfway back to
-Azor City. He and Bernie turned out their pockets and
-added everything they had, including pawnable valuables.
-That helped. It made the total almost enough for one
-person to get three-quarters of the way back.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It didn’t help enough.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross said, “Bernie, what would happen if we, well, stole
-something?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Bernie shrugged. “It’s against the law, of course. They
-probably wouldn’t prosecute, though.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“They wouldn’t?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Not if they can prove egalitarianism on you. Stealing’s
-against the law; preaching equality is against the <i>state</i>. You
-get the maximum penalty for that.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena choked on her drink, but Ross merely nodded.
-“So we might as well take a chance,” he said. “Thanks,
-Bernie. We won’t bother you any more. You’ll forget you
-heard this, won’t you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The hell I will!” Bernie squawked. “If you’re getting out
-of here, I want to go with you! You aren’t leaving <i>me</i>
-behind!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But Bernie——” Ross started. He was interrupted by
-the manager, a battleship-class female with a mighty prow,
-who came scowling toward them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Pipe down,” she ordered coarsely. “This place is for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>decent people; we don’t want no disturbances here. If you
-can’t act decent, get out.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Awk,” said Helena as Ross kicked her under the table.
-“I mean, yes ma’am. Sorry if we were talking too loud.”
-They watched the manager walk away in silence.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As soon as she was fairly away, Ross hissed, “It’s out of
-the question, Bernie. You might be jumping from the frying-pan
-into the fire.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Bernie asked, startled, “The what?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The—never mind, it’s just an expression where I come
-from. It means you might get out of this place and find
-yourself somewhere worse. We don’t know where we’re
-going next; you might wish to God you were back here
-within the next three days.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I’ll take that chance,” Bernie said earnestly. “Look,
-Ross, I played square with you. I didn’t have to stick my
-neck out and warn you. How about giving me a break too?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena interrupted, “He’s right, Ross. After all, we owe
-him that much, don’t we? I mean, if a person does that
-much for a person, a person ought to——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, shut up.” Ross glared at both of them. “You two
-seem to think this is a game,” he said bitterly. “Let me
-set you straight, both of you. It isn’t. More hangs on what
-happens to me than either of you realize. The fate of the
-human race, for instance.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena flashed a look at Bernie. “Of <i>course</i>, Ross,” she
-said soothingly. “Both of us know that, don’t we, Bernie?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Bernie stammered, “Sure—sure we do, Ross.” He
-rubbed his ankle. He went on, “Honest, Ross, I want to
-get the hell away from Azor once and for all. I don’t care
-<i>where</i> you’re going. Anything would be better than this
-place and the damned female bloodsuckers that——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He stopped, petrified. His eyes, looking over Ross’s
-shoulder, were enormous.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Go on, sonny,” said a rich female voice from behind
-Ross. “Don’t let me and the lieutenant stop you just when
-you’re going good.”</p>
-
-<hr class='c008'>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It must have been that damn manager,” Bernie said
-for the fifteenth time.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>Ross uncrossed his legs painfully and tried lying on the
-floor on his side. “What’s the difference?” he asked. “They
-got us; we’re in the jug. And face it: somebody would
-have caught us sooner or later, and we might have wound
-up in a worse jail than this one.” He shifted uncomfortably.
-“If that’s possible, I mean. Why don’t they at least
-have beds in these places?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh,” said Bernie immediately, “some do. The jails in
-Azor City and Nuevo Reykjavik have beds; Novj Grad,
-Eleanor, and Milo don’t. I mean, that’s what they tell me,”
-he added virtuously.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Sure,” Ross growled. “Well, what do they tell you
-usually happens next?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Bernie spread his hands. “Different things. First there’s
-a hearing. That’s all over by now. Then an indictment and
-trial. Maybe that’s started already; sometimes they get it
-in on the same day as the hearing, sometimes not. Then—tomorrow
-sometime, most likely—comes the sentencing.
-We’ll know about that, though, because we’ll be there.
-The law’s very strict on that—they always have you in
-the court for sentencing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross cried, “You mean the trial might be going on
-right now without us?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Of course. What else? Think they’d take a chance on
-having the prisoners creating a disturbance during the
-trial?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross groaned and turned his face to the wall. For this,
-he thought, he had come the better part of a hundred light
-years; for this he had left a comfortable job with a brilliant
-future. He spent a measurable period of time cursing
-the memory of old Haarland and his double-jointed, persuasive
-tongue.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Back in the days of Ross’s early teens he had seen a
-good many situations like this in the tri-dis, and the hero
-had never failed to extricate himself by a simple exercise
-of superhuman strength, intellect, and ingenuity. That,
-Ross told himself, was just what he needed now. The
-trouble was, he didn’t have them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>All he had was the secret of faster-than-light travel.
-And, here on Azor as on the planet of the graybeards, it
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>had laid a king-sized egg. Women, Ross thought bitterly,
-women were basically inward-directed and self-seeking;
-trust them with the secret of F-T-L; make them, like the
-Cavallos, custodians of a universe-racking truth; and see
-the secret lost or embalmed in sterile custom. What, he
-silently demanded of himself, did the greatest of scientific
-discoveries mean to a biological baby-foundry? How could
-any female—no single member of which class had ever
-painted a great picture, written a great book, composed a
-great sonata, or discovered a great scientific truth—appreciate
-the ultimate importance of the F-T-L drive? It
-was like entrusting a first-folio Shakespeare to a broody
-hen; the shredded scraps would be made into a nest. For
-the egg came first. Motherhood was all.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>That explained it, of course. That, Ross told himself
-moodily, explained everything except why the F-T-L secret
-had fallen into apparently equal or worse desuetude
-on such planets as Gemsel, Clyde, Cyrnus One, Ragansworld,
-Tau Ceti II, Capella’s family of eight, and perhaps
-a hundred others.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ragansworld was gone entirely, drowned in a planetary
-nebula.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The planet of the graybeard had gone to seed; nothing
-new, nothing not hallowed by tradition had a chance in
-its decrepit social order.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>His home, Halsey’s Planet, was rapidly, calmly, inevitably
-depopulating itself.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>And Azor had fallen into a rigid, self-centered matriarchal
-order that only an act of God could break.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Was there a pattern? Were there any similarities?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross searched desperately in his mind; but without result.
-The image of Helena kept intruding itself between
-him and his thoughts. Was he getting sentimental about
-that sweet little chucklehead? Who, he hastily added, had
-come near to criminally assaulting him, who had climbed
-the....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He turned to the little waiter and demanded: “Will she—Helena—be
-on the orbital station with us if we’re all
-convicted?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>“Hmm—no, I should think not. As a responsible person,
-she gets the supreme penalty.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross numbly asked after a long pause, “How? Nothing—painful?”
-It was hard to think of Helena dangling grotesquely
-at a rope’s end or jolting as she sat strapped in
-a large, ugly chair. But there were things he had heard of
-which were horribly worse.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Bernie had been watching him. “I’m sorry,” the little
-man said soberly. “It’s up to the judge. She’s a foreigner,
-so they may consider that an extenuating circumstance
-and place some quick-acting poison aboard for her to
-take. Otherwise it’s slow starvation.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A faint, irrational hope had begun to dawn in Ross’s
-mind. “Aboard what? Exactly how does it work?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“They’ll put her aboard some hulk with the rockets disabled,
-fire it off into space—and that’s that. I suppose
-they’ll use the ship she came in——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross was frantically searching his pockets. He had a
-stylus. “Got any paper?” he briskly demanded of Bernie.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, but——?” The waiter blankly passed over an order
-book. Ross sprawled on the floor and began to scribble:
-“Never mind how or why this works. Do it. You saw
-me work the big fan-shaped computer in the center room
-and you can do it too. Find the master star maps in the
-chart room. Look up the co-ordinates of Halsey’s System.
-Set these co-ordinates on the twenty-seven dials marked
-Proximate Mass. Take the readings on the windows above
-the dials and set them on the cursors of the computer——”
-He scribbled furiously, from time to time forcing himself
-deliberately to slow down as the writing became an unreadable
-scrawl. He filled the ruled fronts of the order
-pages and then the backs—perhaps ten thousand closely-written
-words, and not one of them wasted. Haarland’s
-precise instructions, mercilessly drilled into him, flowed
-out again.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He flung the stylus down at last and read through the
-book again, ignoring the gaping Bernie. It was all there,
-as far as he could tell. Grant her a lot of luck and more
-brains than he privately credited her with, and she had a
-fighting chance of winding up within radar range of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>Halsey’s Planet. GCA could take her down from there; an
-annoying ship-like object hanging on the radarscopes
-would provoke a reconnaissance.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She knew absolutely nothing about F-T-L or the Wesley
-drive, but then—neither did he. That fact itself was
-no handicap.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He might rot on “Minerva,” but some word might get
-back to Haarland. And so would the ship. And Helena
-would not perish miserably in a drifting hulk.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Bernie saw the mysterious job was ended and dared
-to ask, “A letter?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No,” Ross said jubilantly. “By God, if things break
-right they won’t get her. It’s like this——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He happily began to explain that his F-T-L ship’s rockets
-were only auxiliaries for fine maneuvering, but he
-counted on the court not knowing that. If he and Helena
-could persuade....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As he went on the look on Bernie’s face changed very
-slowly from hope to pity to politely-simulated interest.
-Correspondingly Ross’s accounting became labored and
-faulty. The pauses became longer and at last he broke off,
-filled with self-contempt at his folly. He said bitterly,
-“You don’t think it’ll work.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, no!” Bernie protested with too much heartiness.
-“I could see she’s awfully mechanically-minded for a
-woman, even if it wouldn’t be polite to say so. Sure it’ll
-work, Ross. Sure!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The hell it would.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At least he had disposed of a few hours. And—perhaps
-some bungling setting would explode the ship, or end a
-Wesley Jump in the heart of a white dwarf star—sudden
-annihilation, whiffing Helena out of existence before her
-body could realize that it had died, before the beginning
-of apprehension could darken happy absorption with a
-task she thought would bring her to safety.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>For that reason alone he had to carry the scheme
-through.</p>
-
-<hr class='c008'>
-
-<p class='c007'>The courtroom was a chintzy place bright with spring
-flowers. Ross and Helena looked numbly at one another
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>from opposite corners while the previous order of business
-was cleared from the docket. A wedding.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The judge, unexpectedly sweet-faced and slender though
-gray, obviously took such parts of her work seriously.
-“Marylyn and Kent,” she was saying earnestly to the happy
-couple, “I suppose you know my reputation. I lecture
-people a bit before I tie the knot. Evidently it’s not such
-a bad idea because my marriages turn out well. Last week
-in Eleanor one of my girls was arrested and reprimanded
-for gross infidelity and a couple of years ago right here in
-Novj Grad one of my boys got five hundred lashes for
-nonsupport. Let’s hope it did them some good, but the
-cases were unusual. My people, I like to think, know their
-rights and responsibilities when they walk out of my
-court, and I think the record bears me out.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Marylyn, you have chosen to share part of your life
-with this man. You intend to bear his children. This
-should not be because your animal appetites have overcome
-you and you can’t win his consent in any other way
-but because you know, down deep in your womanly heart,
-that you can make him happy. Never forget this. If you
-should thoughtlessly conceive by some other man, don’t
-tell him. He would only brood. Be thrifty, Marylyn. I have
-seen more marriages broken up by finances than any other
-reason. If your husband earns a hundred Eleanors a week,
-spend only that and no more. If he makes <i>fifty</i> Eleanors
-a week spend only that and no more. Honorable poverty
-is preferable to debt. And, from a practical standpoint, if
-you spend more than your husband earns he will be jailed
-for debt sooner or later, with resulting loss to your own
-pocket.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Kent, you have accepted the proposal of this woman.
-I see by your dossier that you got in just under the wire.
-In your income group the antibachelor laws would have
-caught up with you in one more week. I must say I don’t
-like the look of it, but I’ll give you the benefit of the
-doubt. I want to talk to you about the meaning of marriage.
-Not just the wage assignment, not just the insurance
-policy, not just the waiver of paternity and copulation
-‘rights’, so-called. Those, as a good citizen, you will abide
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>by automatically—Heaven help you if you don’t. But there
-is more to marriage than that. The honor you have been
-done by this woman who sees you as desirable and who
-wishes to make you happy over the years is not a sterile
-legalism. Marriage is like a rocket, I sometimes think. The
-brute, unreasoning strength of the main jets representing
-the husband’s share and the delicate precise steering and
-stabilizing jets the wife’s. We have all of us seen too many
-marriages crash to the ground like a rocket when these
-roles were reversed. It is not reasonable to expect the wife
-to provide the drive—that is, the income. It is not reasonable
-to expect the husband to provide the steering—that
-is, the direction of the personal and household expenditures.
-So much for the material side of things. On the spiritual
-side, I have little to say. The laws are most explicit;
-see that you obey them—and if you don’t, you had better
-pray that you wind up in some court other than mine. I
-have no patience with the obsolete doctrine that there is
-such a legal entity as seduction by female, despite the
-mouthings of certain so-called jurists who disgrace the
-bench of a certain nearby city.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Having heard these things, Marylyn and Kent, step
-forward and join hands.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They did. The ceremony was short and simple; the
-couple then walked from the courtroom under the beaming
-smile of the judge.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A burly guard next to Ross pointed at the groom.
-“Look,” she said sentimentally. “He’s crying. Cute!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t blame the poor sucker,” Ross flared, and then,
-being a man of conscience, wondered suddenly if that was
-why, on Halsey’s Planet, women cried at weddings.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A clerk called: “Dear, let’s have those egalitarians front
-and center, please. Her honor’s terribly rushed.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena was escorted forward from one side, while Ross
-and Bernie were jostled to the fore from the other. The
-judge turned from the happy couple. As she looked down
-at the three of them the smile that curved her lips turned
-into something quite different. Ross, quailing, suddenly
-realized that he had seen just that expression once before.
-It was when he was very, very young, when a friend of his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>mother’s had come bustling into the kitchen where he was
-playing, just after she had smelled, and just before she
-had seen, the long-dead rat he had fetched up from the
-abandoned cellar across the street.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>While the clerk was reading the orders and indictment,
-the judge’s stare never wavered. And when the clerk had
-finished, the judge’s silent stare remained, for a long, terrible
-time.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the quietest of voices, the judge said, “So.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross caught a flicker of motion out of the corner of his
-eye. He turned just in time to see Bernie, knees buckling,
-slip white-faced and unconscious to the floor. The guards
-rushed forward, but the judge raised a peremptory hand.
-“Leave him alone,” she ordered soberly. “It is kinder. Defendants,
-you are charged with the gravest of crimes. Have
-you anything to say before sentence is passed on you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross tried to force words—any words, to protest, to
-plead, to vilify—through his clogged throat. All he managed
-was a croaking sound; and Helena, by his side,
-nudged him sharply to silence. He turned to her sharply,
-and realized that this was the best chance he’d be likely
-to get. He clutched at her, rolled up his eyes, slumped to
-the floor in as close an imitation of Bernie’s swoon as he
-could manage.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The judge was visibly annoyed, and this time she didn’t
-stop the attendants when they rushed in to kick him erect.
-But he had the consolation of seeing a flash of understanding
-cross Helena’s face, and her hand dart to a pocket
-with the paper he had handed her. In the confusion no
-one saw.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The rest of the courtroom scene was kaleidoscopic in
-Ross’s recollection. The only part he remembered clearly
-was the judge’s voice as she said to him and Bernie,
-“——for the rest of your lives, as long as Almighty God
-shall, in Her infinite wisdom, permit you the breath of
-life, be banished from Azor and all of its allied worlds to
-the prison hulk in ‘Orbit Minerva.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>And they were hustled out as the judge, even more
-wrathful than before, turned to pronounce sentence on
-Helena.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>
- <h2 class='c005' title='Chapter 9'><span class='xxlarge'><b>..... 9</b></span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>THE guard spat disgustedly. “Fine lot of
-wrecks we’re getting,” she complained. “Not like the old
-days. They used to send real men here.” She glowered at
-Ross and Bernie, holding their commitment papers loosely
-in her hand. “And for treason, too!” she added. “Used to
-be it took guts to commit a crime against the state.” She
-shook her head, then made a noise of distaste and scribbled
-initials on the commitment papers. She handed them
-back to the pilot who had brought them up from Azor,
-who grinned, waved, and got out of there. “All right,” said
-the guard, “we have to take what we get. I’ll have to put
-you two on construction; you’ll never stand up under hard
-work. Keep your noses clean, that’s all. Up at 0500; breakfast
-till 0510; work detail till 1950; dinner and recreation
-till 2005; then lights out. Miss a formation and you miss a
-meal. Miss two, and you get punishment detail. Nobody
-misses three.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross and Bernie found themselves sharing a communal
-cell. They had all of five minutes to look around and get
-oriented; then they were out on their first work detail.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It wasn’t so bad as it sounded. Their shiftmates were a
-couple of dozen ragged-looking wrecks, half-heartedly assembling
-a sort of meccano-toy wall out of sheets of perforated
-steel and clip-spring bolts. All the parts seemed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>well worn; some of the bolts hardly closed. It took Ross
-the better part of his first detail, whispering when the
-guards were looking the other way, to find out why. Their
-half of the prisoners were Construction; the other half was
-Demolition. What Construction in the morning put up,
-Demolition in the evening tore down. Neither side was
-anxious to set any speed records, and the guards without
-exception were too bored to care.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>With any kind of luck, Ross found, he could hope eventually
-to get a real job—manning the “Minerva’s” radar,
-signal, or generating facilities, working in the kitchens or
-service shops, perhaps even as an orderly in the guard
-quarters. (Although Ross quite by accident chanced to see
-a guard’s orderly as he passed through a corridor near the
-work area, a handkerchief held daintily to his nose. And
-though the orderly’s clothing was neat and his plump
-cheeks indicated good eating, the haunted expression in
-his eyes made Ross think twice.)</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The one thing he could not do, according to the testimony
-of every man he spoke to, was escape.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The fifth time Ross got that answer, the guard had
-stepped out of the room. Ross took the opportunity to
-thrash the thing through. “Why?” he demanded. “Back
-where I come from we’ve got lots of prisons. I never heard
-of one nobody escaped from.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The other prisoner laughed shortly. “Now you have,” he
-said. “Go ahead, try. Every one of us has tried, one time
-or another. There’s only one thing stopping you—there’s
-no place to go. You can get past the guards easy enough—they’re
-lazy, when they’re not either drunk or boy-chasing.
