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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.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #64644 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/64644)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Outcasts of Solar III, by Emmett
-McDowell
-
-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: The Outcasts of Solar III
-
-Author: Emmett McDowell
-
-Release Date: February 27, 2021 [eBook #64644]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: Greg Weeks, Mary Meehan and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE OUTCASTS OF SOLAR III ***
-
-
-
-
- The Outcasts Of Solar III
-
- By Emmett McDowell
-
- Of all Terra's bloodily brawling billions, only
- mighty scientist Jon Saxon sensed the Others.
- Even as he swung his fists and dodged the tearing
- dart guns, his skin crawled weirdly. Who--_who_--was
- so coldly watching this war-torn, hell-bent planet?
-
- [Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
- Planet Stories Spring 1948.
- Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
- the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
-
-
-"Quiet!" Jon Saxon's voice was a breath in the night as he cautioned
-the girl. A warning prickle of danger had run over his skin like
-gooseflesh. He was a big man, over six feet, with thick brawny
-shoulders and arms like a blacksmith. Before the girl could cry out,
-Saxon swept her into the deep shadow of a doorway. His dark gray eyes
-probed the street but he could see no one.
-
-This seventh level thoroughfare of Adirondaka appeared utterly
-deserted. Only occasional street lamps revealed glimpses of the
-magnificent architecture of the post-atom capitol of Earth. Down the
-center of the boulevard the public conveyor swept silently, endlessly
-without a passenger anywhere along its ribbon-like length.
-
-"Where are they?" the girl whispered.
-
-He shook his head. "I can't see them." But his skin continued to
-prickle its warning. Somewhere in the shadows were men, several of
-them, stalking him soundlessly.
-
-He became aware of an alien quality about the figures ringing in him
-and the girl, figures he could sense but not see. Still nothing moved
-in the street. The girl, he realized, was strangely quiescent.
-
-Then, sharp as speech, her thought impinged on Jon Saxon's
-consciousness. "_The fools! And after I told Emil not to let them crowd
-him!_"
-
-Jon Saxon's eyes narrowed. So the girl thought the invisible figures
-were G.A.'s men. He had known, of course, from their first meeting
-that the girl was a General Atomic spy. But by not so much as a hint
-had he let her suspect that her very thoughts betrayed her.
-
-The tingling sensation intensified, warned him that the shadows were
-closing in. The feel of alienism was stronger, as if they were not
-quite human. His heart pumped faster, the pulse throbbing in his ears.
-
-The moon was rising, he saw, competing indifferently with the street
-lights. Its rays streamed down through the ninety-eight levels of the
-capitol, down through crystal plastic roadways into the dense blackness
-of the pit itself.
-
-Again he became aware of the girl's thought, "_Why, there's nothing
-here! He's imagining things!_" It was accompanied by a wave of relief,
-and at the same time she whispered,
-
-"What is it Jon? What do you see?"
-
-"Hold it, Ileth!"
-
-His hands gripped her slender shoulders, silenced her. The public
-conveyor still swept past without a sound.
-
-Bewilderment grew in him.
-
-The alien entities were close, all about them, apparently without
-substance. The tingling sensations were like hot and cold flashes
-now, signaling him of something present, something which he couldn't
-identify.
-
-They were not the girl's men, whatever she thought. He would have
-recognized them by their feel.
-
-No, these escaped classification. He had never experienced anything
-like them before. His strange sixth sense, the first extra-human sense
-which he had begun to develop inexplicably in his twenty seventh year,
-could perceive nothing beyond their presence.
-
-He took his hand from Ileth's shoulders, groped for the button
-controlling the door against which they crouched.
-
-"_Stop!_"
-
-The thought rang like a bell in his skull.
-
-Jon Saxon stiffened. "_What is it?_" he concentrated. "_Who are you?_"
-
-Again the bodiless thought struck into his mind.
-
-"_That is not for you to know--now or possibly ever. The girl is
-working for General Atomic. Do not allow yourself to be duped. It is
-decidedly not our policy that General Atomic or any of the corporations
-learn the secret of the stellar drive!_"
-
- * * * * *
-
-Saxon's eyes opened with surprise. He had no intention of giving G.A.
-the secret of the stellar drive. It was a government secret, for one
-thing....
-
-"_We are quite aware of your intentions_," came the telepathic
-communication. "_Otherwise, you would no longer be._"
-
-Saxon swallowed dryly, realized his palms were sweating. He glanced at
-Ileth. The moonlight had crept into the doorway, illuminating her oval
-face clearly. He noted the perplexed slant to her fine black brows, the
-sober, half frightened expression clouding her patrician features.
-
-"Why don't we go?" she asked. "What are you waiting for?"
-
-"In a minute."
-
-He sent his thought probing out toward the alien minds. And brought up
-sharp before an absolute mental barrier.
-
-No neophytes here. Whatever the creatures were, they were masters of
-thought-transference. Excitement sent the blood surging through Saxon's
-veins, blotted out momentarily his alarm.
-
-Until this moment, he had believed himself unique, the single telepath
-on Earth.
-
-He had been thirty-one when he first became aware of his telepathic
-potential. It had developed overnight, a seventh extra-human sense,
-that isolated him forever from the rest of mankind.
-
-There had been something indecent, prying about seeing into the minds
-of his fellows--like a peeping Tom. It had been intolerable at first,
-the naked baring of souls before him, intolerable and shocking, until
-he had learned to block out their thoughts.
-
-He felt the girl shiver against him.
-
-"But what are you afraid of, Jon?"
-
-He didn't answer because the alien thoughts intruded on his mind again.
-
-"_This is a warning, Jon Saxon. Do not divulge the stellar drive to
-anyone. It is not and never was intended for you to know. Only the
-unfortunate development of a telepathic sense enabled you to steal it
-from Villainowski's brain...._"
-
-"_I didn't steal it!_" Saxon thought indignantly. "_I worked with
-Villainowski building the ship. It would have been impossible for me
-not to learn it._"
-
-"_Exactly_," came the reply. "_And your continued existence hinges
-entirely on your silence._"
-
-A chill wind blew up Saxon's spine, but it only fanned the flame of
-eagerness which had sprung up in him. Here were others like himself,
-possessed of telepathic powers.
-
-"_Who are you?_" he thought passionately.
-
-He realized in dismay that the prickling in skin and scalp had
-diminished. The telepaths were withdrawing, deserting him without a
-hint of further contact.
-
-"_Who are you? How can I find you?_"
-
-Nothing!
-
-He and the girl were alone again in the moonlit doorway.
-
-A strange sense of exhilaration replaced Saxon's first feeling of
-letdown. There were other telepaths on Earth and sometime, someplace
-their paths would cross again. He stepped into the street, saying to
-Ileth, "Let's go. I was mistaken. There's no one here."
-
-In the rays of the street lamp, he looked more like a pugilist than
-a Government Bureau of Research man and one of Terra's top nuclear
-physicists. He had a big nose, twice broken, strong white teeth and a
-square massive jaw. He caught the girl's thought and grinned down at
-her.
-
-"_He's not handsome_," she was thinking, "_not by any standard, but
-when he grins like that you don't think about his looks and virility
-radiates from him like heat waves. He's a dangerous man! Emil
-underrates him!_"
-
-"Hadn't we better take the conveyor?" she asked aloud.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Jon Saxon nodded, swung the girl lightly by her elbows to the pick-up,
-transferred to commuter, then express. They found seats while the
-buildings flowed past on either hand like a speeded-up movie.
-
-"You have a frightening job," said Ileth, looking up at his from big
-hazel-green eyes. Her shiny black hair she wore in a shoulder length
-page-boy bob. She smoothed her short-waisted chartreuse jacket over
-small firm breasts. "I'm surprised Government lets you go out without
-your bodyguard."
-
-"They don't." Saxon's unprepossessing features lit with a boyish grin.
-"But I slip away from them once in a while."
-
-"You were afraid of an ambush back there in the street?"
-
-He nodded. "Yes. I thought one of the corporations may have got wind of
-my escapade."
-
-The girl, he saw from her thoughts, was satisfied with his explanation.
-
-In these days of savage competition, the big corporations maintained
-their own factories and laboratories. General Atomic, Tri-World,
-Amalgamated Plastic, a score of lesser companies employed staffs
-of technicians and research scientists. The lives of these men
-were fraught with a peculiar danger. They were subject to bribery,
-kidnapping and torture by the spy agencies of rival companies in their
-efforts to extort from them any new discovery or guarded scientific
-process their corporations might possess. Independent agencies manned
-by corrupt technicians had men everywhere.
-
-The corporations protected themselves by confining their technicians
-to barracks and never permitting them to wander forth unescorted. It
-was a condition which Jon Saxon found little better than slavery. The
-constant surveillance irked him to the point of rebellion.
-
-Now he was confronted suddenly with the fact that he had been under
-observation of an infinitely more subtle kind as well. Some group was
-keeping constant watch upon his mind. But who?
-
-Ileth sighed and laid her sleek black head on his shoulder. "Jon,
-you've been so quiet tonight. Is it because tomorrow the expedition
-leaves for Alpha Centauri?"
-
-"I don't know. I'm not afraid, exactly. We know the drive is
-practicable, but it's the first attempt man's ever made to reach the
-stars. We've never been beyond the Solar System before, Ileth."
-
-He felt the girl's arms slip around his neck, cling with surprising
-strength. "I'm afraid, Jon. I wish you weren't going."
-
-"What are you afraid of?"
-
-Ileth bit her lower lip. She was feeling rather than thinking, Saxon
-realized, a mental chaos bubbling in the primitive thalamic regions of
-her nervous system, a formless intuition of disaster stalking the first
-expedition into stellar space.
-
-"I--I don't know exactly," she confessed. "I don't understand it, Jon."
-
-Saxon's eyes narrowed. He had intercepted that dread of the
-expedition's fate before. He had felt it emanating from hundreds of
-individuals otherwise unrelated. It was like a hypnotically imposed
-command: "_Don't venture into the Stellar Depths!_"
-
-And it always stemmed from the subconscious, the regions of the human
-mind telepathically closed to him. At first he'd been inclined to think
-it was dread of the unknown. But now he was not so sure.
-
-Facts, Saxon knew, were assimilated by the subconscious, later to
-emerge as hunches and intuition. He had grown to believe that there
-must be reason behind this universal fear of stellar space.
-
-He had even felt it in himself; in his chief, Villainowski; in his
-co-workers at Government's Bureau of Research. It was a very real
-feeling that nothing but disaster for the human race could come of this
-venture to the stars.
-
-
- II
-
-Ileth's apartment was on the ninety-eighth level, flush against the
-transparent plastic dome which hermetically sealed in Adirondaka.
-
-Jon Saxon followed the girl out of the lift, watching her with
-admiration.
-
-She was a slim, long legged creature in chartreuse green, jodhpur-like
-trousers that moulded her slender waist and rounded hips with amazing
-fidelity before flaring at her thighs.
-
-Ileth Urban was as fetching a bit of scientist-bait as General Atomic
-could have desired.
-
-All the corporations used these girls. They scoured the Solar System
-for the cleverest, most beautiful ones to be found. They paid them
-fantastic wages and trained them to worm secrets from susceptible
-males. Scientific Mata Hari's.
-
-Government itself used them, Saxon was fully aware. Only by employing
-even more ruthless measures than the corporations was government able
-to maintain itself. Government had the finest research department
-anywhere. And the Terrestial Intelligence Service was the most
-efficient organization of its kind. Not only that; Government had
-power, power unbelievable in its Space Navy.
-
-Ileth paused, allowing him to come abreast of her, her hazel-green eyes
-smiling at him.
-
-Saxon hastily blocked out her thoughts in embarrassment. "_You're a
-pretty little Judas_," he thought, then glanced up as a bright glare
-lit the night sky.
-
-A trail of orange flame streaked above the city and disappeared like
-a meteor in reverse. The _Morning Star_, a crack luxury liner, was
-heading out for Venus. It must be nineteen hours.
-
-"Our last night," said Ileth softly. "Tomorrow we'll be leaving for
-Alpha Centauri like that ship."
-
-They had reached a door in the glistening plastic face of a building.
-The door opened automatically, responsive to the girl's personal
-vibration.
-
-Saxon saw a lambent darkness beyond the entrance. The ceiling of
-Ileth's apartment was the transparent rind of the city itself. The moon
-streamed through the crystal plastic, lighting it faintly.
-
-His nerves tightened, his sixth sense of feel exploring the apartment
-for a trap.
-
-But no warning tingle prickled his skin. Then the lights came on as
-Ileth passed inside. They glowed from the walls like cold flame.
-
-With a sigh of relief, Saxon saw that the chamber was empty.
-
-"Sit down," said Ileth, "I'll get you a drink." She disappeared through
-a doorway across the room, stripping her yellow green jacket from her
-shoulders as she went.
-
-Jon Saxon sank onto a lounge, following Ileth's progress by her
-thoughts.
-
-"_Soda. Where's that soda? Oh, here it is. Emil must have put it there.
-Like a man._" Then, "_Contact Emil?_"
-
-A moment's indecision. Saxon could almost hear the girl thinking. "_Not
-yet_," she decided with a mental shiver. "_Saxon would be no good to us
-dead._" Then, "_Make the drink strong. Take a gallon to make him drunk.
-Big brute. Shoulders like a door. I could...._"
-
-Saxon hastily blocked out her thought in embarrassment. The girl's mind
-was too graphic.
-
-For the hundredth time his brain grappled with the identity of those
-alien telepaths who had warned him in the street tonight.
-
-The radiation branch of Government's Bureau of Research had been
-experimenting with thought projection. Could they have been successful?
-It might account for the alien feel he had experienced for that
-impenetrable barrier which had defeated his attempt to reach their
-minds.
-
-A machine?
-
-Unconsciously, he shook his head. His sixth sense, the ability not
-only to feel a presence but identify it almost as if he were seeing
-it, convinced him that there had been life in the street, a strange
-invisible form of life possibly; but the reality of it was inescapable.
-In some ways his heightened sense of feel was more reliable than his
-ears or eyes.
-
-Ileth returned bearing a tray with glasses, a decanter of whiskey and
-soda. "I wasn't long, was I?"
-
- * * * * *
-
-There was a hard bright glitter in her hazel-green eyes. Saxon saw
-that she had changed to a halter and skirt of Martian microweb. He
-swallowed, feeling a pulse beginning to tick in his throat. The
-microweb was as black as the girl's hair, but not anywhere so thick.
-
-Only her cold determination to keep him there until after the sailing,
-which he could feel like a dash of cold water, defeated her purpose.
-
-She handed him a glass, set the tray on an end table, switched on the
-telecaster.
-
-Instead of music, the newscaster was blaring forth the announcement of
-the expedition to Alpha Centauri.
-
-"... greatest page in the annals of the Empire. Tomorrow at nine hours
-the _Shooting Star_ with a picked crew, with a staff of specialists
-and representatives from all the great corporations will blast off for
-Alpha Centauri.
-
-"Under the directorship of John Villainowski of Government's Bureau of
-Research, the man who developed the stellar drive, the expedition plans
-to investigate the planetary systems of the Centaurian suns.
-
-"His excellency, Mustapha IX, will be present...."
-
-Ileth snapped off the telecaster.
-
-"Jon," she asked and leaned against him, "why did you sneak out tonight
-of all nights?"
-
-He sensed the girl's tension, knew that it would be difficult to fool
-her. Suddenly, he decided to quit beating around the bush and strike
-straight into the heart of the opposing forces.
-
-"I know you're an agent of General Atomic, Ileth. I've...!" He paused.
-
-Ileth had gasped and drawn back from him. Her thoughts were in turmoil.
-"_Emil! I must reach Emil!_" was clear.
-
-Saxon went on inexorably. "I've wind of a plot by General Atomic
-against the _Shooting Star_. If they could get their hands on the
-stellar drive, no doubt they could control deep space. They'd be in a
-position to dictate to Government."
-
-Ileth was thinking furiously now, Saxon realized, trying to figure how
-much he knew and how much he was guessing.
-
-He laughed without amusement. He knew damned little, too damned little.
-
-Only this morning, he had intercepted the stray thought of one of his
-co-workers and realized that the man had sold out to General Atomic. To
-his horror he had read in the man's mind where General Atomic, after
-securing the stellar drive, intended to overthrow Government.
-
-How General Atomic planned to get the drive, who else was in the plot,
-the man hadn't known. He had been bribed to take orders from a G.A.
-agent, whom he knew only as Q62.
-
-Saxon couldn't inform the T.I.S. of his knowledge. He had no proof,
-except what he had read in this one man's mind.
-
-He had told Villainowski of his suspicions. The chief had promised to
-set the T.I.S. onto the case, but they had turned up no evidence of any
-kind against the great corporation.
-
-General Atomic had done its work with utmost secrecy, not letting its
-right hand know what its left hand was doing.
-
-Saxon was desperate. He grasped the girl's slight shoulders. "What do
-you know about it, Ileth?"
-
-"I don't know anything. Oh Lord, Jon, I'm to be General Atomic's
-representative aboard the _Shooting Star_, and they've told me nothing
-of any plot against the ship. Nothing, Jon, I swear it."
-
-With a disheartening feeling of defeat, Jon realized the girl was
-telling the truth. She had been told nothing of General Atomic's plan.
-She, too, he read in her frightened thoughts, had been instructed to
-take orders from a General Atomic's agent whom she knew as Q62.
-
-"Who's Q62?" he shot at her.
-
-Ileth's hazel-green eyes were enormous. "You! How did you know?"
-
-"Who's Q62?"
-
-"I don't know. I've never met him."
-
-"How will you know him?"
-
-"I don't know. They said he would be able to identify himself. That's
-all. They wouldn't tell me how."
-
-All at once Saxon's skin began to prickle its warning of danger. He
-released the girl, wheeled towards the door just as it was flung
-viciously back.
-
-He saw three men in the opening and reached for his dart gun.
-
-With a half sob, Ileth hurled herself on him, bearing him backward to
-the couch, her arms around his chest, her long legs tangled with his.
-
-[Illustration: _With a half sob, Ileth hurled herself on him._]
-
-"Emil!" she panted. "Quick! He's got a gun!"
-
-"Easy. Easy. Easy," said a man's low amused voice.
-
-Jon Saxon succeeded in throwing Ileth off his chest and surging to his
-feet. He found himself staring into the tiny barrel of a dart gun. The
-dart gun was being held steady as a rock by a gray-eyed, yellow-haired
-man with a faint smile on his wide thin lips.
-
-Saxon let his hand fall away from his holster.
-
-"Get his gun, Ileth."
-
-"Right, Emil."
-
-Saxon felt the girl's cool fingers slip inside his blouse, pluck his
-automatic from his holster.
-
-"Has he any other weapons?"
-
-She patted Saxon deftly, impersonally, shook her head, her black hair
-swinging.
-
-"No. That's all."
-
-The blond man lowered his gun. "You may sit down, sir."
-
-Saxon sat down.
-
- * * * * *
-
-There were two others behind the blond man but Saxon kept his eyes
-on Emil, recognizing a dangerous type. Obviously well educated,
-intelligent, the blond man was fiercely loyal to General Atomic.
-
-Not such a queer combination in these times, Saxon thought; when the
-corporations had come to replace countries in men's loyalties.
-
-The anarchist revolt against Bureaucratic-Socialism had seriously
-weakened Terra and corporate business had fought its way back to power.
-Determined never again to permit the sacred laws of property to be so
-violated, it had fastened its tentacles to the very roots of society.
-It organized a government in an image of itself--a corporate government.
-
-Men became known no longer as American or Spanish but as General Atomic
-men, or Tri-World men, or Corporate Government men and were as blindly
-patriotic to their corporations as they had been in earlier ages to the
-lands of their birth.
-
-Such a one, Saxon recognized, was Emil of General Atomic, a fanatic who
-would consider it the greatest honor to die for his company.
-
-"You realize, sir," said Emil, "that we regret very much what we must
-do."
-
-"Why do it, then?" Jon Saxon asked bluntly.
-
-The blond Emil looked shocked. "Are you suggesting treason, sir?"
-
-"I'm not suggesting anything," replied Saxon, who had already read his
-death sentence in Emil's brain. "But you don't expect me to give you
-any information, when you plan to kill me immediately after."
-
-Emil's expression was vaguely disturbed. "Nonsense! I'm commissioned
-to offer you a post in General Atomic's research department at twice
-your present salary, if you can give us the information we wish."
-
-But Saxon still read nothing but inexorable death in Emil's mind.
-
-"Eyewash," he said.
-
-In the ensuing silence the men's thoughts beat at Saxon's brain like
-the confusing racket of people talking all at once.
-
-At length Emil moved aside, saying, "We're prepared for obstinacy.
-Georg, take over."
-
-A plump man of middle age drew up a chair facing Saxon.
-
-"Georg," explained Emil, "is an N.P.A."
-
-Saxon stared into the moon faced neural-psychoanalyst. The man
-possessed the most unusual pair of twinkling blue eyes like bits of
-glass, a smooth pink face, thin sandy hair. He was dressed like Emil in
-loose, comfortable coveralls of a gray siliconex.
-
-He took Saxon's wrist, said pleasantly, "Hmmm, pulse rapid but strong.
-Unusual nervous control. Strip to the waist, if you please."
-
-As Saxon pulled off his blouse, the plump N.P.A. turned to the third
-man, obviously his assistant, and said, "Bring the machine, Alph."
-
-The man called Alph lugged a heavy case in front of the couch, opened
-it. Georg began to attach saucer shaped suction discs to Saxon's
-temples, the base of his skull, his solar plexus. Wires led from the
-discs to the machine in the black case.
-
-"Quite ready," said Georg to Emil. "Ask any questions you wish."
-
-Saxon could feel a delicate tingle rippling up his spine into his brain
-like a mild electric shock. Emil asked, "Do you know the secret of
-Villainowski's stellar drive?"
-
-"No," returned Saxon. "That's preposterous. No one understands that
-except Villainowski himself. Do you think Government would be so
-stupid as to let the secret out?"
-
-The plump N.P.A. who had been studying a bank of dials, looked up and
-said, "He's lying. From that I would infer that he understands the
-stellar drive."
-
-"What?" gasped Emil.
-
-With a sinking heart Jon Saxon realized that the blond man had not been
-expecting such luck. They had thought that he might be able to give
-them some clue to the stellar drive, but not that he actually could
-reproduce it.
-
-"What's his torture coefficient?" Emil shot at the N.P.A.
-
-Georg adjusted several dials. The tingling became livid fire coursing
-up Saxon's spine. His eyes closed, he crushed his lips between his
-teeth until a trickle of blood coursed down his chin.
-
-The room swayed sickeningly. Sweat burst from his pores, made his sick
-white face glisten in the indirect lighting.
-
-Then as sudden as it came, the fire smoldered and died out of his spine.
-
-He heard the N.P.A. speak in an awed voice, "His torture coefficient is
-below his will to live. He'll die first."
-
- * * * * *
-
-Emil began to stride nervously back and forth before the lounge. He
-swung suddenly on Saxon, saying, "Look, that post on General Atomic's
-research bureau is still open. I can promise you three times your
-present salary, and a bonus besides."
-
-"Liar," replied Saxon without hesitation. "I don't need a machine to
-tell you're lying." He laughed shortly.
-
-The N.P.A.'s plump face looked puzzled. He made rapid adjustments on
-the machine, bent over the dials again.
-
-"He's not lying," he said in a queer voice. "He knows you intend to
-kill him as soon as you squeeze him dry of information."
-
-Saxon caught sight of Ileth's white, strained face and grinned at her.
-She had been as surprised, he read her thoughts, as himself at Emil's
-opportune entrance. Obviously, Emil had not been supposed to put in an
-appearance until she had a try at him first.
-
-It was all verification that General Atomic was trying to steal the
-stellar drive. But Saxon had been able to catch only the scantiest of
-details from Emil's mind.
-
-General Atomic not only wanted the drive, he sensed, but a monopoly on
-it. That meant killing or buying off everyone in Government's Bureau of
-Research who knew the secret of the drive.
-
-Emil said to Saxon, "Suppose I contact General Atomic and put it up to
-them. I'll confess my orders were to question you, then dispose of you.
-Frankly, Ileth's reports have convinced us that you couldn't be bought."
-
-"What makes you think that I can now? Anyway, what guarantee have I
-that their promises aren't as empty as yours?" he asked sceptically.
-
-Georg, the neuro-psychoanalyst, pursed thick lips and interjected
-himself into the conversation. "General Atomic abides by its
-contracts," he pointed out.
-
-"Yes. When it's to their advantage."
-
-Emil's eyes blazed; red stained his pale cheek. "Do you mean to imply,
-sir, that General Atomic is treacherous?"
-
-"Exactly."
-
-"Emil!" said the plump N.P.A., sharply.
-
-Slowly the flush receded from Emil's cheeks, but he held himself stiff
-as a ram-rod and his eyes were angry.
-
-The N.P.A. turned back to Saxon. "At least, you admit that General
-Atomic abides by its contracts as long as it's to their advantage."
-
-Saxon nodded, seeing already what was coming.
-
-"Then," pursued Georg. "It certainly would be to their advantage
-to preserve you alive until you could build a stellar drive. After
-that...." He shrugged. "You're an intelligent man, Saxon. Rated one of
-the best physicists in the Empire, in fact. It seems to me that you
-could easily convince General Atomic that it would be of advantage to
-them to keep you alive indefinitely. What would you say to a hundred
-thousand credits a year?"
-
-"Not enough."
-
-"_Two hundred thousand?_"
-
-"One or two ..." Saxon began, then paused in consternation. He had been
-tricked!
-
-There was a self-satisfied smile on the neuro-psychoanalyst's pudgy
-features. He had not spoken aloud the words, "Two hundred thousand,"
-but had thought them at Saxon!
-
-"He's a telepath!" said the N.P.A., and began to disconnect the discs
-from Saxon's body and stow them back in the case.
-
-"A telepath!" Emil ejaculated. "He's a telepath?"
-
-"Exactly," agreed the N.P.A. in dry tones. "I suspected it from the
-first, but frankly I couldn't believe it. I've never encountered a
-true telepath before. I didn't think there were any. Individuals who
-are unusually canny at reading expression, yes. But never any true
-telepaths. I'm going to request General Atomic to let me perform an
-autopsy after he's been disposed of. Possibly he's a mutant."
-
-"Disposed of?" ejaculated the blond Emil. "But great stars, Georg! He's
-invaluable to us. Not only does he possess the secret of the stellar
-drive, but he can...."
-
-"You're the executive!" retorted Georg sharply, "but I advise you to
-shoot him now! This second!"
-
-"What do you mean?"
-
-"You're not stupid, man! How much information has he picked from
-our brains already? If he should escape, the plan would have to be
-sacrificed. Everything might be lost." Then, sharply, "And don't think
-about the plan! Shoot him!"
-
-Saxon could read growing conviction in the blond man's mind. He saw
-Emil's hand, holding the dart gun, begin to rise.
-
-"Look out, Emil!" shrieked Ileth suddenly.
-
-But Saxon had already snatched the plump N.P.A. off his feet, yanking
-him between himself and Emil. He heard a sharp plop. The N.P.A.'s body
-quivered as it intercepted Emil's poisoned dart. Saxon realized he was
-holding aloft a dead man.
-
-The muscles in his burly naked shoulders hunched. He hurled the dead
-N.P.A. at the blond man who went down, bowled over backwards by the
-body.
-
-Emil's head struck the plastic floor with a sickening crunch. Saxon
-caught a painful mental flash as unconsciousness gripped the blond man.
-
-Without a pause, he leaped for Ileth. The girl was fumbling at her
-waist, where her gun's muzzle had become entangled. Only the fact that
-the muzzle had caught in her waist band saved him.
-
-She flinched back as Saxon's hand closed on the gun, tore it loose from
-her grip. There was a rip of cloth and the dart gun came away. Ileth's
-skirt, freed of its supporting waistband, slid down about her ankles.
-
-Saxon leaped backward, threatening the N.P.A.'s flabbergasted assistant
-as well as the girl.
-
-"Don't move! Either of you."
-
-The N.P.A.'s assistant was obviously terrified and had no intention of
-budging.
-
-"_Oh, my skirt!_" Ileth's wild thought came clear as a bell to Saxon,
-and the girl rolled her eyes toward her feet, where the cloth lay in a
-black ring. But she didn't move.
-
-Saxon grinned. "Obviously," he said, "you haven't any weapon concealed
-about yourself. You can pick up your skirt, Ileth."
-
-She snatched it about her waist again, holding the foot long tear
-together with her hand.
-
-"I'm leaving," he said, "but remember, I can read your thoughts. If
-either of you make a move towards that audio during the next ten
-minutes, I'll pop back in and fill you as full of darts as a porcupine."
-
-And he backed, still grinning, through the door.
-
-
- III
-
-The huge structure, housing Government's Bureau of Research, was aflame
-with light when Saxon climbed from the robot cab and approached the
-entrance. The shadowy figure of a guard challenged him.
-
-Saxon produced his papers, submitted to a fingerprint test.
-
-"So, it's you, all right," the guard growled. "Where the hell have you
-been? The T.I.S. has been scouring the city for you."
-
-Saxon asked, "Is Villainowski in? I want to see him."
-
-"Not half as bad," said the guard, "as he wants to see you." He stuck
-his head inside the guardroom, yelled, "Hey, Webb, come relieve me.
-That missing physicist has shown up. I've got to take him up to the
-chief."
-
-"I can find my way," Saxon assured him dryly.
-
-"I've got my orders," retorted the man, "to escort you, and escorted
-you'll be."
-
-As they took the lift, Saxon probed gently into the guard's mind. He
-was thinking about a Venusian dancer performing at the Sun Palace on
-Greater Broadway. Either he didn't know why Villainowski wanted him, or
-he was more interested in the dancer.
-
-Saxon sighed in resignation.
-
-Chief Villainowski was a small wiry man of Polish descent who had led
-none too reputable a life, although it was not generally known. Jon
-Saxon, regarding him across the polished desk, read suspicion and
-wonder in the chief's mind. Villainowski was never able to reconcile
-Saxon's appearance with his indisputable scientific attainments.
-
-"_Looks like a plug ugly_," Villainowski was thinking although he was
-far from a beauty himself. "_Ought to be a prize fighter instead of a
-physicist!_"
-
-"Will you pray tell me," he asked aloud of the amused Saxon, "what the
-hell possessed you to sneak out the night before we leave?"
-
-Saxon grinned like a mastiff. "It was that General Atomic affair. I
-haven't told you, but I met one of their agents, a girl by the name of
-Ileth Urban, about a month ago."
-
-"Black-headed girl?" asked the third man in the room. He had his chair
-leaned against the wall. A tall, angular, sandy-haired man with pale
-blue eyes like gimlets. "Does she have hazel-green eyes, small delicate
-features? Ears peaked like an animal's...."
-
-"I hadn't noticed the ears," Saxon confessed, swinging toward the
-sandy-haired man.
-
-Gavin Murdock, T.I.S. agent, had been assigned as T.I.S. representative
-to this first expedition beyond the Solar System. He said, "No, I guess
-not. She wears her hair in a page-boy bob."
-
-Villainowski interrupted: "Well, damn it, man, who gave you permission
-to horn in on the T.I.S.'s work?"
-
-"I knew her. She'd been set to pump me dry of information by General
-Atomic. If anyone could get anything out of her, I could."
-
-"You don't fancy yourself much," the chief grunted with a touch of
-asperity. "What did you find out?"
-
-Saxon related events just as they had transpired, omitting only the
-alien telepaths in the street and his own telepathic ability.
-
-"By Pluto!" exploded Villainowski when he had concluded. "We can grab
-the lot of them."
-
-"Not so fast," Murdock interrupted from his chair against the wall.
-"What proof have you? Only Saxon's word. It won't hold in a court of
-law."
-
-"But the girl!" Villainowski protested. "She's General Atomic's
-representative on the expedition. You don't intend to let her--"
-
-"It's better to have her where we can watch her," the T.I.S. agent
-returned. "Saxon can keep an eye on her. He seems to be able to pry
-more out of her than any of my agents have. If he can persuade her that
-he hasn't told us about the fracas in her apartment...."
-
-"I can convince her of that, I think," said Saxon. "But she doesn't
-know anything...."
-
-"Except," Murdock interrupted again, "that she's to take orders from an
-agent known as Q62. At least, she should lead us to him." He paused,
-regarded Saxon with his penetrating pale blue eyes. "What the devil did
-you do to her, man, to get that information out of her? Stick darts
-under her finger nails?"
-
-In both Murdock's and Villainowski's mind Saxon read a cold
-determination to keep him under surveillance as well as the girl.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Villainowski, he knew, hated the corporations in general, but it was
-nothing to the black flame of hatred that consumed the man whenever he
-thought of General Atomic. It was almost psychopathic. He had never
-forgotten or forgiven General Atomic, Saxon knew, for stealing his
-first three discoveries and then disgracing him.
-
-It was a queer friendship that existed between the two men questioning
-Saxon--the gaunt cold-blooded manhunter, who had sent a girl with whom
-he was infatuated to the Lunar Penal Colony, and Villainowski, the
-small wiry scientist, ex-Jovian slaver, and at present head of the
-first expedition into deep space.
-
-"Well," the sandy-haired Murdock repeated inexorably, "how did she
-happen to tell you about Q62?"
-
-"It was a slip," explained Saxon. "I followed it up."
-
-"She's not given to making slips," Murdock pointed out. "Not Ileth
-Urban."
-
-When Saxon didn't reply, the T.I.S. agent said, "Saxon, we've
-investigated your past pretty thoroughly. We did the same with every
-man and woman connected with this expedition. We encountered a strange
-thing. Saxon, who are your parents?"
-
-Jon Saxon could feel his stomach contract. "I don't know. I haven't any
-recollection before my eleventh year." He could feel Murdock's probing
-blue eyes, sense his scepticism.
-
-"You've a convenient memory, because we've been unable to find any
-trace of your parents or birth prior to your enrollment in the
-Institute. A thousand years ago your case would have been unusual,
-but it could have happened. But today, with our universal system of
-records, it's impossible. I've never encountered a parallel case to
-yours."
-
-"I'm sorry," said Saxon dryly, "but I do seem to have been born, don't
-I? And somehow escaped the census."
-
-Murdock smiled a wintry smile. "There were funds deposited at the
-Institute for your education. We haven't been able to trace those funds
-either. In fact, every way we've turned, we've run into a blank wall."
-
-"I'm sorry," said Saxon again, "but I can't help you. I have absolutely
-no memory before I was eleven. Don't think it hasn't worried me. I
-asked the T.I.S. to investigate it years ago. They couldn't find
-anything then. It's not surprising they haven't found anything this
-time."
-
-"You won't object to being examined by our N.P.A.?"
-
-"No," replied Saxon.
-
-Villainowski spoke into an inter-communicating audio, "Send in the
-N.P.A."
-
-The neuro-psychoanalyst must have been waiting outside because he
-entered immediately. Saxon regarded him curiously. Government's N.P.A.
-was a lean Cassius-like individual with an ingratiating smile. Saxon
-had taken an immediate dislike to him when he had first seen him
-prowling about the corridors of the research building, but he knew the
-man was a brilliant psychologist.
-
-The N.P.A. approached Saxon rubbing his hands together and smiling.
-"So this is the subject. How are you, Jon? There's no need to ask
-questions. I've studied your record. No question but what there's a
-mental block, is there? Hope we can break it. Sit here, if you don't
-mind."
-
-Saxon took the chair indicated, the N.P.A. facing him.
-
-"Take one of these." He held out a box of hypno-pills.
-
-Saxon selected one, gulped it down. He made no effort to read the minds
-of Murdock, Villainowski or the N.P.A.
-
-The neuro-psychoanalyst was wearing a revolving mirror about an inch
-in diameter on a band about his forehead. He set the mirror in motion
-which caught the room light, alternately darkening and flashing.
-
-"Look into the light, Jon," he said in a calm, sure voice. "Relax and
-watch the light. You are going to sleep when I count three. You can
-feel the effect of the hypno-pill already. When I count three you
-sleep, sleep.... One." A pause. "Two." Pause. "Three...."
-
- * * * * *
-
-After half an hour the N.P.A.'s voice wasn't so sure. He had given
-Jon three more pills, had tried all the devices at the command of the
-largest neural-clinic in the Empire without the slightest effect.
-Jon Saxon continued to regard the N.P.A. with a half hidden gleam of
-amusement in his dark gray eyes.
-
-The neuro-psychoanalyst sat back, mopped his perspiring face with his
-handkerchief. "It's no use!" he said in a strained voice. "He can't be
-hypnotized!"
-
-"I could have told you that," replied Saxon. "Do you think I haven't
-tried to have the block broken before?"
-
-The N.P.A. swore and got to his feet. "Well, why didn't you say so?" he
-shouted. It was the first time Saxon had ever seen him lose his temper.
-
-"Because these gentlemen have been suspicious of me." He indicated
-Murdock and Villainowski. "If I had offered any objections to being
-hypnotized, they'd have been sure that I was afraid to."
-
-All at once, Saxon experienced the peculiar tingling in scalp and
-skin that warned him the alien creatures, whom he had met in the
-street, were present. He couldn't possibly be mistaken. Once having
-experienced that peculiar inhuman feel it was not to be forgotten or
-confused.
-
-Not only were they invisible, but neither doors nor walls seemed to
-offer any resistance to them.
-
-"_Who are you?_" he concentrated, but his thought met that strange
-mental barrier. There was no answer.
-
-He realized that the three men were watching him with a curious
-tenseness.
-
-Suddenly the N.P.A.'s jaw dropped. An expression of complete
-astonishment lit up his face. "I've got it! I've got it!" he cried.
-
-"Got what?" growled Villainowski, moving uneasily behind his massive
-desk.
-
-"Saxon! Saxon, that's who! My Lord, why didn't it occur to me before.
-He's a--"
-
-The words died suddenly on the N.P.A.'s lips. An expression of fright
-crossed his lean features. Then, without a sound, he crumpled to the
-carpet.
-
-Jon Saxon, staring in horror, realized that the tingling of his skin
-was diminishing. The telepaths were withdrawing.
-
-At the same instant Murdock's chair hit the floor as he leaped across
-the room, dropped to his knee beside the prone figure of the N.P.A. For
-a moment he was bent over the body like a bronze statue, then he turned
-his face up to Villainowski.
-
-Saxon, who had read his thoughts, was amazed at Murdock's passionless
-expression.
-
-"He's dead," the T.I.S. agent said in a toneless voice. "I wouldn't
-have believed it, if I hadn't seen it happen, but he's deader than the
-moon."
-
-
- IV
-
-Bong! Bong! Bong! Bong! rang the warning gong, reverberating through
-the launching pit.
-
-Mustapha IX had shaken hands for the last time with Villainowski and
-hurried down the gangplank. The ports were all sealed; crew at their
-stations. Outside the pits, the frenzied crowd was delirious with
-excitement. Wasn't it man's first attempt to reach the stars?
-
-Bong! Bong! Bong! Bong! Bong!
-
-On the last stroke the _Shooting Star_ fell silent except for the
-muffled roar of her tubes warming. At the same instant the crowd grew
-impossibly still.
-
-The raw fear, which had made itself felt in spite of the festivities,
-rode to the surface. The strange psychological dread of deep space.
-
-A woman in the relatives' stand suddenly buried her face in her hands,
-her shoulders shaking with violent sobs. She was the wife of the master
-mechanic on the third's watch. A gray-faced man moved towards the
-woman, patted her shoulders.
-
-Just then a continuous violent explosion shook the frail stand like
-an earth tremor. The _Shooting Star_ burst from the pits, trailing a
-comet-tail of orange flame.
-
-"Oh, my husband!" wailed the woman, "oh, my husband!" but her voice was
-drowned in the roar.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Jon Saxon threw off his safety belt, glanced across at the strained
-white face of Ileth Urban in the next acceleration chair. "Buck up," he
-grinned. "It's too late to change your mind now."
-
-The girl nervously tucked a curl in place, smiled uncertainly. "Heaven
-help me! Are we going to share all my thoughts during the rest of the
-voyage?"
-
-"Hell, no," said Saxon. "I want to preserve some of my illusions." He
-leaned towards her. "I'll strike a bargain with you, though. If you
-don't mention that I'm a telepath, I'll not report our--er--experience
-last night."
-
-"You mean you haven't said anything?"
-
-"No," said Saxon. "Why should I? I didn't have proof. Who'd want to
-tackle General Atomic without cast-iron evidence? On second thought,
-who'd want to tackle General Atomic at all? No one would believe
-me, anyway. Just like they won't believe you if you tell them I'm a
-telepath."
-
-Saxon could see the girl reach a decision. "Oh, I wouldn't say that,"
-he broke in before she could voice her thought. "You've lots of other
-courses. You could snub me or spread tales behind my back."
-
-"I didn't say it!" she retorted hotly. "I thought it. My Lord, I can't
-even call my thoughts my own!"
-
-"Then it's a bargain."
-
-"I didn't say so."
-
-"No. But you've decided to...."
-
-She stamped her feet. "That's what I mean! That's what I mean!"
-
-"Calm down," he said. "Half the staff is staring at you."
-
-Ileth drew a deep breath, shrugged. A grim smile flashed across her
-pretty patrician features.
-
-"If you can stand it," she replied with an unexpected twinkle in her
-hazel-green eyes, "I suppose I can too."
-
-He stood up. "Like to meet the rest of the staff? Fine. You're all
-settled in your cabin, aren't you? No? Then I'll give you a hand as
-soon as we finish our tour of introduction."
-
-Ileth's eyes had grown darker and darker.
-
-"Now don't lose your temper," he said hastily.
-
-"I haven't said a damn word. At least let me get my answers out of my
-mouth."
-
-Saxon laughed, taking her arm. "Come along. We're accelerating at one
-G constant. We'll have no trouble moving around." He hesitated, then
-asked in an off hand manner,
-
-"Has Q62 identified himself yet?"
-
-Ileth looked startled, frightened. She tried to draw away but Saxon
-held onto her arm. "No. No, he hasn't. Please let go. You're hurting
-me, Jon."
-
-But he didn't release her. "Is he aboard the ship?"
-
-"No. I don't know. General Atomic didn't notify me that he would
-be." Abruptly, Ileth didn't seem confused any longer. She raised her
-chin, looked Saxon nakedly in the eyes making no effort to conceal
-her thoughts. "I think he is," she said simply. "But I don't know. He
-hasn't identified himself, if he is. I--I haven't seen anyone aboard
-that I know. I think I'm the only General Atomic agent aboard, and I'm
-an accredited representative."
-
-Saxon regarded her a moment without speaking. The girl was telling the
-truth as far as she knew. There could be no doubt about that.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Saxon introduced Ileth to Brand, Government's bio-chemist, to Mercedes,
-the gray-haired middle-aged woman who was Government's authority in
-anthropology. He made the circuit of the lounge with her, letting her
-chat with ethnologists and semantics experts, psycho-historians and
-zoologists--all of Government's brilliant array of specialists. And all
-the while he kept his mind open and alert, sifting their varied thought
-patterns for a betraying sign.
-
-He didn't intercept a single suspicious thought.
-
-They all seemed to be just exactly what they were supposed to be,
-each one an expert in his field, eager and enthusiastic investigators
-beginning an unparalleled adventure. Saxon could discover no evidences
-that any of them had sold out to General Atomic.
-
-If Q62 or any General Atomic agent were among Government's staff, they
-were perfect in dissembling their thoughts.
-
-From the lounge, Saxon showed Ileth about the ship. He could see it was
-an experience for the girl.
-
-The _Shooting Star_ had been built along the general design of a
-cruiser, heavily armed and armored against the possibilities of hostile
-races inhabiting the planets of the Alpha Centaurian suns.
-
-Her crew was small. Government's staff of scientists numbered fourteen;
-and only four of the corporations were represented: General Atomic,
-Tri-World, Amalgamated Plastic and United Spaceways. In spite of the
-mass of equipment and a year's emergency ration of fuel and supplies,
-they were not crowded.
-
-Saxon led Ileth through the control room, the officer's mess, the
-engine room and observation deck. Everywhere they went, Saxon probed
-the brains of crew and officers.
-
-At the end of two hours, he still had found exactly nothing. Apparently
-Q62 was not aboard. Ileth asked slyly, "Did you find him?"
-
-They had entered the deck on which the cabins were located and were
-passing the closed door of number seven.
-
-"Q62?" said Saxon with a puzzled frown. "No--" He halted abruptly,
-seizing the girl's arm.
-
-"Jon! What is it?"
-
-"Be quiet!"
-
-Saxon's scalp was tingling as if minute electrical shocks were coursing
-through the roots of his hair.
-
-The Aliens?
-
-The feel was unmistakable to his extra-human sixth sense. And it was
-emanating from Cabin Seven!
-
-Like a cat he reached the door in one silent bound, pressed the button.
-The panel slid back noiselessly. Except for a blade of light lancing
-into the cabin from the lighted passage, only darkness lurked beyond
-the doorway.
-
-The alien unhuman feel was suddenly so strong that it was like a cold
-draft pouring through the blackened entrance, sending chills rippling
-up his spine.
-
-Ileth's eyes were enormous. Saxon could hear her frightened erratic
-breathing. Her fear-thoughts beat at his brain. "_What is it? What has
-he found? What's wrong?_"
-
-In spite of himself, Saxon could feel the blood drain out of his
-cheeks. He wanted suddenly to slam the door and run blindly down the
-corridor, away from that strange creature lurking in the dark of Cabin
-Seven.
-
-He controlled himself, reached noiselessly inside the door, pressed the
-switch. Light flooded the cabin.
-
-"Why, it's just a girl!" said Ileth, who was peering wide-eyed over
-Saxon's shoulder. She giggled nervously.
-
-Saxon stared at the occupant of the cabin, scarcely crediting his eyes.
-It was a girl right enough, a flaxen haired girl sleeping easily on her
-back in the narrow bunk.
-
-A thin flexoplas coverlet was thrown across her. One slim bare leg
-dangled over the edge of the bunk. Her face, Saxon saw, was heart
-shaped, the closed eyelids delicately blue.
-
-At Ileth's giggle, the creature opened her eyes, sat upright with
-a half-suppressed scream. Ileth backed out of the doorway in
-embarrassment, but Saxon stood as if turned to stone.
-
-The tingling sensation was sending goose flesh racing over his skin.
-The alien emanations were streaming straight from the girl on the bunk.
-
-He recovered himself, thought violently, angrily, "_Who are you?_"
-
-The girl stared at him without making a sound. Saxon realized that her
-eyes were amber as topaz, large and strangely lambent. Then a faint
-smile twitched the corners of her lips. She made no move to escape, not
-even to cover her breasts and shoulder.
-
-"_You!_" the thought reached Saxon tinged with amusement. "_It would be
-you who discovered me!_"
-
-She touched a tiny instrument strapped to her wrist, which Saxon
-noticed for the first time.
-
-"_Who are you?_" he thought again, then narrowed his eyes with crazed
-disbelief.
-
-He could see the bulkhead through the girl. She gave a low laugh. The
-flexoplas coverlet, which had lain so lightly over her lap, collapsed
-slowly.
-
-The girl was gone, dissolved. Only her throaty laugh lingered in the
-still air.
-
-Saxon rubbed his eyes. He felt Ileth trembling against him as if she
-had a chill. Setting his jaw, he stepped up to the bunk, felt the
-sheets. They were warm and still held the impression of the girl's body.
-
-He straightened, realized that the tingling in his scalp had ceased.
-The alien telepath was gone. But where?
-
-"Let's get the hell out of here," Ileth said vehemently.
-
-Saxon followed her into the passage, switched off the lights, closed
-the door softly behind him.
-
-"I don't believe it!" said Ileth. "I don't want to believe it." Her
-fine patrician features were paper white, making her black lashes
-and eyebrows stand out like heavy strokes of a crayon. Her lips were
-bloodless.
-
-Saxon shook his head in bewilderment.
-
-"Couldn't you read her mind?" asked Ileth.
-
-"She had the most perfect mental barrier I've ever encountered. I
-couldn't read a thing. Only...."
-
-"Only what?"
-
-"Nothing," he said abruptly, shaking his massive shoulders as if to
-free them from a burden. "Nothing. I think we'd better keep our mouths
-shut about this too. If we went around telling what we've seen, they'd
-throw us in the psychopathic ward."
-
-Ileth shuddered.
-
-"Maybe it was an hallucination," she suggested. "Maybe we're nutty as a
-fruit cake, I hope."
-
-
- V
-
-"You've been through the Little Death before," said Saxon. He and
-Murdock, the T.I.S. agent, were in the control room, Murdock's eye
-glued to the scanner. "What's it like, Murdock?"
-
-The gaunt, frosty T.I.S. agent took his eyes from the scanner, faced
-Saxon.
-
-"Not so bad," he replied laconically.
-
-"I've heard it's a pretty rugged experience."
-
-Murdock allowed himself a tight smile. "That depends on how active a
-social consciousness you have. You're a non-Newtonian physicist. You
-know the Pachner conception of the space-time continuum better than I
-do. Villainowski's stellar drive inverts the Newtonian concept that a
-vehicle travels through space during a passage of time. It operates
-through time during a passage of space.
-
-"Yes, yes," Saxon interrupted impatiently. "But the effects of the time
-field.... What do you experience while the ship is in the time field?"
-
-"That's the Little Death," replied Murdock in a dry voice, "though the
-name is misleading. Actually you experience a segment of your own life,
-either the past, the future, or the present. As Villainowski would
-explain it, time is co-existent, while in the time field our lives are
-spread out around us, but because we're equipped with three-dimensional
-sense organs we're restricted to a single series of episodes anywhere
-along our life span."
-
-Saxon frowned and said, "In other words, it's just as if we returned to
-the past and relived some incident that occurred to us before?"
-
-"Right. Or into the future and experienced something that hasn't
-happened yet."
-
-Saxon's frown deepened. "But what's so rugged about that?"
-
-"Nothing," rejoined Murdock dryly, "if you've lived an exemplary life.
-It's not pleasant, though, to live over and over again a period when
-you committed murder say, or were terribly frightened, or even did some
-little thing that you've been trying your best to forget since."
-
-Saxon, caught a brief mental flash from the T.I.S. agent, as he shoved
-the picture of a girl with pretty Slavic features out of his mind.
-
-"I'm not looking forward to the Little Death!" Murdock said dryly, and
-returned his eye to the scanner.
-
-Saxon leaned back in the acceleration chair. The captain was bending
-over the three-dimensional space-charts along with the third mate. A
-spaceman stood at the robot pilot. Another, whom Murdock had replaced
-at the scanner, was reclining in a second acceleration chair.
-
-There was an air of tension in the control room. Saxon realized
-suddenly that the captain was checking the robot controls.
-
-That could mean only one thing. It was nearing time for Villainowski to
-switch the _Shooting Star_ onto the stellar drive. They would be going
-into the Little Death any moment. Saxon sat up abruptly. "How long
-before we switch over, Captain?"
-
-The captain looked up from the charts. "We've attained minimum
-velocity. Villainowski's in the engine room now. I'm expecting orders
-to turn her over right away."
-
-Murdock turned from the scanner again, fixed Saxon with his pale blue
-eyes.
-
-"By the way, Jon, you've been prowling the ship from stem to stern the
-past three days." His voice was pitched too low to reach the officers
-checking the star maps and robot controls. "Have you a line on Q62 yet?"
-
-Saxon could read suspicion in the T.I.S. agent's mind. "No," he
-admitted, "and I'm more puzzled than you. Ileth doesn't know who Q62
-is, or even if he's aboard, although she's been commanded by General
-Atomic to take her orders from him."
-
-"You're sure of that?"
-
-"Yes. I'm sure of it."
-
-There was a pause, each man busy with his own thoughts.
-
-"I'd swear," Saxon broke the silence, "that Q62 isn't aboard, nor any
-other General Atomic agents."
-
-Murdock regarded him speculatively and Saxon caught his thought, "_What
-the hell makes him so damned sure?_"
-
- * * * * *
-
-Sure? Saxon thought to himself. He wasn't sure about anything. The
-alien stowaway was still aboard. His sixth sense had warned him of her
-nearness a hundred times during his sporadic jaunts about the ship. But
-he had been unable to establish contact with her.
-
-He had kept his mind open to the wash of thoughts from crew and
-staff, but, so far as he had been able to learn, they were all loyal
-to Government. Not even in their secret innermost thoughts had he
-discovered any evidence that a traitor was aboard.
-
-Murdock interrupted his reflections, asking, "Have you any idea what
-that N.P.A. had discovered before he died?"
-
-Saxon started, looked at the T.I.S. agent uncomfortably. Murdock's
-irrelevant question had conjured a vivid picture in his mind of the
-death of the N.P.A. in Villainowski's office.
-
-"I don't know," he said miserably, beginning to understand how
-uncomfortable the Little Death might be. "I would give a lot to know.
-He may have had a clue to what I am."