-You can roam around ‘Minerva’ all you like. You can
-even get to the spacelock, and if you want to you can walk
-right through it. But not in a spacesuit, because there
-aren’t any on board. And not into the tender that brings
-us up from Azor, because you aren’t built right.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross looked puzzled. “Not built right?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That’s right. There’s telescreens and remote-control
-locks built into that tender. The pilot brings you up, but
-once she couples with ‘Minerva’ the controls lock. And
-the only way they get unlocked is when three women, in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>three different substations down on Azor, push the RC
-releases. And they don’t do that until they look in their
-screens, and see that everybody who has turned up in the
-tender has stripped down to nothing at all, and every one
-of them is by-God female. Any further questions?” He
-grinned wryly. “Don’t even think about plastic surgery, if
-that happens to cross your mind,” he said. “We have two
-men here who tried it. You don’t have much equipment
-here; you can’t do a neat enough job.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross gulped. “Hadn’t given it a thought,” he assured
-the other man. “You can’t even hide away in a trunk or
-something?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The prisoner shook his head. “Aren’t any trunks. Everything’s
-one way—Azor to ‘Minerva’—except pilots and
-guards. No men ever go back. When you die, you go out
-the lock—without a ship. Same with everything else that
-they want to get rid of.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross thought hard. “What if they—well, what if you’re
-sent up here and all, and then some new evidence turns
-up and you’re found innocent? Don’t they send you back
-then?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Found innocent?” The man looked at Ross pityingly.
-“Man, you <i>are</i> new. Hey,” he called. “Hey, Chuck! This
-guy wants to know what happens if they find out back on
-Azor that he’s innocent!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Chuck exploded into laughter. Wiping his eyes, he
-walked over to Ross. “Thanks,” he grinned. “Haven’t had
-a good laugh in fifteen years.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t see that that’s so funny,” Ross said defensively.
-“After all, the judge can make a mistake, none of us is
-per—awk!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Shut up!” Chuck hissed, holding a hand over Ross’s
-mouth. “Do you want to get us all in <i>real</i> trouble? Some
-of these guys would rat to the guards for an extra hunk of
-bread! The judges never make a mistake.” And his lips
-formed the silent word: “Officially.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He let go of Ross and stood back, but didn’t walk away.
-He scratched his head. “Say,” he said, “you ask some
-stupid questions. Where are you from, anyhow?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross said bitterly, “What’s the use? You won’t believe
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>me. I happen to be from a place called Halsey’s Planet,
-which is a good long distance from here. About as far as
-light will travel in two hundred years, if that gives you an
-idea. I came here in an F-T-L—that is, a faster-than-light
-ship. You don’t know what that is, of course, but I did. It
-was a mistake, I admit it. But here I am.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Somewhat to Ross’s surprise, Chuck didn’t laugh again.
-He looked dubious, and he scratched his head some more,
-but he didn’t laugh. To the other prisoner he said, “What
-do you think, Sam?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Sam shrugged. “So maybe we were wrong,” he observed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross demanded, “Wrong about what?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well,” Chuck said hesitantly, “there’s a guy here named
-Flarney. He’s a pretty old son-of-a-gun by now, must be
-at least ninety, and he’s been here a good long time. Dunno
-how long. But he talks crazy, just like you. No offense,”
-he added, “it’s just that we all thought he’d gone space-happy.
-But maybe we’re wrong. Unless——” his eyes narrowed
-“unless the two of you are both space-happy, or
-trying to kid us, or something.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross said urgently, “I swear, Chuck, there’s no such
-thing. It’s true. Who’s this Flarney? Where does he say he
-came from?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Who can make sense out of what he says? All I know
-is, he talked a lot about something faster than light. That’s
-crazy; that’s like saying slower than dark, or bigger than
-green, or something. But I don’t know, maybe it means
-something.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Believe me, Chuck, it does! Where is this man—can I
-see him?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Chuck looked uncertain. “Well, sure. That is, you can
-see him all right. But it isn’t going to do you a whole hell
-of a lot of good, because he’s dead. Died yesterday; they’re
-going to pitch him out into space sometime today.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Sam said, “This is when Whitker flips. One week without
-his old pal Flarney and he’ll begin to look funny. Two
-weeks and he starts acting funny. Three and he’s talking
-funny and the guards begin to crack down. I give him a
-month to get shot down and heaved through the locker.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>Old pal? Ross demanded, “Who’s this Whitker? Where
-can I get in touch with him?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Him and Flarney were both latrine orderlies. That’s
-where they put the feeble old men, mopping and polishing.
-Number Two head, any hour of the day or night. Old
-buzzard has his racket—we’re supposed to get a hank of
-cellosponge per man per day, but he’s always ‘fresh out’—unless
-you slip him your saccharine ration every once in a
-while.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross asked the way to Number Two head and the routine.
-But it was an hour before he could bring himself to
-ask the hulking guard for permission.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Sure, sonny,” she boomed. “I’ll show you the way. Need
-any help?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, thanks, ma’am,” he said hastily, and she roared
-with laughter. So did the members of the construction gang;
-it must have been an ancient gag. He hurried on his way
-thinking dark and bloody thoughts.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Whitker?” he asked a tottering ancient who nodded and
-drowsed amid the facilities of the head.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The old man looked up blearily and squeaked: “Fresh
-out. Fresh out. You should’ve saved some from yesterday.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That’s all right. I’m a new man here. I want to ask you
-about your friend Flarney——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Whitker bowed his head and began to cry noiselessly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I’m sorry, Mr. Whitker. I heard. But there’s something
-we can do about it—maybe. Flarney was a faster-than-light
-man. He must have told you that. So am I. Ross, from
-Halsey’s Planet.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He hadn’t the faintest idea as to whether any of this
-was getting through to the ancient.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It seems Flarney and I were both on the same mission,
-finding out how and why planets were dropping out of
-communication. You and he used to talk a lot, they tell me.
-Did he ever tell you anything about that?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Whitker looked up and squeaked dimly. “Oh, yes. All
-the time. I humored him. He was an old man, you know.
-And now he’s dead.” The tears leaked from his rheumy
-eyes and traced the sad furrows beside his nose.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>Was he getting through? “What did he <i>say</i>, Mr. Whitker?
-About faster-than-light?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The old man said, “L-sub-T equals L-sub-zero e to the
-minus T-over-two-N.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>That damned formula again! “But what does it mean,
-Mr. Whitker? What did he say it meant?” Ross softly
-urged.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The old man looked surprised. “Genes?” he asked himself
-hazily. “Generations? I don’t remember. But you go
-to Earth, young man. Flarney said <i>they’d</i> know, and know
-what to do about it, too, which is more than he did. His
-very words, young man!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross didn’t dare stay longer. Furthermore he suspected
-that the old man’s attention span had been exhausted. He
-started from the room with a muttered thanks, and was
-stopped at the door by Whitker’s hand on his shoulder.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You’re a good boy,” Whitker squeaked. “Here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross found himself walking down the corridor with an
-enormous wad of cellosponge in his hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The bunks were hard, but that didn’t matter. Dormitories
-were the outermost layer of the hulk, pseudogravity
-varies inversely as the fourth power of the distance, and the
-field generator was conventionally located near “Minerva’s”
-center. When your relative weight is one-quarter normal
-you can sleep deliciously on a gravel driveway. This was the
-dormitory’s only attractive feature. Otherwise it was too
-many steel slabs, tiered and spotted too close, too many
-unwashed males, too much weary snoring. The only things
-in short supply were headroom and air.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Not everybody slept. Insomniacs turned and grunted;
-those who had given up the struggle talked from bunk to
-bunk in considerately low tones.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Bernie muttered from a third-tier bunk facing Ross’s: “I
-wonder if she made it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross knew what he meant. “Unlikeliest thing in the
-world,” he said. “But I think she went fast and never knew
-what hit her.” He thought of the formula and “They’d know
-on Earth—and know what to do about it too.” Earth the
-enigma, from which all planetary peoples were supposed
-to be derived. Earth—the dot on the traditional master
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>charts, Earth—from which and to which no longliners ever
-seemed to travel. Haarland had told him no F-T-L ship
-had in recent centuries ever reported again after setting out
-for Earth. Another world sunk in barbarism? But Flarney
-had said—no; that was not data. That was the confused
-recollections of a very old man, possibly based on the
-confused recollections of another very old man. Perhaps
-it had got mixed up with the semilegendary origin story.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Poor sweet Helena! He hoped it had happened fast, that
-she had been thinking of some pleasant prospect on Halsey’s
-Planet. In her naïve way she’d think it just around
-the corner, a mere matter of following instructions....</p>
-
-<hr class='c008'>
-
-<p class='c007'>So thought Ross, the pessimist.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In his gloom he had forgotten that this was exactly what
-it was. In his snobbishness he never realized that he was
-guilty of the most frightful arrogance in assuming that what
-he could do, she could not. In his ignorance he was not
-aware that since navigation began, every new instrument,
-every technique, has drawn the shuddery warnings of savants
-that uneducated skippers, working by rote, could not
-be expected to master these latest fruits of science—or that
-uneducated skippers since navigation began have cheerfully
-adopted new instruments and techniques at the drop of a
-hat and that never once have the shuddery warnings been
-justified by the facts.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Up the aisle somebody was saying in a low, argumentative
-tone, “I saw the drum myself. Naturally it was
-marked Dulsheen Creme, but the guards here never did
-give a damn whether their noses were dull or bright enough
-to flag down a freighter and I don’t think they’ve suddenly
-changed. It was booze, I tell you. Fifty liters of it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Gawd! The hangovers tomorrow.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“We’ll all have to watch our steps. I hope they don’t do
-anything worse than getting quietly drunk in their quarters.
-Those foot-kissing orderlies’ll get a workout, but who cares
-what happens to an orderly?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“They haven’t been on a real tear since I’ve been here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Lucky you. Let’s hope they don’t bust loose tonight. It’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>a break in the monotony, sure—but those girls play rough.
-Five prisoners died last time.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“They beat them up?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“One of them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What about the others? Oh! Oh, Gawd—fifty liters, you
-said?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Bernie began to whimper: “Not again! Not those plug-uglies!
-I swear I’ll throw myself through the spacelock if
-they make a pass at me. Ross, isn’t there anything we can
-do?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Seems not, Bernie. Maybe they won’t come in. Or if
-they do, maybe they’ll pass you by. There certainly isn’t
-any place to hide.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A raucous female voice roared through the annunciator:
-“Bed check five minutes, boys. Anybody got any li’l thing
-to do down the hall, better do it now. See you lay-terrr!”
-Hiccup and drunken giggle.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>For the first time in his life Ross suddenly and spontaneously
-acted like a tri-di hero, with the exception that
-he felt like a silly ass through it all.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Got an idea,” he muttered. “Get out of your bunk.”
-He pulled the wad of cellosponge, old Whitker’s present,
-from his pocket and yanked it in half, one for him and one
-for Bernie.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Pullover said faintly: “Thanks, but I don’t have
-to——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross didn’t bother to answer. He was carefully fluffing
-the stuff out to its maximum dimensions. He unzipped his
-coveralls and began wadding them with cellosponge.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I get it,” Bernard said softly. He stepped out of his
-one-piece garment and followed suit. In less than a minute
-they had creditable dummies lying on their bunks.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The others watched their activity with emotions ranging
-between awe and envy. One giant of a man proclaimed
-grimly to whoever cared to listen: “These are a couple of
-smart guys. I wish them luck. And I want you guys to know
-that I will personally break the back of any sneaking rat
-who tips off a guard about this.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Sure, Ox. Sure,” came a muted chorus.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Arranged in a fetal sleeping position, face down, the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>dummies astonished even their creators. It would take a
-lucky look in a fair light to note that the heads were earless,
-fibrous globes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“They’ll do,” Ross snapped. “Come on, Bernie.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They walked quietly from the dormitory in their singlet
-underwear toward the dormitory latrine—and past it. Into
-the corridor. Through a doorless opening into a storeroom
-piled with crates of rations. “This’ll do,” Ross said quietly.
-They ducked into a small cavern formed by sloppy issuing
-of stock and hunched down.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The dummies will fool the bed check. It’s only a sweep
-with a hundred-line TV system. If the guards do raid the
-dormitory tonight we’ll have to count on them ignoring the
-dummies or thinking they’re a joke or being too busy with
-other things to care. They’ll be drunk, after all. Then in the
-morning things’ll be plenty disorganized. We’ll be able to
-sneak back into formation—and that’ll be that for a matter
-of years. They can’t often bribe the pilots with enough to
-guarantee a real ripsnorting drunk. Now try and get some
-sleep. There’s nothing more we can do.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They actually did doze off for a couple of hours, and then
-were awakened by drunken war whoops.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It’s them!” Bernie wailed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Shut up. They’re heading for the dormitory. We’re
-safe.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Safe!” Bernie echoed derisively. “Safe until when?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross threatened him with the side of his hand and Bernie
-was quiet, though his lips were mumbling soundlessly. The
-guards lurched giggling past and Ross said:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“We’ll sneak into the lockroom. There won’t be anybody
-there tonight; at least we’ll get a night’s sleep.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Big deal,” grumbled Bernie, but he followed, complaining
-inarticulately to himself. Ross thought tiredly: All this
-work for a night’s sleep! And saw, half-formed, the dreadful
-procession of days and nights and years ahead....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They reached the lockroom and stumbled in breathlessly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Dearie!” Two guards, playing a card game on the floor
-with a ring of empty bottles around them, looked up in
-drunken delight. “Dearie!” repeated the bigger of the two.
-“Angela, <i>look</i> what <i>we’ve</i> got!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>Ross said stupidly. “But you shouldn’t be here——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The guard made a clumsy pass at fluffing up her back
-hair and giggled. “Duty comes first, dearie. Angela, just
-lock that door, will you?” The other guard scrambled unevenly
-to her feet and weaved over to the door. It was
-locked before Ross or Bernie could move.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The big guard stood up too, leering at Bernie. “Wow!”
-she said. “New merchandise. Just be patient, dearie. We’ve
-got a little something to attend to in a couple of minutes,
-but we’ll have <i>lots</i> of time after that.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Then things began to happen rapidly. There was Angela
-the guard, inarticulate, falling-down drunk; she waved
-bonelessly at a brightly flickering light on the far side of the
-lockroom. There was the other guard, reaching out for
-Bernie with one hand, pawing at a bottle with the other.
-There was Ross, a paralyzed spectator.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>And there was Bernie.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Bernie’s eyes bulged wide as the guard came toward him.
-He babbled hysterically, “No! Nonononono! I said I’d kill
-myself and I——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He stiff-armed the big guard and leaped for the lock
-door. Ross suddenly came to life. “Bernie!” he bellowed.
-“Hold it! Don’t jump!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But it was too late. The one guard sprawling, the other
-staggering helplessly across the floor, Bernie was clear. He
-scrabbled at the lockwheels, spun them open. Ross tensed
-himself for the sudden, awful rush of expanding air; he
-leaped after Bernie just as Bernie flung the lock door open
-and jumped.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross jumped after.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There was no rush of air. They were not in space.
-Around them was no ripping, sucking void, no flaming
-backdrop of stars; around them were six walls and a Wesley
-board, and Helena peering at them wide-eyed and delighted.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well!” she said. “<i>That</i> was fast!”</p>
-
-<hr class='c008'>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross said, “But——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena, hanging from the acceleration loops, smiled
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>maternally. “Oh, it was nothing,” she said. “Ross don’t you
-think we’re far enough away yet?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross said hopelessly, “All right,” and cut the drive. The
-starship hung in space in the limbo between stars. Azor,
-“Minerva,” and the rest were light-years behind, far out
-of range of challenge.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena wriggled free from the loops and rubbed her arms
-where the retaining straps had gripped them. “After all,”
-she said demurely, “you <i>told</i> me how to run the ship, and
-<i>really</i>, Ross, I’m not quite <i>stupid</i>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross said, “But——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But what, Ross? It isn’t as if I were some sort of brainless
-little thing that had never run a machine in her life.
-My goodness, Ross——” She wrinkled her nose. “<i>You</i>
-should remember. All those days in the dye vats? Don’t you
-think I had to learn a little something about machines
-<i>there</i>?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross swore incredulously. To compare those clumsy
-constructs of wheels and rollers with the subtle subelectronic
-flows of the Wesley force—and to make it work!
-He said, unbelievingly, “And the ‘Minerva’ helped you
-vector in? They gave you the co-ordinates and radared
-your course?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Certainly.” Helena turned to Bernie, who was staring
-dazedly around him. “Are you all right, dear?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross turned his back on them and faced the Wesley
-Christmas tree of controls. Don’t question it, he told himself;
-take a miracle for what it is. God wanted you out of
-“Minerva”—and God moves in most mysterious ways His
-wonders to perform.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Anyway, they had to get going. When the court had
-exiled Helena in the starship they had gone through the
-customary rituals; not only was everything that looked like
-a weapon gone, along with all but a teacup of fuel for the
-auxiliary jets, but the food locker was stripped entirely.
-He put everything else out of his mind and began to calculate
-a setting.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Bernie said over his shoulder, “Home, huh? That place
-you call Halsey’s Planet?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross shook his head. “Not this time. I got this far and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>I’m still alive; maybe I can finish the job. Anyway, I’ll try.
-The first solid suggestion I’ve had ever since I took off was
-what that half-witted old moron——” He ignored a little
-gasp from Helena. “——said back on ‘Minerva.’ If Flarney
-had lived, he would have gone there; we’ll go there
-now.” He finished manipulating the calculator and began
-to set it up on the board. He said, “The name of the place
-is—Earth.”</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>
- <h2 class='c005' title='Chapter 10'><span class='xxlarge'><b>..... 10</b></span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>IT took Ross a while to learn a lesson,
-but when he learned it, it stuck. This time, he promised
-himself, <i>no spaceport</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They sneaked into the solar system that held fabulous
-old Earth from far outside the ecliptic, where the chance
-of radar detection was least; they came to a relative dead
-halt millions of miles from the planet and cautiously
-scanned the surrounding volume of space with their own
-radar.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>No ships seemed to be in space. Earth’s solar system
-turned out to be a trivial affair, only five planets, scarcely
-a half-dozen moons among them. None of the planets
-except Earth itself was anything like inhabitable.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Hold tight,” said Ross grimly, “I’m not so good at this
-fine navigation.” He cautiously applied power along a single
-vector; the starship leaped and bucked. He corrected
-with another; and the distant sun swelled in their view
-plates with frightening rapidity. The alarm beeps bleated
-furiously, and the automatic cutoff restored all controls to
-neutral.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross, sweating, picked himself up from the floor and
-staggered back to the panel. Helena said carefully, “You’re
-doing <i>fine</i>, Ross, but if you’d like <i>me</i> to take over for a
-minute——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>Ross swallowed his pride and stood back. After one
-wide-eyed stare of shock—she wasn’t even calculating!—he
-gripped the loops and closed his eyes and waited for
-death.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There was a punishing bump and his eyes flew open.
-Helena was looking at him apologetically. “You would
-have done it better,” she lied, “but anyway we’re down.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross lied, “Of course, but I’m glad you had the practice.
-Where—uh, where are we?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena silently showed him the radar plot. Earth, it
-seemed, had a confusing multiplicity of continents; they
-were on one in the northern hemisphere, a large one as
-Earth’s continents went, and smack in the middle of it.
-It was night on their side of Earth just then; and, by the
-plot, a largish city was only a dozen or so miles away.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Okay,” said Ross wearily, “landing party away. Helena,
-you stay here while Bernie and I——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena said simply, “No.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross stared at her a minute, then shrugged. “All right.
-Then Bernie will stay while——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I will not!” said Bernie.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Clearly it was time for a showdown. Ross roared:
-“Who’s the captain here, anyway?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You are,” Helena said promptly. “As long as I don’t
-have to stay here alone.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yeah,” said Bernie.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross said, “Oh.” He thought for a while and then said,
-“Well, let’s all go.” They thought it was a wonderful idea.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Earth wasn’t a very unusual planet—lots of green sand
-and purple vegetation. Either the master star chart was
-wrong or the gravity meter was off; the former, strangely
-enough, gave Earth’s gravity as 1.000000 and the latter as
-0.8952, a whopping ten per cent discrepancy. Further, the
-principal inert gas in Earth’s atmosphere was, according
-to the master chart’s planetary supplement, nitrogen; and
-according to the ship’s instruments was indubitably neon.
-A terrific aurora polaris display constantly flickering in
-the northern sky bore that out.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But the gap between the chart and the facts didn’t particularly
-worry Ross as they swung along overland. So the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>chart was off, or perhaps things had changed. This was—according
-to Flarney via Whitker—the place where people
-knew about the formula, where his questions would be
-answered. After this, he thought happily, it’s off to Halsey’s
-Planet and an unspecified glorious future, revered as the
-savior of humanity instead of a lousy Yards clerk pushing
-invoices around. And Helena, he thought sentimentally....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He turned to smile at her and found she and Bernie were
-giggling.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Listen, you two!” Captain Ross roared. “Haven’t you
-learned anything yet? What’s the good of us exploring if
-we stroll along with our silly heads in the clouds, not paying
-attention? Do you realize that this place may be as dangerous
-as Azor or worse?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Ross——” Helena said.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Don’t interrupt! What this outfit needs is some discipline—tightening
-up. You two have got to accept your
-responsibilities. Keep alert! Be on the lookout! Any single
-thing out of the ordinary may be a deathtrap. Watch
-for——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena was looking not at Ross but over his shoulder.
-Bernie was making strangled noises and pointing.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross turned. Behind him stood a mechanical monstrosity
-vaguely recognizable as a heavily-armed truck, its motor
-faintly humming. A man leaned darkly from the cab and
-transfixed them to the ground with a powerful spotlight.
-From the dazzling circle of light his voice came, hasty and
-furtive. “Thought it was two women and a man, but I
-guess you’re the ones. Ugh, those faces on you! Yes, you’re
-the ones. Get in. Fast.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The light blinked out. When their eyes adjusted to the
-dimmer illumination of the stars and the aurora display
-they saw a side door in the body of the truck standing open.
-Too, one of the long, slim gun barrels with which the truck
-seemed copiously supplied swiveled to cover them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross stupidly read aloud a sign on the truck: “Jones
-Floor-Cover Company. Finest Tile on Jones. Wall-to-Wall
-a Specialty. ‘Rugs Fit For a Jones’.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yeah,” the man said. “Yeah, yeah. Just don’t try to buy
-any. Get in, for Jones’ sake! If I’d of known you were half-wits
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>I wouldn’t of taken this job for a million Joneses, cash.
-Get in!” His voice was hysterical and the gun covering
-them moved ominously. “If this is a frame——” he began
-to shrill.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Get in,” Ross said shakily to the others. They climbed
-in and the door slammed violently and automatically.
-Helena began to cry in a preoccupied sort of way and Bernie
-began a long, mumbling inventory of his own mental
-weaknesses for ever getting involved in this crackbrained,
-imbecilic, feeble-minded....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There were windows in the truck body and Ross turned
-from one to another. He saw the guns on the cab telescope
-into stubs, the stubs fold into the mounts, the mounts
-smoothly descend flush with the sheet metal. He saw the
-cursing driver manipulate a dozen levers as the car began
-to glide across the green sand, purple-dotted with vegetation.
-Finally, through the rear window, he saw three figures
-racing across the sand waving their arms, rapidly being left
-behind. All he could make out was that they seemed to
-be two women and a man.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena was wailing softly, “——and I am <i>not</i> ugly and
-just because we’re young and we’re strangers isn’t any reason
-to go around insulting people——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>From Bernie: “——fatheaded, goggly-eyed, no-browed,
-slobber-lipped, dim-witted——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Shut up,” Ross said softly. “Before I bang both your
-heads together.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They stared.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Thank you. We’ve got to think. What’s this spot we’re
-in? What can we do about it? I don’t have any F-T-L contact
-name for Earth and obviously this fellow picked us up
-by mistake. I saw two women and a man—remember what
-he said?—just now trying to catch up with us. He seems
-to be some kind of criminal. Otherwise why a disguised
-gun-carrier? Why floor coverings ‘but don’t try to buy any’?
-And Jones seems to be the name of the local political subdivision,
-the name of the local deity and the currency.
-That’s important. It points to a rigid one-man dictatorship—Jones,
-of course, or possibly his dynasty. What
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>course of action should we take? Kick it around. Helena,
-what do you think?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“He shouldn’t have said we were ugly,” she pouted.
-“Isn’t <i>that</i> important?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Women!” Ross said grimly. “If you’ll kindly forget the
-trivial affront to your vanity perhaps we can figure something
-out.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena said stubbornly: “But he <i>shouldn’t</i>. We’re not.
-What if they just <i>think</i> we are because they all look alike
-and we don’t look like them?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross collapsed. After a long pause during which he tried
-and almost failed to control his temper he said slowly:
-“Thank you, Helena. You’re wrong, of course, but it was
-a contribution. You see, you can’t build up such a wild, far-fetched
-theory from the few facts available.” His voice was
-beginning to choke with anger. “It isn’t reasonable and it
-isn’t really any help. In fact it’s the God-damndest stupidest
-imitation of reasoning I have ever——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“City,” Bernard croaked, pointing. The jolting ride had
-become smoother, and gliding past the windows were green
-tiled buildings and street lights.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Fine,” Ross said bitterly. “We had a few clear minutes
-to think and now we find they were wasted by the crackpot
-dissertation of a female and my reasonable attempt to
-show her the elements of logical thinking.” He put his head
-in his hands and tried to ignore them, tried to reason it out.
-But the truck made a couple of sharp turns and jolted to
-a stop.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The door opened and the voice of their driver said, again
-from behind a flashlight’s dazzling circle: “Out. Walk
-ahead of me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They did, into a fair-sized, well-lighted room with eight
-people in it whom they studied in amazement. Every one
-of the eight was exactly the same height—six feet. Every
-one had straight red hair of exactly the same shade, sprouting
-from an identical hairline. Every one had precisely the
-same build—gangling but broad-shouldered. Their sixteen
-eyes were the identical blue under sixteen identical eyebrows.
-Head to toe, they were duplicates. One of them
-spoke—in exactly the same voice as the truckdriver’s.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>“So you want to be Joneses, do you?” he said.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Absolutely impossible.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But we took their money.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Give it back. Reasonable changes, yes, but look at
-them!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“We can’t give it back. Look what we spent already.
-Anyway, Sam,——” It sounded like “Sam” to Ross.
-“——anyway, Sam, look at some of the work you’ve done
-already. You can do it. I doubt if anybody else could, but
-you can.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross felt his eyes crossing, and gave up the effort of
-trying to tell which Jones was speaking to which. Even the
-clothing was nearly identical—purple pantaloons, scarlet
-jacket, black cummerbund sash, black shoes. Then he noticed
-that Third-from-the-left Jones—the one who seemed
-to be named Sam—wore a frilly shirt of white under the
-scarlet jacket. Only a lacy edge showed at the open collar;
-but where his was white, the others were all muted pastels
-of pink and green.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Sam said coldly, “I know nobody else can do it. Anybody
-else! Who else <i>is</i> there?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A Jones with a frill of chartreuse pursed his lips. “Well,”
-he said thoughtfully, “there’s Northside Tim Jones——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Northside Tim Jones,” Sam mimicked. “Eight of his
-jobs are in the stockade right now! Paraffin, for Jones’s
-sake—he still uses paraffin to mold a face!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I know, Sam, but after all, these people need help. If
-you won’t do it for them, what’s left?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Sam shrugged morosely. “Well——” he said. Then he
-shook his head, sighed, and came forward to look at the
-three travelers. With an expression of revulsion he said,
-“Strip.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross hesitated. “Hold it!” he said sharply to Helena, already
-half out of her coveralls. “Sir, there may have been
-some mistake. Would you mind explaining just what you
-propose to do?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The usual thing,” Sam said irritably. “Fix your hair,
-build up your frames, level you off at standard Jones height.
-The works. Though I must say,” he added bitterly, “I never
-saw such unpromising specimens in my life. How the Jones
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>have you managed to stay out of trouble this long? Whose
-garrets have you been hiding in?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross licked his lips. “You mean,” he said, “you want to
-make us look more like you gentlemen, is that it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<i>I</i> want!” Sam repeated in bafflement. Over his shoulder
-he roared, “Ben, what kind of creeps are you saddling me
-with?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ben, looking worried, said, “Holy Jones, Sam, I don’t
-get it either. It was a perfectly normal deal. This guy came
-up to me in Jones’s Joint and made a pitch. He knew the
-setup all right, and he had the money with him. Six hundred
-Joneses, cold cash; and it wasn’t funny money, either.”
-His face clouded. “I did think, though,” he mentioned,
-“that he said two women and one man. But Paul Jones
-picked them up right at the rendezvous, so it must’ve been
-the right ones.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He glowered suspiciously at Ross and the others. “Come
-to think of it,” he said, “maybe not. Tell you what, Sam,
-you just sit tight here for twenty minutes or so.” And he
-hurried out of the room.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>One of the other Joneses said curtly, “Sit down.” Ross,
-Bernie, and Helena found chairs lined up against a wall;
-they sat. A different Jones rummaged in a stack of papers
-on a table; he handed something to each of them. “Relax,”
-he advised. Obediently the three spacefarers opened the
-magazines he gave them. When they were settled, most of
-the Joneses, after a whispered conference, went out. The one
-that was left said, “No talking. If we made a mistake, we’re
-sorry. Meanwhile, you do what you’re told.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross found that his magazine was called <i>By Jones</i>; it
-seemed to be a periodical devoted to entertaining news and
-gossip of sports, fashion, and culture. He stared at an article
-headed “Be Glad the People’s Police Are Watching
-YOU!”, but the words made little sense. He tried to think;
-but somehow he couldn’t find a point at which to grasp
-the flickering mass of impressions that were circling
-through his brain. Nothing seemed to make a great deal
-of sense any more; and Ross suddenly realized that he was
-very, very tired.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>His mind an utter blank, he sat and waited.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>It was twenty minutes and a bit more. Then the door
-flew open and half a dozen Joneses burst in. Even at first
-sight, Ross could tell that three of them were newcomers.
-For one thing, two were women; and the third, though red-haired,
-tall and gangling, had a nose a full centimeter
-shorter than any of the others, and his hair was crisply
-curled.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“All right, you Peepeece!” snarled the first Jones. “You
-found what you were looking for—now try to get out!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena did the talking. It wasn’t Ross’s idea, but when
-her heel crunched down on his instep he was too startled
-to object, and from then on he didn’t get a chance to get
-a word in edgewise.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He had to admit that her act was getting across with the
-audience. Long before she had finished reporting their
-meeting, their flight to Azor, the escape from “Minerva,”
-and the flight here, most of the Joneses had put their guns
-away, and all were showing signs of stupefaction.
-“——And then,” she finished, “we saw this truck, and that
-very good-looking man picked us up. And so we’re here
-on Earth; and, honest to goodness, that’s the exact truth.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There was silence while the Joneses looked at each other.
-Then the plastic-surgeon-type Jones, Sam with the white
-shirt front, stepped forward. “Hold still, my dear,” he ordered.
-Helena bravely stood rigid while the surgeon raked
-searchingly through the roots of her hair, peered into her
-eyes, expertly traced the configuration of her ribs.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He stepped back, shaken. “One thing is for sure,” he
-told the others, “they’re not Peepeece. Not with those
-bones. They’d never get in.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ben Jones beat his forehead and moaned. “How do I
-get into these things?” he demanded.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>One of the female Joneses said shrilly, “We didn’t expect
-anything like this. We’re honest Jones-fearing Joneses
-and——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Shut up!” Ben Jones roared. “What about the other
-two, Sam? They all right too?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, for Jones’s sake, Ben,” Sam said disgustedly, “just
-look at them, will you? Do you think the police would take
-in a five-inch height deviation like that one——” he pointed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span>to Bernie——“or a half-bald scarecrow like that?” Ross,
-stung, opened his mouth to object; but swiftly closed it
-again. Nobody was paying much attention to him, anyhow,
-except as Exhibit A.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“So what do we do?” Ben demanded.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Sam shrugged. “The first thing we do,” he said wearily,
-“is to take care of our, uh, clients here. We get them out of
-the way, and then we decide what to do next.” He looked
-around at the other Joneses. “If you three will come this
-way,” he said, “we’ll finish up your job and get you back
-home. I needn’t remind you, of course, that if you should
-happen to mention anything you’ve seen here tonight to
-the Peepeece it would——” His voice was cut off by the
-closing door before Ross could catch the nature of the
-threat.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ben Jones stayed behind, scowling to himself. “You
-people got any Joneses?” he demanded abruptly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You mean money? Not any at all,” Helena said honestly.