-
-Murdock's cold blue eyes narrowed, and he regarded Saxon with a
-peculiar intensity. "_That's a devilish odd way for him to put it_,"
-the T.I.S. agent was thinking. "_What he is! Now why the hell would he
-say that?_"
-
-Saxon realized with chagrin that he had made a slip. He should have
-said, "Who I am," not "What I am." No human ever doubted that he was a
-genuine specimen of _homo sapiens_.
-
-The engine room telegraph buzzed suddenly, and when the captain
-answered, Villainowski's voice reached the two men.
-
-"Sound the general alarm, Captain. Turn the ship over to the robot
-control. We're going into the Little Death."
-
-"Right," said the captain. He looked pale and worn and older. He
-snapped off the telegraph, turned to the third. "Sound the general
-alarm and turn on the public address system, then go to your cabin."
-The third nodded, reached for the switch.
-
-An ugly clangor broke through the _Shooting Star_ from stem to
-stern, followed immediately by a harsh metallic voice issuing from
-strategically placed audios.
-
-"All officers, members of unlicensed personnel and staff report to your
-quarters at once and lie on your bunks."
-
-There was a series of clicks as the ship went smoothly over to the
-robot controls.
-
-The command ordering everyone to their cabins was repeated three more
-times.
-
-Saxon realized there was no one in the control room, but himself,
-Murdock, and the captain.
-
-"Coming?" asked the captain from the doorway.
-
-"In a minute," Murdock replied.
-
-The captain departed hastily, and Saxon followed the T.I.S. agent
-across the deck to the control board, where a single dial was marked
-off in parsecs.
-
-"I'm damned curious about this four dimensional drive," Murdock
-confessed, as he dropped into an acceleration chair before the dial.
-"I've been through it before. But I'd like to follow its operation here
-in the control room as long as possible before we blank out. Are you
-game?"
-
-"Sure," Saxon's voice was eager. He took a seat beside Murdock, staring
-at the dial marked off in parsecs with fascination.
-
-He became conscious of a sobering silence. The robot controls had cut
-off the jets. A giddy feeling of weightlessness possessed him.
-
-Suddenly the radiograph began to click off a message. He saw Murdock
-frown, tear off the tape, read it.
-
-"Good Lord!" the T.I.S. agent burst out. "Read it! We've got to get to
-Villainowski before we go onto the stellar drive!" He leaped to his
-feet, went soaring in the air, a pained expression on his face. Murdock
-had forgotten their weightless condition now that the jets were off.
-
-Saxon who had snatched the strip of paper, flashed his eye over the
-words.
-
- IMPERIAL HEADQUARTERS:
-
- TO CHIEF J. VILLAINOWSKI. URGENT. ORDERS CANCELLED. TURN BACK
- TO EARTH WITHOUT DELAY. ALL FIVE COPIES OF STELLAR DRIVE STOLEN.
- GOVERNMENT CANNOT RISK YOUR LIFE IN DEEP SPACE UNTIL YOU CAN
- REPLACE PLANS.
-
- MUSTAPHA IX.
-
-Saxon realized the machine was still clicking off the message over and
-over again.
-
-Murdock had pushed himself to the bulkhead, where he kicked off,
-gliding through the door. Saxon followed cautiously, conscious of a
-yellow mist collecting in the control room.
-
-The T.I.S. agent got just beyond the doorway when he floated
-unconscious to the deck.
-
-Saxon made it to the head of the ladder. Then he, too, lost control
-over his muscles.
-
-[Illustration: _Saxon made it to the head of the ladder. Then he, too,
-lost control over his muscles._]
-
-The mist was like soup, thick yellow pea soup.
-
-His last conscious thought was, "So this is the Little Death!"
-
- * * * * *
-
-"Here! Why are you crying?" asked the big white giant. His voice was
-gentle, compassionate, and he was naked except for a kilt of a strange
-gleaming material like woven light.
-
-"But I don't want to go," Saxon protested in a reedy, childish tone.
-He realized in dismay that the giant wasn't a giant at all, but normal
-and man-sized. "I don't want to go," he heard himself tearfully
-repeating.
-
-They were in a room, the little boy that had been Saxon and the big
-white man, and a door across the room was opening. The little boy that
-was Saxon shrank against the man.
-
-A woman appeared in the doorway. She was tall and beautiful and dressed
-like the man in a gleaming kilt. She smiled at Saxon, but he was not
-reassured. He hung back from crossing the threshold.
-
-Saxon saw a troubled look pass between the two. Then the man steeled
-himself, picked up the squirming boy, carried him through the doorway.
-
-It was a strange sensation that possessed the mature Saxon, stretched
-on the cold deck at the head of the ladder to the engine room. He
-wasn't dreaming. He was the little boy, and yet he seemed to be outside
-himself, watching his own actions, appraising himself like the detached
-half of a dual personality.
-
-He was in the time field, Saxon realized. That was it! He was reliving
-a segment of his life span that had taken place before he was eleven!
-
-His heart leaped spasmodically. At last the curtain was being raised on
-those blank years of childhood!
-
-The room into which the man carried him, Saxon saw, was larger that
-the anteroom and cluttered with strange machinery, ugly machinery.
-The far wall was a solid bank of windows, through which he could see
-a green meadow rolling gently away to blue foothills in the distance.
-Light poured through the windows from a blazing sun high overhead and a
-second orange sun was just rising.
-
-The man deposited him in a chair. Saxon quit thrashing, as the woman
-fitted a skull-cap over his head, making minute adjustments. A cable
-led from the peak of the skull-cap to a frightening machine which the
-woman bent over next, and set in operation.
-
-Saxon could feel a rush of thought pouring into his brain. Queer
-thoughts couched in semantically obscure words.
-
-One stood out. "_Earth._" It was repeated many times before he began
-to comprehend the import of the alien symbols. "_Earth is the third
-planet of a star known to its inhabitants as Sol!_"
-
-With a feeling of strangeness the Saxon who observed realized that the
-boy was being taught to speak English!
-
- * * * * *
-
-Saxon shook his head groggily, pushed himself to his hands and knees
-and found himself floating six feet in the air. He had forgotten that
-the jet drive was still off.
-
-It came back with a suddenness that flung Saxon to the metal deck.
-
-He scrambled to his feet, his mind in a whirl. Forgotten temporarily
-were the emergency orders commanding them to return to Earth. If
-Villainowski had been right, then Saxon had actually relived an event
-which had transpired before he was eleven.
-
-Then who the hell was he?
-
-He returned to the control room, stepping over the unconscious body of
-Murdock, who had not yet recovered from the effects of the time field.
-
-The dial on the control board read 1.3 parsecs!
-
-He jumped for the scanner, clamped his eye to the aperture, and
-immediately jumped back!
-
-Dead ahead was a huge blazing sun!
-
-It looked so close that the _Shooting Star_ appeared to be falling
-straight into the maw of erupting atomic energy.
-
-But reason returned, and he knew they must still be millions of miles
-away. He went back to the scanner, spotting first a second sun not so
-close, then a third, small and red like a fiery coin.
-
-The ternary system of Alpha Centauri! They were out of the Solar System!
-
-"Please," said a girl's voice behind him. "Stand back from the scanner!
-Don't try for your gun, Saxon, or I will be forced to shoot!"
-
-Saxon whirled around.
-
-Ileth Urban stood in the doorway, a dart gun leveled at his stomach.
-Behind her, he saw the shame-faced Murdock surrounded by the crew.
-Murdock was helpless, his arms in the air.
-
-"The crew have mutinied," said Ileth. "The ship is now under the
-control of General Atomic."
-
-Saxon's jaw sagged. He said, "So you are Q62." It wasn't so much a
-question as a statement. He knew. He could read it in her thoughts. But
-why hadn't he been able to see it there before?
-
-It wasn't possible, but there could be no doubt. Ileth Urban was Q62.
-
-Then the thoughts of the men in the corridor made themselves felt.
-Every man jack of them had gone over to General Atomic, not recently,
-but weeks and months ago, before they had ever left Earth.
-
-He dropped into a chair, his head in his hands. How had they been able
-to disguise their thoughts all this time?
-
-He looked at Ileth in her chartreuse green short-waisted jacket. She
-held the dart gun leveled at his chest. Her patrician features were set
-in grim unhappy lines.
-
-"Something!" Saxon thought wildly, "Something has gone terribly wrong!"
-
-
- VI
-
-The T.I.S. agent, his bony fingers locked beneath his head, was
-stretched face up on his bunk. There were five of them in the ship's
-brig--Saxon, Murdock and Villainowski, Mercedes, the anthropologist and
-Brand, the bio-chemist.
-
-"Jon, that girl's crazy about you."
-
-"What?" Jon Saxon swung up his head, regarded Murdock coldly.
-
-Without moving, the T.I.S. agent repeated, "She's in love with you,
-Jon. Though what Ileth can find to love in that ugly granite mug of
-yours is beyond comprehension."
-
-Saxon said, "So what?" Everyone was watching him speculatively.
-
-They had been cooped together for nine days now, the four men and the
-woman. Yesterday the ship had landed. But none of them knew where.
-
-"So what?" Murdock echoed breaking the silence. "My Lord, man, play up
-to her. She's eating her heart out for you. Can't you see it's our only
-chance?"
-
-"No," said Saxon stiffly and blocked out their thoughts. "No, I don't.
-You know as well as I do, that the crew and the officers, even the
-staff, except Mercedes and Brand here sold out to General Atomic.
-Suppose I did persuade Ileth to let us out. Suppose she comes over to
-our side--which I tell you right now she won't--but suppose she did.
-What possible chance would the five of us have against sixty armed
-desperate men and women? Hell, Murdock, we couldn't even get the ship
-back to Earth by ourselves!" He hesitated. "Besides it strikes me as a
-contemptible stunt...."
-
-Murdock's cold blue eyes flashed. He sat up, swinging his feet to the
-deck. "Do you think we're playing a game?"
-
-Mercedes, the gray-haired woman, interrupted, "Don't nag him, Murdock.
-Everyone isn't a cold-blooded monster like you."
-
-The T.I.S. agent grunted his disgust, lay back down and rolled to his
-stomach.
-
-Mercedes was a pleasant-faced, middle-aged woman with bright black eyes
-like a parrot.
-
-"I don't see yet," she continued imperturbably, "how General Atomic
-could contact everyone before we sailed." She smoothed her skirts,
-sitting primly on the brig's only chair, and cast a sly look at
-Murdock. "Not with the vaunted T.I.S. on guard."
-
-"Humph!" came Murdock's muffled voice from the pillow. "What's so
-damned impossible about that? We couldn't watch the beggars all the
-time." He rolled back and sat up again.
-
-"No. What bothers me is why they didn't give themselves away. They were
-investigated. All of them were reputable Government men, their fathers
-Government men before 'em."
-
-"It's hard to refuse a million credits," Saxon pointed out.
-
-Murdock's pale blue eyes jerked to Saxon. "How do you know?"
-
-Before Saxon could reply, Mercedes said, "General Atomic offered us all
-a million credits. They did to me and Brand, I know. We reported it to
-the T.I.S."
-
-"Yeah," said Murdock with a frown. "Yeah, and we questioned them with
-the lie-detector. Not once, but every time they left the building.
-They were psychoanalyzed and searched. And every damned one of them
-was certified loyal to Government. They never gave a sign that they'd
-sold out to General Atomic, not a sign. Why, the bums acted as if they
-didn't know it themselves."
-
-"They didn't!" put in Saxon.
-
-Their eyes swung back to the burly nuclear physicist. He read
-scepticism, doubt, curiosity in their minds.
-
-"What do you mean??" Murdock exploded.
-
-"I mean just what I said. They actually didn't know that they had sold
-out to General Atomic until after the Little Death. It's simple enough.
-I'm surprised no one's thought of it before. Ever since Charcot back in
-the nineteenth century....'"
-
-"Hypnotism!" Villainowski burst out. "That's it, of course!
-Post-hypnotic commands!"
-
-Saxon nodded. "I wasn't sure. I'm not sure even yet." But he was. He
-had known it the moment he had looked into Ileth's mind the day of the
-mutiny.
-
-Murdock frowned, said "Post-hypnotic commands? I don't follow you."
-
-"There's nothing mysterious about it, actually," explained Saxon.
-"When the men sold out to General Atomic they must have submitted to
-being hypnotized by GA's neuro-psychoanalyst. They could be given
-orders while in the hypnotic state, then commanded to forget them,
-forget in fact that they had sold out to General Atomic until after the
-Little Death. The Little Death was to act as a post-hypnotic command,
-recalling their memories and instructions."
-
-"By Pluto!" ejaculated Murdock. "I believe you've hit it!" He regarded
-Saxon with increased respect.
-
-The slight, homely Villainowski rubbed a nine day's growth of
-beard, musing, "It was a beautiful scheme. Then men couldn't betray
-themselves. They couldn't be tripped up by the lie-detector because
-they honestly believed they were still loyal to Government."
-
-Again Saxon nodded. "I was trying to find Q62," he said, "when Ileth
-was Q62 all the time, although she didn't know it until she woke up
-from the Little Death."
-
- * * * * *
-
-Brand, the bio-chemist, who had been lying on an upper bunk silently
-listening, broke into the conversation. "But why did General Atomic
-wait until after the Little Death before having their men seize the
-ship? It doesn't make sense. I should think they'd want to get the
-drive to one of their laboratories, where it could be examined as soon
-as possible."
-
-It was Murdock who replied. "That's not difficult to explain either.
-General Atomic couldn't afford to take a chance. If they'd grabbed the
-_Shooting Star_ within reach of Government's space navy, they would
-have been apprehended sure. Remember, every observatory in the System
-had us in view until we went into the time field.
-
-"No one but Villainowski knows how to use the stellar drive, so they
-couldn't have used that to escape. But after we reached Alpha Centauri
-we were beyond reach of the electronic telescope on Luna, even beyond
-radio contact. Their engineers would have a chance to examine the drive
-and learn enough to operate it, at least. They could return then.
-Nothing can catch the _Shooting Star_ when she's operating in the
-Little Death."
-
-Saxon listened with somber eyes to the T.I.S. agent's explanation. It
-was right, he felt, as far as it went. But it didn't account for the
-aliens, nor for Saxon's strange experiences during the Little Death,
-nor the death of that N.P.A. before they sailed.
-
-He heard the door to the brig click and glanced up just as it slid
-aside.
-
-Ileth Urban stood in the entrance.
-
-Ileth's green jodphur-like trousers emphasized her long legs and slim
-waist. Her black shoulder length hair had been pushed back, disclosing
-small peaked ears.
-
-She came inside, with a look of determination, and the guard closed the
-door behind her, but didn't lock it.
-
-"I ..." she began, caught Saxon's eyes and blushed furiously.
-Unconsciously her chin went up and she squared her shoulders. "I don't
-know how to say what I've come to tell you." Again she hesitated,
-biting her lip. "I think it'll be good news...."
-
-"Good news?" echoed Murdock sarcastically. "Have the crew been
-massacred by Centaurians?"
-
-"There's no sign of living Centaurians yet," she replied. "Not on this
-planet anyway."
-
-"Living Centaurians?" asked Murdock. "What do you mean 'living'
-Centaurians? What have you found?"
-
-The silence was alive. Saxon could feel the intangible fear of deep
-space grip every one of them. There was, he realized, a decided
-pathologic quality about it, as if every one of them were not quite
-sane on the subject.
-
-"A city," said Ileth in a suppressed voice.
-
-There was a quick intake of breaths.
-
-"Yes," she went on, "a city. About twenty-five kilometers northeast of
-here. A perfectly huge city without a single inhabitant."
-
-"What planet is this?" Villainowski asked suddenly.
-
-"There's no harm in telling you, I suppose," said Ileth, "because we
-haven't the faintest notion. Our astronomer says that it belongs to
-Alpha Centauri A, although he hasn't figured its period yet. He says
-it's about midway between Alpha Centauri A and Alpha Centauri B. It's a
-little larger than Earth but not so dense. Gravity is about four fifths
-what it is at home." Her face sobered at the word "home." "Oxygen
-content a little high, but not much. The rest of the atmosphere is
-composed principally of non-poisonous inert gases. Now you know as much
-as we do."
-
-Jon Saxon became aware of a thought emanating from Murdock: "_Seize the
-girl. Dictate terms to the others._" The same thought, Saxon realized,
-was forming in their bio-chemist's mind as well.
-
-Ileth must have suspected something, because her hand crept up to her
-small high breasts and she said, "Before I go on, you'd better know
-that I'm not so unprotected as I look. We were all hypnotized back
-on Earth and our orders given to us in that condition. Then we were
-commanded to forget them until after the Little Death. I'm telling you
-this so you'll understand."
-
-The prisoners exchanged glances.
-
-"General Atomic," Ileth continued hurriedly, "prepared for any
-eventuality. If anything happens to me, Q63 will take over. I don't
-know who he is, and he doesn't know it himself, but any accident
-befalling me will be the post-hypnotic signal for him to remember.
-There's also a Q64, Q65--all the way to Q70. So you see it's useless to
-think that by doing anything to me you can get the upper hand."
-
-"Rather like queen bees," suggested Saxon. "Secret order with a
-vengeance."
-
-"_Even from you, darling!_" he caught Ileth's irritating thought.
-
- * * * * *
-
-He saw Murdock relax on his bunk, intercepted his furious frustration.
-The T.I.S. agent, he realized, was like cold flame on the inside.
-
-"But that's not my news," Ileth said. "I've come to offer you your
-freedom--within limits, of course."
-
-"Eh?" said Villainowski in surprise, and the rest tensed expectantly.
-
-Ileth said, "General Atomic believed that it would be to their
-advantage to go ahead with the expedition as soon as we got control
-of the ship. We would be on the spot, and any information relating to
-Alpha Centauri's planetary systems, natural resources, inhabitants (if
-any), possibilities of colonization and trade--that sort of thing--is
-of the utmost importance.
-
-"I feel...." She hesitated, and Saxon caught a glimpse again of that
-same intolerable fear gnawing at her mind.
-
-"I feel that we should stick together--while we're here at least. If
-we're fighting among ourselves...."
-
-"In other words," Murdock interrupted in a voice without inflection,
-"you're asking us to go on with the expedition as if nothing's
-happened?"
-
-"Only while we're here," she hastened to assure him. "You won't be
-given arms, of course. There are only five of you. What earthly chance
-would you have against the entire crew and the rest of the staff? And
-this way you won't have to stay locked in the brig. You can carry on
-with your investigations. We--we don't know what alien form of life
-inhabits this planet. But the city...."
-
-She bit her lip again. "The city was peculiar."
-
-A short uncomfortable silence greeted her statement; then Mercedes, the
-gray-haired anthropologist asked, "What do you mean, child?"
-
-"I don't know how to define it. Wait until you see it."
-
-But Saxon had intercepted an image in Ileth's mind--a distorted glimpse
-of a vast beautiful city stretching for kilometer after kilometer
-without a soul anywhere. A sobering chill prickled up his spine. He
-said, "I, for my part, am willing to call a truce, Ileth."
-
-The girl glanced at him gratefully. Saxon became aware of a passionate
-thought: "_Oh, the darling stiffnecked bear!_" The girl's color
-heightened suddenly. She began to think furiously: "_Two times two is
-four; three times two is six; four times two is eight_...."
-
-Saxon grinned at her knowingly, to her added confusion.
-
-"_I hate you!_" she thought.
-
-Villainowski jumped to his feet, saying, "Of course we accept. We all
-accept. But let me warn you, young woman, aliens or no aliens, I don't
-care if we spend the rest of our lives in the Centaurian system, I'm
-not going to explain my stellar drive to your scoundrels!"
-
-Ileth turned to him almost gratefully. "Oh, that doesn't matter. Our
-engineers are examining it. They've assured me that they can take us
-back to Earth."
-
-Villainowski looked crestfallen.
-
-"Tomorrow," said Ileth in a firm voice, "we're starting to investigate
-the city. Mercedes is the anthropologist. I particularly wanted her and
-Saxon along."
-
-"What about the rest of us?" Brand the bio-chemist, asked.
-
-Ileth ticked them off on her fingers. "Dr. Villainowski is an
-astro-physicist, I believe. We have the telescope mounted. He and our
-men are to locate any other planets in the system. You, Dr. Brand, are
-to go with Loar, the Martian, on an expedition into the hills to the
-south. Mr. Murdock will be stationed temporarily with the emergency
-crew aboard the _Shooting Star_."
-
-Saxon realized that she had cleverly separated them. At the same moment
-he recognized that leap of fear in Ileth whenever she thought about
-outside. It was pathologic.
-
-"My Lord!" he thought, "was their fear of deep space driving them
-insane?"
-
-Ileth was saying, "You can have your old cabins back. I won't see you
-again until tomorrow. We--we're still on Earth time because of the
-peculiar daylight hours. Until tomorrow."
-
-She turned, head bent and hurried abruptly through the door.
-
-The prisoners looked at each other in vague alarm, unconsciously
-drawing closer together. In each of their minds, Saxon read the same
-thing--the blind unspoken terror of deep space!
-
- * * * * *
-
-The helicopter whispered scarcely a hundred feet above the rolling
-plain, while Saxon stared hungrily out of the windows, unable to
-satisfy his eyes.
-
-Alpha Centauri A, a scintillating yellow orb like Sol, stood in
-mid-sky. The orange disc that was Alpha Centauri B, the second half of
-the binary, was just rising. Proxima was not in sight.
-
-Directly below he could see a flock of plants that looked like tumble
-weeds except that they were a weirdly mottled yellow and green. They
-rolled along in a herd pausing to nibble at new shoots of the pale
-green grass. "Cannibal Plants," their botanist had named them because
-of their feeding habits.
-
-Herbivorous plants!
-
-Their botanist, Saxon thought, was going quietly insane trying to
-classify the staggering complexity of utterly alien forms of plant
-growth.
-
-"Weird, isn't it?" A woman's rich husky voice addressed Saxon. "It
-sends goose flesh up my spine." Saxon tore his eyes away from the
-window.
-
-The person sitting beside him was Clo-Javel, a black-eyed woman with
-cadmium-yellow hair. There was a sleek disturbing fullness to her
-breasts and hips that was echoed in her red lips and magnificent eyes.
-She must be thirty-five but no one except possibly the T.I.S. knew her
-exact age.
-
-Clo-Javel's first passion was archaeology, Saxon knew. Her second was
-men. He asked, "How many pieces of silver did General Atomic give you?"
-
-Clo-Javel regarded him with an amused tolerant smile. "Don't be rude,
-Jon."
-
-Saxon, looking into the woman's mind, realized that his thrust hadn't
-disturbed her in the least. Clo-Javel apparently had no more honor than
-morals.
-
-There was no question, though, about her archaeological ability. Her
-reconstruction of the New York skyscrapers, which had perished early in
-the Atom Age, were famous.
-
-Saxon was appalled. He had expected to uncover a sense of shame among
-the crew and staff for their treachery. But, if they felt any remorse,
-they never let it rise into the realms of conscious thought. He had
-probed their minds one after another, his hope of persuading some of
-them to return to the Government fold diminished with each one.
-
-At one stroke they had received wealth and better positions with
-General Atomic's research bureau. They were determined not to lose
-them. Furthermore, to a man they were convinced that General Atomic
-would be the next government.
-
-He glanced about the cabin. There were nine of them accompanying Ileth
-to the deserted city. He allowed their thoughts to wash across his
-mind, eager, excited, fearful thoughts like half spoken words.
-
-"Look!" Ileth cried suddenly and pointed ahead. She was piloting the
-helicopter and spoke over her shoulder. "Look! There's the city!"
-
-Saxon saw a maze of towers scintillating like jewels in the combined
-light of the twin suns. He saw endless avenues and squares and parks.
-It was all bright and raw like a city seen in a shimmering mirage.
-
-He swallowed a lump in his throat. He felt.... Why, damn it, he felt as
-if he were coming home after a long time.
-
-Home?
-
-He thought suddenly of his extra-human senses. Maybe this _was_ home!
-Could it be that he was not of Earth at all? Not a mutant of whom his
-parents had been ashamed and who had deserted him at the Institute, as
-he had always believed?
-
-Then Ileth was dropping the helicopter safely into a beautiful square
-ringed with vari-colored translucent buildings.
-
-Nothing moved. Not the faintest echo of a sound reached Saxon's ears.
-He found himself holding his breath as the 'copter landed with a faint
-jar.
-
-Saxon's scalp began to prickle warningly, and such a feel of alienism
-swept over him, exciting his extra-human sixth sense that he felt giddy.
-
-The city wasn't deserted. It was densely populated.
-
-All around him, everywhere, were aliens. He could sense their movements
-along the streets, inside the buildings. Hundreds of them.
-
-He heard Ileth's strangely chastened voice. "It's so uncannily
-deserted. No one. Absolutely no one. What do you suppose happened to
-the--the things who built this city?"
-
-Saxon had to clench his jaw to keep from shouting, "They're here! You
-fools, let's get away while we've still got a chance! They're all
-around us!"
-
-Instead, he kept silent, little beads of perspiration breaking through
-his prickling skin.
-
-
- VII
-
-Jon Saxon was the first man out of the helicopter. He stood stock-still
-while the others climbed out, his scalp tingling, his eyes sweeping the
-magnificent panorama. The faces of buildings like the sheer fracture of
-tinted ice walled in the square, with here and there a canyon street
-slicing off from it.
-
-Ileth scrambled out last, asked, "Jon, what's wrong? You're pale as a
-ghost."
-
-"I don't know." The tingling in his hair roots was becoming less
-pronounced as his extra-human sixth sense adjusted. He was still aware
-of the aliens but not uncomfortably so.
-
-"You--you don't feel anything?"
-
-He started. "How did you know I could feel things?"
-
-"I didn't!" Ileth's hazel-green eyes were enormous. "Good Lord, Jon,
-I only thought you could sense their thoughts, maybe, if anything was
-around. I didn't.... Can you feel things? You can, can't you? I should
-have guessed it."
-
-Saxon's expression had grown grimmer with each word. When Ileth asked,
-"What are you?" in a hushed voice, he snapped,
-
-"Homo Superior!"
-
-"Homo Superior?" She looked startled, then raised her eyebrows. "You
-don't fancy yourself much, do you?"
-
-They had drawn gradually away from the others. He looked back. Basil,
-the geographer, and his helper had set up their instruments. They were
-taking readings, making swift notations. They had the three-dimensional
-camera recording impressions, and the automatic mapper was beginning to
-scratch a few tentative lines on its plastic rolls.
-
-"I think we ought to stick together," Saxon volunteered. "I know it'll
-be impossible to keep the geographers by us, but the rest had better
-hang together."
-
-Ileth shivered and asked, "Then there is something here?"
-
-The silence was absolute. Not a breath of air stirred anywhere. Saxon
-hesitated, said at last, "Yes, I think so."
-
-"What?"
-
-"I don't know."
-
-Clo-Javel, approached them, straightening her short kilt-like skirts.
-The archaeologist's costume was brief and practical, but of more
-importance to Clo-Javel's way of thinking, the red skirt disclosed
-a goodly length of her really remarkable legs. Clo-Javel was even
-more proud of her legs than of her reconstruction of the New York
-skyscrapers. She said, "Did you ever see such buildings? What makes
-them look so weird?"
-
-Saxon wrinkled his brow, his eyes returning to the glittering facade
-of cliff-like structures as they waited for the rest of their party to
-come up.
-
-"I think," he said hesitantly, "it's because, it's because everything
-looks so new. As if the city was only finished yesterday and had never
-been used."
-
-"That's it," Ileth burst out.
-
-Mercedes joined them. She too, was wearing kilts, but hers were longer
-than Clo-Javel's and gray and her jacket was a commodious affair with
-many pockets. "What's that?" she asked catching the tail end of the
-conversation.
-
-"The city looks as if it has never been lived in," Ileth explained.
-
-Mercedes lit a cigarette, said, "Nonsense, whoever heard of building a
-city and then not using it."
-
-"No." Clo-Javel agreed with the gray-haired Mercedes. "It's not that
-altogether. Possibly it's built of some material impervious to decay.
-Saxon's a physicist." She gave him a brilliant smile. "He would know
-more about that than I do."
-
-Clo-Javel pursed red lips. "It--it looks familiar."
-
-There was a silence, then Mercedes said, "So it does. Though I can't
-put my finger on it. But that shouldn't be so strange. The creatures
-who built it might have been very similar to us. If I could lay my
-hands on some of their bones...." She laughed good humoredly. "I could
-tell you in a minute what they were like."
-
-"Were?" Saxon thought, but he didn't express it aloud. He was conscious
-all the time of the presence of the aliens. It was like being in the
-midst of a crowded city street.
-
-The semantics expert, the psycho-historian, and the ethnologist joined
-them in a body. They headed for the nearest building, a towering
-windowless structure of yellow crystal.
-
-Saxon glanced back uneasily.
-
-The helicopter stood silent and deserted in the center of the square.
-The geographer and his helper were disappearing down one of the
-canyon-like streets with their equipment.
-
-"Look!" commanded Ileth pointing toward the face of the yellow
-structure. "Letters of some sort! There on the building. Maybe it's a
-sign."
-
-They quickened their pace until they could describe the letters clearly.
-
-Ileth gasped, "Oh!" and stopped uncertainly.
-
-The rest of them came to a confused halt beside her, staring up at the
-sign in utter bewilderment. Saxon felt a chill creep up his spine. The
-sign read:
-
- TIMES SQUARE
-
- * * * * *
-
-For as long as it takes to draw a startled breath there was silence;
-then they all began to babble at once. Clo-Javel made herself heard
-suddenly above the others. "I recognize it!" she cried in her ringing
-husky voice.
-
-"What?"
-
-"It's an exact reproduction of New York II! I knew the city looked
-familiar! I knew it!"
-
-"New York II?" Saxon echoed. He was not strong in history and had only
-a faint recollection of a city by that name having once occupied the
-great Manhattan waste lands.
-
-"Yes," Clo-Javel repeated. "It was the world capitol before Adirondaka
-was built. I had to study it when I was doing the reconstruction of New
-York I. There's a scale model of it in the Institute's museum. Isn't
-that right, Rufus?"
-
-The psycho-historian nodded in a bemused fashion.
-
-"Yes," he agreed. "New York II was built over the ruins of New York I
-which had been destroyed by the first atomic war. The second atomic war
-completely annihilated New York II as well as all the other big cities
-on Earth. Cities weren't built after that for almost five hundred
-years. Not until the Empire, in fact." He paused uncertainly. "I don't
-understand this."
-
-Ileth asked, "You mean that this city is an exact reproduction of New
-York II, Clo?"
-
-The woman nodded, her black eyes curiously frightened. "This is the
-amusement center. The yellow building housed the Tri-World Theatre."
-
-"But I don't understand...." Ileth gazed helplessly at Saxon. "What
-is a reproduction of New York II doing here on a planet in the Alpha
-Centaurian system? We're over four light years from Sol. No one's ever
-been here before."
-
-Saxon was conscious of bewilderment and fear muddling the girl's
-thoughts. His own mind couldn't quite grasp the fact that here was an
-exact replica of a Terran city. It was inexplicable. It didn't make
-sense. And, more than that, it was impossible!
-
-He could read the same thoughts struggling against the fact in the
-minds of the others. He said, "Let's see what the buildings are like
-inside."
-
-"Yes," agreed Ileth. She had edged close to Saxon. "Maybe we can find
-the answer inside."
-
-They started for the impressive entrance of the Tri-World Theatre,
-halted again in near-panic as the doors swung wide.
-
-Ileth gasped, clutched at Saxon's arm, hanging onto it in desperation.
-
-Before any of them could say anything, a voice blared forth. "... a
-thousand Ganymedian natives in the primitive ritualistic orgy of that
-Weird little satellite. Hamura in the mating dance of the Ganymedians.
-Seats: three hundred and seventy-five dollars."
-
-Clo-Javel's voice had lost its rich huskiness. It was a frightened
-quaver when she said, "It's a working model. Automatic, don't you see?"
-She giggled nervously, and paused.
-
-"But the voice?" protested Ileth.
-
-"Advertising," explained the archaeologist. "It's a mechanical voice,
-like the doors."
-
-"Well, I'm not sure how much a dollar was," said Mercedes, "but three
-hundred and seventy-five for a seat seems rather exorbitant."
-
-Rufus, the psycho-historian, was pale as a corpse. He swallowed,
-managed to splutter, "Inflation that followed the first atomic war.
-Inflation...." His voice trailed off as he stared beyond the gaping
-doors into the foyer of the empty theatre.
-
-"Well, I'm not going in that place!" said the ethnologist suddenly. He
-was a goat-bearded little dandy. It was his first speech in some time.
-
-Rufus, the psycho-historian, said, "I don't think I care to either."
-
-"Nonsense!" exploded Mercedes. "There isn't anything in there. You can
-see for yourself. I'm going in."
-
-"I think we should explore the city a bit further," Rufus protested.
-He glanced uneasily toward the helicopter. Basil and his helper were
-nowhere in sight.
-
-Mercedes said, "Humph," gave her plump shoulders a shake, disappeared
-with short sturdy steps through the door.
-
-"She shouldn't go in there alone," said Saxon starting after her. Ileth
-clung to his arm. "I'm coming along." They left the others standing
-huddled outside, watching them nervously.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The foyer was carpeted ankle deep in mauve. Life-like,
-three-dimensional photographs of actors and actresses in every
-conceivable costume from none at all to the cumbersome furs of Titan
-lined the walls.
-
-The magnificent foyer gave the startling impression that just the
-moment before, crowds of theatre goers had been surging across it.
-Saxon could feel the hair lift on the back of his neck.
-
-"Where's Mercedes?" asked Ileth in a small voice.
-
-Saxon glanced around, realized that the anthropologist wasn't in the
-foyer. "She must have gone into the theatre." He lifted his voice,
-called, "Mercedes. Mercedes!"
-
-His voice echoed hollowly. There was no answer. Saxon and Ileth
-exchanged worried glances.
-
-"Our voices probably don't carry beyond the foyer," Saxon reassured the
-girl. "The ancients were clever with sound."
-
-They crossed the floor, their steps cushioned noiselessly in the thick
-mauve carpet. They went through the doors, past the automatic ticket
-taker and paused.
-
-A vast amphitheatre with curving rows of empty seats fell away below
-them like the terribly ancient Roman theatre at Pompeii. The walls by
-some trick of construction trapped the light, shedding it softly over
-the seats, concentrating it in a glowing pillar of illumination on the
-stage.
-
-Suddenly, Ileth brought her hand to her mouth, a look of horror
-springing into her features. "Oh, my Lord!" she whispered. "Look!" and
-pointed at the floor at their feet. Saxon glanced down, caught his
-breath.
-
-A puddle of clothes lay on the floor as if the middle-aged, gray-haired
-anthropologist had just stepped out of them.
-
-Saxon dropped to his knees beside the garments, turned them over.
-Sturdy leather walking shoes and heavy gray socks. Gray skirt and
-jacket. A stout brassiere and practical mannish shorts. They were so
-typically Mercedes, that Saxon felt a lump in his throat.
-
-The socks were still in the shoes, brassiere inside the jacket. He
-stood up, feeling his palms begin to sweat. It was as if Mercedes had
-been suddenly dissipated into thin air, her clothes falling in on
-themselves.
-
-He heard Ileth give a dry sob, realized suddenly that he felt no alien
-presence. He and the girl were alone in the theatre, alone as they'd
-been in the street that night in Adirondaka.
-
-Saxon clenched his fist. "Let's get out of here. Quick!"
-
-"But Mercedes?"
-
-"She's gone! We can't help Mercedes now. The others! Hurry!"
-
-They ran through the doorway back across the carpeted foyer, halting at
-the street.
-
-Four little mounds of clothes met their eyes.
-
-Saxon could feel his stomach knot inside himself. He felt the clothes.
-They were still warm from contact with the men's bodies. He stirred
-the brief red kilt that Clo-Javel had been wearing, saw with a macabre
-flash of humor that where Mercedes' underthings had been eminently
-practical, Clo-Javel didn't wear any at all.
-
-Ileth suppressed a scream. "The helicopter! Look! It's gone, too!"
-Saxon glanced up in consternation.
-
-The square was empty. The twin suns riding high in the sky beat down on
-bare plastic blocks where the helicopter had stood.
-
-"We're hiking back to the ship--_now_," Saxon said to the frightened
-girl.
-
-"But it's twenty-five kilometers."
-
-"So it's twenty-five kilometers. We can average four an hour or better.
-That's six hours. How many more hours of daylight have we?"
-
-Ileth bit her lip, studied her chronometer. "The days are short. The
-planet rotates in a little over fourteen hours. Alpha Centauri A sets
-first, in about an hour, I think. Then Alpha Centauri B about three
-hours later. Proxima rises about ten minutes after that but it doesn't
-cast much light."
-
-"Never mind," he said almost roughly. "Come on. We'd better find the
-geographers quick."
-
- * * * * *
-
-They did, a few minutes later, in one of the side canyons. That is,
-they found implements and two small piles of clothes. "I was afraid of
-this," said Saxon, his heart lowly sinking into his boots.
-
-Ileth began to cry half in fright, half hysterically.
-
-"None of that!" He shook her shoulders, until she stopped with a
-hiccup. Turning her loose, he bent over the instruments, secured a
-compass.
-
-"We're northeast of the ship," he said, "that means if we travel in a
-southwesterly direction, we should hit it square on the nose. Let's
-hike!"
-
-But they found it impossible to keep a true southwesterly course
-through the city. They walked along the deserted, resounding streets,
-their eyes filled with the fantastically lovely architecture of New
-York II, the flowing lines and gleaming planes of apartment houses
-built of a thousand substances from crystal to somber-veined black
-marble.
-
-"To think," said Saxon, "that a people, any people, could have found it
-in their hearts to destroy a work like this."
-
-"I'm glad I've seen it," Ileth replied queerly, "even if I did have to
-come to Alpha Centauri. It's lovely." She shivered.
-
-Saxon said in perplexity, "Why did they let us escape? I don't
-understand it."
-
-"We were in the foyer, alone, when it must have happened," she
-suggested. "Maybe they overlooked us."
-
-"Maybe," agreed Saxon doubtfully and paused.
-
-They had come to the end of the city which stopped abruptly as if it
-had been set down in the middle of the green rolling prairie. Beyond
-the last building, a herd of cannibal plants rolled by, browsing as
-they went.
-
-"It's going to be damned tricky keeping a straight course across this,"
-he said. "There doesn't seem to be a tree on the planet." He sighted
-the compass, picked out a round hill like the dome of a building, to
-the southwest. "We'll keep a little to the left of that hill."
-
- * * * * *
-
-Alpha Centauri A was setting. By the time they had advanced a kilometer
-across the prairie it was gone. The orange light of Alpha Centauri B
-lent a queer unearthly complexion to the scene. It became perceptibly
-cooler, and a breeze sprang up from the east, bringing the faint scent
-of bitter almonds.
-
-Saxon lengthened his stride. "We're not keeping to schedule," he said;
-then, "Look at that!"
-
-A fawn colored creature like a large cat but with four pairs of legs,
-broke from a draw and went undulating across the grass.
-
-"I'm getting tired," said Ileth in a small voice.
-
-He took his eyes from the strange animal, studied the girl. The
-emotional turmoil which they'd been through had drained her of
-strength. Her features were white, drawn, her lids drooping over her
-hazel-green eyes. Her lashes, he thought, were the thickest curliest
-lashes he'd ever seen and black as her lustrous hair. He felt a
-tenderness well up inside him and banished it.
-
-"We've got to make the ship. Walk until you drop. Then I'll carry you.
-But we have to get back as soon as possible."
-
-Her features stiffened at the harshness of his words. He caught a weary
-flash of anger in her thoughts, then she turned and began to plod again
-toward the southwest.
-
-"Faster," said Saxon.
-
-Alpha Centauri B was setting when they reached the domed hill which
-Saxon had lined up with the compass. He left Ileth stretched exhausted
-at the base and climbed to the summit. His eyes swept the horizons with
-the last orange rays of the sun, but the _Shooting Star_ was still not
-in sight.
-
-By the time he rejoined Ileth, it was dark. "Did you see it?" the girl
-asked in a sleepy voice.
-
-"No. We haven't come far enough, I suppose. We'll have to wait until
-Proxima rises before we can go on. That'll give us a chance to rest.
-How long before Proxima comes up?"
-
-"Ten or fifteen minutes." She hesitated. "I'm cold."
-
-Saxon put his arms around the shivering girl, pulled her against him.
-She gave a little sigh, laid her head on his shoulder. He caught her
-sleepy thoughts, "_Two times two is four. Three times two is six_," and
-chuckled to himself.
-
-The darkness was not dispelled very much when Proxima rose above the
-hills like a sullen red hot drop of metal. The light was red and
-wavering like the shimmering heat waves above a brush fire. Saxon could
-not see very well or very far. Nevertheless he wakened Ileth.
-
-She rubbed her eyes, glanced about her in consternation. The change in
-light had brought about a startling change in the scenery. It looked as
-if it were bathed in blood.
-
-She said, "Oh, Jon, I wish we were home. I wish we'd never come on this
-horrible expedition."
-
-He didn't look up from his compass. "The ship can't be much further."
-He spotted the black gash of a gully a hundred yards ahead. "We'll walk
-to the gully, then pick out another object."
-
-"I'm still tired. I don't feel as if I'd slept at all."
-
-"You didn't--much. Only about ten minutes. Come on."
-
-They reached the gully and Saxon found a cone-shaped hill looming up
-redly almost a quarter of a mile further on. They set out for it, Ileth
-holding his hand.
-
-Their progress was necessarily slower because Saxon had to stop often
-and consult the compass. Even so, he began to be afraid that they had
-overshot the ship in the dark.
-
-Slowly Proxima Centauri blazed its blood red path across the night sky.
-
-Not far from Proxima a star twinkled faintly, steadily. It was about in
-the position that Sol should be. He wondered if it was.
-
-"It's growing lighter," said Ileth.
-
-Saxon glanced toward the east, recognized the graying darkness that
-heralded the dawn. He said, "Alpha Centauri A's rising. Maybe we can
-see where we are."
-
-The light was quickening fast with dawn. Saxon climbed to the crest of
-a ridge, stared off into the southwest.
-
-All at once his heart stood still. He called, "Ileth! Ileth! Come up
-here!"
-
-The girl ran up the ridge, the urgency in his voice dispelling her
-weariness. "What is it, Jon?"
-
-He pointed ahead. "Aren't those the hills south of the ship?"
-
-She narrowed her eyes, studying the blue outlines in the dawn light.
-"Yes. But, Jon, where is the ship?"
-
-He pointed at a blackened circle in the grass not an eighth of a
-kilometer distant. The circle was almost a thousand yards in diameter.
-
-"That's where our jets burned the grass when we landed. That's where
-the _Shooting Star_ was yesterday!"
-
-In ten minutes they were tramping back and forth across the blackened
-circle of grass, kicking up little puffs of ashes. The mark of the jets
-were there, pressed deep in the soft soil. But those and the charred
-vegetation were the only signs that a ship had ever rested there.
-
-Ileth flung herself dejectedly to the grass at the edge of the circle.
-"I'm so hungry and bone weary and thirsty and disappointed, I could
-cry."
-
-Saxon sat down beside her. "I don't understand it," he said for the
-hundredth time. "I don't understand any of it."
-
-All at once, his scalp began to prickle its warning and Saxon
-recognized the alien feel. At the same instant Ileth screamed, leaping
-to her feet. Saxon felt his mouth go dry, his stomach contract as he
-stumbled erect beside her.
-
-Not ten yards distant, in the path of the rising sun, a naked man was
-materializing before their eyes. Saxon could see the grass and the
-hills and a segment of Alpha Centauri A through the man's body.
-
-A thought struck into Saxon's mind. "_So there you are._" It emanated
-from the Alien. "_We were afraid you might have gotten clean away._"
-
-Saxon realized the man was quite solid now, standing with bare feet
-planted in the pale green grass. There was an instrument like a watch
-strapped to his wrist. He was holding a small shiny cylinder.
-
-Saxon caught an echo of Ileth's thought. "_Oh Lord, he's naked as a
-grape!_"
-
-The man leveled the cylinder. There was a brief flash.
-
-Saxon felt an instant's giddiness, a rapid dissolution, then nothing.
-
-
- VIII
-
-Jon Saxon couldn't have been unconscious but a fraction of a second
-because he didn't have time to fall. He came to himself swaying
-dizzily, nauseated as if with space sickness.
-
-He opened his eyes. He was blind!
-
-The shock left him numb. Then gradually, like a flower unfolding its
-petals to the light, he felt his extra-human sixth sense assume control.
-
-He became aware of the grass and the sun and the distant hills.
-Everything registered in varying degrees of grayness. It wasn't
-grayness exactly, but the word came as near to describing the peculiar
-impressions that external objects were registering on his sixth sense
-as his vocabulary could supply.
-
-He didn't picture his environment; he realized it. The burned circle of
-grass, the naked alien....
-
-A second shock rocked Saxon to his heels. The Alien!
-
-Tentatively, almost timidly, he examined the strange figure confronting
-him. The man, for man he appeared to be, stood quietly several paces,
-sizing up Saxon with an equal degree of caution. The analogy to two
-strange dogs eyeing each other belligerently, but each afraid to make
-the first move, was so ludicrous that Saxon chuckled although no sound
-issued from his lips.
-
-He sensed his opponent relax. The fellow was big the way Saxon was big,
-and the same virility radiated from him like a physical force.
-
-The impressions received via his sixth sense were gaining in vividness.
-Saxon had never fully appreciated its scope before.
-
-Then with the force of a blow, Ileth's terrified thoughts penetrated
-sharply to his mind.
-
-"_I must be dead! Oh God, I'm dead!_"
-
-Saxon could perceive the girl cowering above a small pile of clothes,
-frightened, helpless, blind. She didn't have his extra-human sixth
-sense to substitute for sight. She was trembling violently, a
-slim-naked wraith without substance.
-
-The little pile of clothes at her feet made it suddenly clear what had
-befallen Mercedes and the crew, what had happened to Ileth and himself.
-In some fashion, the Aliens had transmuted them into a space where
-their three-dimensional organs of perception no longer registered.
-
-He moved to the girl, touched her arm.
-
-Saxon was not conscious of a sense of contact, but a vague shock like a
-weak electric current ran up his arm to his brain. Ileth flinched back
-in terror.
-
-Again he touched her arm, thinking, "_Ileth, am I getting through?
-Ileth, am I getting through?_" over and over again.
-
-"_Yes_," came the unexpected answer. "_Yes. Yes. Is it you, Jon? We're
-dead, you know, Jon._"
-
-"_No_," he thought. "_We're not dead. We've been transmuted but we're
-not dead._"
-
-A command rang sharply in his disembodied mind. "_Lead the girl and
-follow me!_"
-
-Saxon's attention swung back to the Alien, perceived the man
-threatening him with the cylinder which had blasted them into this
-indeterminate dimension.
-
-"_Suppose I refuse?_" he thought.
-
-"_I'm afraid that you underestimate the range of effect of this
-weapon._" The Alien brandished the cylinder again. "_Follow me._"
-
-Saxon capitulated, touched Ileth. "_Keep in contact with me. I'll
-guide you._" He began to move after the stranger who was already at a
-distance.
-
-He didn't know how long they walked. Time had no expression in this
-state. Alpha Centauri A hung always in the same spot just above the
-horizon. He thought of Villainowski's inverted formula--"To travel
-through time during a passage of space." The Little Death must be like
-this, if one were conscious.
-
-He was still turning it over in his mind when he perceived the station.
-
-The station appeared to be a cubical structure like a large plastic
-block, except that the matter of which it was formed wasn't matter at
-all. It was energy, Saxon sensed, pulsating sheets of energy that must
-not be visible in the normal, three-dimensional world.
-
-The Alien stood to one side, motioned them through the shimmering walls.
-
-Saxon was conscious of a throbbing rhythm which swept through him like
-the hum of a dynamo. He experienced the eerie giddiness for the second
-time and groped for Ileth before he blanked out.
-
- * * * * *
-
-This time Saxon was longer regaining consciousness. He came out from
-under the effects of the pulsation, feeling his flesh solid again. Air
-warmed and caressed his skin. He was materialized, he saw, as he leaped
-to his feet and opened his eyes.
-
-He felt vaguely overwhelmed by the return of his senses. He had never
-before appreciated their infinite variety. The walls were yellow, lemon
-yellow; the floor cool and firm underfoot; the air had a faint odor of
-bitter almonds; and Ileth....
-
-He said, "Open your eyes, Ileth. You'll be able to see better that way."
-
-The girl's eyes popped open. She took one look at Saxon, then at
-herself. Her eyes grew rounder, her throat flamed.
-
-She gasped, "Oh! You should have let me keep my eyes shut," and whipped
-her back to him.
-
-She must have realized instantly that the view she presented was no
-better screened, for she sat down with a thump, saying, "Oh!" again.
-Then, in an embarrassed voice, "This is just like a dream I had once.
-Only everyone but me wore clothes in the dream, and there isn't a fig
-leaf between the three of us."
-
-"The three of us?"
-
-Saxon glanced around, discovered the Alien rummaging in one of the
-cabinets, from which he produced three of the gleaming kilts, tossed
-them each one.
-
-"You humans," he said in an amused tone and perfect English, "have odd
-notions about concealing yourselves. Here."
-
-Saxon gratefully buckled his kilt in place, examined the material. The
-threads were almost weightless and glowed like strands of light. With a
-start, he recalled where he had seen them before.
-
-The man and the woman had been wearing kilts like these in his vision
-during the Little Death. Then....
-
-His mind refused to entertain the possibility. And yet it was a piece
-of everything else. His inability to remember his childhood. The
-development of first a sixth sense at twenty-seven, then a seventh at
-thirty-one.
-
-He strode abruptly to the windows and looked out.
-
-The windows were at an elevation and gave a view of the strangest city
-he had ever beheld.
-
-There were houses, at least they could be houses, spaced entirely
-without relation to each other and surrounded by immense park-like
-grounds. There were no congested areas within his range of vision.
-Neither was he able to discover roads or sidewalks, fences or walls
-anywhere.
-
-Alpha Centauri A was still just rising, its orange twin not yet above
-the hills, which he could see in the distance.
-
-He turned wonderingly back into the room.
-
-Their guard regarded them in amusement. "Sit down," he suggested,
-indicating a bench.
-
-They seated themselves.
-
-"Ask him what they're going to do with us, Jon." Ileth nudged Saxon in
-the ribs.
-
-Saxon cleared his throat.
-
-Before he could speak, the guard smiled and said, "I haven't the
-faintest idea how they plan to dispose of you. Even if I did, that
-would be for Them to tell you." He nodded toward a closed door on their
-right. "They'll send for you any moment now."
-
-"Who are 'they'?" Saxon asked.
-
-"The Elders."
-
-"What planet is this?"
-
-"Vark." The guard's voice was pleasant. He smiled faintly when he
-talked. "The fourth planet of the sun you call Alpha Centauri A. This
-is the city of Ghibellena." He nodded out the windows.
-
-"How did we get here? Teleportation?"
-
-"Not exactly."
-
-There was a momentary silence while the Alien observed them with that
-amused gleam in his eye. Then Saxon tried again. "Who are you? Why have
-you captured us?"
-
-The man nodded briefly again towards the closed door. "You'll learn
-that in there--if They see fit to tell you."
-
-"Where are the rest of the crew? Dead? In prison?"
-
-"Oh, no. They've been taken to Zara."
-
-"Zara? Where's Zara?"
-
-"Zara is a satellite of the third planet. The one we call Tunis."
-
-"What is that city we saw? The deserted one near the ship?"
-
-Again the man smiled and nodded toward the door. "If They see fit to
-tell you."
-
-Saxon shrugged burly shoulders. "How do you make yourselves invisible?"
-
-Surprisingly enough the man answered.
-
-"It's a refinement of your stellar drive, an excursion into the time
-field. In fact, it was discovered almost a hundred of your years ago by
-a Terran. A Dr. Walter."
-
-Saxon looked disconcerted. Ileth swallowed, her eyes as round as
-saucers. Suddenly her hand squeezed his arm.
-
-"The door! It's opening!"
-
-"You may go in," said their guard. "They're ready for you."
-
-Saxon had risen uncertainly. He looked at the door which was receding
-into the wall. Through the portal, he glimpsed a terrace or a balcony,
-roofless. Beyond and below the terrace was a yellow sea stretching to
-the horizon, its cadmium waves frothing against a beach of black sand.
-
-"They're expecting you," the guard prompted.
-
-Saxon shrugged. Taking Ileth's arm, he went through the opening. The
-door slid shut behind them.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The balcony, Saxon saw, was paved checkerboard fashion with green and
-yellow blocks. At the left, out of sight from the entrance, was a
-twenty foot table of pale green stone. Seven incredibly old men sat
-behind the table.
-
-No one said anything.