-Ross could have kicked her.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ben Jones growled deep in his throat. “Always it happens
-to me!” he complained. “I suppose we’re going to
-have to feed you, too.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well,” Helena said diffidently, “we haven’t eaten in a
-long time——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ben Jones swore to his god, whose name was Jones, but
-he stepped to the door and ordered food. When it came it
-was surprisingly good; each of the three, with their diverse
-backgrounds, found it delicious. While they were eating,
-Ben Jones sat watching them, refreshing himself from time
-to time with a greenish bubbling liquid out of a jug. He
-offered some to Ross; who clutched his throat as though
-he’d swallowed molten steel.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ben Jones guffawed till his eyes ran. “First taste of
-Jones’s Juice, hey? Kind of gets right down inside, doesn’t
-it?” He wiped his eyes, then sobered. “I guess you people
-are all right,” he admitted. “What I’m going to do with you
-I don’t know. I can’t take you to Earth, and I can’t keep
-you here, and I can’t throw you out on the street—the
-Peepeece would have you in the stockade in ten minutes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross, startled, said, “Aren’t we on Earth?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>“Naw,” Ben Jones said disgustedly. “Didn’t you hear
-me? You’re on Jones, halfway between Jones’s Forks and
-Jonesgrad. But you came pretty close, at that. Earth’s about
-fifty miles out the Jones Pike past Jonesgrad, turn right at
-Jonesboro Minor.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross said bewilderedly, “The planet Earth is fifty miles
-along the Pike?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Not a planet,” Ben Jones said. “It’s an old city, kind
-of. Nobody lives there any more; the Peepeece don’t permit
-it. I’ve never been there, but they say it’s kind of, you know,
-different. Some of the buildings——” he seemed actually
-to be blushing——“are as much as fifteen, twenty stories
-high; and the walls aren’t even all green. Excuse me,” he
-added, looking at Helena.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Sam Jones returned and said to Ben, “It’s all right. All
-finished. Trivial alterations. Maybe they could have gone
-along for the rest of their lives on wigs and pads—but we
-don’t tell them that, do we? And anyway now they won’t
-worry. Healy Jones, the older man, for instance. Very
-bright fellow, but it seems he was working as a snathe-handler’s
-apprentice. Afraid to take the master’s test, afraid
-to change his line of work—might be noticed and questioned.”
-He heaved a tremendous sigh and poured himself
-a tremendous slug of the green fluid. Ben Jones gave Ross
-a cynical wink and shrug.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Look at my hand!” the surgeon exploded. It was shaking.
-He gulped the Jones Juice and poured himself another.
-“Nothing physical,” he said. “Neurosis. The subconscious
-coldly counting up my crimes and coldly imposing and
-executing sentence. I’m a surgeon, so my hand trembles.”
-He drank. “Jones is not mocked,” he said broodingly.
-“Jones is not mocked. Think those three are going to be
-happy? Think they’re going to be folded in Jones’s bosom
-just because they’re Joneses externally now? No. Watch
-them five years, ten years. Maybe they’ll sentence themselves
-to be hateful, vitriol-tempered lice and wonder
-why nobody loves them. Maybe they’ll sentence themselves
-to penal servitude and wonder why everybody pushes them
-around, why they haven’t the guts to hit back—Jones is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>not mocked,” he told the jug of green liquid, ignoring the
-others, and drank again.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ben Jones said softly to them, “Come on,” and led them
-into an adjoining room furnished with sleeping pads. He
-said apologetically, “The doctor’s nerves are shot tonight.
-Trouble is, he’s too Jones-fearing. Me, I can take it or leave
-it alone.” His laugh had a little too much bravado in it.
-“There’s a little bit of nonJones in the best of us, I always
-say—but not to the doctor. And not when he’s hitting the
-Jones juice.” He shrugged cynically and said, “What the
-hell? L-sub-T equals L-sub-zero e to the minus T-over-two-N.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross had him by his shirt frill. “Say that again!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ben Jones shoved him away. “What’s the matter with
-you, boy?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I’m sorry. Would you please repeat that formula? What
-you said?” he hastily amended when the word “formula”
-obviously failed to register.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ben Jones repeated the formula wonderingly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What does it mean?” Ross demanded. “I’ve been chasing
-the damned thing across the Galaxy.” He hastily filled
-Ben Jones in on its previous appearances.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well,” Ben Jones said, “it means what it says, of
-course. I mean, it’s obvious, isn’t it?” He studied their
-faces and added uncertainly, “Isn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What does it mean to <i>you</i>, Ben?” Ross asked softly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why, what it means to anybody, pal. Right’s right,
-wrong’s wrong, Jones is in his Heaven, conform or else—it
-means morality, man. What else could it mean?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross then proceeded to make an unmannerly nuisance
-of himself. He grilled their involuntary host mercilessly,
-shrugging aside all attempted diversions of the talk into
-what they were going to do with the three visitors. He ignored
-protestations that Ben was no Jonesologist, Jones
-knew, and drilled in. By the time Ben Jones exploded,
-stamped out, and locked them in for the night, he had
-elicited the following:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Everybody knew the formula; they were taught it at their
-mother’s knee. It was recited antiphonally before and after
-Jones Meetings. Ben knew it was right, of course, and some
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>day he was going to get right with Jones and live up to it,
-but not just yet, because if he didn’t make money in the
-prosthesis racket somebody else would. The formula was
-everywhere: on the lintels of public buildings, hanging in
-classrooms, and on the bedroom walls of the most Jones-fearing
-old ladies where they could see its comforting message
-last thing at night and first thing in the morning.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>From a book? Well yes, he guessed so; sure it was in the
-Book of Joneses, but who could say whether that was where
-it started. Most people thought it was just Handed Down.
-Way back during the war—what war? The War of the
-Joneses, of course! Anyway, in the war the last of the
-holdouts against the formula had been destroyed. No, he
-didn’t know anything about the war. No, not his grandfather’s
-time or his grandfather’s grandfather’s time. Long
-ago, that war was. Maybe there were records in the old
-museum in Earth. The city, of course, not some damn
-planet he never heard of!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>After Ben Jones slammed out and the room darkened
-Helena and Bernie exchanged comforting words from adjoining
-sleeping pads, to Ross’s intense displeasure. They
-fell asleep and at last he fell asleep still churning over the
-problem.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When he woke he found that evidently the doctor, Sam
-Jones, had stumbled in during the night and passed out on
-the pad next to him. The white frill was stiff and green with
-dried Jones Juice. Helena and Bernie still slept. He tried
-the door.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was locked, but there was a tantalizing hum of voices
-beyond it. He put his ear to the cold steel. The fruits of his
-eavesdropping were scanty but alarming.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“——cut ’em down mumble found someplace mumble.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“——mumble never killed yet mumble prosthesis
-racket.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“——Jones’s sake, it’s their lives or mumble mumble
-time to get scared mumble Peepeece are you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>And then apparently the speakers moved out of range.
-Ross was cold with sweat, and there was an abnormal hollow
-in the pit of his stomach that breakfast would never
-fill.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>He spun around as a Jones voice croaked painfully:
-“Hear anything good, stranger?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The surgeon, looking very dilapidated, was sitting up and
-regarding him through bloodshot eyes. “They’re talking
-about killing us,” he said shortly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“They are not really intelligent,” Sam Jones said wearily.
-“They were just bright enough to entangle me to the point
-where I had to work for them—and to keep me copiously
-supplied with that green stuff I haven’t the intelligence to
-use in moderation.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross said, “How’d you like to break away from this?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Sam Jones mutely extended his hand. It trembled like
-a leaf. He said, “For his own inscrutable reason, Jones
-grants me steadiness of hand during an operation designed
-to frustrate his grand design. He then overwhelms me with
-a titanic thirst for oblivion to my shame.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“There’s no design,” Ross said. “Or if there is, luckily
-this planet is a trifling part of it. I have never heard of such
-arrogant pip-squeakery in my life. You flyspecks in your
-shabby corner of the Galaxy think your own fouled-up
-mess is the pattern of universal life. You’re wrong! I’ve
-seen life elsewhere and I know it isn’t.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The doctor passed his trembling hand over his eyes.
-“Jones is not mocked,” he croaked. “L-sub-T equals L-sub-zero
-e to the minus T-over-two-N. You can’t fight <i>that</i>,
-stranger. You can’t fight that.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross realized he was silently crying behind his covering
-hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He said, much more gently, “It’s nothing you have to
-fight. It’s something you have to understand.” He told Sam
-Jones of his two previous encounters with the formula.
-The doctor looked up, his eyes full of wonder. Ross said,
-“How would you like to be free, doctor? Free of your
-shaking hands, free of your guilt, free of these killers? How
-would you like to know the truth?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The doctor said faintly, “If I dared——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross pressed, “The museum in Earth city. Get me records,
-facts, anything about the War of the Joneses. If there’s
-any meaning to the formula it’ll have to lie in that. It seems
-there was a battle about its interpretation and we know
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>who won. Let’s find out what the other side said. Get me
-in there.” He was thinking of the disgraceful war of fanaticism
-that had marred his own planet’s history. The doctor’s
-weak Jones jaw was firming up, though his eyes were still
-haunted. “Stall your killer friends, doctor,” Ross urged.
-“Tell them you can use us for experiments that’ll cut the
-cost of the operations. That ought to bring them around.
-And get me the facts!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“To be free,” the doctor said wistfully. He said after a
-pause, “I’ll try. But——” And rapped a code series on the
-steel door.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>
- <h2 class='c005' title='Chapter 11'><span class='xxlarge'><b>..... 11</b></span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>THE doctor said with weak belligerence,
-“Who do you think I am? Jones? I <i>had</i> to leave your
-friends behind. I had enough trouble getting those hoods
-to let me take <i>you</i> along. After all, I’m not a miracle-worker.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross said sullenly, “Okay, okay.” He glowered out of
-the car window and spat out a tendril of red hair that had
-come loose from the fringe surrounding his mouth. The
-trouble with a false beard was that it itched, worse than
-the real article, worse than any torment Ross had ever
-known. But at least Ross, externally and at extreme range,
-was enough of a Jones to pass a casual glance.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>And what would Helena and Bernie be thinking now?
-He hadn’t had a chance to whisper to them; they’d been just
-waking when the doctor dragged him out. Ross put that
-problem out of his mind; there were problems enough right
-on hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He cautiously felt his red wig to see if it was on straight.
-The doctor didn’t seem to look away from his driving, but
-he said: “Leave it alone. That’s the first thing the Peepeece
-look for, somebody who obviously isn’t sure if his hair is
-still on or not. It won’t come off.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Umph,” said Ross. The road was getting worse, it
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>seemed; they had passed no houses for several miles now.
-They rounded a rutted turn, and ahead was a sign.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c000'>
- <div>STOP!</div>
- <div><span class='sc'>restricted area ahead</span></div>
- <div><span class='sc'>Warning: This Road Is Mined</span></div>
- <div><span class='sc'>No Traffic Allowed! Detour</span></div>
- <div>“Trespassers beyond this point will be shot</div>
- <div>without further notice.” Decree #404-5</div>
- <div>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;People’s Commissariat of</div>
- <div>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Culture and Solidarity.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>The doctor spat contemptuously out the window and
-roared past. Ross said, “Hey!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, relax,” said the doctor. “That’s just the Cultureniks.
-Nobody pays any attention to <i>them</i>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross swallowed and sat as lightly as possible on the
-green leather cushion of the car. By the time they had gone
-a quarter of a mile, he began to feel a little reassured that
-the doctor knew what he was talking about. Then the doctor
-swerved sharply to miss a rusted hulk and almost skidded
-off the road. He swore and manhandled the wheel until
-they were back on the straightaway.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>White lipped, Ross asked, “What was that?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Car,” grunted the doctor. “Hit a mine. Silly fools!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross squawked, “But you said——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Shut up,” the doctor ordered tensely. “That was weeks
-ago; they haven’t had a chance to lay new mines since
-then.” Pause. “I hope.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The car roared on. Ross closed his eyes, limply abandoning
-himself to what was in store. But if it was bad to see
-what was going on, the roaring, swerving, jolting race was
-ten times worse with his eyes closed. He opened them again
-in time to see another sign flash past, gone before he could
-read it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What was that?” he demanded.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What’s the difference?” the doctor grunted. “Want to go
-back?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, no——” Ross thought for a moment. “Do we
-have to go this fast, though?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>“If we want to get there. Crossed a Peepeece radar screen
-ten miles back; they’ll be chasing us by now.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, I see,” Ross said weakly. “Look, Doc, tell me one
-thing—why do they make this place so hard to get to?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Tabu area,” the doctor said shortly. “Not allowed.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why not allowed?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Because it’s not allowed. Don’t want people poking
-through the old records.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why not just put the old records in a safe place—or
-burn the damn things up?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Because they didn’t, that’s why. Shut up! Expect me to
-tell you why the Peepeece do anything? They don’t know
-themselves. It isn’t Jonesly to destroy, I guess.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross shut up. He leaned against the window, letting
-the air rush over his head. They were moving through
-forest, purplish squatty trees with long, rustling leaves. The
-sky overhead was crisp and cool looking; it was still early
-morning. Ross exhaled a long breath. Back on Halsey’s
-Planet he would be getting up about now, rising out of a
-soft, warm bed, taking his leisurely time about breakfast,
-climbing into a comfortable car to make his way to the
-spaceport where he was safe, respected, and at home....
-Damn Haarland!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At least, Ross thought, some sort of a pattern was beginning
-to shape up. The planets were going out of communication
-each for its own reason; but wasn’t there a basic
-reason-for-the-reasons that was the same in each case?
-Wasn’t there some overall design—some explanation that
-covered all the facts, pointed to a way out?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He sat up straight as they approached a string of little
-signs. He scanned them worriedly as they rolled past.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c000'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Workers, Peasants, Joneses all——”</div>
- <div class='line'>“By these presents know ye——”</div>
- <div class='line'>“If you don’t stop in spite of all——”</div>
- <div class='line'>“THIS to hell will blow ye!”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Duck!” the doctor yelled, crouching down in the seat
-and guiding the careening car with one hand. Ross, startled,
-followed his example, but not before he saw that “THIS”
-was an automatic, radar-actuated rapid-fire gun mounted
-a few yards past the last sign. There was a stuttering roar
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>from the gun and a splatter of metal against the armored
-sides of the car. The doctor sat up again as soon as the
-burst had hit; evidently only one was to be feared. “Yah,
-yah,” he jeered at the absent builders of the gun. “Lousy
-fifty-millimeters can’t punch their way through a tin can!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross, gasping, got up just in time to see the last sign
-in the series:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c000'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“By order of People’s Democratic Council</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Of Arts &amp; Sciences, Small Arms Division.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>He said wildly, “They can’t even write a poem properly.
-Did you notice the first and third line rhyme-words?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Surprisingly, the doctor glanced at him and laughed with
-a note of respect. He took a hand off the wheel to pat Ross
-on the shoulder. “You’ll make a Jones yet, my boy,” he
-promised. “Don’t worry about these things; I told you this
-place was restricted. This stuff isn’t worth bothering about.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross found that he was able to smile. There was a point,
-he realized with astonishment, where courage came easily;
-it was the only thing left. He sat up straighter and breathed
-the air more deeply. Then it happened.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They rounded another curve; the doctor slammed on
-the brakes. Suspended overhead across the road was a
-single big sign:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c000'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>THAT’S ALL, JONES!</div>
- <div class='line'>——<span class='sc'>People’s Police</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>The car bucked, slewed around, and skidded. The wheels
-locked, but not in time to keep it from sliding into the pit,
-road wide and four feet deep, that was dug in front of them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross heard the axles crack and the tires blow; but the
-springing of the car was equal to the challenge. He was
-jarred clear in the air and tumbled to the floor in a heap;
-but no bones were broken.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Painfully he pushed the door open and crawled out. The
-doctor limped after and the two of them stood on the edge
-of the pit, looking at the ruin of their car.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That one,” said the doctor, “was worth bothering
-about.” He motioned Ross to silence and cocked an ear.
-Was there a distant roaring sound, like another car following
-on the road they had traveled? Ross wasn’t sure; but
-the doctor’s expression convinced him. “Peepeece,” he said
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>briefly. “From here on it’s on foot. They won’t follow beyond
-here; but let’s get out of sight. They’ll by-Jones <i>shoot</i>
-beyond here if they see us!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross stared unbelievingly. “This is Earth?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The doctor fanned himself and blew. “That’s it,” he said,
-looking around curiously. “Heard a lot about it, but I’ve
-never been here before,” he explained. “Funny-looking,
-isn’t it?” He nudged Ross, indicating a shattered concrete
-structure beside them on the road. “Notice that toll
-booth?” he whispered slyly. “Eight sides!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross said wearily, “Yes, mighty funny! Look, Doc, why
-don’t you sort of wander around by yourself for a while?
-That big thing up ahead is the museum you were talking
-about, isn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The doctor squinted. His eyes were unnaturally bright,
-and his breathing was fast, but he was making an attempt
-to seem casual in the presence of these manifold obscenities
-of design. He licked his lips. “<i>Round pillars</i>,” he marveled.
-“Why, yes, I think that’s the museum. You go on up
-there, like you say. I’ll, uh, sort of see what there is to see.
-Jones, yes!” He staggered off, staring from ribald curbing
-to scatological wall in an orgy of prurience.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross sighed and walked through the deserted, weed-grown
-streets to the stone building that bore on its cracked
-lintel the one surviving word, “Earth.” This was all wrong,
-he was almost certain; Earth <i>had</i> to be a planet, not a city.
-But still....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The museum had to have the answers.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>On its moldering double doors was a large lead seal. He
-read: “Surplus Information Repository. Access denied to
-unauthorized personnel.” But the seal had been forced by
-somebody; one of the doors swung free, creaking.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross invoked the forcer of the door. If <i>he</i> could do it....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He went in and stumbled over a skeleton, presumably
-that of the last entrant. The skull had been crushed by a
-falling beam. There was some sort of mechanism involved—a
-trigger, a spring, a release hook. All had rusted
-badly, and the spring had lost its tension over the years. A
-century? Two? Five? Ross prayed that any similar mantraps
-had likewise rusted solid, and cautiously inched
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>through the dismal hall of the place, ready for a backward
-leap at the first whisper of a concealed mechanism in action.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was unnecessary. The place was—dead.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Exploring room after room, he realized slowly that he
-was stripping off history in successive layers. The first had
-been the booby-trapped road, lackadaisically planned to
-ensure that mere inquisitiveness would be discouraged.