-
-Saxon took the initiative, advanced to within six feet of the pale
-green table. His dark gray eyes narrowed. He was vaguely conscious of a
-flow of thought passing among the seven old men like conversation, but
-its content escaped him. His jaw jutted angrily.
-
-"Control your anger, my son," said the old man in the center. "Your
-thoughts should be respectful in the presence of your elders."
-
-Saxon concealed his astonishment, asking, "Might I inquire what this
-mummery is all about?" He became aware again of the hidden thoughts
-flowing between them.
-
-Then the old man in the center said, "I am the moderator, my son. Your
-mind, we have perceived, teems with questions. We have decided that
-from the psychological angle, certain of these questions can now be
-answered."
-
-"Psychological angle?" Saxon felt confused. The deviousness of the
-Aliens, the maddening superiority which they assumed began to get
-under his skin. With an effort, he got a grip on himself, returned
-their curious stares.
-
-The seven old men were wrinkled, emaciated. Once they had been big men
-like Saxon, but the years had wasted their flesh.
-
-"That's better," approved the Moderator, referring to Saxon's change of
-tactics. "Now for your questions," and he seemed to look straight into
-Saxon's mind.
-
-"Very early in our history," began the Moderator after a moment, "we
-learned that we advanced in the physical sciences by trial and error. A
-disheartening process, because only so many combinations can be tried
-in a single life-time...."
-
-"What the hell has this got to do with us?" Saxon interrupted harshly.
-
-"Patience, my son. I'm explaining the relation between our world and
-the third planet of Sol which you call Earth."
-
-A little muscle began to jump in Saxon's jaw.
-
-"Trial and error," the old man began again. "A slow heartbreaking
-process, and one which in its nature is inescapable. At least, so we
-thought until quite recently." He paused, tugged at his lower lip with
-thumb and forefinger.
-
-Saxon mastered an impulse to shout, "Get to the point!"
-
-"Recently," went on the moderator, "we tried an experiment in
-our biological laboratories which we hoped would speed up the
-trial-and-error formula.
-
-"By exposing the germ plasm of a semi-intelligent anthropoid inhabiting
-the fourth planet of this system to hard radiations, we succeeded in
-creating a mutant, a biologic sport who's life span was only an instant
-of time. It matured, mated and died in an incredibly brief period.
-
-"They were startlingly prolific as well; they multiplied like--like--"
-he groped for a simile--"like guinea pigs or rats.
-
-"Furthermore, they early exhibited the most amazing ingenuity. In
-twenty generations they had fire; in thirty, crude implement of stone."
-
-Saxon, unable to restrain his impatience longer, cried, "The point,
-man--get to the point."
-
-The old man gave Saxon a steely look. "We recognized," he went
-on stiffly, "the significance of our mutation. As soon as the
-semi-intelligent sports developed a science, we could expect the trial
-and error method to be speeded up. A life-time of experiment to them
-was only a moment to us.
-
-"We isolated them on the fifth planet of our sun. But it soon became
-apparent that they constituted a dangerous menace even that close.
-They were so fecund, and their ferocity was appalling. Wars broke out
-between various tribes. They murdered each other by the thousands."
-
-Gradually Saxon's interest had been caught by the history of the
-semi-reasoning mutants whose ferocity and proliferation had constituted
-a menace to their creators. He glanced at Ileth, discovered her
-spellbound.
-
-The Moderator's voice was growing thinner.
-
-"Luckily," he was saying, "stellar travel was accomplished at this
-time. We exported several thousand of the creatures to another star
-system and destroyed the rest.
-
-"The environment on the planet where we transplanted our colony of
-humanoids was ideal for our purpose--harsh and savage. Several species
-of bipeds with rudimentary intelligence already inhabited the planet,
-but our own culture speedily wiped them out and were happily warring
-among themselves...."
-
-A suspicion began to grow in Saxon's mind. He blurted, "On what planet
-did you introduce this culture?"
-
-The Moderator paused, stared Saxon coolly in the eye.
-
-"Earth!" he said.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Saxon and Ileth looked at each other incredulously, unable to
-comprehend the significance of the Moderator's answer.
-
-"Earth?" repeated Saxon. "I don't understand."
-
-The Moderator wrinkled his brow, and said, "I don't know how to put
-it any more clearly. We transplanted our biological sports to Earth.
-The two sub-human races which our humanoids exterminated were the
-Cro-Magnards and the Neanderthalers."
-
-Saxon's brain reeled. "Do you mean that man as we know him, homo
-sapiens, originated in your laboratories as--an experiment?"
-
-He heard Ileth laugh hysterically.
-
-"Precisely," replied the Moderator. "And I might add that the
-experiment has proven successful. During the last thousand years they
-have supplied us with hundreds of discoveries and developments. The
-real nature of the space-time continuum, for example.
-
-"The creatures are inordinately clever at the physical sciences--as was
-to be expected from an emotionally unstable, rationalizing mammal under
-the pressure of such an antagonistic environment. Our own laboratories
-have become, for all practical purposes, unnecessary!"
-
-Ileth was staring at the Moderator with wide horrified eyes. "I," she
-gasped. "I am a humanoid? I don't live but a moment? I'm prolific and
-savage and--and clever like a monkey? Why, you shriveled up old bag of
-bones, that's the most stupid pack of lies I've ever heard!"
-
-The Moderator regarded her compassionately. "You haven't changed
-because I've told you the truth. Your life expectation is no shorter.
-It's a matter of relativity. To us our ten thousand years seems no
-longer than your three score and ten does to you."
-
-"Ten thousand years?" exploded Saxon. The sum was so staggering that it
-was only a figure to him. "Then--" he began, but the Moderator answered
-before he could speak.
-
-"No. I was not born when the experiment with the humanoids began. They
-were developed some twenty-five thousand years ago."
-
-Ileth began to laugh crazily, unable to stop. In a moment she would be
-hysterical. Saxon shook her roughly. "Stop it!"
-
-"I--I--I can't," she giggled. "Either he's mad or I am." Her words
-ended in a flood of tears.
-
-Saxon put his arm around the girl, turned back to the Moderator. "It
-was done with hard radiations?"
-
-"Yes. In the resultant mutants their metabolism had been accelerated
-beyond our wildest expectation. Their life cycle geared to their
-metabolism passed through its different phases like--like ..." again he
-fished in Saxon's mind for a simile. "Like a meteor. By artificially
-slowing down their metabolism they returned to their normal life span.
-
-"You've been very curious about the replica of New York II which you
-saw when you landed."
-
-Saxon nodded, trying to conceal a thought which had begun to take shape
-in the back of his mind.
-
-"It's just that. A replica of a city built during the Atomic Age by
-the humanoids. Their constant implacable wars are so savage that we've
-found it necessary to duplicate their work here, if we hope to preserve
-any of it for study."
-
-Saxon narrowed his eyes, asked, "You spoke of the menace of having such
-savage neighbors. Just how serious was such a threat?"
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Moderator smiled and glanced at his constituents. Saxon strained to
-grasp the thoughts flowing between them, but failed utterly.
-
-"Admirable!" the Moderator commented suddenly. "Your reactions, my son,
-are leading us to hope we may turn in the most optimistic report."
-
-Saxon stared at him as if he were crazy. Ileth's tears had subsided to
-a sniffle.
-
-"Now for your question," said the Moderator and coughed again.
-
-"The menace was real, not imaginary. We had created a monster that
-would be either a marvelous scientific instrument, or--the means of our
-destruction.
-
-"Remember, my son, time is relative. These creatures lived, fought,
-loved, begat children, carried on scientific research and died, all in
-seventy short years. They existed at fever intensity. Their metabolism
-burns them up.
-
-"Our lives are adjusted to a span of ten thousand years. We have a
-total population of little over a million. We are neither a war-like
-people, nor a highly-industrialized people.
-
-"In one of their generations the humanoids accomplish almost as much as
-we do in one of ours. Think, my son, they perform in seventy years what
-it takes us ten thousand to do.
-
-"If it ever came to hostilities between us we'd be doomed, overwhelmed
-almost before we realized what was happening."
-
-Saxon listened in astonishment. The thought in the back of his mind
-kept trying to push to the fore, but he repressed it, afraid that the
-Aliens might see it.
-
-"Their amazing fecundity," the Moderator was saying, "their short life
-spans, their ingenuity and ferocity made them a very real menace even
-isolated outside our stellar system. Fortunately, we also foresaw the
-inevitable crisis and prepared for it."
-
-"Crisis?" Saxon echoed.
-
-"The time when the humanoids would reach our scientific level and
-surpass us," said the Moderator in a grim voice. "That time has
-arrived!"
-
-
- IX
-
-Somewhere a bell began to ring shrilly. Saxon saw an expression of
-annoyance pass across the Moderator's wrinkled visage. He pressed a
-button set in the table top. The bell stopped ringing. A voice began
-to speak in an alien tongue directly behind Saxon. The burly nuclear
-physicist spun around in surprise.
-
-He was looking into the control room of a small private space yacht!
-
-The deception was so realistic that Saxon gasped before he noticed
-the three beams of light converging from lenses in the wall, focusing
-at a point directly behind him to form the solid appearing image. A
-three-dimensional televisor complete with sound!
-
-Then all speculation was driven from his mind as he recognized the
-figure who was speaking.
-
-Mustapha IX, Supreme Autocrat of the Terran Empire!
-
-The image of Mustapha sat stiffly in an acceleration chair before the
-control panel of the space yacht. His voice, rattling away in the
-strange language, was high, tense, frightened.
-
-Saxon, unable to understand, looked over his shoulder at the seven old
-men. They were all on their feet, staring in disbelief at the three
-dimensional image. The Moderator's hands began to tremble. He sat down
-as if his knees had turned to water.
-
-The voice rattled on and on.
-
-At last Mustapha IX quit talking. The Moderator pressed the button. The
-image dissolved.
-
-A stunned silence followed, as one by one the old men sank back to
-their seats. Saxon, devoured with curiosity, asked, "What was it?"
-
-The Moderator gave him a level glance. "That was the man you know as
-Mustapha IX, Supreme Autocrat of the Terran Empire. He was reporting
-from his private yacht which has just emerged from the time field and
-is decelerating. It'll be a week before he lands on Vark."
-
-"Mustapha IX?" Saxon burst out. "Here on Vark? But that's impossible.
-What's he doing--"
-
-"There's been civil war," the Moderator interrupted savagely. "General
-Atomic has overthrown Government. General Atomic is the Terran
-Government now!"
-
-"But I don't see ..." protested Saxon.
-
-"Bah! I spoke of controls. Naturally our first necessity has been to
-control the humanoid's government. The Supreme Autocrats have all been
-Varkans, our governors, which we sent to Earth!
-
-"Now Mustapha IX has had to flee for his life. Most of our agents on
-Earth have been murdered. Only a handful escaped with him!"
-
-The Moderator pressed another button, began to speak rapidly,
-tonelessly in the alien language into a microphone. The thoughts of the
-seven old men were flashing back and forth like streaks of light behind
-their mental barrier. The crisis, Saxon realized, had arrived with a
-vengeance!
-
-Suddenly the guard came running through the door in answer to a summons
-by the Moderator. For the first time Saxon intercepted a thought as the
-Moderator directed the guard to take the prisoners away.
-
-"_Send the girl to Zara_," he commanded the guard. "_Confine the man
-here until we can check results!_"
-
-"Come along," said the guard in a tight voice to Saxon and Ileth. He
-took hold of Ileth's arm. The girl shrank away from him, frightened by
-the swift and ominous change which had come over their captors.
-
-Saxon's eyes went bleak. The guard jerked back as he caught a glimpse
-of Saxon's intentions, but he wasn't quick enough.
-
-Saxon's balled fist caught him on his left cheek bone, sent him
-sprawling to the checkered pavement. Saxon was on him like a wolf.
-Wrenching the cylinder from the stunned guard's belt, he backed off
-swinging the unfamiliar weapon in a menacing arc.
-
-[Illustration: _He backed off, swinging the unfamiliar weapon._]
-
-He saw the withered faces of the Elders blanch. They pressed stiffly
-against the back of their chairs, jaws sagging. The guard scrambled
-to his feet. He shook his head groggily but made no move to attack
-Saxon.
-
-Triumph welled up inside Jon Saxon. He said, "The shoe's on the other
-foot. I don't know how this damned thing works, but there's a button.
-Unless you start answering my questions straight we'll see what happens
-if I press it."
-
-He paused. The seven old men glared at him but said nothing.
-
-"How did General Atomic discover your agents? Why didn't their
-invisibility protect them?"
-
-The Moderator moistened his lips. "The humanoids devised a machine that
-detects us. An adaption of the thought projector, which enabled them to
-detect our telepathic potential. Once they could isolate our thought
-waves, they were able to trace them to their source by a process
-similar to locating the source of a radio beam."
-
-Saxon narrowed his eyes, recalling the thought projector which
-the radiation branch of Government's Bureau of Research had been
-experimenting with. So that's how General Atomic had uncovered the
-Aliens.
-
-"General Atomic," the Moderator was saying, "suspected the existence of
-mutants, telepaths, ever since an agent of theirs by the name of Emil
-turned in a report on you!"
-
-Saxon started.
-
-The Moderator's first fright was over, he realized. The old man was
-regarding him with a faint smile.
-
-Saxon glanced behind him in alarm; but there was nothing there. He
-clenched his fist until the knuckles whitened. "What other methods did
-you use to keep the humanoids in check?"
-
-There was a subtle change in the voice of the Moderator when he
-answered. It was ringing, hard. "As I said, we foresaw this crisis. To
-discourage stellar travel we planted a pathologic fear of deep space in
-the humanoid subconscious.
-
-"Certain of their discoveries we have suppressed. Notably, the
-space-time stellar drive. The Little Death, as you call it, has been
-discovered three separate times in the past thousand years."
-
-"What?"
-
-"Yes. Are you surprised? Once by an unknown scientist, once by a
-physicist, Dr. Walter, and lastly by Dr. Villainowski."
-
-Although Saxon still held the alien weapon, he had the uncomfortable
-sensation that a trap had been sprung and the Moderator was only
-waiting for it to close on him.
-
-With a suffocating tenseness, he asked, "What am I?"
-
-"You," said the Moderator, "are a test experiment!"
-
-"What?"
-
-"A test experiment. On your psychological reactions will depend the
-ultimate fate of the humanoids!"
-
-"A test experiment," he repeated dazedly. "What do you mean?"
-
-"Simply this. For some time we've realized that steps must be taken to
-curb the rapaciousness of the humanoids."
-
-"But me...."
-
-The Moderator held up his hand.
-
-"I'm coming to you. If the ruthless savagery of the humanoids was
-instinctive, part of their heredity, there was little that could be
-done except destroy them.
-
-"But if, on the other hand, their natures resulted from the pressure
-of their environment, we might be able to modify that environment and
-salvage our experiment."
-
-"But what the hell am I? What did you mean when you said I was a test
-experiment?"
-
-The Moderator seemed to have forgotten the existence of Saxon's weapon.
-He tugged at his lower lip with thumb and forefinger. "You are not a
-humanoid. You are one of us, a Varkan. We placed you as a baby on Earth
-to be raised as a humanoid."
-
-"I was eleven," protested Saxon.
-
-"A mere baby still, with psychological plasticity." The Moderator
-waved the objection aside. "If your disposition hardened into humanoid
-characteristics, then we would be safe in assuming that the humanoids,
-too, were a product of their environment.
-
-"Of course, there were factors we couldn't control. The natural
-unfolding of your sixth and seventh senses in early childhood--"
-
-Saxon burst out, "But I was twenty-seven when I developed a sixth sense
-and thirty-one--"
-
-"My son, that's quite true. But you're only in your adolescence now."
-
-"At thirty-eight," said Saxon in disbelief, "I'm an adolescent?"
-
-The Moderator nodded. "And precocious at that!"
-
-Ileth giggled again nervously.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Saxon gave a short laugh. He had a feeling that he had been stuffed too
-full of information. He couldn't digest it. In spite of the suspicions
-he had entertained concerning his birth, he was unable to really
-believe that he was an Alien!
-
-He glanced suddenly at Ileth. The girl had shrunk away from him as if
-he were a leper. Her hazel-green eyes were horrified. All at once, she
-began to cry.
-
-Saxon tried to pat her shoulder, but she wrenched away. The action
-drove a needle of pain into his heart. He realized in a numbed fashion
-how fond he had grown of the girl.
-
-"Fond, hell!" he thought savagely, "I'm in love with her."
-
-"My son," came the hated voice of the Moderator, "she is not for you."
-
-"What do you mean?" Saxon shouted.
-
-The Moderator regarded him a moment, his eyes veiled. Then, "The
-psychologist is ready to give you his report. As a true human, you have
-the right to hear it."
-
-A shriveled, wrinkled man at the end of the table began to address
-Saxon in a dry voice.
-
-"I've been probing your reactions as the truth was revealed to you.
-You can understand the importance of an accurate judgment, when you
-know that the fate of our experiment rests on the manner in which you
-conformed to a humanoid environment."
-
-"Experiment be damned!" Saxon flung out "What about me?"
-
-The psychologist permitted himself a vague smile. "Your reactions have
-been typically humanoid.
-
-"You have been bewildered, frightened, angry.
-
-"You tried to think first of some way by which you could destroy us.
-Failing that, you cast about in your mind for some compromise which
-would cause us to hold our hand until we could be either conquered or
-wiped out--preferably wiped out. These are typically humanoid reactions
-to a dangerous foe.
-
-"Under the circumstances we can preserve our experiment if we can
-modify the humanoids' environment."
-
-Saxon felt relief. Whatever the Aliens planned, they weren't going to
-destroy mankind.
-
-The psychologist having delivered his report, the Moderator resumed,
-"It is unfortunate in a way for you, my son, that the test has been so
-favorable to the humanoids.
-
-"They live and die so fast that in a few generations we can correct
-their savage dispositions.
-
-"But you have solidified in the humanoid mould. You will have to
-undergo a dangerous operation. Our psychologist must induce infantile
-retrogression in you. When you have been reduced mentally, to the age
-of eleven, then your re-education can begin.
-
-"I'll be perfectly frank. You have about one chance in ten of retaining
-your sanity. The danger lies in that retrogression once activated in
-your brain cells. It cannot always be halted."
-
-Saxon's laugh was a croak. "You forget I've still the weapon."
-
-The Moderator said, "It's time that this nonsense stopped. We've
-allowed you to retain the cylinder in order to observe your reactions.
-Look around you!"
-
-Saxon spun around.
-
-Materializing like gray wraiths, a dozen figures were taking substance
-behind him. They were all armed with shining cylinders.
-
-"Drop it!" commanded the Moderator.
-
-Saxon's weapon clanged against the pavement.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Ileth suppressed a scream, swayed, half fainting. Saxon caught her
-before she fell. The girl recovered, flung her arms about his neck.
-
-"You can't do it!" she stormed at the Elders. "You can't. I love him. I
-don't care what he is, I love him, I tell you!"
-
-"Take them away!" the Moderator said imperiously.
-
-The wraiths had grown solid. They began to close in.
-
-Saxon's spine stiffened. He said, "Wait a moment!" in a breathless
-voice. "Have you overlooked the five sets of plans for Villainowski's
-stellar drive? The ones that were stolen from Government's Research
-Building?"
-
-The Moderator's face went gray. For the second time Saxon intercepted a
-thought flowing between the seven old men.
-
-A fear thought! Pure funk!
-
-Saxon's heart leaped like an arrow as the realization burst on him
-that the seven old men were terrified of the humanoids. They were so
-badly frightened that for a moment their guard had relaxed and the fear
-thought had escaped past their mental barriers.
-
-If only there was a way to exploit their fear. He felt hope surging
-back through his veins.
-
-"Already," he shouted, "General Atomic must be manufacturing the ships.
-And you can't stop it. The secret of stellar travel is loose among the
-humanoids!"
-
-"We know of the loss of the plans. General Atomic _is_ laying the keels
-of thousands of the new-type ships. But that doesn't affect your fate
-in the least."
-
-"Doesn't it?" said Saxon harshly. "I'm the only Varkan who can compete
-with the humanoids. I'm the only one who's been conditioned to the
-speed of their reflexes."
-
-"You're a dangerous anti-social!" the Moderator snapped. "Your
-auto-reactions approach the humanoid level because you're still a child
-with a child's adaptiveness. When you mature you'll appreciate the
-difference. We wouldn't dare use you even if you could do anything. If
-worst comes to worst we can destroy our experiment!"
-
-Saxon laughed at him. "And how many generations of humanoids would have
-passed away before you could wipe out a culture that's spread to all
-the planets of its solar system? Why, they'll be swarming over Vark
-from pole to pole before you can prepare to repel them."
-
-The Moderator winced, tried to interrupt, but Saxon was inexorable.
-
-"You might have been able to destroy them while you had them isolated
-in their own Solar System. But they're free now. Free to expand through
-the Galaxy!"
-
-Saxon paused. The idea sprouting some time ago had begun to bear
-fruit. He pushed it resolutely out of his mind lest they intercept it.
-
-The Moderator asked with narrowed eyes, "You have an idea, haven't you?"
-
-Saxon could feel the Aliens probing at his thoughts like a scalpel
-laying bare his skull.
-
-"_Two times two is four. Three times two is six_," he thought hastily
-and realized the seven old men were on the verge of apoplexy.
-
-There was a tense moment of silence as their wills clashed. Then the
-Moderator asked, "What's your price?"
-
-"Freedom for myself and the crew. Hands-off policy for the humanoids."
-
-The silence deepened.
-
-Again Saxon became aware of those flickering baffling thoughts as the
-seven old men conferred behind their mental shields.
-
-At last, grudgingly, the Moderator spoke, "That depends on your
-success."
-
-Saxon didn't relax. He had won only if he had guessed the right answer
-to a question that had been obsessing him. If he was right, he would
-need no guarantee to hold the Aliens to their promise.
-
-"You said that when the metabolism of the humanoids was slowed they
-returned to their normal life span. Does that mean that you can
-actually lengthen their lives to equal yours?"
-
-The Moderator looked puzzled, nodded. "A comparatively simple
-operation, but...."
-
-"But nothing!" Saxon almost shouted. "If their life span is the same
-as yours, then they'll be on the same time scale. Their fecundity is
-the direct result of their shortened life cycle. They'll no longer
-constitute a menace!"
-
-Hope blazed temporarily in the Moderator's eyes, then went out. When he
-spoke next his voice was cold, dead.
-
-"But that takes time. Before we could effect the change several
-generations of humanoids would have lived and died. We'd be conquered!"
-
-Saxon laughed outright. "Of course, you people couldn't effect the
-change quick enough, but other humanoids could. You have Ileth here.
-She's a General Atomic agent. You have the crew and some of the best
-brains on Earth isolated on Zara. They could do it!"
-
-The Moderator drew in his breath sharply. "But would they be willing to
-cooperate?"
-
-"What a question!" roared Saxon. "Would mankind be willing to increase
-their life span ten thousand years? They'll jump at it!"
-
- * * * * *
-
-Zara was a diminutive green little world, held in thrall by the third
-planet of Alpha Centauri A. A miniature heaven of soft breezes and
-crystal streams and gravity so slight that Saxon felt buoyant as a
-bubble.
-
-He said in rare good humor, "So there it is. The Varkans can't slow the
-metabolic rate of billions of humanoids by force or by themselves in
-time."
-
-He was surrounded by the members of the expedition, to whom he had just
-explained the proposal of the Aliens to extend mankind's normal life
-span to an unthinkable age.
-
-With his arm around Ileth's slim waist, he had watched suspicion give
-way to hope and hope to wild enthusiasm. Only Villainowski appeared
-disgruntled.
-
-"It's more than I can stomach," growled the Chief, "to think of
-perpetuating General Atomic in power practically forever."
-
-Saxon leaned close, said in a lowered voice, "You don't believe that
-if the people have ten thousand years to contemplate the iniquity of
-General Atomic, they'll continue to be duped. It'll be the death blow
-to all the big corporations."
-
-He straightened, returning his arm to Ileth's waist. "There's no reason
-for you to return to Earth with the rest of them, Villainowski. There's
-a lot to see here, a lot to learn. Ileth and I are going to spend...."
-
-He frowned, called, "Hey, Mercedes. You're the anthropologist. What
-was that barbaric custom practiced by newly-married couples during the
-pre-Atom age?"
-
-"The honeymoon." Mercedes chuckled, turned to the faintly pink Ileth,
-pinched her cheek. "Don't look so frightened, child. The first ten
-thousand years are the hardest."
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Transcriber's Note: Original text had two section VII. Second one
-renumbered to VIII.]