-There had been no real denial of access, for there was almost
-no possibility that anybody would care to visit the
-place.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Next, the seal and the mantraps. An earlier period.
-Somebody had once said: “This episode is closed. This
-history is determined. We have all reached agreement. Only
-a dangerous or frivolous meddler would seek to rake over
-these dead ashes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>And then, prying into the museum, Ross found the era
-during which agreement had been reached, during which it
-still was necessary to insist and demonstrate and cajole.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The outer rooms and open shelves were testimonials to
-Jones. There were books of Jonesology—ingenious, persuasive
-books divided usually into three sections. Human
-Jonesology would be a painstaking effort to determine the
-exact physical and mental tolerances of a Jones. Anatomical
-atlases minutely gave femur lengths, cranial angles, eye
-color to an angstrom, hair thickness to a micron. Moral
-Jonesology treated of the dangers of deviating from these
-physical and more elastic mental specifications. (Here the
-formula appeared again, repeatedly invoked but never explained.
-Already it was a truism.) And Sacred Jonesology
-was a series of assertions concerning the nature of The
-Jones in whose image all other Joneses were created.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Subdivisions of the open shelves held works on Geographical
-Jonesology (the distribution across the planet of
-Joneses) and similar works.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross went looking for a lower layer of history and found
-it in a bale of crumbling pamphlets. “Comrades, We Must
-Now Proceed to Consolidate Our Victory”; “Ultra-Jonesism,
-An Infantile Political Disorder”; “On The Fallacy of
-‘Jonesism In One Country’.” These Ross devoured. They
-added up to the tale of a savage political battle among the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>victors of a greater war. Clemency was advocated and
-condemned; extermination of the opposition was casually
-mentioned; the Cultural Faction and the Biological Faction
-had obviously been long locked in a death struggle. Across
-the face of each pamphlet stood a similar logotype: the
-formula. It was enigmatically mentioned in one pamphlet,
-which almost incomprehensibly advanced the claims of
-the Biological faction to supremacy among the Joneses
-United: “Let us never forget, comrades, that the initiation
-of the great struggle was not caused by our will or by the
-will of our sincere and valiant opponents, the Culturists.
-The inexorable law of nature, L<sub>T</sub>=L<sub>O</sub>e-<sup>T/2N</sup>, was the begetter
-of that holocaust from which our planet has emerged
-purified——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Was it now?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The entrance to a musty, airless wing had once been
-bricked up. The mortar was crumbling and a few bricks
-had fallen. Above the arched doorway a sign said Military
-Archives. On the floor was a fallen metal plaque whose
-inscription said simply Dead Storage. He kicked the loose
-bricks down and stepped through.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>That was it. The place was lightless, except for the daylight
-filtering through the violated archway. Ross hauled
-maps and orders and period newspapers and military histories
-and handbooks into the corridor in armfuls and
-spread them on the floor. It took only minutes for him to
-realize that he had his answer. He ran into the street and
-shouted for the doctor.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Together they pored over the papers, occasionally reading
-aloud choice bits, wonderingly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The simplest statement of the problem they found was
-in the paper-backed “Why We Fight” pamphlet issued for
-the enlisted men of the Provisional North Continent Government
-Army.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What is a Jones?” the pamphlet asked rhetorically. “A
-Jones is just a human being, the same as you and I. Dismiss
-rumors that a Jones is supernatural or unkillable with
-a laugh when you hear them. They arose because of the
-extraordinary resemblance of one Jones to another. Putting
-a bullet through one Jones in a skirmish and seeing another
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>one rise up and come at you with a bayonet is a chilling
-experience; in the confusion of battle it may seem that the
-dead Jones rose and attacked. But this is not the case.
-Never let the rumor pass unchallenged, and never fail to
-report habitual rumor-mongers.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“How did the Joneses get that way? Many of you were
-too young when this long war began to be aware of the
-facts. Since then, wartime disruption of education and
-normal communications facilities has left you in the dark.
-This is the authoritative statement in simple language that
-explains why we fight.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“This planet was colonized, presumably from the quasi-legendary
-planet Earth. (The famous Earth Archives
-Building, incidentally, is supposed to derive its puzzling
-name from this fact.) It is presumed that the number of
-colonists was originally small, probably in the hundreds.
-Though the number of human beings on the planet increased
-enormously as the generations passed, genetically
-the population remained small. The same ones (heredity
-units) were combined and reshuffled in varying combinations,
-but no new ones were added. Now, it is a law of genetics
-that in small populations, variations tend to smooth
-out and every member of the population tends to become
-like every other member. So-called unfixed genes are lost
-as the generations pass; the end product of this process
-would theoretically be a population in which every member
-had exactly the same genes as every other member. This is
-a practical impossibility, but the Joneses whom we fight
-are a tragic demonstration of the fact that the process need
-not be pushed to its ultimate extreme to dislocate the life
-of a planet and cause endless misery to its dwellers.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“From our very earliest records there have been Joneses.
-It is theorized that this gangling redheaded type was well
-represented aboard the original colonizing ship, but some
-experts believe one Jones type and the workings of chance
-would be sufficient to produce the unhappy situation of
-type-dominance.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Some twenty-five years ago Joneses were everywhere
-among us and not, as now, withdrawn to South Continent
-and organized into a ruthless aggressor nation. They made
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>up about thirty per cent of the population and had become
-a closely knit organization devoted to mutual help. They
-held the balance of political power in every election from
-the municipal to the planetary level and virtually monopolized
-production and finance. There were fanatics and
-rabble-rousers among them who readily exploited a rising
-tide of discontent over a series of curbing laws, finally
-pushed through by a planetary majority, united at last in
-self-defense against the rapacity and ruthless self-interest
-of the Joneses.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The Joneses withdrew en masse to South Continent.
-Some sincerely wished them well; others scoffed at the secession
-as a sulky and childish gesture. Only a handful of
-citizens guessed the terrible truth, and were laughed at for
-their pains. Five years after their withdrawal the Joneses
-returned across the Vandemeer Peninsula and the war had
-begun.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“A final word. There has been much loose talk among
-the troops about the slogan of the Joneses, which goes
-L<sub>T</sub>=L<sub>O</sub>e-<sup>T/2N</sup>. Some uninformed people actually believe
-it is an invocation which gives the Joneses supernatural
-power and invulnerability. It is not. It is merely an ancient
-and well-known formula in genetics which quantitatively
-describes the loss of unfixed genes from a population. By
-mouthing this formula, the Joneses are simply expressing
-in a compact way their ruthless determination that all
-genes except theirs shall disappear from the planet and the
-Joneses alone survive. In the formula L<sub>T</sub> means the number
-of genes after the lapse of T years, L<sub>O</sub> means the original
-number of genes, e means the base of the natural system of
-logarithms and N means number of generations.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The surgeon said slowly and with wonder: “So <i>that</i> was
-my God!” He stretched out his hands before him. The
-fingers were rock-steady.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross left him and paced the corridor uneasily. Fine.
-Now he knew. Lost genes in genetically small populations.
-On Halsey’s Planet, some fertility gene, no doubt. On Azor,
-a male-sex-linked gene that provides men with the backbone
-required to come out ahead in the incessant war of
-the genders? Bernie was a gutless character. Here, all too
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>many genes determining somatotype. On the planets that
-had dropped out of communication, who knew? Scientific-thought
-genes? Sex-drive-determining genes?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>One thing was clear: any gene-loss was bad for the survival
-of a planetary colony. Evolution had——on Earth——worked
-out in a billion trial-and-error years a working
-mechanism, man. Man exhibited a vast range of variation,
-which was why he survived almost any conceivable catastrophe.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Reduce man to a single type and he is certain to succumb,
-sooner or later, to the inevitable disaster that his
-one type cannot cope with.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The problem, now stated clearly, was bigger than he had
-dreamed. And now he knew only the problem—not the
-solution.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Go to Earth.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Well, he had tried. There had been no flaw in his calculations,
-no failure in setting up the Wesley panel. Yet—this
-was Jones, not Earth; the city was only a city, not the planet
-that the star charts logged. And the planet, beyond all
-other considerations, was less like Earth than any conceivable
-chart error could account for. Gravitation, wrong;
-atmosphere, wrong; flora and fauna, wrong.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>So. Eliminate the impossible, and what remains, however
-unlikely, is true. So there had been a flaw in his calculations.
-And the way to check that, once and for all, was
-to get back to the starship.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross wheeled and went back into the book room. “Doc,”
-he called, “how do we get out of here?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The answer was: on their bellies. They trudged through
-the forest for hours, skirting the road, hiding whenever a
-suspicious noise gave warning that someone might be in
-the vicinity. The Peepeece knew they were in the woods;
-there was no doubt of that. And as soon as they got past
-the tabu area, they had to crawl.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was well past dark before Ross and the doctor,
-scratched and aching, got to the tiny hamlet of Jonesie-on-the-Pike.
-By the light from the one window in the village
-that gave any signs of life, the doctor took a single horrified
-look at Ross and shuddered. “You wait here,” he
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>ordered. “Hide under a bush or something—your beard
-rubbed off.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross watched the doctor rap on the door and be admitted.
-He couldn’t hear the conversation that followed,
-but he saw the doctor’s hand go to his pocket, then clasp
-the hand of the figure in the doorway. That was the language
-all the galaxy understood, Ross realized; he only
-hoped that the householder was an honest man—i. e., one
-who would stay bribed, instead of informing the Peepeece
-on them. It was beyond doubt that their descriptions had
-long since been broadcast; the road must have been lined
-with TV scanners on the way in.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The door opened again, and the doctor walked briskly
-out. He strode out into the street, walked half a dozen paces
-down the road, and waited for Ross to catch up with him.
-“Okay,” the doctor whispered. “They’ll pick us up in half
-an hour, down the road about a quarter of a mile. Let’s go.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What about the man you were talking to?” Ross asked.
-“Won’t he turn us in?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The doctor chuckled. “I gave him a drink of Jones’s
-Juice out of my private stock,” he said. “No, he won’t turn
-anybody in, at least not until he wakes up.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross nodded invisibly in the dark. He had a thought,
-and suppressed it. But it wouldn’t stay down. Cautiously
-he let it seep through his subconscious again, and looked it
-over from every angle.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>No, there wasn’t any doubt of it. Things were definitely
-looking up!</p>
-
-<hr class='c008'>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ben Jones roared, “Just what the hell do you think
-you’re doing, Doc?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The doctor pushed Ross through the doorway and turned
-to face the other Jones. He asked mildly, “What?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You heard me!” Ben Jones blustered. “I let you out
-with this one, and maybe I made a mistake at that. But I
-by-Jones don’t intend to let you get out of here with all
-three of them. What are you trying to get away with anyhow?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The doctor didn’t change his mild expression. He took a
-short, unhurried step forward. <i>Smack.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>Ben Jones reeled back from the slap, his mouth open,
-hand to his face. “Hey!” he squawked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The doctor said levelly, “I’m telling you this just one
-time, Ben. <i>Don’t cross me.</i> You’ve got the guns, but I’ve
-got these.” He held up his spread hands. “You can shoot
-me, I won’t deny that. But you can’t make me do your
-dirty work for you. From now on things go my way—with
-these three people, with my own life, with the bootleg
-plastic surgery we do to keep you in armored cars. Or else
-there won’t <i>be</i> any plastic surgery.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ben Jones swallowed, and Ross could see the man fighting
-himself. He said after a moment, “No reason to act
-sore, Doc. Haven’t we always got along? The only thing
-is, maybe you don’t realize how dangerous these three——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Shut up,” said the doctor. “Right, boys?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The other two Joneses in the room shuffled and looked
-uncomfortable. One of them said, “Don’t get mad, Ben,
-but it kind of looks as if he’s right. We and the doc had a
-little talk before you got here. It figures, you have to admit
-it. He does the work; we ought to let him have something
-to say about it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The look that Ben Jones gave him was pure poison, but
-the man stood up to it, and in a minute Ben Jones looked
-away. “Sure,” he said distantly. “You go right ahead, Doc.
-We’ll talk this over again later on, when we’ve all had a
-chance to cool off.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The doctor nodded coldly and followed Ross out. Helena
-and Bernie, suitably Jonesified for the occasion, were already
-in the car; Ross and the doctor jumped in with them,
-and they drove away. Now that the strain was relaxed a bit
-the doctor was panting, but there was a grin on his lips.
-“Son-of-a-Jones,” he said happily, “I’ve been waiting five
-years for this day!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross asked, “Is it all right? They won’t chase after us?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, not Ben Jones. He has his own way of handling
-things. Now if we were stupid enough to go back there, after
-he had a chance to talk to the others without me around,
-that would be something different. But we aren’t going
-back.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross’s eyes widened. “Not even you, Doc?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>“Especially not me.” The doctor concentrated on his
-driving. Presently: “If I take you to the rendezvous, can
-you find your ship from there?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Sure,” said Ross confidently. “And Doc—welcome to
-our party.”</p>
-
-<hr class='c008'>
-
-<p class='c007'>Space had never looked better.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They hung half a million miles off Jones, and Ross
-fumbled irritatedly with the Wesley panel while the other
-three stood around and made helpful suggestions. He set
-up the integrals for Earth just as he had set them up once
-before; the plot came out the same. He transferred the
-computations to the controls and checked it against the
-record in the log. The same. The ship should have gone
-straight as a five-dimensional geodesic arrow to the planet
-Earth.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Instead, he found by cross-checking the star atlas, it had
-gone in almost the other direction entirely, to the planet
-of Jones.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He threw his pencil across the room and swore. “I don’t
-get it,” he complained.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It’s probably broken, Ross,” Helena told him seriously.
-“You know how machines are. They’re <i>always</i> doing something
-funny just when you least expect it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross bit down hard on his answer to that. Bernie contributed
-his morsel, and even Dr. Sam Jones, whose race
-had lost even the memory of spaceflight, had a suggestion.
-Ross swore at them all, then took time to swear at the
-board, at the starship, at Haarland, at Wesley, and most of
-all at himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena turned her back pointedly. She said to Bernie,
-“The way Ross acts sometimes you’d honestly think he was
-the <i>only</i> one who’d <i>ever</i> run this thing. Why, my goodness,
-I <i>know</i> you can’t <i>rely</i> on that silly board! Didn’t I have just
-exactly the same experience with it myself?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross gritted his teeth and doggedly started all over again
-with the computations for Earth. Then he did a slow double-take.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Helena,” he whispered. “What experience did you
-have?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>“Why, just the same as now! Don’t you <i>remember</i>,
-Ross? When you and Bernie were in jail and I had to come
-rescue you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What happened?” Ross shouted.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My goodness, Ross don’t <i>yell</i> at me! There was that
-silly light flashing all the time. It was driving me out of my
-<i>mind</i>. Well, I knew <i>perfectly</i> well that I wasn’t going to get
-anywhere if it was going to act like <i>that</i>, so I just——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross, eyes glazed, robotlike, lifted the cover off the main
-Wesley unit. Down at the socket of the alarm signal, shorting
-out two delicately machined helices that were a basic
-part of the Wesley drive, wedged between an eccentric
-vernier screw and a curious crystalline lattice, was—the
-hairpin.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He picked it out and stared at it unbelievingly. He marveled,
-“It says in the manual, ‘On no account should any
-alterations be made in any part of the Wesley driving assembly
-by any technician under a C-Twelve rating.’ She
-didn’t like the alarm going off. So she fixed it. With a hairpin.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena giggled and appealed to Bernie. “Doesn’t he <i>kill</i>
-you?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross’s eyes were glazed and his hands worked convulsively.
-“Kill,” he muttered, advancing on Helena. “Kill, kill,
-kill——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Help!” she screamed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The two men managed to subdue Ross with the aid of a
-needle from Dr. Jones’s kit-pocket.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena was in tears and tried to explain to the others:
-“Just for no reason at <i>all</i>——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She got only icy stares. After a while she sulkily began
-setting up the Wesley board for the Earth jump.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>
- <h2 class='c005' title='Chapter 12'><span class='xxlarge'><b>..... 12</b></span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>ROSS awoke, clearheaded and alert.
-Helena and Bernie were looking at him apprehensively.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He understood and said grudgingly, “Sorry I flipped. I
-didn’t mean to scare you. Everything seemed to go
-black——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They smothered him with relieved protestations that
-they understood perfectly and Helena wouldn’t stick hairpins
-into the Wesley Drive ever again. Even if the ship
-hadn’t blown up. Even if she had rescued the men from
-“Minerva.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Anyway,” she said happily, “we’re off Earth. At least,
-it’s <i>supposed</i> to be Earth, according to the charts.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He unkinked himself and studied the planet through a
-vision screen at its highest magnification. The apparent
-distance was one mile; nothing was hidden from him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Golly,” he said, impressed. “Science! Makes you realize
-what backward gropers we were.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Obviously they had it, down there on the pleasant, cloud-flecked,
-green and blue planet. Science! White, towering
-cities whose spires were laced by flying bridges—and inexplicably
-decorated with something that looked like cooling
-fins. Huge superstreamlined vehicles lazily coursing the
-roads and skies. Long, linked-pontoon cities slowly heaving
-on the breasts of the oceans. Science!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>Ross said reverently, “We’re here. Flarney was right.