-
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-<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Outcasts of Solar III, by Emmett McDowell</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: The Outcasts of Solar III</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Emmett McDowell</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: February 27, 2021 [eBook #64644]</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='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Greg Weeks, Mary Meehan and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net</div>
-
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE OUTCASTS OF SOLAR III ***</div>
-
-<div class="titlepage">
-
-<h1>The Outcasts Of Solar III</h1>
-
-<h2>By Emmett McDowell</h2>
-
-<p>Of all Terra's bloodily brawling billions, only<br />
-mighty scientist Jon Saxon sensed the Others.<br />
-Even as he swung his fists and dodged the tearing<br />
-dart guns, his skin crawled weirdly. Who&mdash;<i>who</i>&mdash;was<br />
-so coldly watching this war-torn, hell-bent planet?</p>
-
-<p>[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from<br />
-Planet Stories Spring 1948.<br />
-Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that<br />
-the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p>"Quiet!" Jon Saxon's voice was a breath in the night as he cautioned
-the girl. A warning prickle of danger had run over his skin like
-gooseflesh. He was a big man, over six feet, with thick brawny
-shoulders and arms like a blacksmith. Before the girl could cry out,
-Saxon swept her into the deep shadow of a doorway. His dark gray eyes
-probed the street but he could see no one.</p>
-
-<p>This seventh level thoroughfare of Adirondaka appeared utterly
-deserted. Only occasional street lamps revealed glimpses of the
-magnificent architecture of the post-atom capitol of Earth. Down the
-center of the boulevard the public conveyor swept silently, endlessly
-without a passenger anywhere along its ribbon-like length.</p>
-
-<p>"Where are they?" the girl whispered.</p>
-
-<p>He shook his head. "I can't see them." But his skin continued to
-prickle its warning. Somewhere in the shadows were men, several of
-them, stalking him soundlessly.</p>
-
-<p>He became aware of an alien quality about the figures ringing in him
-and the girl, figures he could sense but not see. Still nothing moved
-in the street. The girl, he realized, was strangely quiescent.</p>
-
-<p>Then, sharp as speech, her thought impinged on Jon Saxon's
-consciousness. "<i>The fools! And after I told Emil not to let them crowd
-him!</i>"</p>
-
-<p>Jon Saxon's eyes narrowed. So the girl thought the invisible figures
-were G.A.'s men. He had known, of course, from their first meeting
-that the girl was a General Atomic spy. But by not so much as a hint
-had he let her suspect that her very thoughts betrayed her.</p>
-
-<p>The tingling sensation intensified, warned him that the shadows were
-closing in. The feel of alienism was stronger, as if they were not
-quite human. His heart pumped faster, the pulse throbbing in his ears.</p>
-
-<p>The moon was rising, he saw, competing indifferently with the street
-lights. Its rays streamed down through the ninety-eight levels of the
-capitol, down through crystal plastic roadways into the dense blackness
-of the pit itself.</p>
-
-<p>Again he became aware of the girl's thought, "<i>Why, there's nothing
-here! He's imagining things!</i>" It was accompanied by a wave of relief,
-and at the same time she whispered,</p>
-
-<p>"What is it Jon? What do you see?"</p>
-
-<p>"Hold it, Ileth!"</p>
-
-<p>His hands gripped her slender shoulders, silenced her. The public
-conveyor still swept past without a sound.</p>
-
-<p>Bewilderment grew in him.</p>
-
-<p>The alien entities were close, all about them, apparently without
-substance. The tingling sensations were like hot and cold flashes
-now, signaling him of something present, something which he couldn't
-identify.</p>
-
-<p>They were not the girl's men, whatever she thought. He would have
-recognized them by their feel.</p>
-
-<p>No, these escaped classification. He had never experienced anything
-like them before. His strange sixth sense, the first extra-human sense
-which he had begun to develop inexplicably in his twenty seventh year,
-could perceive nothing beyond their presence.</p>
-
-<p>He took his hand from Ileth's shoulders, groped for the button
-controlling the door against which they crouched.</p>
-
-<p>"<i>Stop!</i>"</p>
-
-<p>The thought rang like a bell in his skull.</p>
-
-<p>Jon Saxon stiffened. "<i>What is it?</i>" he concentrated. "<i>Who are you?</i>"</p>
-
-<p>Again the bodiless thought struck into his mind.</p>
-
-<p>"<i>That is not for you to know&mdash;now or possibly ever. The girl is
-working for General Atomic. Do not allow yourself to be duped. It is
-decidedly not our policy that General Atomic or any of the corporations
-learn the secret of the stellar drive!</i>"</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Saxon's eyes opened with surprise. He had no intention of giving G.A.
-the secret of the stellar drive. It was a government secret, for one
-thing....</p>
-
-<p>"<i>We are quite aware of your intentions</i>," came the telepathic
-communication. "<i>Otherwise, you would no longer be.</i>"</p>
-
-<p>Saxon swallowed dryly, realized his palms were sweating. He glanced at
-Ileth. The moonlight had crept into the doorway, illuminating her oval
-face clearly. He noted the perplexed slant to her fine black brows, the
-sober, half frightened expression clouding her patrician features.</p>
-
-<p>"Why don't we go?" she asked. "What are you waiting for?"</p>
-
-<p>"In a minute."</p>
-
-<p>He sent his thought probing out toward the alien minds. And brought up
-sharp before an absolute mental barrier.</p>
-
-<p>No neophytes here. Whatever the creatures were, they were masters of
-thought-transference. Excitement sent the blood surging through Saxon's
-veins, blotted out momentarily his alarm.</p>
-
-<p>Until this moment, he had believed himself unique, the single telepath
-on Earth.</p>
-
-<p>He had been thirty-one when he first became aware of his telepathic
-potential. It had developed overnight, a seventh extra-human sense,
-that isolated him forever from the rest of mankind.</p>
-
-<p>There had been something indecent, prying about seeing into the minds
-of his fellows&mdash;like a peeping Tom. It had been intolerable at first,
-the naked baring of souls before him, intolerable and shocking, until
-he had learned to block out their thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>He felt the girl shiver against him.</p>
-
-<p>"But what are you afraid of, Jon?"</p>
-
-<p>He didn't answer because the alien thoughts intruded on his mind again.</p>
-
-<p>"<i>This is a warning, Jon Saxon. Do not divulge the stellar drive to
-anyone. It is not and never was intended for you to know. Only the
-unfortunate development of a telepathic sense enabled you to steal it
-from Villainowski's brain....</i>"</p>
-
-<p>"<i>I didn't steal it!</i>" Saxon thought indignantly. "<i>I worked with
-Villainowski building the ship. It would have been impossible for me
-not to learn it.</i>"</p>
-
-<p>"<i>Exactly</i>," came the reply. "<i>And your continued existence hinges
-entirely on your silence.</i>"</p>
-
-<p>A chill wind blew up Saxon's spine, but it only fanned the flame of
-eagerness which had sprung up in him. Here were others like himself,
-possessed of telepathic powers.</p>
-
-<p>"<i>Who are you?</i>" he thought passionately.</p>
-
-<p>He realized in dismay that the prickling in skin and scalp had
-diminished. The telepaths were withdrawing, deserting him without a
-hint of further contact.</p>
-
-<p>"<i>Who are you? How can I find you?</i>"</p>
-
-<p>Nothing!</p>
-
-<p>He and the girl were alone again in the moonlit doorway.</p>
-
-<p>A strange sense of exhilaration replaced Saxon's first feeling of
-letdown. There were other telepaths on Earth and sometime, someplace
-their paths would cross again. He stepped into the street, saying to
-Ileth, "Let's go. I was mistaken. There's no one here."</p>
-
-<p>In the rays of the street lamp, he looked more like a pugilist than
-a Government Bureau of Research man and one of Terra's top nuclear
-physicists. He had a big nose, twice broken, strong white teeth and a
-square massive jaw. He caught the girl's thought and grinned down at
-her.</p>
-
-<p>"<i>He's not handsome</i>," she was thinking, "<i>not by any standard, but
-when he grins like that you don't think about his looks and virility
-radiates from him like heat waves. He's a dangerous man! Emil
-underrates him!</i>"</p>
-
-<p>"Hadn't we better take the conveyor?" she asked aloud.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Jon Saxon nodded, swung the girl lightly by her elbows to the pick-up,
-transferred to commuter, then express. They found seats while the
-buildings flowed past on either hand like a speeded-up movie.</p>
-
-<p>"You have a frightening job," said Ileth, looking up at his from big
-hazel-green eyes. Her shiny black hair she wore in a shoulder length
-page-boy bob. She smoothed her short-waisted chartreuse jacket over
-small firm breasts. "I'm surprised Government lets you go out without
-your bodyguard."</p>
-
-<p>"They don't." Saxon's unprepossessing features lit with a boyish grin.
-"But I slip away from them once in a while."</p>
-
-<p>"You were afraid of an ambush back there in the street?"</p>
-
-<p>He nodded. "Yes. I thought one of the corporations may have got wind of
-my escapade."</p>
-
-<p>The girl, he saw from her thoughts, was satisfied with his explanation.</p>
-
-<p>In these days of savage competition, the big corporations maintained
-their own factories and laboratories. General Atomic, Tri-World,
-Amalgamated Plastic, a score of lesser companies employed staffs
-of technicians and research scientists. The lives of these men
-were fraught with a peculiar danger. They were subject to bribery,
-kidnapping and torture by the spy agencies of rival companies in their
-efforts to extort from them any new discovery or guarded scientific
-process their corporations might possess. Independent agencies manned
-by corrupt technicians had men everywhere.</p>
-
-<p>The corporations protected themselves by confining their technicians
-to barracks and never permitting them to wander forth unescorted. It
-was a condition which Jon Saxon found little better than slavery. The
-constant surveillance irked him to the point of rebellion.</p>
-
-<p>Now he was confronted suddenly with the fact that he had been under
-observation of an infinitely more subtle kind as well. Some group was
-keeping constant watch upon his mind. But who?</p>
-
-<p>Ileth sighed and laid her sleek black head on his shoulder. "Jon,
-you've been so quiet tonight. Is it because tomorrow the expedition
-leaves for Alpha Centauri?"</p>
-
-<p>"I don't know. I'm not afraid, exactly. We know the drive is
-practicable, but it's the first attempt man's ever made to reach the
-stars. We've never been beyond the Solar System before, Ileth."</p>
-
-<p>He felt the girl's arms slip around his neck, cling with surprising
-strength. "I'm afraid, Jon. I wish you weren't going."</p>
-
-<p>"What are you afraid of?"</p>
-
-<p>Ileth bit her lower lip. She was feeling rather than thinking, Saxon
-realized, a mental chaos bubbling in the primitive thalamic regions of
-her nervous system, a formless intuition of disaster stalking the first
-expedition into stellar space.</p>
-
-<p>"I&mdash;I don't know exactly," she confessed. "I don't understand it, Jon."</p>
-
-<p>Saxon's eyes narrowed. He had intercepted that dread of the
-expedition's fate before. He had felt it emanating from hundreds of
-individuals otherwise unrelated. It was like a hypnotically imposed
-command: "<i>Don't venture into the Stellar Depths!</i>"</p>
-
-<p>And it always stemmed from the subconscious, the regions of the human
-mind telepathically closed to him. At first he'd been inclined to think
-it was dread of the unknown. But now he was not so sure.</p>
-
-<p>Facts, Saxon knew, were assimilated by the subconscious, later to
-emerge as hunches and intuition. He had grown to believe that there
-must be reason behind this universal fear of stellar space.</p>
-
-<p>He had even felt it in himself; in his chief, Villainowski; in his
-co-workers at Government's Bureau of Research. It was a very real
-feeling that nothing but disaster for the human race could come of this
-venture to the stars.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="ph1">II</p>
-
-<p>Ileth's apartment was on the ninety-eighth level, flush against the
-transparent plastic dome which hermetically sealed in Adirondaka.</p>
-
-<p>Jon Saxon followed the girl out of the lift, watching her with
-admiration.</p>
-
-<p>She was a slim, long legged creature in chartreuse green, jodhpur-like
-trousers that moulded her slender waist and rounded hips with amazing
-fidelity before flaring at her thighs.</p>
-
-<p>Ileth Urban was as fetching a bit of scientist-bait as General Atomic
-could have desired.</p>
-
-<p>All the corporations used these girls. They scoured the Solar System
-for the cleverest, most beautiful ones to be found. They paid them
-fantastic wages and trained them to worm secrets from susceptible
-males. Scientific Mata Hari's.</p>
-
-<p>Government itself used them, Saxon was fully aware. Only by employing
-even more ruthless measures than the corporations was government able
-to maintain itself. Government had the finest research department
-anywhere. And the Terrestial Intelligence Service was the most
-efficient organization of its kind. Not only that; Government had
-power, power unbelievable in its Space Navy.</p>
-
-<p>Ileth paused, allowing him to come abreast of her, her hazel-green eyes
-smiling at him.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon hastily blocked out her thoughts in embarrassment. "<i>You're a
-pretty little Judas</i>," he thought, then glanced up as a bright glare
-lit the night sky.</p>
-
-<p>A trail of orange flame streaked above the city and disappeared like
-a meteor in reverse. The <i>Morning Star</i>, a crack luxury liner, was
-heading out for Venus. It must be nineteen hours.</p>
-
-<p>"Our last night," said Ileth softly. "Tomorrow we'll be leaving for
-Alpha Centauri like that ship."</p>
-
-<p>They had reached a door in the glistening plastic face of a building.
-The door opened automatically, responsive to the girl's personal
-vibration.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon saw a lambent darkness beyond the entrance. The ceiling of
-Ileth's apartment was the transparent rind of the city itself. The moon
-streamed through the crystal plastic, lighting it faintly.</p>
-
-<p>His nerves tightened, his sixth sense of feel exploring the apartment
-for a trap.</p>
-
-<p>But no warning tingle prickled his skin. Then the lights came on as
-Ileth passed inside. They glowed from the walls like cold flame.</p>
-
-<p>With a sigh of relief, Saxon saw that the chamber was empty.</p>
-
-<p>"Sit down," said Ileth, "I'll get you a drink." She disappeared through
-a doorway across the room, stripping her yellow green jacket from her
-shoulders as she went.</p>
-
-<p>Jon Saxon sank onto a lounge, following Ileth's progress by her
-thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>"<i>Soda. Where's that soda? Oh, here it is. Emil must have put it there.
-Like a man.</i>" Then, "<i>Contact Emil?</i>"</p>
-
-<p>A moment's indecision. Saxon could almost hear the girl thinking. "<i>Not
-yet</i>," she decided with a mental shiver. "<i>Saxon would be no good to us
-dead.</i>" Then, "<i>Make the drink strong. Take a gallon to make him drunk.
-Big brute. Shoulders like a door. I could....</i>"</p>
-
-<p>Saxon hastily blocked out her thought in embarrassment. The girl's mind
-was too graphic.</p>
-
-<p>For the hundredth time his brain grappled with the identity of those
-alien telepaths who had warned him in the street tonight.</p>
-
-<p>The radiation branch of Government's Bureau of Research had been
-experimenting with thought projection. Could they have been successful?
-It might account for the alien feel he had experienced for that
-impenetrable barrier which had defeated his attempt to reach their
-minds.</p>
-
-<p>A machine?</p>
-
-<p>Unconsciously, he shook his head. His sixth sense, the ability not
-only to feel a presence but identify it almost as if he were seeing
-it, convinced him that there had been life in the street, a strange
-invisible form of life possibly; but the reality of it was inescapable.
-In some ways his heightened sense of feel was more reliable than his
-ears or eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Ileth returned bearing a tray with glasses, a decanter of whiskey and
-soda. "I wasn't long, was I?"</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>There was a hard bright glitter in her hazel-green eyes. Saxon saw
-that she had changed to a halter and skirt of Martian microweb. He
-swallowed, feeling a pulse beginning to tick in his throat. The
-microweb was as black as the girl's hair, but not anywhere so thick.</p>
-
-<p>Only her cold determination to keep him there until after the sailing,
-which he could feel like a dash of cold water, defeated her purpose.</p>
-
-<p>She handed him a glass, set the tray on an end table, switched on the
-telecaster.</p>
-
-<p>Instead of music, the newscaster was blaring forth the announcement of
-the expedition to Alpha Centauri.</p>
-
-<p>"... greatest page in the annals of the Empire. Tomorrow at nine hours
-the <i>Shooting Star</i> with a picked crew, with a staff of specialists
-and representatives from all the great corporations will blast off for
-Alpha Centauri.</p>
-
-<p>"Under the directorship of John Villainowski of Government's Bureau of
-Research, the man who developed the stellar drive, the expedition plans
-to investigate the planetary systems of the Centaurian suns.</p>
-
-<p>"His excellency, Mustapha IX, will be present...."</p>
-
-<p>Ileth snapped off the telecaster.</p>
-
-<p>"Jon," she asked and leaned against him, "why did you sneak out tonight
-of all nights?"</p>
-
-<p>He sensed the girl's tension, knew that it would be difficult to fool
-her. Suddenly, he decided to quit beating around the bush and strike
-straight into the heart of the opposing forces.</p>
-
-<p>"I know you're an agent of General Atomic, Ileth. I've...!" He paused.</p>
-
-<p>Ileth had gasped and drawn back from him. Her thoughts were in turmoil.
-"<i>Emil! I must reach Emil!</i>" was clear.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon went on inexorably. "I've wind of a plot by General Atomic
-against the <i>Shooting Star</i>. If they could get their hands on the
-stellar drive, no doubt they could control deep space. They'd be in a
-position to dictate to Government."</p>
-
-<p>Ileth was thinking furiously now, Saxon realized, trying to figure how
-much he knew and how much he was guessing.</p>
-
-<p>He laughed without amusement. He knew damned little, too damned little.</p>
-
-<p>Only this morning, he had intercepted the stray thought of one of his
-co-workers and realized that the man had sold out to General Atomic. To
-his horror he had read in the man's mind where General Atomic, after
-securing the stellar drive, intended to overthrow Government.</p>
-
-<p>How General Atomic planned to get the drive, who else was in the plot,
-the man hadn't known. He had been bribed to take orders from a G.A.
-agent, whom he knew only as Q62.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon couldn't inform the T.I.S. of his knowledge. He had no proof,
-except what he had read in this one man's mind.</p>
-
-<p>He had told Villainowski of his suspicions. The chief had promised to
-set the T.I.S. onto the case, but they had turned up no evidence of any
-kind against the great corporation.</p>
-
-<p>General Atomic had done its work with utmost secrecy, not letting its
-right hand know what its left hand was doing.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon was desperate. He grasped the girl's slight shoulders. "What do
-you know about it, Ileth?"</p>
-
-<p>"I don't know anything. Oh Lord, Jon, I'm to be General Atomic's
-representative aboard the <i>Shooting Star</i>, and they've told me nothing
-of any plot against the ship. Nothing, Jon, I swear it."</p>
-
-<p>With a disheartening feeling of defeat, Jon realized the girl was
-telling the truth. She had been told nothing of General Atomic's plan.
-She, too, he read in her frightened thoughts, had been instructed to
-take orders from a General Atomic's agent whom she knew as Q62.</p>
-
-<p>"Who's Q62?" he shot at her.</p>
-
-<p>Ileth's hazel-green eyes were enormous. "You! How did you know?"</p>
-
-<p>"Who's Q62?"</p>
-
-<p>"I don't know. I've never met him."</p>
-
-<p>"How will you know him?"</p>
-
-<p>"I don't know. They said he would be able to identify himself. That's
-all. They wouldn't tell me how."</p>
-
-<p>All at once Saxon's skin began to prickle its warning of danger. He
-released the girl, wheeled towards the door just as it was flung
-viciously back.</p>
-
-<p>He saw three men in the opening and reached for his dart gun.</p>
-
-<p>With a half sob, Ileth hurled herself on him, bearing him backward to
-the couch, her arms around his chest, her long legs tangled with his.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/illus2.jpg" alt=""/>
- <div class="caption">
- <p><i>With a half sob, Ileth hurled herself on him.</i></p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p>"Emil!" she panted. "Quick! He's got a gun!"</p>
-
-<p>"Easy. Easy. Easy," said a man's low amused voice.</p>
-
-<p>Jon Saxon succeeded in throwing Ileth off his chest and surging to his
-feet. He found himself staring into the tiny barrel of a dart gun. The
-dart gun was being held steady as a rock by a gray-eyed, yellow-haired
-man with a faint smile on his wide thin lips.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon let his hand fall away from his holster.</p>
-
-<p>"Get his gun, Ileth."</p>
-
-<p>"Right, Emil."</p>
-
-<p>Saxon felt the girl's cool fingers slip inside his blouse, pluck his
-automatic from his holster.</p>
-
-<p>"Has he any other weapons?"</p>
-
-<p>She patted Saxon deftly, impersonally, shook her head, her black hair
-swinging.</p>
-
-<p>"No. That's all."</p>
-
-<p>The blond man lowered his gun. "You may sit down, sir."</p>
-
-<p>Saxon sat down.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>There were two others behind the blond man but Saxon kept his eyes
-on Emil, recognizing a dangerous type. Obviously well educated,
-intelligent, the blond man was fiercely loyal to General Atomic.</p>
-
-<p>Not such a queer combination in these times, Saxon thought; when the
-corporations had come to replace countries in men's loyalties.</p>
-
-<p>The anarchist revolt against Bureaucratic-Socialism had seriously
-weakened Terra and corporate business had fought its way back to power.
-Determined never again to permit the sacred laws of property to be so
-violated, it had fastened its tentacles to the very roots of society.
-It organized a government in an image of itself&mdash;a corporate government.</p>
-
-<p>Men became known no longer as American or Spanish but as General Atomic
-men, or Tri-World men, or Corporate Government men and were as blindly
-patriotic to their corporations as they had been in earlier ages to the
-lands of their birth.</p>
-
-<p>Such a one, Saxon recognized, was Emil of General Atomic, a fanatic who
-would consider it the greatest honor to die for his company.</p>
-
-<p>"You realize, sir," said Emil, "that we regret very much what we must
-do."</p>
-
-<p>"Why do it, then?" Jon Saxon asked bluntly.</p>
-
-<p>The blond Emil looked shocked. "Are you suggesting treason, sir?"</p>
-
-<p>"I'm not suggesting anything," replied Saxon, who had already read his
-death sentence in Emil's brain. "But you don't expect me to give you
-any information, when you plan to kill me immediately after."</p>
-
-<p>Emil's expression was vaguely disturbed. "Nonsense! I'm commissioned
-to offer you a post in General Atomic's research department at twice
-your present salary, if you can give us the information we wish."</p>
-
-<p>But Saxon still read nothing but inexorable death in Emil's mind.</p>
-
-<p>"Eyewash," he said.</p>
-
-<p>In the ensuing silence the men's thoughts beat at Saxon's brain like
-the confusing racket of people talking all at once.</p>
-
-<p>At length Emil moved aside, saying, "We're prepared for obstinacy.
-Georg, take over."</p>
-
-<p>A plump man of middle age drew up a chair facing Saxon.</p>
-
-<p>"Georg," explained Emil, "is an N.P.A."</p>
-
-<p>Saxon stared into the moon faced neural-psychoanalyst. The man
-possessed the most unusual pair of twinkling blue eyes like bits of
-glass, a smooth pink face, thin sandy hair. He was dressed like Emil in
-loose, comfortable coveralls of a gray siliconex.</p>
-
-<p>He took Saxon's wrist, said pleasantly, "Hmmm, pulse rapid but strong.
-Unusual nervous control. Strip to the waist, if you please."</p>
-
-<p>As Saxon pulled off his blouse, the plump N.P.A. turned to the third
-man, obviously his assistant, and said, "Bring the machine, Alph."</p>
-
-<p>The man called Alph lugged a heavy case in front of the couch, opened
-it. Georg began to attach saucer shaped suction discs to Saxon's
-temples, the base of his skull, his solar plexus. Wires led from the
-discs to the machine in the black case.</p>
-
-<p>"Quite ready," said Georg to Emil. "Ask any questions you wish."</p>
-
-<p>Saxon could feel a delicate tingle rippling up his spine into his brain
-like a mild electric shock. Emil asked, "Do you know the secret of
-Villainowski's stellar drive?"</p>
-
-<p>"No," returned Saxon. "That's preposterous. No one understands that
-except Villainowski himself. Do you think Government would be so
-stupid as to let the secret out?"</p>
-
-<p>The plump N.P.A. who had been studying a bank of dials, looked up and
-said, "He's lying. From that I would infer that he understands the
-stellar drive."</p>
-
-<p>"What?" gasped Emil.</p>
-
-<p>With a sinking heart Jon Saxon realized that the blond man had not been
-expecting such luck. They had thought that he might be able to give
-them some clue to the stellar drive, but not that he actually could
-reproduce it.</p>
-
-<p>"What's his torture coefficient?" Emil shot at the N.P.A.</p>
-
-<p>Georg adjusted several dials. The tingling became livid fire coursing
-up Saxon's spine. His eyes closed, he crushed his lips between his
-teeth until a trickle of blood coursed down his chin.</p>
-
-<p>The room swayed sickeningly. Sweat burst from his pores, made his sick
-white face glisten in the indirect lighting.</p>
-
-<p>Then as sudden as it came, the fire smoldered and died out of his spine.</p>
-
-<p>He heard the N.P.A. speak in an awed voice, "His torture coefficient is
-below his will to live. He'll die first."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Emil began to stride nervously back and forth before the lounge. He
-swung suddenly on Saxon, saying, "Look, that post on General Atomic's
-research bureau is still open. I can promise you three times your
-present salary, and a bonus besides."</p>
-
-<p>"Liar," replied Saxon without hesitation. "I don't need a machine to
-tell you're lying." He laughed shortly.</p>
-
-<p>The N.P.A.'s plump face looked puzzled. He made rapid adjustments on
-the machine, bent over the dials again.</p>
-
-<p>"He's not lying," he said in a queer voice. "He knows you intend to
-kill him as soon as you squeeze him dry of information."</p>
-
-<p>Saxon caught sight of Ileth's white, strained face and grinned at her.
-She had been as surprised, he read her thoughts, as himself at Emil's
-opportune entrance. Obviously, Emil had not been supposed to put in an
-appearance until she had a try at him first.</p>
-
-<p>It was all verification that General Atomic was trying to steal the
-stellar drive. But Saxon had been able to catch only the scantiest of
-details from Emil's mind.</p>
-
-<p>General Atomic not only wanted the drive, he sensed, but a monopoly on
-it. That meant killing or buying off everyone in Government's Bureau of
-Research who knew the secret of the drive.</p>
-
-<p>Emil said to Saxon, "Suppose I contact General Atomic and put it up to
-them. I'll confess my orders were to question you, then dispose of you.
-Frankly, Ileth's reports have convinced us that you couldn't be bought."</p>
-
-<p>"What makes you think that I can now? Anyway, what guarantee have I
-that their promises aren't as empty as yours?" he asked sceptically.</p>
-
-<p>Georg, the neuro-psychoanalyst, pursed thick lips and interjected
-himself into the conversation. "General Atomic abides by its
-contracts," he pointed out.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes. When it's to their advantage."</p>
-
-<p>Emil's eyes blazed; red stained his pale cheek. "Do you mean to imply,
-sir, that General Atomic is treacherous?"</p>
-
-<p>"Exactly."</p>
-
-<p>"Emil!" said the plump N.P.A., sharply.</p>
-
-<p>Slowly the flush receded from Emil's cheeks, but he held himself stiff
-as a ram-rod and his eyes were angry.</p>
-
-<p>The N.P.A. turned back to Saxon. "At least, you admit that General
-Atomic abides by its contracts as long as it's to their advantage."</p>
-
-<p>Saxon nodded, seeing already what was coming.</p>
-
-<p>"Then," pursued Georg. "It certainly would be to their advantage
-to preserve you alive until you could build a stellar drive. After
-that...." He shrugged. "You're an intelligent man, Saxon. Rated one of
-the best physicists in the Empire, in fact. It seems to me that you
-could easily convince General Atomic that it would be of advantage to
-them to keep you alive indefinitely. What would you say to a hundred
-thousand credits a year?"</p>
-
-<p>"Not enough."</p>
-
-<p>"<i>Two hundred thousand?</i>"</p>
-
-<p>"One or two ..." Saxon began, then paused in consternation. He had been
-tricked!</p>
-
-<p>There was a self-satisfied smile on the neuro-psychoanalyst's pudgy
-features. He had not spoken aloud the words, "Two hundred thousand,"
-but had thought them at Saxon!</p>
-
-<p>"He's a telepath!" said the N.P.A., and began to disconnect the discs
-from Saxon's body and stow them back in the case.</p>
-
-<p>"A telepath!" Emil ejaculated. "He's a telepath?"</p>
-
-<p>"Exactly," agreed the N.P.A. in dry tones. "I suspected it from the
-first, but frankly I couldn't believe it. I've never encountered a
-true telepath before. I didn't think there were any. Individuals who
-are unusually canny at reading expression, yes. But never any true
-telepaths. I'm going to request General Atomic to let me perform an
-autopsy after he's been disposed of. Possibly he's a mutant."</p>
-
-<p>"Disposed of?" ejaculated the blond Emil. "But great stars, Georg! He's
-invaluable to us. Not only does he possess the secret of the stellar
-drive, but he can...."</p>
-
-<p>"You're the executive!" retorted Georg sharply, "but I advise you to
-shoot him now! This second!"</p>
-
-<p>"What do you mean?"</p>
-
-<p>"You're not stupid, man! How much information has he picked from
-our brains already? If he should escape, the plan would have to be
-sacrificed. Everything might be lost." Then, sharply, "And don't think
-about the plan! Shoot him!"</p>
-
-<p>Saxon could read growing conviction in the blond man's mind. He saw
-Emil's hand, holding the dart gun, begin to rise.</p>
-
-<p>"Look out, Emil!" shrieked Ileth suddenly.</p>
-
-<p>But Saxon had already snatched the plump N.P.A. off his feet, yanking
-him between himself and Emil. He heard a sharp plop. The N.P.A.'s body
-quivered as it intercepted Emil's poisoned dart. Saxon realized he was
-holding aloft a dead man.</p>
-
-<p>The muscles in his burly naked shoulders hunched. He hurled the dead
-N.P.A. at the blond man who went down, bowled over backwards by the
-body.</p>
-
-<p>Emil's head struck the plastic floor with a sickening crunch. Saxon
-caught a painful mental flash as unconsciousness gripped the blond man.</p>
-
-<p>Without a pause, he leaped for Ileth. The girl was fumbling at her
-waist, where her gun's muzzle had become entangled. Only the fact that
-the muzzle had caught in her waist band saved him.</p>
-
-<p>She flinched back as Saxon's hand closed on the gun, tore it loose from
-her grip. There was a rip of cloth and the dart gun came away. Ileth's
-skirt, freed of its supporting waistband, slid down about her ankles.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon leaped backward, threatening the N.P.A.'s flabbergasted assistant
-as well as the girl.</p>
-
-<p>"Don't move! Either of you."</p>
-
-<p>The N.P.A.'s assistant was obviously terrified and had no intention of
-budging.</p>
-
-<p>"<i>Oh, my skirt!</i>" Ileth's wild thought came clear as a bell to Saxon,
-and the girl rolled her eyes toward her feet, where the cloth lay in a
-black ring. But she didn't move.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon grinned. "Obviously," he said, "you haven't any weapon concealed
-about yourself. You can pick up your skirt, Ileth."</p>
-
-<p>She snatched it about her waist again, holding the foot long tear
-together with her hand.</p>
-
-<p>"I'm leaving," he said, "but remember, I can read your thoughts. If
-either of you make a move towards that audio during the next ten
-minutes, I'll pop back in and fill you as full of darts as a porcupine."</p>
-
-<p>And he backed, still grinning, through the door.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="ph1">III</p>
-
-<p>The huge structure, housing Government's Bureau of Research, was aflame
-with light when Saxon climbed from the robot cab and approached the
-entrance. The shadowy figure of a guard challenged him.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon produced his papers, submitted to a fingerprint test.</p>
-
-<p>"So, it's you, all right," the guard growled. "Where the hell have you
-been? The T.I.S. has been scouring the city for you."</p>
-
-<p>Saxon asked, "Is Villainowski in? I want to see him."</p>
-
-<p>"Not half as bad," said the guard, "as he wants to see you." He stuck
-his head inside the guardroom, yelled, "Hey, Webb, come relieve me.
-That missing physicist has shown up. I've got to take him up to the
-chief."</p>
-
-<p>"I can find my way," Saxon assured him dryly.</p>
-
-<p>"I've got my orders," retorted the man, "to escort you, and escorted
-you'll be."</p>
-
-<p>As they took the lift, Saxon probed gently into the guard's mind. He
-was thinking about a Venusian dancer performing at the Sun Palace on
-Greater Broadway. Either he didn't know why Villainowski wanted him, or
-he was more interested in the dancer.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon sighed in resignation.</p>
-
-<p>Chief Villainowski was a small wiry man of Polish descent who had led
-none too reputable a life, although it was not generally known. Jon
-Saxon, regarding him across the polished desk, read suspicion and
-wonder in the chief's mind. Villainowski was never able to reconcile
-Saxon's appearance with his indisputable scientific attainments.</p>
-
-<p>"<i>Looks like a plug ugly</i>," Villainowski was thinking although he was
-far from a beauty himself. "<i>Ought to be a prize fighter instead of a
-physicist!</i>"</p>
-
-<p>"Will you pray tell me," he asked aloud of the amused Saxon, "what the
-hell possessed you to sneak out the night before we leave?"</p>
-
-<p>Saxon grinned like a mastiff. "It was that General Atomic affair. I
-haven't told you, but I met one of their agents, a girl by the name of
-Ileth Urban, about a month ago."</p>
-
-<p>"Black-headed girl?" asked the third man in the room. He had his chair
-leaned against the wall. A tall, angular, sandy-haired man with pale
-blue eyes like gimlets. "Does she have hazel-green eyes, small delicate
-features? Ears peaked like an animal's...."</p>
-
-<p>"I hadn't noticed the ears," Saxon confessed, swinging toward the
-sandy-haired man.</p>
-
-<p>Gavin Murdock, T.I.S. agent, had been assigned as T.I.S. representative
-to this first expedition beyond the Solar System. He said, "No, I guess
-not. She wears her hair in a page-boy bob."</p>
-
-<p>Villainowski interrupted: "Well, damn it, man, who gave you permission
-to horn in on the T.I.S.'s work?"</p>
-
-<p>"I knew her. She'd been set to pump me dry of information by General
-Atomic. If anyone could get anything out of her, I could."</p>
-
-<p>"You don't fancy yourself much," the chief grunted with a touch of
-asperity. "What did you find out?"</p>
-
-<p>Saxon related events just as they had transpired, omitting only the
-alien telepaths in the street and his own telepathic ability.</p>
-
-<p>"By Pluto!" exploded Villainowski when he had concluded. "We can grab
-the lot of them."</p>
-
-<p>"Not so fast," Murdock interrupted from his chair against the wall.
-"What proof have you? Only Saxon's word. It won't hold in a court of
-law."</p>
-
-<p>"But the girl!" Villainowski protested. "She's General Atomic's
-representative on the expedition. You don't intend to let her&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"It's better to have her where we can watch her," the T.I.S. agent
-returned. "Saxon can keep an eye on her. He seems to be able to pry
-more out of her than any of my agents have. If he can persuade her that
-he hasn't told us about the fracas in her apartment...."</p>
-
-<p>"I can convince her of that, I think," said Saxon. "But she doesn't
-know anything...."</p>
-
-<p>"Except," Murdock interrupted again, "that she's to take orders from an
-agent known as Q62. At least, she should lead us to him." He paused,
-regarded Saxon with his penetrating pale blue eyes. "What the devil did
-you do to her, man, to get that information out of her? Stick darts
-under her finger nails?"</p>
-
-<p>In both Murdock's and Villainowski's mind Saxon read a cold
-determination to keep him under surveillance as well as the girl.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Villainowski, he knew, hated the corporations in general, but it was
-nothing to the black flame of hatred that consumed the man whenever he
-thought of General Atomic. It was almost psychopathic. He had never
-forgotten or forgiven General Atomic, Saxon knew, for stealing his
-first three discoveries and then disgracing him.</p>
-
-<p>It was a queer friendship that existed between the two men questioning
-Saxon&mdash;the gaunt cold-blooded manhunter, who had sent a girl with whom
-he was infatuated to the Lunar Penal Colony, and Villainowski, the
-small wiry scientist, ex-Jovian slaver, and at present head of the
-first expedition into deep space.</p>
-
-<p>"Well," the sandy-haired Murdock repeated inexorably, "how did she
-happen to tell you about Q62?"</p>
-
-<p>"It was a slip," explained Saxon. "I followed it up."</p>
-
-<p>"She's not given to making slips," Murdock pointed out. "Not Ileth
-Urban."</p>
-
-<p>When Saxon didn't reply, the T.I.S. agent said, "Saxon, we've
-investigated your past pretty thoroughly. We did the same with every
-man and woman connected with this expedition. We encountered a strange
-thing. Saxon, who are your parents?"</p>
-
-<p>Jon Saxon could feel his stomach contract. "I don't know. I haven't any
-recollection before my eleventh year." He could feel Murdock's probing
-blue eyes, sense his scepticism.</p>
-
-<p>"You've a convenient memory, because we've been unable to find any
-trace of your parents or birth prior to your enrollment in the
-Institute. A thousand years ago your case would have been unusual,
-but it could have happened. But today, with our universal system of
-records, it's impossible. I've never encountered a parallel case to
-yours."</p>
-
-<p>"I'm sorry," said Saxon dryly, "but I do seem to have been born, don't
-I? And somehow escaped the census."</p>
-
-<p>Murdock smiled a wintry smile. "There were funds deposited at the
-Institute for your education. We haven't been able to trace those funds
-either. In fact, every way we've turned, we've run into a blank wall."</p>
-
-<p>"I'm sorry," said Saxon again, "but I can't help you. I have absolutely
-no memory before I was eleven. Don't think it hasn't worried me. I
-asked the T.I.S. to investigate it years ago. They couldn't find
-anything then. It's not surprising they haven't found anything this
-time."</p>
-
-<p>"You won't object to being examined by our N.P.A.?"</p>
-
-<p>"No," replied Saxon.</p>
-
-<p>Villainowski spoke into an inter-communicating audio, "Send in the
-N.P.A."</p>
-
-<p>The neuro-psychoanalyst must have been waiting outside because he
-entered immediately. Saxon regarded him curiously. Government's N.P.A.
-was a lean Cassius-like individual with an ingratiating smile. Saxon
-had taken an immediate dislike to him when he had first seen him
-prowling about the corridors of the research building, but he knew the
-man was a brilliant psychologist.</p>
-
-<p>The N.P.A. approached Saxon rubbing his hands together and smiling.
-"So this is the subject. How are you, Jon? There's no need to ask
-questions. I've studied your record. No question but what there's a
-mental block, is there? Hope we can break it. Sit here, if you don't
-mind."</p>
-
-<p>Saxon took the chair indicated, the N.P.A. facing him.</p>
-
-<p>"Take one of these." He held out a box of hypno-pills.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon selected one, gulped it down. He made no effort to read the minds
-of Murdock, Villainowski or the N.P.A.</p>
-
-<p>The neuro-psychoanalyst was wearing a revolving mirror about an inch
-in diameter on a band about his forehead. He set the mirror in motion
-which caught the room light, alternately darkening and flashing.</p>
-
-<p>"Look into the light, Jon," he said in a calm, sure voice. "Relax and
-watch the light. You are going to sleep when I count three. You can
-feel the effect of the hypno-pill already. When I count three you
-sleep, sleep.... One." A pause. "Two." Pause. "Three...."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>After half an hour the N.P.A.'s voice wasn't so sure. He had given
-Jon three more pills, had tried all the devices at the command of the
-largest neural-clinic in the Empire without the slightest effect.
-Jon Saxon continued to regard the N.P.A. with a half hidden gleam of
-amusement in his dark gray eyes.</p>
-
-<p>The neuro-psychoanalyst sat back, mopped his perspiring face with his
-handkerchief. "It's no use!" he said in a strained voice. "He can't be
-hypnotized!"</p>
-
-<p>"I could have told you that," replied Saxon. "Do you think I haven't
-tried to have the block broken before?"</p>
-
-<p>The N.P.A. swore and got to his feet. "Well, why didn't you say so?" he
-shouted. It was the first time Saxon had ever seen him lose his temper.</p>
-
-<p>"Because these gentlemen have been suspicious of me." He indicated
-Murdock and Villainowski. "If I had offered any objections to being
-hypnotized, they'd have been sure that I was afraid to."</p>
-
-<p>All at once, Saxon experienced the peculiar tingling in scalp and
-skin that warned him the alien creatures, whom he had met in the
-street, were present. He couldn't possibly be mistaken. Once having
-experienced that peculiar inhuman feel it was not to be forgotten or
-confused.</p>
-
-<p>Not only were they invisible, but neither doors nor walls seemed to
-offer any resistance to them.</p>
-
-<p>"<i>Who are you?</i>" he concentrated, but his thought met that strange
-mental barrier. There was no answer.</p>
-
-<p>He realized that the three men were watching him with a curious
-tenseness.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly the N.P.A.'s jaw dropped. An expression of complete
-astonishment lit up his face. "I've got it! I've got it!" he cried.</p>
-
-<p>"Got what?" growled Villainowski, moving uneasily behind his massive
-desk.</p>
-
-<p>"Saxon! Saxon, that's who! My Lord, why didn't it occur to me before.
-He's a&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>The words died suddenly on the N.P.A.'s lips. An expression of fright
-crossed his lean features. Then, without a sound, he crumpled to the
-carpet.</p>
-
-<p>Jon Saxon, staring in horror, realized that the tingling of his skin
-was diminishing. The telepaths were withdrawing.</p>
-
-<p>At the same instant Murdock's chair hit the floor as he leaped across
-the room, dropped to his knee beside the prone figure of the N.P.A. For
-a moment he was bent over the body like a bronze statue, then he turned
-his face up to Villainowski.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon, who had read his thoughts, was amazed at Murdock's passionless
-expression.</p>
-
-<p>"He's dead," the T.I.S. agent said in a toneless voice. "I wouldn't
-have believed it, if I hadn't seen it happen, but he's deader than the
-moon."</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="ph1">IV</p>
-
-<p>Bong! Bong! Bong! Bong! rang the warning gong, reverberating through
-the launching pit.</p>
-
-<p>Mustapha IX had shaken hands for the last time with Villainowski and
-hurried down the gangplank. The ports were all sealed; crew at their
-stations. Outside the pits, the frenzied crowd was delirious with
-excitement. Wasn't it man's first attempt to reach the stars?</p>
-
-<p>Bong! Bong! Bong! Bong! Bong!</p>
-
-<p>On the last stroke the <i>Shooting Star</i> fell silent except for the
-muffled roar of her tubes warming. At the same instant the crowd grew
-impossibly still.</p>
-
-<p>The raw fear, which had made itself felt in spite of the festivities,
-rode to the surface. The strange psychological dread of deep space.</p>
-
-<p>A woman in the relatives' stand suddenly buried her face in her hands,
-her shoulders shaking with violent sobs. She was the wife of the master
-mechanic on the third's watch. A gray-faced man moved towards the
-woman, patted her shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>Just then a continuous violent explosion shook the frail stand like
-an earth tremor. The <i>Shooting Star</i> burst from the pits, trailing a
-comet-tail of orange flame.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, my husband!" wailed the woman, "oh, my husband!" but her voice was
-drowned in the roar.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Jon Saxon threw off his safety belt, glanced across at the strained
-white face of Ileth Urban in the next acceleration chair. "Buck up," he
-grinned. "It's too late to change your mind now."</p>
-
-<p>The girl nervously tucked a curl in place, smiled uncertainly. "Heaven
-help me! Are we going to share all my thoughts during the rest of the
-voyage?"</p>
-
-<p>"Hell, no," said Saxon. "I want to preserve some of my illusions." He
-leaned towards her. "I'll strike a bargain with you, though. If you
-don't mention that I'm a telepath, I'll not report our&mdash;er&mdash;experience
-last night."</p>
-
-<p>"You mean you haven't said anything?"</p>
-
-<p>"No," said Saxon. "Why should I? I didn't have proof. Who'd want to
-tackle General Atomic without cast-iron evidence? On second thought,
-who'd want to tackle General Atomic at all? No one would believe
-me, anyway. Just like they won't believe you if you tell them I'm a
-telepath."</p>
-
-<p>Saxon could see the girl reach a decision. "Oh, I wouldn't say that,"
-he broke in before she could voice her thought. "You've lots of other
-courses. You could snub me or spread tales behind my back."</p>
-
-<p>"I didn't say it!" she retorted hotly. "I thought it. My Lord, I can't
-even call my thoughts my own!"</p>
-
-<p>"Then it's a bargain."</p>
-
-<p>"I didn't say so."</p>
-
-<p>"No. But you've decided to...."</p>
-
-<p>She stamped her feet. "That's what I mean! That's what I mean!"</p>
-
-<p>"Calm down," he said. "Half the staff is staring at you."</p>
-
-<p>Ileth drew a deep breath, shrugged. A grim smile flashed across her
-pretty patrician features.</p>
-
-<p>"If you can stand it," she replied with an unexpected twinkle in her
-hazel-green eyes, "I suppose I can too."</p>
-
-<p>He stood up. "Like to meet the rest of the staff? Fine. You're all
-settled in your cabin, aren't you? No? Then I'll give you a hand as
-soon as we finish our tour of introduction."</p>
-
-<p>Ileth's eyes had grown darker and darker.</p>
-
-<p>"Now don't lose your temper," he said hastily.</p>
-
-<p>"I haven't said a damn word. At least let me get my answers out of my
-mouth."</p>
-
-<p>Saxon laughed, taking her arm. "Come along. We're accelerating at one
-G constant. We'll have no trouble moving around." He hesitated, then
-asked in an off hand manner,</p>
-
-<p>"Has Q62 identified himself yet?"</p>
-
-<p>Ileth looked startled, frightened. She tried to draw away but Saxon
-held onto her arm. "No. No, he hasn't. Please let go. You're hurting
-me, Jon."</p>
-
-<p>But he didn't release her. "Is he aboard the ship?"</p>
-
-<p>"No. I don't know. General Atomic didn't notify me that he would
-be." Abruptly, Ileth didn't seem confused any longer. She raised her
-chin, looked Saxon nakedly in the eyes making no effort to conceal
-her thoughts. "I think he is," she said simply. "But I don't know. He
-hasn't identified himself, if he is. I&mdash;I haven't seen anyone aboard
-that I know. I think I'm the only General Atomic agent aboard, and I'm
-an accredited representative."</p>
-
-<p>Saxon regarded her a moment without speaking. The girl was telling the
-truth as far as she knew. There could be no doubt about that.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Saxon introduced Ileth to Brand, Government's bio-chemist, to Mercedes,
-the gray-haired middle-aged woman who was Government's authority in
-anthropology. He made the circuit of the lounge with her, letting her
-chat with ethnologists and semantics experts, psycho-historians and
-zoologists&mdash;all of Government's brilliant array of specialists. And all
-the while he kept his mind open and alert, sifting their varied thought
-patterns for a betraying sign.</p>
-
-<p>He didn't intercept a single suspicious thought.</p>
-
-<p>They all seemed to be just exactly what they were supposed to be,
-each one an expert in his field, eager and enthusiastic investigators
-beginning an unparalleled adventure. Saxon could discover no evidences
-that any of them had sold out to General Atomic.</p>
-
-<p>If Q62 or any General Atomic agent were among Government's staff, they
-were perfect in dissembling their thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>From the lounge, Saxon showed Ileth about the ship. He could see it was
-an experience for the girl.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Shooting Star</i> had been built along the general design of a
-cruiser, heavily armed and armored against the possibilities of hostile
-races inhabiting the planets of the Alpha Centaurian suns.</p>
-
-<p>Her crew was small. Government's staff of scientists numbered fourteen;
-and only four of the corporations were represented: General Atomic,
-Tri-World, Amalgamated Plastic and United Spaceways. In spite of the
-mass of equipment and a year's emergency ration of fuel and supplies,
-they were not crowded.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon led Ileth through the control room, the officer's mess, the
-engine room and observation deck. Everywhere they went, Saxon probed
-the brains of crew and officers.</p>
-
-<p>At the end of two hours, he still had found exactly nothing. Apparently
-Q62 was not aboard. Ileth asked slyly, "Did you find him?"</p>
-
-<p>They had entered the deck on which the cabins were located and were
-passing the closed door of number seven.</p>
-
-<p>"Q62?" said Saxon with a puzzled frown. "No&mdash;" He halted abruptly,
-seizing the girl's arm.</p>
-
-<p>"Jon! What is it?"</p>
-
-<p>"Be quiet!"</p>
-
-<p>Saxon's scalp was tingling as if minute electrical shocks were coursing
-through the roots of his hair.</p>
-
-<p>The Aliens?</p>
-
-<p>The feel was unmistakable to his extra-human sixth sense. And it was
-emanating from Cabin Seven!</p>
-
-<p>Like a cat he reached the door in one silent bound, pressed the button.
-The panel slid back noiselessly. Except for a blade of light lancing
-into the cabin from the lighted passage, only darkness lurked beyond
-the doorway.</p>
-
-<p>The alien unhuman feel was suddenly so strong that it was like a cold
-draft pouring through the blackened entrance, sending chills rippling
-up his spine.</p>
-
-<p>Ileth's eyes were enormous. Saxon could hear her frightened erratic
-breathing. Her fear-thoughts beat at his brain. "<i>What is it? What has
-he found? What's wrong?</i>"</p>
-
-<p>In spite of himself, Saxon could feel the blood drain out of his
-cheeks. He wanted suddenly to slam the door and run blindly down the
-corridor, away from that strange creature lurking in the dark of Cabin
-Seven.</p>
-
-<p>He controlled himself, reached noiselessly inside the door, pressed the
-switch. Light flooded the cabin.</p>
-
-<p>"Why, it's just a girl!" said Ileth, who was peering wide-eyed over
-Saxon's shoulder. She giggled nervously.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon stared at the occupant of the cabin, scarcely crediting his eyes.
-It was a girl right enough, a flaxen haired girl sleeping easily on her
-back in the narrow bunk.</p>
-
-<p>A thin flexoplas coverlet was thrown across her. One slim bare leg
-dangled over the edge of the bunk. Her face, Saxon saw, was heart
-shaped, the closed eyelids delicately blue.</p>
-
-<p>At Ileth's giggle, the creature opened her eyes, sat upright with
-a half-suppressed scream. Ileth backed out of the doorway in
-embarrassment, but Saxon stood as if turned to stone.</p>
-
-<p>The tingling sensation was sending goose flesh racing over his skin.
-The alien emanations were streaming straight from the girl on the bunk.</p>
-
-<p>He recovered himself, thought violently, angrily, "<i>Who are you?</i>"</p>
-
-<p>The girl stared at him without making a sound. Saxon realized that her
-eyes were amber as topaz, large and strangely lambent. Then a faint
-smile twitched the corners of her lips. She made no move to escape, not
-even to cover her breasts and shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>"<i>You!</i>" the thought reached Saxon tinged with amusement. "<i>It would be
-you who discovered me!</i>"</p>
-
-<p>She touched a tiny instrument strapped to her wrist, which Saxon
-noticed for the first time.</p>
-
-<p>"<i>Who are you?</i>" he thought again, then narrowed his eyes with crazed
-disbelief.</p>
-
-<p>He could see the bulkhead through the girl. She gave a low laugh. The
-flexoplas coverlet, which had lain so lightly over her lap, collapsed
-slowly.</p>
-
-<p>The girl was gone, dissolved. Only her throaty laugh lingered in the
-still air.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon rubbed his eyes. He felt Ileth trembling against him as if she
-had a chill. Setting his jaw, he stepped up to the bunk, felt the
-sheets. They were warm and still held the impression of the girl's body.</p>
-
-<p>He straightened, realized that the tingling in his scalp had ceased.
-The alien telepath was gone. But where?</p>
-
-<p>"Let's get the hell out of here," Ileth said vehemently.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon followed her into the passage, switched off the lights, closed
-the door softly behind him.</p>
-
-<p>"I don't believe it!" said Ileth. "I don't want to believe it." Her
-fine patrician features were paper white, making her black lashes
-and eyebrows stand out like heavy strokes of a crayon. Her lips were
-bloodless.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon shook his head in bewilderment.</p>
-
-<p>"Couldn't you read her mind?" asked Ileth.</p>
-
-<p>"She had the most perfect mental barrier I've ever encountered. I
-couldn't read a thing. Only...."</p>
-
-<p>"Only what?"</p>
-
-<p>"Nothing," he said abruptly, shaking his massive shoulders as if to
-free them from a burden. "Nothing. I think we'd better keep our mouths
-shut about this too. If we went around telling what we've seen, they'd
-throw us in the psychopathic ward."</p>
-
-<p>Ileth shuddered.</p>
-
-<p>"Maybe it was an hallucination," she suggested. "Maybe we're nutty as a
-fruit cake, I hope."</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="ph1">V</p>
-
-<p>"You've been through the Little Death before," said Saxon. He and
-Murdock, the T.I.S. agent, were in the control room, Murdock's eye
-glued to the scanner. "What's it like, Murdock?"</p>
-
-<p>The gaunt, frosty T.I.S. agent took his eyes from the scanner, faced
-Saxon.</p>
-
-<p>"Not so bad," he replied laconically.</p>
-
-<p>"I've heard it's a pretty rugged experience."</p>
-
-<p>Murdock allowed himself a tight smile. "That depends on how active a
-social consciousness you have. You're a non-Newtonian physicist. You
-know the Pachner conception of the space-time continuum better than I
-do. Villainowski's stellar drive inverts the Newtonian concept that a
-vehicle travels through space during a passage of time. It operates
-through time during a passage of space.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, yes," Saxon interrupted impatiently. "But the effects of the time
-field.... What do you experience while the ship is in the time field?"</p>
-
-<p>"That's the Little Death," replied Murdock in a dry voice, "though the
-name is misleading. Actually you experience a segment of your own life,
-either the past, the future, or the present. As Villainowski would
-explain it, time is co-existent, while in the time field our lives are
-spread out around us, but because we're equipped with three-dimensional
-sense organs we're restricted to a single series of episodes anywhere
-along our life span."</p>
-
-<p>Saxon frowned and said, "In other words, it's just as if we returned to
-the past and relived some incident that occurred to us before?"</p>
-
-<p>"Right. Or into the future and experienced something that hasn't
-happened yet."</p>
-
-<p>Saxon's frown deepened. "But what's so rugged about that?"</p>
-
-<p>"Nothing," rejoined Murdock dryly, "if you've lived an exemplary life.