-Helena, Bernie, Doc—maybe this is the parent planet of
-us all and maybe it isn’t. But the people who built those
-cities <i>must</i> know all the answers. Helena, will you please
-land us?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Sure, Ross. Shall I look for a spaceport?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross frowned. “Of course. Do you think <i>these</i> people
-are savages? We’ll go in openly and take our problem to
-them. Besides, imagine the radar setup they must have!
-We’d never sneak through even if we wanted to.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena casually fingered the controls; there was the
-sickening swoop characteristic of her ship-handling, several
-times repeated. As she jerked them wildly across the
-planet’s orbit she explained over her shoulder, “I had the
-darnedest time finding a really big spaceport on that little
-radar thing—oops!—but there’s a nice-looking one near
-that coastal city. Whee! That was close! There was one—sorry,
-Ross—on a big lake inland, but I didn’t like——Now
-everybody be very quiet. This is the hard part and I
-have to concentrate.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross hung on.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena landed the ship with her usual timber-shivering
-crash. “Now,” she said briskly, “we’d better allow a little
-time for it to cool down. This <i>is</i> nice, isn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross dragged himself, bruised, from the floor. He had to
-agree. It was nice. The landing field, rimmed by gracious,
-light buildings (with the cooling fins), was dotted with
-great, silvery ships. They didn’t, Ross thought with a twinge
-of irritation, seem to be space vessels, though; leave it to
-Helena to get them down at some local airport! Still—the
-ships also, he noticed, were liberally studded with the fins.
-He peered at them with puzzlement and a rising sense of
-excitement. Certainly they had a function, and that function
-could only be some sort of energy receptor. Could it
-be—dared he imagine that it was the long-dreamed-of
-cosmic energy tap? What a bonus that would be to bring
-back with him! And what other marvels might this polished
-technology have to give them....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Bernie distracted him. He said, “Hey, Ross. Here comes
-somebody.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>But even Bernie’s tone was awed. A magnificent vehicle
-was crawling toward them across the field. It was long,
-low, bullet-shaped—and with cooling fins. Multiple plates
-of silvery metal contrasted with a glossy black finish. All
-about its periphery was a lacy pattern of intricate crumples
-and crinkles of metal, as though its skirts had been crushed
-and rumpled. Ross sighed and marveled: What a production
-problem these people had solved, stamping those forms
-out between dies.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Then he saw the faces of the passengers.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He drew in his breath sharply. Godlike. Two men whose
-brows were cliffs of alabaster, whose chins were strong
-with the firmness of steady, flamelike wisdom. Two women
-whose calm, lovely features made the heart within him
-melt and course.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The vehicle stopped ten yards from the open spacelock
-of the ship. From its tip gushed upward a ten-foot fountain
-of sparks that flashed the gamut of the rainbow. Simultaneously
-one of the godlike passengers touched the wheel, and
-there was a sweet, piercing, imperative summons like a
-hundred strings and brasses in unison.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena whispered, “They want us to come out. Ross—Ross—I
-can’t face <i>them</i>!” She buried her face in her hands.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Steady,” he said gravely. “They’re only human.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross gripped that belief tightly; he hardly dared permit
-himself to think, even for a second, that perhaps these
-people were no longer merely human. Hoarsely he said,
-“We need their help. Maybe we should send Doc Jones
-out first. He’s the oldest of us, and he’s the only one you
-could call a scientist; he can talk to them. Where is he?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A raucous Jones voice bellowed through the domed control
-room: “Who wansh ol’ doc, hargh? Who wansh goo’
-ol’ doc?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Good old doc staggered into the room, obviously loaded
-to the gills by a very enjoyable backslide. He began to
-sing:</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“In A. J. seven thirty-two a Jones from Jones’s Valley,
-He wandered into Jones’s Town to hold a Jonesist
-Rally. He shocked the gents and ladies both; his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>talk was most disturbing; He spoke of seven-sided
-doors and purple-colored curbing——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Jones’s eyes focused on Helena. He flushed. “’m deeply
-sorry,” he mumbled. “Unf’rgivable vulgararrity. Mom’ntarily
-f’rgot ladies were present.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Again that sweet summons sounded.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Pull yourself together, doctor,” Ross begged. “This is
-Earth. The people seem—very advanced. Don’t disgrace
-us. Please!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Jones’s face went pale and perspiration broke out.
-“’Scuse me,” he mumbled, and staggered out again.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross closed the door on him and said, “We’ll leave him.
-He’ll be all right; nothing’s going to happen here.” He took
-a deep breath. “We’ll all go out,” he said.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Unconsciously Ross and Helena drew closer together
-and joined hands. They walked together down the unfolding
-ramp and approached the vehicle.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>One of the coolly lovely women scrutinized them and
-turned to the man beside her. She remarked melodiously,
-“Yuhsehtheybebems!”, and laughed a silvery tinkle.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Panic gripped Ross for a long moment. A thing he had
-never considered, but a thing which he should have realized
-would be inevitable. Of course! These folk—older and incomparably
-more advanced than the rest of the peoples
-in the universe—would have evolved out of the common
-language into a speech of their own, deliberately or naturally
-rebuilt to handle the speed, subtlety, and power of
-their thoughts.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But perhaps the older speech was merely disused and not
-lost.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He said formally, quaking: “People of Earth, we are
-strangers from another star. We throw ourselves on your
-mercy and ask for your generosity. Our problem is summed
-up in the genetic law L-sub-T equals L-sub-zero e to the
-minus T-over-two-N. Of course——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>One of the men was laughing. Ross broke off.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The man smiled: “Wha’s that again?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They understood! He repeated the formula, slowly, and
-would have explained further, but the man cut him off.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Math,” the man smiled. “We don’ use that stuff no
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>more. I got a lab assistant, maybe he uses it sometimes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They were beyond mathematics! They had broken
-through into some mode of symbolic reasoning that must
-be as far beyond mathematics as math was beyond primitive
-languages!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Sir,” he said eagerly, “you must be a scientist. May I
-ask you to——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Get in,” he smiled. Gigantic doors unfolded from the
-vehicle. Thought-reading? Had the problem been snatched
-from his brain even before he stated it? Mutely he gestured
-at Helena and Bernie. Jones would be all right where he
-was for several hours if Ross was any judge of blackouts.
-And you don’t quibble with demigods.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The man, the scientist, did something to a glittering
-control panel that was, literally, more complex than the
-Wesley board back on the starship. Noise filled the vehicle—noise
-that Ross identified as music for a moment. It
-was a starkly simple music whose skeleton was three
-thumps and a crash, three thumps and a crash. Then followed
-an antiphonal chant—a clear tenor demanding in a
-monotone: “Is this your car?” and a tremendous chorally-shouted:
-“NO!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Too deep for him, Ross thought forlornly as the car
-swerved around and sped off. His eyes wandered over the
-control board and fixed on the largest of its dials, where a
-needle crawled around from a large forty to a large fifty
-and a red sixty, proportional to the velocity of the vehicle.
-Unable to concentrate because of the puzzling music, unable
-to converse, he wondered what the units of time and
-space were that gave readings of fifty and sixty for their
-very low rate of speed—hardly more than a brisk walk,
-when you noticed the slow passage of objects outside. But
-there seemed to be a whistle of wind that suggested high
-speed—perhaps an effect peculiar to the cooling-fin power
-system, however it worked. He tried to shout a question
-at the driver, but it didn’t get through. The driver smiled,
-patted his arm and returned to his driving.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They nosed past a building—cooling fins—and Ross
-almost screamed when he saw what was on the other
-side: a curve of highway jammed solid with vehicles that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>were traveling at blinding speed. And the driver wasn’t
-stopping.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross closed his eyes and jammed his feet against the
-floorboards waiting for the crash which, somehow, didn’t
-come. When he opened his eyes they were in the traffic
-and the needle on the speedometer quivered at 275. He
-blew a great breath and thought admiringly: reflexes to
-match their superb intellects, of course. There <i>couldn’t</i> have
-been a crash.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Just then, across the safety island in the opposing lane,
-there was a crash.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The very brief flash of vision Ross was allowed told him,
-incredibly, that a vehicle had attempted to enter the lane
-going the wrong way, with the consequences you’d expect.
-He watched, goggle-eyed, as the effects of the crash rippled
-down the line of oncoming traffic. The squeal of brakes
-and rending of metal was audible even above the thumping
-music: “Is this your car?” “NO!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thereafter, as they drove, the opposing lane was motionless,
-but not silent. The piercing blasts of strings and trumpets
-rose to the heavens from each vehicle, as did the brilliant
-pyrotechnic jets. A call for help, Ross theorized. The
-music was beginning to make his head ache. It had been
-going on for at least ten minutes. Suddenly, blessedly, it
-changed. There was a great fanfare of trombones in major
-thirds that seemed to go on forever, but didn’t quite. At the
-end of forever, the same tenor chanted: “You got a Roadmeister?”
-and the chorus roared: “<i>YES!</i>”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross realized forlornly that the music must contain
-values and subtleties which his coarser senses and undeveloped
-esthetic background could not grasp. But he wished
-it would stop. It was making him miss all the scenery.
-After perhaps the fifteenth repetition of the Roadmeister
-motif, it ended; the driver, with a look of deep satisfaction,
-did something to the control board that turned off a
-subsequent voice before it could get out more than a
-syllable.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He turned to Ross and yelled above the suddenly-noticeable
-rush of air, “Talk-talk-talk,” and gave a whimsical
-shrug.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span>During the moment his attention wandered from the
-road, his vehicle rammed the one ahead, decelerated
-sharply and was rammed by the one behind, accelerated
-and rammed the one ahead again and then fell back into
-place.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross suddenly realized that he knew what had caused
-those crumples and crinkles around the periphery of the
-car.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Subtle,” the driver yelled. “Indirection. Sneak it in.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What?” Ross screamed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The commersh,” the driver yelled.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It meant nothing to Ross, and he felt miserable because
-it meant nothing. He studied the roadside unhappily and
-almost beamed when he saw a sign coming up. Not advertising,
-of course, he thought. Perhaps some austere reminder
-of a whole man’s duty to the race and himself, some
-noble phrase that summed up the wisdom of a great thinker....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But the sign—and it had cooling fins—declared:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c000'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>BE SMUG! SMOKE SMOGS!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>And the next one urged:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c000'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>BEAT YOUR SISTER</div>
- <div class='line'>CHEAT YOUR BROTHER</div>
- <div class='line'>BUT SEND SOME SMOGS</div>
- <div class='line'>TO DEAR OLD MOTHER.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c010'>It said it on four signs which, apparently alerted by radar,
-zinged in succession along a roadside track even with the
-vehicle.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There were more. And worse. They were coming to a
-city.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Turmoil and magnificence! White pylons, natty belts of
-green, lacy bridges, the roaring traffic, nimble-skipping
-pedestrians waving at the cars and calling—greetings? It
-sounded like “Suvvabih! Suvvabih! Bassa-bassa!” The
-shops were packed and radiant, dazzling. Ross wondered
-fleetingly how one parked here, and then found out. A car
-pulled from the curb and a hundred cars converged on the
-spot, shrilling their sweet message and spouting their gay
-sparkles. Theirs too! There were a pair of jolting crashes
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span>as it shouldered two other vehicles aside and parked, two
-wheels over the curb and on the sidewalk.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Suvvabih-bassa!” shouted drivers, and the man beside
-Ross gaily repeated the cry. The vehicle’s doors opened
-and they climbed out into the quick tempo of the street.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was loud with a melodious babble from speaker horns
-visible everywhere. The driver yelled cheerfully at Ross:
-“C’mon. Party.” He followed, dazed and baffled, assailed
-by sudden doubts and contradictions.</p>
-
-<hr class='c008'>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was a party, all right—twenty floors up a shimmering
-building in a large, handsome room whose principal decorative
-motif seemed to be cooling fins.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Perhaps twenty couples were assembled; they turned and
-applauded as they made their appearance.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The vehicle driver, standing grandly at the head of a
-short flight of stairs leading to the room, proclaimed: “I got
-these rocket flyers like on the piece of paper you guys read
-me. Right off the field. Twenny points. How about that?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A tall, graying man with a noble profile hurried up and
-beamed: “Good show, Joe. I knew we could count on you
-to try for the high-point combo. You was always a real
-sport. You got the fish?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Sure we got the fish.” Joe turned and said to one of the
-lovely ladies, “Elna, show him the fish.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She unwrapped a ten-pound swordfish and proudly held
-it up while Ross, Bernie, and Helena stared wildly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The profile took the fish and poked it. “Real enough,
-Joe. You done great. Now if the rocket flyers here are okay
-you’re okay. Then you got twenny points and the prize.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You’re a rocket flyer, ain’t you, Buster?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross realized he was being addressed. He croaked:
-“Men of Earth, we come from a far-distant star in search
-of——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The profile said, “Just a minute, Buster. <i>Just</i> a minute.
-You ain’t from Earth?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“We come from a far-distant star in search of——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Stick to the point, Buster. You ain’t a rocket flyer from
-Earth? None of you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>“No,” Ross said. He furtively pinched himself. It hurt.
-Therefore he must be awake. Or crazy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The profile was sorrowfully addressing a downcast Joe.
-“You should of asked them, Joe. You really should of. Now
-you don’t even get the three points for the swordfish, because
-you went an’ tried for the combo. It reely is a pity.
-Din’t you ask them at all?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Joe blustered, “He did say sump’m, but I figured a rocket
-flyer was a rocket flyer, and they come out of a rocket.” His
-lower lip was trembling. Both of the ladies of his party
-were crying openly. “We tried,” Joe said, and began to
-blubber. Ross moved away from him in horrified disgust.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The profile shook its head, turned and announced: “Owing
-to a unfortunate mistake, the search group of Dr.
-Joseph Mulcahy, Sc.D., Ph.D., got disqualified for the combination.
-They on’y got three points. So that’s all the groups
-in an’ who got the highest?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I got fifteen! I got fifteen!” screamed a gorgeous brunette
-in a transport of joy. “A manhole cover from the
-museum an’ a las’ month <i>Lipreaders Digest</i> an’ a steering
-wheel from a police car! I got fifteen!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The others clustered about her, chattering. Ross said to
-the profile mechanically: “Man of Earth, we come from a
-far-distant star in search of——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Sure, Buster,” said the profile. “Sure. Too bad. But you
-should of told Joe. You don’t have to go. You an’ your
-friends have a drink. Mix. Have fun. I gotta go give the
-prize now.” He hurried off.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A passing blonde, stacked, said to Ross: “Hel-looo,
-baldy. Wanna see my operation?” He began to shake his
-head and felt Helena’s fingers close like steel on his arm.
-The blonde sniffed and passed on.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I’ll operate her,” Helena said, and then: “Ross, what’s
-<i>wrong</i> with everybody? They act so young, even the old
-people!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Follow me,” he said, and began to circulate through the
-party, trailing Bernie and a frankly terrified Helena, button-holing
-and confronting and demanding and cajoling. Nothing
-worked. He was greeted with amused tolerance and
-invited to have a drink and asked what he thought of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>latest commersh with its tepid trumpets. Nobody gave a
-damn that he was from a far-distant star except Joe, who
-sullenly watched them wander and finally swaggered up to
-Ross.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I figured something out,” he said grimly. “You made
-me lose.” He brought up a roundhouse right, and Ross saw
-the stars and heard the birdies.</p>
-
-<hr class='c008'>
-
-<p class='c007'>Bernie and Helena brought him to on the street. He
-found he had been walking for some five minutes with a
-blanked-out mind. They told him he had been saying over
-and over again, “Men of Earth, I come from a far-distant
-star.” It had got them ejected from the party.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena was crying with anger and frustration; she had
-also got a nasty scare when one of the vehicles had swerved
-up onto the sidewalk and almost crushed the three of them
-against the building wall.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And,” she wailed, “I’m hungry and we don’t know
-where the ship is and I’ve got to sit down and—and go
-someplace.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“So do I,” Bernie said weakly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>So did Ross. He said, “Let’s just go into this restaurant.
-I know we have no money—don’t nag me please, Helena.
-We’ll order, eat, not pay, and get arrested.” He held up
-his hand at the protests. “I said, get arrested. The smartest
-thing we could do. Obviously somebody’s running this
-place—and it’s not the stoops we’ve seen. The quickest
-way I know of to get to whoever’s in charge is to get in
-trouble. And once they see us we can explain everything.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It made sense to them. Unfortunately the first restaurant
-they tried was coin-operated—from the front door on. So
-were the second to seventh. Ross tried to talk Bernie into
-slugging a pedestrian so they could all be jugged for disturbing
-the peace, but failed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena noted at last that the women’s wear shops had
-live attendants who, presumably, would object to trouble.
-They marched into one of the gaudy places, each took a
-dress from a rack and methodically tore them to pieces.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A saleslady approached them dithering and asked
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span>tremulously: “What for did you do that? Din’t you like the
-dresses?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well yes, very much,” Helena began apologetically.
-“But you see, the fact is——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Shuddup!” Ross told her. He said to the saleslady:
-“No. We hated them. We hate every dress here. We’re going
-to tear up every dress in the place. Why don’t you call
-the police?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh,” she said vaguely. “All right,” and vanished into
-the rear of the store. She returned after a minute and said,
-“He wants to know your names.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Just say ‘three desperate strangers,’” Ross told her.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh. Thank you.” She vanished again.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The police arrived in five minutes or so. An excited elder
-man with many stripes on his arms strode up to them excitedly
-as they stood among the shredded ruins of the
-dresses. “Where’d they go?” he demanded. “Didja see what
-they looked like?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“We’re them. We three. We tore these dresses up. You’d
-better take them along for evidence.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh,” the cop said. “Okay. Go on into the wagon. And
-no funny business, hear me?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They offered no funny business. In the wagon Ross expounded
-on his theme that there must be directing intelligences
-and that they must be at the top. Helena was horribly
-depressed because she had never been arrested before
-and Bernie was almost jaunty. Something about him suggested
-that he felt at home in a patrol wagon.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It stopped and the elderly stripe-wearer opened the door
-for them. Ross looked on the busy street for anything resembling
-a station house and found none.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The cop said, “Okay, you people. Get going. An’ let’s
-don’t have no trouble or I’ll run you in.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross yelled in outrage, “This is a frame-up! You have
-no right to turn us loose. We demand to be arrested and
-tried!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Wise guy,” sneered the cop, climbed into the wagon
-and drove off.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They stood forlornly as the crowd eddied and swirled
-around them. “There was a plate of sandwiches at that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>party,” Helena recalled wistfully. “And a ladies’ room.”
-She began to cry. “If only you hadn’t acted so darn superior,
-Ross! I’ll bet they would have let us have all the sandwiches
-we wanted.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Bernie said unexpectedly, “She’s right. Watch me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He buttonholed a pedestrian and said, “Duh.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yeah?” asked the pedestrian with kindly interest.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Bernie concentrated and said, “Duh. I yam losted. I yam
-broke. I losted all my money. Gimme some money, mister,
-please?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The pedestrian beamed and said, “That is real tough
-luck, buddy. If I give you some money will you send it to
-me when you get some more? Here is my name wrote on a
-card.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Bernie said, “Sure, mister. I will send the money to you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then,” said the pedestrian, “I will give you some money
-because you will send it back to me. Good luck, buddy.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Bernie, with quiet pride, showed them a piece of paper
-that bore the interesting legend Twenty Dollars.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Let’s eat,” Ross said, awed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A machine on a restaurant door changed the bill for a
-surprising heap of coins and they swaggered in, making
-beelines for the modest twin doors at the rear of the place.
-Close up the doors were not very modest, but after the
-initial shock Ross realized that there must be many on this
-planet who could not read at all. The washroom attendant,
-for instance, who collected the “dimes” and unlocked the
-booths. “Dime” seemed to be his total vocabulary.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>By comparison the machines in the restaurant proper
-were intelligent. The three of them ate and ate and ate.
-Only after coffee did they spare a thought for Dr. Sam
-Jones, who should about then be awakening with a murderous
-hangover aboard the starship.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thinking about him did not mean they could think of
-anything to do.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“He’s in trouble,” Bernie said. “<i>We’re</i> in trouble. First
-things first.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What trouble?” asked Helena brightly. “You got twenty
-dollars by asking for it and I suppose you can get plenty
-more. And I think we wouldn’t have got thrown out of that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>party if—ah—<i>we</i> hadn’t gone swaggering around talking
-as if we knew everything. Maybe these people here aren’t
-very bright——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross snorted.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena went on doggedly, “——not <i>very</i> bright, but they
-certainly can tell when somebody’s brighter than they are.
-And naturally they don’t like it. Would you like it? It’s like
-a really old person talking to a really young person about
-nothing but age. But here when you’re bright you make
-everybody feel bad every time you open your mouth.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“So,” Ross said impatiently, “we can go on begging and
-drifting. But that’s not what we’re here for. The answer is
-supposed to be on Earth. Obviously none of the people
-we’ve seen could possibly know anything about genetics.
-Obviously they can’t keep this machine civilization going
-without guidance. There must be people of normal intelligence
-around. In the government, is my guess.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No,” said Helena, but she wouldn’t say why. She just
-thought not.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The inconclusive debate ended with them on the street
-again. Bernie, who seemed to enjoy it, begged a hundred
-dollars. Ross, who didn’t, got eleven dollars in singles and
-a few threats of violence for acting like a wise guy. Helena
-got no money and three indecent proposals before Ross
-indignantly took her out of circulation.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They found a completely automatic hotel at nightfall.
-Ross tried to inspect Helena’s room for comfort and safety,
-but was turned back at the threshold by a staggering jolt
-of electricity. “Mechanical house dick,” he muttered, picking
-himself up from the floor. “Well,” he said to her sourly,
-“it’s safe. Good night.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>And later in the gents’ room, to Bernie: “You’d think
-the damn-fool machine could be adjusted so that a person
-with perfectly innocent intentions could visit a lady——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Sure,” said Bernie soothingly, “sure. Say, Ross, frankly,
-is this Earth exactly what you expected it to be?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The attendant moved creakily across the floor and said
-hopefully, “Dime?”</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>
- <h2 class='c005' title='Chapter 13'><span class='xxlarge'><b>..... 13</b></span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>THEIR second day on the bum they accumulated
-a great deal of change and crowded into a telephone
-booth. The plan was to try to locate their starship
-and find out what, if anything, could be done for Sam
-Jones.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>An automatic Central conferred with an automatic Information
-and decided that they wanted the Captain of the
-Port, Baltimore Rocket Field.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They got the Port Captain on the wire and Ross asked
-after the starship. The captain asked, “Who wan’sta know,
-huh?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross realized he had overdone it and shoved Bernie at
-the phone. Bernie snorted and guggled and finally got out
-that he jus’ wannit ta know. The captain warmed up immediately
-and said oh, sure, the funny-lookin’ ship, it was
-still there all right.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“How about the fella that’s in it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You mean the funny-lookin’ fella? He went someplace.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“He went someplace? What place?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Someplace. He went away, like. I din’t see him go,
-mister. I got plenty to do without I should watch out for
-every dummy that comes along.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“T’anks,” said Bernie hopelessly at Ross’s signal.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>They walked the street, deep in thought. Helena sobbed,
-“Let’s <i>leave</i> him here, Ross. I don’t like this place.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Bernie growled, “What’s the difference, Ross? He can
-get a snootful just as easy here as anywhere else——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No! It isn’t the Doc, don’t you see? But this is the place
-we’re looking for. All the answers we need are here; we’ve
-got to get them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Bernie stepped around two tussling men on the ground,
-ineffectually thumping each other over a chocolate-covered
-confection. “Yeah,” he said shortly.</p>
-
-<hr class='c008'>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena said: “Isn’t that a silly way to put up a big sign
-like that?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross looked up. “My God,” he said. A gigantic metal
-sign with the legend, <i>Buy Smogs</i>——<i>You Can SMOKE
-Them</i>, was being hoisted across the street ahead. The street
-was nominally closed to traffic by cheerfully inattentive
-men with red flags; a mobile boom hoist was doing the
-work, and quite obviously doing it wrong. The angle of
-the boom arm with the vertical was far too great for stability;
-the block-long sign was tipping the too-light body of
-the hoisting engine on its treads....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross made a flash calculation: when the sign fell, as fall
-it inevitably would, perhaps two hundred people who had
-wandered uncaringly past the warning flags would be under
-it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There was a sudden aura of blue light around the engine
-body.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It tipped back to stability. The boom angle decreased,
-and the engine crawled forward to take up the horizontal
-difference.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The blue light went out.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena choked and coughed and babbled, “But Ross, it
-<i>couldn’t</i> have because——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross said: “It’s them!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Who?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Excitedly: “The people behind all this! The people who
-built the cities and put up the buildings and designed the
-machines. The people who have the answers! Come on,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>Bernie. I just seem to antagonize these people—I want you
-to ask the boom operator what happened.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The boom operator cheerfully explained that nah, it was
-just somep’n that happened. Nah, nobody did nothin’ to
-make it happen. It was in case if anything went wrong, like.
-You know?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They retired and regrouped their forces.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Foolproof machines,” Ross said slowly. “And I mean
-really <i>fool</i> proof. Friends, I was wrong, I admit it; I thought
-that those buildings and cars were something super-special,
-and they turned out to be just silly gimcracks. But not this
-blue light thing. That boom <i>had</i> to fall.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Bernie shrugged rebelliously. “So what? So they’ve got
-some kinds of machines you don’t have on Halsey’s
-Planet?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“A different order of machines, Bernie! Believe me, that
-blue light was something as far from any safety device I
-ever heard of as the starships are from oxcarts. When we
-find the people who designed them——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Suppose they’re all dead?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross winced. He said determinedly, “We’ll find them.”
-They returned to their begging and were recognized
-one day by the gray-haired profile of the party. He didn’t
-remember just who they were or where they were from
-or where he had met them, but he enthusiastically invited
-them to yet another party. He told them he was
-Hennery Matson, owner of an airline.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross asked about accidents and blue lights. Matson
-jovially said some o’ his pilots talked about them things but
-he din’t bother his head none. Ya get these planes from the
-field, see, an’ they got all kinds of gadgets on them. Come
-on to the party!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They went, because Hennery promised them another
-guest—Sanford Eisner, who was a wealthy aircraft manufacturer.
-But he din’t bother his head none either; them
-rockets was hard to make, you had to feed the patterns,
-like, into the master jigs just so, and, boy!, if you got ’em
-in backwards it was a <i>mess</i>. Wheredja get the patterns?
-Look, mister, we <i>always</i> had the patterns, an’ don’t spoil
-the party, will ya?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>The party was a smasher. They all woke with headaches
-on Matson’s deep living room rug.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You did fine, Ross,” Helena softly assured him. “Nobody
-would have guessed you were any smarter than anybody
-else here. There wasn’t a bit of trouble.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross seemed to have a hiatus in his memory.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The importance of the hiatus faded as time passed. There
-was a general move toward the automatic dispensing bar. It
-seemed to be regulated by a time clock; no matter what you
-dialed first thing in the morning, it ruthlessly poured a double
-rye with Worcestershire and tabasco and plopped a fair
-imitation of a raw egg into the concoction. It helped!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Along about noon something clicked in the bar’s innards.
-Guests long since surfeited with the prairie oysters joyously
-dialed martinis and manhattans and the day’s serious drinking
-began.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross fuzzily tried to trace the bar’s supply. There were
-nickel pipes that led Heaven knew where. Some vast depot
-of fermentation tanks and stills? Fed grain and cane by
-crawling harvest-monsters? Grain and cane planted from
-seed the harvest-monsters carefully culled from the crop
-for the plow-and-drag-and-drill-and-fertilize-and-cultivate
-monsters?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>His head was beginning to ache again. A jovial martini-drinker
-who had something to do with a bank—a <i>bank!</i>—roared,
-“Hey, fellas! I got a idea what we can do! Less go
-on over to <i>my</i> place!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>So they all went, and that disposed of another day.</p>
-
-<hr class='c008'>
-
-<p class='c007'>It blended into a dream of irresponsible childhood.
-When your clothes grew shabby you helped yourself to
-something that fit from your host of the moment’s wardrobe.
-When you grew tired of one host you switched to
-another. They seldom remembered you from day to day,
-and they never asked questions.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Their sex was uninhibited and most of the women were
-more or less pregnant most of the time. They fought and
-sulked and made up and giggled and drank and ate and
-slept. All of the men had jobs, and all of them, once in a
-while, would remember and stagger over to a phone and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>make a call to an automatic receptionist to find out if everything
-was going all right with their jobs. It always was. They
-loved their children and tolerated anything from them, except
-shrewd inquisitiveness which drew a fast bust in the
-teeth from the most indulgent daddy or adoring mommy.
-They loved their friends and their guests, as long as they
-weren’t wise guys, and tolerated anything from them—as
-long as they weren’t wise guys.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Did it last a day, a week, a month?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross didn’t know. The only things that were really bothering
-Ross were, first, nobody wouldn’t tell him nothin’
-about the blue lights and, second, that Bernie, he was actin’
-like a wise guy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There came a morning when it ended as it had begun: on
-somebody’s living room rug with a headache pounding
-between his eyes. Helena was sobbing softly, and that wise
-guy, Bernie, was tugging at him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Lea’ me alone,” ordered Captain Ross without opening
-his eyes. Wouldn’t let a man get his rest. What did he have
-to bring them along for, anyway? Should have left them
-where he found them, not brought them to this place Earth
-where they could act like a couple of wise guys and keep
-getting in his way every time he came close to the blue-light
-people, the intelligent people, the people with the answers
-to——to——</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He lay there, trying to remember what the question was.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“——<i>have</i> to get him out of here,” said Helena’s voice
-with a touch of hysteria.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“——go back and get that fellow Haarland,” said Bernie’s
-voice, equally tense. Ross contemplated the fragments
-of conversation he had caught, ignoring what the two were
-saying to him. Haarland, he thought fuzzily, <i>that</i> wise
-guy....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Bernie had him on his feet. “Leggo,” ordered Ross, but
-Bernie was tenacious. He stumbled along and found himself
-in the men’s room of the apartment. The tired-looking
-attendant appeared from nowhere and Bernie said something
-to him. The attendant rummaged in his chest and
-found something that Bernie put into a fizzy drink.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross sniffed at it suspiciously. “Wassit?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>“Please, Ross, drink it. It’ll sober you up. We’ve got to
-get out of here—we’re going nuts, Helena and me. This
-has been going on for weeks!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Nope. Gotta find a blue light,” Ross said obstinately,
-swaying.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But you aren’t finding it, Ross. You aren’t doing anything
-except get drunk and pass out and wake up and get
-drunk. Come on, drink the drink.” Ross impatiently dashed
-it to the floor. Bernie sighed. “All right, Ross,” he said
-wearily. “Helena can run the ship; we’re taking off.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Go ’head.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Good-by, Ross. We’re going back to Halsey’s Planet,
-where you came from. Maybe Haarland can tell us what to
-do.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Go ’head. <i>That</i> wise guy!” Ross sneered.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The attendant was watching dubiously as Bernie
-slammed out and Ross peered at himself in a mirror.
-“Dime?” the attendant asked in his tired voice. Ross gave
-him one and went back to the party.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Somehow it was not much fun.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He shuffled back to the bar. The boilermaker didn’t taste
-too good. He set it down and glowered around the room.
-The party was back in swing already; Helena and Bernie
-were nowhere in sight. Let them go, then....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He drank, but only when he reminded himself to. This
-party had become a costume ball; one of the men lurched
-out of the room and staggered back guffawing. “Looka
-him!” one of the women shrieked. “He got a woman’s hat
-on! Horace, you get the craziest kinda ideas!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross glowered. He suddenly realized that, while he
-wasn’t exactly sober, he wasn’t drunk either. Those soreheads,
-they had to go and spoil the party....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He began abruptly to get less drunk yet. Back to Halsey’s
-Planet, they said? Ask Haarland what to do, they said?
-Leave him here——?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He was cold sober.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He found a telephone. The automatic Central checked
-the automatic Information and got him the Captain of the
-Port, Baltimore Rocket Field. The Captain was helpful
-and sympathetic; caught by the tense note in Ross’s voice
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>when he told him who wannit to know, the Captain said,
-“Gee, buddy, if I’d of known I woulda stopped them.
-Stoled your ship, is that what they done? They could get
-arrested for that. You could call the cops an’ maybe they
-could do something——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross didn’t bother to explain. He hung up.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The party was no fun at all. He left it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross walked along the street, hating himself. He couldn’t
-hate Helena and Bernie; they had done the right thing. It
-had been his fault, all the way down the line. He’d been
-acting like a silly child; he’d had a job of work to do, and
-he let himself be sidetracked by a crazy round of drinking
-and parties.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Of course, he told himself, something had been accomplished.
-Somebody had built the machines—not the happy
-morons he had been playing with. Somebody had invented
-whatever it was that flared with blue light and repaired the
-idiot errors the morons made. Somebody, somewhere.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Where?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Well, he had some information. All negative. At the
-parties had been soldiers and politicians and industrialists
-and clergy and entertainers and, heaven save the mark,
-scientists. And none of them had had the wit to do more
-than push the Number Three Button when the Green Light
-A blinked, by rote. None of them could have given him the
-answer to the question that threatened to end human domination
-over the cosmos; none of them would have known
-what the words meant.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Maybe—Ross made himself face it—maybe there was
-no answer. Maybe even if he found the intellects that
-lurked beneath the surface on this ancient planet, they
-could not or would not tell him what he wanted to know.
-Maybe the intellects didn’t exist.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Maybe he was all wrong in all of his assumptions; maybe
-he was wasting his time. But, he told himself wryly, he had
-fixed it for himself that time was all he had left. He might
-as well waste it. He might as well go right on looking....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A migrant party was staggering down the street toward
-him, a score of persons going from one host’s home to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>another. He crossed to avoid them. They were singing drunkenly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross looked at them with the distaste of the recently
-reformed. One of the voices raised in song caught his ear:</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“——bobbed his nose and dyed it rose, and kissed
-his lady fair, And sat her down on a cushion brown in
-a seven-legged chair. ‘By Jones,’ he said, ‘my shoes
-are red, and so’s my overcoat, And with buttons
-nine in a zigzag line, I’ll——’”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Doc!” Ross bellowed. “Doc Jones! For God’s sake,
-come over here!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They got rid of the rest of Doctor Sam Jones’s party, and
-Ross sobered the doctor up in an all-night restaurant. It
-wasn’t hard; the doctor had had plenty of practice.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross filled him in, carefully explaining why Bernie and
-Helena had left him. Doc Jones filled Ross in. He didn’t
-have much to tell. He had come to in the ship, waited
-around until he got hungry, fallen into a conversation with
-a rocket pilot on the field—and that was how <i>his</i> round of
-parties had begun.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Like Ross, Doc, in his soberer moments, had come to
-the conclusion that Earth was run by person or persons unseen.
-He had learned little that Ross hadn’t found out or
-deduced. The blue lights had bothered him, too; he’d asked
-the pilot about it, and found out about what Ross had—there
-appeared to be some sort of built-in safety device
-which kept the inevitable accidents from becoming unduly
-fatal. How they worked, he didn’t know—</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But he had an idea.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It sounds a little ridiculous, I admit,” he said, embarrassed.
-“But I think it might work. It’s a radio program.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“A radio program?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I said it sounded ridiculous. They call it, ‘What’s Biting
-You,’ and one of the fellows was telling me about it. It
-seems that you can appear before the panel on the program
-with any sort of problem, any sort at all, and they
-guarantee to solve it for you. There’s some sort of bond
-posted—I don’t know much about the details, but this
-man assured me that the bond was only a formality; they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>never failed. Of course,” Doc finished, hearing his own
-proposal with a touch of doubt, “I don’t know whether
-they ever had any problem like this before, but——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yeah,” said Ross. “What have we got to lose?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They got into the program. It took the techniques of a
-doubler on an army chow line and a fair amount of brute
-strength, but they got to the head of the queue at the
-studio and wedged themselves inside. Doc came close to
-throttling the man who prowled through the studio audience,
-selecting the lucky few who would get on stage—but
-they got on.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The theme music swelled majestically around them, and
-a chorus crooned, “What’s Biting You—Hunh?” It was
-repeated three times, with crashing cymbals under the
-“Hunh?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross listened to the beginning of the program and
-cursed himself for being persuaded into such a harebrained
-tactic. But, he had to admit, the program offered the only
-possibility in sight. The central figure was a huge, jovially
-grinning figure of papier-mâché, smoking a Smog and billowing
-smoke rings at the audience. An announcer, for some
-obscure reason in blackface, interviewed the disturbed
-derelicts who came before Smiley Smog, the papier-mâché
-figure, and propounded their problems to Smiley in a sort
-of doggerel. And in doggerel the answers came back.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The first person to go up before Smiley was a woman,
-clearly in her last month of pregnancy. The announcer introduced
-her to the audience and begged for a real loud
-holler of hello for this poor mizzuble li’l girl. “Awright,
-honey,” he said. “You just step right up here an’ let ol’
-Uncle Smiley take care of your troubles for you. Less go,
-now. What’s Bitin’ You?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Uh,” she sobbed, “it’s like I’m gonna have a baby.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Hoddya like that!” the announcer screamed. “She’s
-gonna have a <i>baby!</i> Whaddya say to that, folks?” The
-audience shrieked hysterically. “Awright, honey,” the announcer
-said. “So you’re gonna have a baby, so what’s
-bitin’ you about that?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It’s my husband,” the woman sniffled. “He don’t like
-kids. We got eight already,” she explained. “Jack, he says
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>if we have one more kid he’s gonna take off an’ marry somebody
-else.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“He’s gonna marry somebody else!” the announcer
-howled. “Hoddya like that, folks?” There was a tempest
-of boos. “Awright, now,” the announcer said, “you just
-sit there, honey, while I tell ol’ Uncle Smiley about this. Ya
-ready? Listen:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c000'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“What’s bitin’ this lady is plain to see:</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Her husband don’t want no more family!”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>The huge figure’s head rotated on a concealed hinge to
-look down on the woman. From a squawk-box deep in
-Smiley’s papier-mâché belly, a weary voice declaimed:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c000'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“If one more baby is your husband’s dread,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Cross him up, lady. Have twins instead!”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>The audience roared its approval. The announcer asked
-anxiously, “Ya get it? When ya get inta the hospital, like,
-ya jus’ tell the nurse ya want to take <i>two</i> kids home with
-you. See?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The grateful woman staggered away. Ross gave Doc a
-poisonous look.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What else is there to do?” the doctor hissed. “All right,
-perhaps this won’t work out—but let’s try!” He half rose,
-and staggered against the man next to him, who was already
-starting toward the announcer. “Go on, Ross,” Doc
-hissed venomously, blocking off the other man.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross went. What else was there to do?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What’s biting me,” he said belligerently before the announcer
-could put him through the preliminaries, “is simply
-this: L-sub-T equals L-sub-zero e to the minus-T-over-two-N.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Dead silence in the studio. The announcer quavered,
-“Wh-what was that again, buddy?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I said,” Ross repeated firmly, “L-sub-T equals L-sub-zero
-e to the——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Now, wait a minute, buddy,” the announcer ordered.
-“We never had no stuff like that on <i>this</i> program before.
-Whaddya, some kind of a wise guy?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There might have been violence; the conditions were
-right for it. But Uncle Smiley Smog saved the day.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The papier-mâché figure puffed a blinding series of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>smoke rings at Ross. From its molded torso, the weary
-voice said:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c000'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“If you’re looking for counsel sagacious and wise,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>The price is ten cents. It’s right under your eyes.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>They left the studio in a storm of animosity.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Maybe we could have collected the forfeit,” Doc said
-hopefully.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Maybe we could have collected some lumps,” Ross
-growled. “Got any more ideas?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The doctor sipped his coffee. “No,” he admitted. “I
-wonder—No, I don’t suppose that means anything.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That jingle? Sure it means something, Doc. It means
-I should have had my head examined for letting you talk
-me into that performance.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The doctor said rebelliously, “Maybe I’m wrong, Ross,
-but I don’t see that you’ve had any ideas than panned out
-much better.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross got up. “All right,” he admitted. “I’m sorry if I
-gave you a hard time. It’s all this coffee and all the liquor
-underneath it; I swear, if I ever get back to a civilized
-planet I’m going on a solid diet for a month.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They headed for the room marked “Gents,” Ross sullenly
-quiet, Doc thoughtfully quiet.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Doc said reflectively, “‘The price is ten cents.’ Ross,
-could that mean a paper that we could buy on a newsstand,
-maybe?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yeah,” Ross said in irritation. “Look, Doc, don’t give
-it another thought. There must be some way to straighten
-this thing out; I’ll think of it. Let’s just make believe that
-whole asinine radio program never happened.” The attendant
-materialized and offered Ross a towel.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Dime?” he said wearily.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross fished absently in his pocket. “The thing that
-bothers me, Doc,” he said, “is that I know there are intelligent
-people somewhere around. I even know what
-they’re doing, I bet. They’re doing exactly what I tried to
-do: acted as stupid as anybody else, or stupider. I’d make
-a guess,” he said, warming up, “that if we could just make
-a statistical analysis of the whole planet and find the absolute
-stupidest-seeming people of the lot, we’d——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>He ran out of breath all at once. His eyes bulged.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He looked at the men’s-room attendant, and at the ten-cent
-piece in his own hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You!” he breathed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The attendant’s face suddenly seemed to come to life.
-In a voice that was abruptly richer and deeper than before,
-the man said: “Yes. You had to find us yourself, you
-know.”</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>
- <h2 class='c005' title='Chapter 14'><span class='xxlarge'><b>..... 14</b></span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>THERE was a home base, a gigantic island
-called Australia, to which they took Ross and Doc
-Jones in a little car that sprouted no wings and flashed no
-rockets, but flew.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They lived underground there, invisible to goggling passengers
-and crewmen aboard the “rockets.” (They weren’t
-rockets. They were turbo-jets. But it made the children
-happy to think that they had rockets, so iron filings were
-added to the hot jet stream, and they sparkled in magnificent
-display.)</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There they were born, and there they spent strange childhoods,
-learning such things as psychodynamics and teleportation.
-By the time they were eight months or so old
-they thought it amusing to converse of Self and the Meaning
-of Meaning. By eighteen months a dozen infants would
-chat in <i>terza rima</i>. But by the age of two they had put such
-toys behind them with a sigh of pleasant regret. They would
-revert to them only for such purposes as love-making or
-choral funeral addresses.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They were then of an age to begin their work.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They were born there, and trained there for terrible tasks.
-And they died there, at whatever risk. For that they would
-not surrender: their right to die among their own.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span>But their lives between cradle and grave, those they
-gave away.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Nursemaids? What else can one call them?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They explained it patiently to Ross and the doctor.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The pattern emerged clearly in the twentieth century.
-Swarming slums abrawl with children, children, children
-everywhere. Walk down a Chicago Southside street, and
-walk away with the dazed impression that all the world was
-pregnant. Walk through pretty, pleasant Evanston, and
-find the impression wrong. Those who lived in Evanston
-were reasonable people. They waited and thought. Being
-reasonable, they saved and planned. Being reasonable, they
-resorted to gadgets or chemicals or continence.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“A woman of the period had some three hundred and
-ninety opportunities to conceive a child. In the slums and
-the hills they took advantage of as many of them as they
-might. But around the universities, in the neighborhoods
-of the well-educated and the well-to-do, what was the
-score?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“First, education, until the age of twenty. This left two
-hundred and ninety-nine opportunities. Then, for perhaps
-five years, shared work; the car, the mortgage, the furniture,
-that two salaries would pay off earlier than one. Two
-hundred and thirty-four opportunities were left. Some of
-them were seized: a spate of childbearing perhaps would
-come next. But subtract a good ten years more at the end of
-the cycle, for the years when a child would be simply too
-late—too late for fashion, too late for companionship with
-the first-born. We started with three hundred and ninety
-opportunities. We have, perhaps, one hundred and forty-four
-left.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Is that the roster complete? No. There is the battle of
-the budget: No, not right now, not until the summer place
-is paid for. And more. The visits from the mothers-in-law,
-the quarterly tax payments, the country-club liaisons and
-the furtive knives behind the brownstone fronts and what
-becomes of fertility—they have all been charted. But these
-are superfluous. The ratio 390:144 points out the inevitable.
-As three hundred and ninety outweighs one hundred
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>and forty-four, so the genes of the slovenly and heedless
-outweigh the thoughtful and slow to act.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“We tampered with the inevitable.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The planet teemed and burst. The starships went forth.
-The strong, bright, quick ones went out in the ships. Two
-sorts were left: The strong ones who were not bright, the
-bright ones who were not strong.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“We are the prisoners of the planet. We cannot leave.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The children—the witless ones outside—can leave.
-But who would have them?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross peered into the shifting shadows. “But,” he said,
-“you are the masters of the planet——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<i>Masters?</i> We are slaves! Fully alive only here where
-we are born and die. Abstracted and as witless as they
-when we are among <i>them</i>—well we might be. For each of
-us, square miles to stand guard over. Our minds roving
-across the traps we dare not ignore, ready to leap out and
-straighten these children’s toppling walls of blocks, ready
-to warn the child that sharp things cut and hot things burn.
-The blue lights—did you think they were machines?” They
-were <i>us</i>!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You’re torturing yourselves!” Ross exploded. “Let
-them die.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Let—ten—billion—children—die? We are not such
-monsters.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross was humbled before their tragedy. Diffidently he
-spoke of Halsey’s Planet, Ragansworld, Azor, Jones. He
-warmed to the task and was growing, he thought, eloquent
-when their smiles left him standing ashamed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t understand,” he said, almost weeping.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The voice corrected him: “You do. But you do not—yet—know
-that you do. Consider the facts:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Your planet. Sterile and slowly dying.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The planets you have seen. One sterile because it is
-imprisoned by ancients, one sterile under an in-driven matriarchal
-custom, one sterile because all traces of divergence
-have been wiped out.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Earth. Split into an incurable dichotomy—the sterility
-of brainless health, the sterility of sick intellect.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Humanity, then, imprisoned in a thousand sterile tubes,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>cut off each from the other, dying. We feared war, and so
-we isolated the members with a wall of time. We have
-found something worse to fear. What if the walls are
-cracked?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Crack the walls? How? Is it too late?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Somehow the image of Helena was before him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Is it too late?” they gently mocked. “Surely you know.
-How? Perhaps you will ask her.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The image of Helena was blushing.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross’s heart leaped. “As simple as that?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“For you, yes. For others there will be lives spent over
-the lathes and milling machines, eyes gone blind in calculating
-and refining trajectories, daring ones lost screaming
-in the hearts of stars, or gibbering with hunger and pain
-as the final madness closes down on them, stranded between
-galaxies. There will be martyrs to undergo the worst
-martyrdom of all—which is to say, they will never know
-of it. They will be unhappy traders and stock-chasers,
-grinding their lives to smooth dull blanks against the wearying
-routine so that the daring ones may go forth to the stars.
-But for you—you have seen the answer.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Old blood runs thin. Thin blood runs cold. Cold blood
-dies. Let the walls crack.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There was a murmuring in the shadows that Ross could
-not hear. Then the voice again, saying a sort of good-by.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“We have had a great deal of experience with children,
-so we know that they must not be told too much. There
-is nothing more you need be told. You will go back
-now——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross dared interrupt. “But our ship—the others have
-taken it away——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Again the soundless laughter. “The ship has not been
-taken far. Did you think we would leave you stranded
-here?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ross peered hard into the shadows. But only the shadows
-were there, and then he and Jones were in the shadows no
-longer.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Ross!” Helena was hysterical with joy. Even Bernie
-was stammering and shaking his head incredulously. “Ross,
-dearest! We thought—And the ship acted all <i>funny</i>, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>then it landed here and there just wasn’t anybody around,
-and I couldn’t make it go again——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It will go now,” Ross promised. It did. They sealed
-ship; he took the controls; and they hung in space, looking
-back on a blue-green planet with a single moon.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There were questions; but Ross put an end to questions.
-He said, “We’re going back to Halsey’s Planet. Haarland
-wanted an answer. We’ve found it; we’ll bring it to him.
-The F-T-L families have kept their secret too well. No
-wars between the planets—but stagnation worse than wars.
-And Haarland’s answer is this: He will be the first of the
-F-T-L traders. He’ll build F-T-L ships, and he’ll carelessly
-let their secrets be stolen. We’ll bridge the galaxy with
-F-T-L transports; and we’ll pack the ships with a galaxy
-of crews! New genes for old; hybrid vigor for dreary decay!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Do you see it?” His voice was ringing loud; Helena’s
-eyes on him were adoring. “Mate Jones to Azor, Halsey’s
-Planet to Earth. Smash the smooth, declining curve! Cross
-the strains, and then breed them back. Let mankind become
-genetically wild again instead of rabbits isolated in
-their sterile hutches!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Exultantly he set up the combinations for Halsey’s Planet
-on the Wesley board.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Helena was beside him, proud and close, as he threw
-in the drive.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>
- <h2 class='c011'><span class='xlarge'><b>ABOUT THE AUTHORS</b></span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>The Space Merchants</span> was not only one of the best-reviewed
-science-fiction novels in 1953, it was one of the most widely
-reviewed. Favorable notices appeared in journals ranging
-from <i>Printer’s Ink</i> to science-fiction magazines, from <i>Tide</i>
-magazine to the great national dailies. That novel firmly
-established Messrs. Pohl and Kornbluth as a team, although
-they had collaborated before under pen names and had
-established reputations singly. Their new novel, <span class='sc'>Search the
-Sky</span>, has the same wit, the same passages of genuinely beautiful
-writing and—what is most important and most characteristic—the
-same underlying concern for human beings,
-whether they are on future Madison Avenues or in the
-outer galaxies.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This is Mr. Kornbluth’s seventh published novel. Two
-were written in collaboration with Judith Merril under the
-pen name “Cyril Judd”; one was the notable <span class='sc'>Takeoff</span>
-(Doubleday, 1952); one was not science fiction; one was his
-last collaborative effort with Mr. Pohl; and his most recent
-was <span class='sc'>The Syndic</span> (Doubleday, 1953). Mr. Kornbluth, still
-under thirty, now lives in an upstate New York farmhouse
-with his wife and child where he devotes himself to writing.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This is Mr. Pohl’s sixth published book. Two of them were
-reprint collections which he edited and two others were the
-now-celebrated first and second volumes of <span class='sc'>Star Science
-Fiction Stories</span>, collections of new stories published by
-Ballantine Books. At 34, Mr. Pohl lives in a large old house
-on the Jersey shore—“five rooms for me, four for my wife
-and two apiece for the children.” He has three more books
-forthcoming in 1953: two anthologies and his first solo novel.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000'>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c011'><b><span class='xlarge'>TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE</span></b></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c012'>Repeated instances of the title in the front
-of the book have been reduced.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Punctuation has been normalized. Variations
-in hyphenation have been retained as they were in the
-original publication. The following assumed printer’s
-errors were corrected:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>look at the stars and breath —> breathe {Page 24}</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Halsey City to the ’port —> port {Page 29}</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>were ready to quit Oldhan —> Oldham {Page 31}</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>short of meccano-toy —> sort {Page 96}</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>O.8952, —> 0.8952, {Page 109}</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>Trouble is, he’s too Jonesfearing. —> Jones-fearing {Page 118}</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SEARCH THE SKY ***</div>
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