-It's not pleasant, though, to live over and over again a period when
-you committed murder say, or were terribly frightened, or even did some
-little thing that you've been trying your best to forget since."</p>
-
-<p>Saxon, caught a brief mental flash from the T.I.S. agent, as he shoved
-the picture of a girl with pretty Slavic features out of his mind.</p>
-
-<p>"I'm not looking forward to the Little Death!" Murdock said dryly, and
-returned his eye to the scanner.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon leaned back in the acceleration chair. The captain was bending
-over the three-dimensional space-charts along with the third mate. A
-spaceman stood at the robot pilot. Another, whom Murdock had replaced
-at the scanner, was reclining in a second acceleration chair.</p>
-
-<p>There was an air of tension in the control room. Saxon realized
-suddenly that the captain was checking the robot controls.</p>
-
-<p>That could mean only one thing. It was nearing time for Villainowski to
-switch the <i>Shooting Star</i> onto the stellar drive. They would be going
-into the Little Death any moment. Saxon sat up abruptly. "How long
-before we switch over, Captain?"</p>
-
-<p>The captain looked up from the charts. "We've attained minimum
-velocity. Villainowski's in the engine room now. I'm expecting orders
-to turn her over right away."</p>
-
-<p>Murdock turned from the scanner again, fixed Saxon with his pale blue
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>"By the way, Jon, you've been prowling the ship from stem to stern the
-past three days." His voice was pitched too low to reach the officers
-checking the star maps and robot controls. "Have you a line on Q62 yet?"</p>
-
-<p>Saxon could read suspicion in the T.I.S. agent's mind. "No," he
-admitted, "and I'm more puzzled than you. Ileth doesn't know who Q62
-is, or even if he's aboard, although she's been commanded by General
-Atomic to take her orders from him."</p>
-
-<p>"You're sure of that?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes. I'm sure of it."</p>
-
-<p>There was a pause, each man busy with his own thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>"I'd swear," Saxon broke the silence, "that Q62 isn't aboard, nor any
-other General Atomic agents."</p>
-
-<p>Murdock regarded him speculatively and Saxon caught his thought, "<i>What
-the hell makes him so damned sure?</i>"</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Sure? Saxon thought to himself. He wasn't sure about anything. The
-alien stowaway was still aboard. His sixth sense had warned him of her
-nearness a hundred times during his sporadic jaunts about the ship. But
-he had been unable to establish contact with her.</p>
-
-<p>He had kept his mind open to the wash of thoughts from crew and
-staff, but, so far as he had been able to learn, they were all loyal
-to Government. Not even in their secret innermost thoughts had he
-discovered any evidence that a traitor was aboard.</p>
-
-<p>Murdock interrupted his reflections, asking, "Have you any idea what
-that N.P.A. had discovered before he died?"</p>
-
-<p>Saxon started, looked at the T.I.S. agent uncomfortably. Murdock's
-irrelevant question had conjured a vivid picture in his mind of the
-death of the N.P.A. in Villainowski's office.</p>
-
-<p>"I don't know," he said miserably, beginning to understand how
-uncomfortable the Little Death might be. "I would give a lot to know.
-He may have had a clue to what I am."</p>
-
-<p>Murdock's cold blue eyes narrowed, and he regarded Saxon with a
-peculiar intensity. "<i>That's a devilish odd way for him to put it</i>,"
-the T.I.S. agent was thinking. "<i>What he is! Now why the hell would he
-say that?</i>"</p>
-
-<p>Saxon realized with chagrin that he had made a slip. He should have
-said, "Who I am," not "What I am." No human ever doubted that he was a
-genuine specimen of <i>homo sapiens</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The engine room telegraph buzzed suddenly, and when the captain
-answered, Villainowski's voice reached the two men.</p>
-
-<p>"Sound the general alarm, Captain. Turn the ship over to the robot
-control. We're going into the Little Death."</p>
-
-<p>"Right," said the captain. He looked pale and worn and older. He
-snapped off the telegraph, turned to the third. "Sound the general
-alarm and turn on the public address system, then go to your cabin."
-The third nodded, reached for the switch.</p>
-
-<p>An ugly clangor broke through the <i>Shooting Star</i> from stem to
-stern, followed immediately by a harsh metallic voice issuing from
-strategically placed audios.</p>
-
-<p>"All officers, members of unlicensed personnel and staff report to your
-quarters at once and lie on your bunks."</p>
-
-<p>There was a series of clicks as the ship went smoothly over to the
-robot controls.</p>
-
-<p>The command ordering everyone to their cabins was repeated three more
-times.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon realized there was no one in the control room, but himself,
-Murdock, and the captain.</p>
-
-<p>"Coming?" asked the captain from the doorway.</p>
-
-<p>"In a minute," Murdock replied.</p>
-
-<p>The captain departed hastily, and Saxon followed the T.I.S. agent
-across the deck to the control board, where a single dial was marked
-off in parsecs.</p>
-
-<p>"I'm damned curious about this four dimensional drive," Murdock
-confessed, as he dropped into an acceleration chair before the dial.
-"I've been through it before. But I'd like to follow its operation here
-in the control room as long as possible before we blank out. Are you
-game?"</p>
-
-<p>"Sure," Saxon's voice was eager. He took a seat beside Murdock, staring
-at the dial marked off in parsecs with fascination.</p>
-
-<p>He became conscious of a sobering silence. The robot controls had cut
-off the jets. A giddy feeling of weightlessness possessed him.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly the radiograph began to click off a message. He saw Murdock
-frown, tear off the tape, read it.</p>
-
-<p>"Good Lord!" the T.I.S. agent burst out. "Read it! We've got to get to
-Villainowski before we go onto the stellar drive!" He leaped to his
-feet, went soaring in the air, a pained expression on his face. Murdock
-had forgotten their weightless condition now that the jets were off.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon who had snatched the strip of paper, flashed his eye over the
-words.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>IMPERIAL HEADQUARTERS:</p>
-
-<p>TO CHIEF J. VILLAINOWSKI. URGENT. ORDERS CANCELLED. TURN BACK
-TO EARTH WITHOUT DELAY. ALL FIVE COPIES OF STELLAR DRIVE STOLEN.
-GOVERNMENT CANNOT RISK YOUR LIFE IN DEEP SPACE UNTIL YOU CAN REPLACE
-PLANS.</p>
-
-<p>MUSTAPHA IX.</p></div>
-
-<p>Saxon realized the machine was still clicking off the message over and
-over again.</p>
-
-<p>Murdock had pushed himself to the bulkhead, where he kicked off,
-gliding through the door. Saxon followed cautiously, conscious of a
-yellow mist collecting in the control room.</p>
-
-<p>The T.I.S. agent got just beyond the doorway when he floated
-unconscious to the deck.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon made it to the head of the ladder. Then he, too, lost control
-over his muscles.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/illus1.jpg" alt=""/>
- <div class="caption">
- <p><i>Saxon made it to the head of the ladder. Then he, too, lost control over his muscles.</i></p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p>The mist was like soup, thick yellow pea soup.</p>
-
-<p>His last conscious thought was, "So this is the Little Death!"</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>"Here! Why are you crying?" asked the big white giant. His voice was
-gentle, compassionate, and he was naked except for a kilt of a strange
-gleaming material like woven light.</p>
-
-<p>"But I don't want to go," Saxon protested in a reedy, childish tone.
-He realized in dismay that the giant wasn't a giant at all, but normal
-and man-sized. "I don't want to go," he heard himself tearfully
-repeating.</p>
-
-<p>They were in a room, the little boy that had been Saxon and the big
-white man, and a door across the room was opening. The little boy that
-was Saxon shrank against the man.</p>
-
-<p>A woman appeared in the doorway. She was tall and beautiful and dressed
-like the man in a gleaming kilt. She smiled at Saxon, but he was not
-reassured. He hung back from crossing the threshold.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon saw a troubled look pass between the two. Then the man steeled
-himself, picked up the squirming boy, carried him through the doorway.</p>
-
-<p>It was a strange sensation that possessed the mature Saxon, stretched
-on the cold deck at the head of the ladder to the engine room. He
-wasn't dreaming. He was the little boy, and yet he seemed to be outside
-himself, watching his own actions, appraising himself like the detached
-half of a dual personality.</p>
-
-<p>He was in the time field, Saxon realized. That was it! He was reliving
-a segment of his life span that had taken place before he was eleven!</p>
-
-<p>His heart leaped spasmodically. At last the curtain was being raised on
-those blank years of childhood!</p>
-
-<p>The room into which the man carried him, Saxon saw, was larger that
-the anteroom and cluttered with strange machinery, ugly machinery.
-The far wall was a solid bank of windows, through which he could see
-a green meadow rolling gently away to blue foothills in the distance.
-Light poured through the windows from a blazing sun high overhead and a
-second orange sun was just rising.</p>
-
-<p>The man deposited him in a chair. Saxon quit thrashing, as the woman
-fitted a skull-cap over his head, making minute adjustments. A cable
-led from the peak of the skull-cap to a frightening machine which the
-woman bent over next, and set in operation.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon could feel a rush of thought pouring into his brain. Queer
-thoughts couched in semantically obscure words.</p>
-
-<p>One stood out. "<i>Earth.</i>" It was repeated many times before he began
-to comprehend the import of the alien symbols. "<i>Earth is the third
-planet of a star known to its inhabitants as Sol!</i>"</p>
-
-<p>With a feeling of strangeness the Saxon who observed realized that the
-boy was being taught to speak English!</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Saxon shook his head groggily, pushed himself to his hands and knees
-and found himself floating six feet in the air. He had forgotten that
-the jet drive was still off.</p>
-
-<p>It came back with a suddenness that flung Saxon to the metal deck.</p>
-
-<p>He scrambled to his feet, his mind in a whirl. Forgotten temporarily
-were the emergency orders commanding them to return to Earth. If
-Villainowski had been right, then Saxon had actually relived an event
-which had transpired before he was eleven.</p>
-
-<p>Then who the hell was he?</p>
-
-<p>He returned to the control room, stepping over the unconscious body of
-Murdock, who had not yet recovered from the effects of the time field.</p>
-
-<p>The dial on the control board read 1.3 parsecs!</p>
-
-<p>He jumped for the scanner, clamped his eye to the aperture, and
-immediately jumped back!</p>
-
-<p>Dead ahead was a huge blazing sun!</p>
-
-<p>It looked so close that the <i>Shooting Star</i> appeared to be falling
-straight into the maw of erupting atomic energy.</p>
-
-<p>But reason returned, and he knew they must still be millions of miles
-away. He went back to the scanner, spotting first a second sun not so
-close, then a third, small and red like a fiery coin.</p>
-
-<p>The ternary system of Alpha Centauri! They were out of the Solar System!</p>
-
-<p>"Please," said a girl's voice behind him. "Stand back from the scanner!
-Don't try for your gun, Saxon, or I will be forced to shoot!"</p>
-
-<p>Saxon whirled around.</p>
-
-<p>Ileth Urban stood in the doorway, a dart gun leveled at his stomach.
-Behind her, he saw the shame-faced Murdock surrounded by the crew.
-Murdock was helpless, his arms in the air.</p>
-
-<p>"The crew have mutinied," said Ileth. "The ship is now under the
-control of General Atomic."</p>
-
-<p>Saxon's jaw sagged. He said, "So you are Q62." It wasn't so much a
-question as a statement. He knew. He could read it in her thoughts. But
-why hadn't he been able to see it there before?</p>
-
-<p>It wasn't possible, but there could be no doubt. Ileth Urban was Q62.</p>
-
-<p>Then the thoughts of the men in the corridor made themselves felt.
-Every man jack of them had gone over to General Atomic, not recently,
-but weeks and months ago, before they had ever left Earth.</p>
-
-<p>He dropped into a chair, his head in his hands. How had they been able
-to disguise their thoughts all this time?</p>
-
-<p>He looked at Ileth in her chartreuse green short-waisted jacket. She
-held the dart gun leveled at his chest. Her patrician features were set
-in grim unhappy lines.</p>
-
-<p>"Something!" Saxon thought wildly, "Something has gone terribly wrong!"</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="ph1">VI</p>
-
-<p>The T.I.S. agent, his bony fingers locked beneath his head, was
-stretched face up on his bunk. There were five of them in the ship's
-brig&mdash;Saxon, Murdock and Villainowski, Mercedes, the anthropologist and
-Brand, the bio-chemist.</p>
-
-<p>"Jon, that girl's crazy about you."</p>
-
-<p>"What?" Jon Saxon swung up his head, regarded Murdock coldly.</p>
-
-<p>Without moving, the T.I.S. agent repeated, "She's in love with you,
-Jon. Though what Ileth can find to love in that ugly granite mug of
-yours is beyond comprehension."</p>
-
-<p>Saxon said, "So what?" Everyone was watching him speculatively.</p>
-
-<p>They had been cooped together for nine days now, the four men and the
-woman. Yesterday the ship had landed. But none of them knew where.</p>
-
-<p>"So what?" Murdock echoed breaking the silence. "My Lord, man, play up
-to her. She's eating her heart out for you. Can't you see it's our only
-chance?"</p>
-
-<p>"No," said Saxon stiffly and blocked out their thoughts. "No, I don't.
-You know as well as I do, that the crew and the officers, even the
-staff, except Mercedes and Brand here sold out to General Atomic.
-Suppose I did persuade Ileth to let us out. Suppose she comes over to
-our side&mdash;which I tell you right now she won't&mdash;but suppose she did.
-What possible chance would the five of us have against sixty armed
-desperate men and women? Hell, Murdock, we couldn't even get the ship
-back to Earth by ourselves!" He hesitated. "Besides it strikes me as a
-contemptible stunt...."</p>
-
-<p>Murdock's cold blue eyes flashed. He sat up, swinging his feet to the
-deck. "Do you think we're playing a game?"</p>
-
-<p>Mercedes, the gray-haired woman, interrupted, "Don't nag him, Murdock.
-Everyone isn't a cold-blooded monster like you."</p>
-
-<p>The T.I.S. agent grunted his disgust, lay back down and rolled to his
-stomach.</p>
-
-<p>Mercedes was a pleasant-faced, middle-aged woman with bright black eyes
-like a parrot.</p>
-
-<p>"I don't see yet," she continued imperturbably, "how General Atomic
-could contact everyone before we sailed." She smoothed her skirts,
-sitting primly on the brig's only chair, and cast a sly look at
-Murdock. "Not with the vaunted T.I.S. on guard."</p>
-
-<p>"Humph!" came Murdock's muffled voice from the pillow. "What's so
-damned impossible about that? We couldn't watch the beggars all the
-time." He rolled back and sat up again.</p>
-
-<p>"No. What bothers me is why they didn't give themselves away. They were
-investigated. All of them were reputable Government men, their fathers
-Government men before 'em."</p>
-
-<p>"It's hard to refuse a million credits," Saxon pointed out.</p>
-
-<p>Murdock's pale blue eyes jerked to Saxon. "How do you know?"</p>
-
-<p>Before Saxon could reply, Mercedes said, "General Atomic offered us all
-a million credits. They did to me and Brand, I know. We reported it to
-the T.I.S."</p>
-
-<p>"Yeah," said Murdock with a frown. "Yeah, and we questioned them with
-the lie-detector. Not once, but every time they left the building.
-They were psychoanalyzed and searched. And every damned one of them
-was certified loyal to Government. They never gave a sign that they'd
-sold out to General Atomic, not a sign. Why, the bums acted as if they
-didn't know it themselves."</p>
-
-<p>"They didn't!" put in Saxon.</p>
-
-<p>Their eyes swung back to the burly nuclear physicist. He read
-scepticism, doubt, curiosity in their minds.</p>
-
-<p>"What do you mean??" Murdock exploded.</p>
-
-<p>"I mean just what I said. They actually didn't know that they had sold
-out to General Atomic until after the Little Death. It's simple enough.
-I'm surprised no one's thought of it before. Ever since Charcot back in
-the nineteenth century....'"</p>
-
-<p>"Hypnotism!" Villainowski burst out. "That's it, of course!
-Post-hypnotic commands!"</p>
-
-<p>Saxon nodded. "I wasn't sure. I'm not sure even yet." But he was. He
-had known it the moment he had looked into Ileth's mind the day of the
-mutiny.</p>
-
-<p>Murdock frowned, said "Post-hypnotic commands? I don't follow you."</p>
-
-<p>"There's nothing mysterious about it, actually," explained Saxon.
-"When the men sold out to General Atomic they must have submitted to
-being hypnotized by GA's neuro-psychoanalyst. They could be given
-orders while in the hypnotic state, then commanded to forget them,
-forget in fact that they had sold out to General Atomic until after the
-Little Death. The Little Death was to act as a post-hypnotic command,
-recalling their memories and instructions."</p>
-
-<p>"By Pluto!" ejaculated Murdock. "I believe you've hit it!" He regarded
-Saxon with increased respect.</p>
-
-<p>The slight, homely Villainowski rubbed a nine day's growth of
-beard, musing, "It was a beautiful scheme. Then men couldn't betray
-themselves. They couldn't be tripped up by the lie-detector because
-they honestly believed they were still loyal to Government."</p>
-
-<p>Again Saxon nodded. "I was trying to find Q62," he said, "when Ileth
-was Q62 all the time, although she didn't know it until she woke up
-from the Little Death."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Brand, the bio-chemist, who had been lying on an upper bunk silently
-listening, broke into the conversation. "But why did General Atomic
-wait until after the Little Death before having their men seize the
-ship? It doesn't make sense. I should think they'd want to get the
-drive to one of their laboratories, where it could be examined as soon
-as possible."</p>
-
-<p>It was Murdock who replied. "That's not difficult to explain either.
-General Atomic couldn't afford to take a chance. If they'd grabbed the
-<i>Shooting Star</i> within reach of Government's space navy, they would
-have been apprehended sure. Remember, every observatory in the System
-had us in view until we went into the time field.</p>
-
-<p>"No one but Villainowski knows how to use the stellar drive, so they
-couldn't have used that to escape. But after we reached Alpha Centauri
-we were beyond reach of the electronic telescope on Luna, even beyond
-radio contact. Their engineers would have a chance to examine the drive
-and learn enough to operate it, at least. They could return then.
-Nothing can catch the <i>Shooting Star</i> when she's operating in the
-Little Death."</p>
-
-<p>Saxon listened with somber eyes to the T.I.S. agent's explanation. It
-was right, he felt, as far as it went. But it didn't account for the
-aliens, nor for Saxon's strange experiences during the Little Death,
-nor the death of that N.P.A. before they sailed.</p>
-
-<p>He heard the door to the brig click and glanced up just as it slid
-aside.</p>
-
-<p>Ileth Urban stood in the entrance.</p>
-
-<p>Ileth's green jodphur-like trousers emphasized her long legs and slim
-waist. Her black shoulder length hair had been pushed back, disclosing
-small peaked ears.</p>
-
-<p>She came inside, with a look of determination, and the guard closed the
-door behind her, but didn't lock it.</p>
-
-<p>"I ..." she began, caught Saxon's eyes and blushed furiously.
-Unconsciously her chin went up and she squared her shoulders. "I don't
-know how to say what I've come to tell you." Again she hesitated,
-biting her lip. "I think it'll be good news...."</p>
-
-<p>"Good news?" echoed Murdock sarcastically. "Have the crew been
-massacred by Centaurians?"</p>
-
-<p>"There's no sign of living Centaurians yet," she replied. "Not on this
-planet anyway."</p>
-
-<p>"Living Centaurians?" asked Murdock. "What do you mean 'living'
-Centaurians? What have you found?"</p>
-
-<p>The silence was alive. Saxon could feel the intangible fear of deep
-space grip every one of them. There was, he realized, a decided
-pathologic quality about it, as if every one of them were not quite
-sane on the subject.</p>
-
-<p>"A city," said Ileth in a suppressed voice.</p>
-
-<p>There was a quick intake of breaths.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," she went on, "a city. About twenty-five kilometers northeast of
-here. A perfectly huge city without a single inhabitant."</p>
-
-<p>"What planet is this?" Villainowski asked suddenly.</p>
-
-<p>"There's no harm in telling you, I suppose," said Ileth, "because we
-haven't the faintest notion. Our astronomer says that it belongs to
-Alpha Centauri A, although he hasn't figured its period yet. He says
-it's about midway between Alpha Centauri A and Alpha Centauri B. It's a
-little larger than Earth but not so dense. Gravity is about four fifths
-what it is at home." Her face sobered at the word "home." "Oxygen
-content a little high, but not much. The rest of the atmosphere is
-composed principally of non-poisonous inert gases. Now you know as much
-as we do."</p>
-
-<p>Jon Saxon became aware of a thought emanating from Murdock: "<i>Seize the
-girl. Dictate terms to the others.</i>" The same thought, Saxon realized,
-was forming in their bio-chemist's mind as well.</p>
-
-<p>Ileth must have suspected something, because her hand crept up to her
-small high breasts and she said, "Before I go on, you'd better know
-that I'm not so unprotected as I look. We were all hypnotized back
-on Earth and our orders given to us in that condition. Then we were
-commanded to forget them until after the Little Death. I'm telling you
-this so you'll understand."</p>
-
-<p>The prisoners exchanged glances.</p>
-
-<p>"General Atomic," Ileth continued hurriedly, "prepared for any
-eventuality. If anything happens to me, Q63 will take over. I don't
-know who he is, and he doesn't know it himself, but any accident
-befalling me will be the post-hypnotic signal for him to remember.
-There's also a Q64, Q65&mdash;all the way to Q70. So you see it's useless to
-think that by doing anything to me you can get the upper hand."</p>
-
-<p>"Rather like queen bees," suggested Saxon. "Secret order with a
-vengeance."</p>
-
-<p>"<i>Even from you, darling!</i>" he caught Ileth's irritating thought.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>He saw Murdock relax on his bunk, intercepted his furious frustration.
-The T.I.S. agent, he realized, was like cold flame on the inside.</p>
-
-<p>"But that's not my news," Ileth said. "I've come to offer you your
-freedom&mdash;within limits, of course."</p>
-
-<p>"Eh?" said Villainowski in surprise, and the rest tensed expectantly.</p>
-
-<p>Ileth said, "General Atomic believed that it would be to their
-advantage to go ahead with the expedition as soon as we got control
-of the ship. We would be on the spot, and any information relating to
-Alpha Centauri's planetary systems, natural resources, inhabitants (if
-any), possibilities of colonization and trade&mdash;that sort of thing&mdash;is
-of the utmost importance.</p>
-
-<p>"I feel...." She hesitated, and Saxon caught a glimpse again of that
-same intolerable fear gnawing at her mind.</p>
-
-<p>"I feel that we should stick together&mdash;while we're here at least. If
-we're fighting among ourselves...."</p>
-
-<p>"In other words," Murdock interrupted in a voice without inflection,
-"you're asking us to go on with the expedition as if nothing's
-happened?"</p>
-
-<p>"Only while we're here," she hastened to assure him. "You won't be
-given arms, of course. There are only five of you. What earthly chance
-would you have against the entire crew and the rest of the staff? And
-this way you won't have to stay locked in the brig. You can carry on
-with your investigations. We&mdash;we don't know what alien form of life
-inhabits this planet. But the city...."</p>
-
-<p>She bit her lip again. "The city was peculiar."</p>
-
-<p>A short uncomfortable silence greeted her statement; then Mercedes, the
-gray-haired anthropologist asked, "What do you mean, child?"</p>
-
-<p>"I don't know how to define it. Wait until you see it."</p>
-
-<p>But Saxon had intercepted an image in Ileth's mind&mdash;a distorted glimpse
-of a vast beautiful city stretching for kilometer after kilometer
-without a soul anywhere. A sobering chill prickled up his spine. He
-said, "I, for my part, am willing to call a truce, Ileth."</p>
-
-<p>The girl glanced at him gratefully. Saxon became aware of a passionate
-thought: "<i>Oh, the darling stiffnecked bear!</i>" The girl's color
-heightened suddenly. She began to think furiously: "<i>Two times two is
-four; three times two is six; four times two is eight</i>...."</p>
-
-<p>Saxon grinned at her knowingly, to her added confusion.</p>
-
-<p>"<i>I hate you!</i>" she thought.</p>
-
-<p>Villainowski jumped to his feet, saying, "Of course we accept. We all
-accept. But let me warn you, young woman, aliens or no aliens, I don't
-care if we spend the rest of our lives in the Centaurian system, I'm
-not going to explain my stellar drive to your scoundrels!"</p>
-
-<p>Ileth turned to him almost gratefully. "Oh, that doesn't matter. Our
-engineers are examining it. They've assured me that they can take us
-back to Earth."</p>
-
-<p>Villainowski looked crestfallen.</p>
-
-<p>"Tomorrow," said Ileth in a firm voice, "we're starting to investigate
-the city. Mercedes is the anthropologist. I particularly wanted her and
-Saxon along."</p>
-
-<p>"What about the rest of us?" Brand the bio-chemist, asked.</p>
-
-<p>Ileth ticked them off on her fingers. "Dr. Villainowski is an
-astro-physicist, I believe. We have the telescope mounted. He and our
-men are to locate any other planets in the system. You, Dr. Brand, are
-to go with Loar, the Martian, on an expedition into the hills to the
-south. Mr. Murdock will be stationed temporarily with the emergency
-crew aboard the <i>Shooting Star</i>."</p>
-
-<p>Saxon realized that she had cleverly separated them. At the same moment
-he recognized that leap of fear in Ileth whenever she thought about
-outside. It was pathologic.</p>
-
-<p>"My Lord!" he thought, "was their fear of deep space driving them
-insane?"</p>
-
-<p>Ileth was saying, "You can have your old cabins back. I won't see you
-again until tomorrow. We&mdash;we're still on Earth time because of the
-peculiar daylight hours. Until tomorrow."</p>
-
-<p>She turned, head bent and hurried abruptly through the door.</p>
-
-<p>The prisoners looked at each other in vague alarm, unconsciously
-drawing closer together. In each of their minds, Saxon read the same
-thing&mdash;the blind unspoken terror of deep space!</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The helicopter whispered scarcely a hundred feet above the rolling
-plain, while Saxon stared hungrily out of the windows, unable to
-satisfy his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Alpha Centauri A, a scintillating yellow orb like Sol, stood in
-mid-sky. The orange disc that was Alpha Centauri B, the second half of
-the binary, was just rising. Proxima was not in sight.</p>
-
-<p>Directly below he could see a flock of plants that looked like tumble
-weeds except that they were a weirdly mottled yellow and green. They
-rolled along in a herd pausing to nibble at new shoots of the pale
-green grass. "Cannibal Plants," their botanist had named them because
-of their feeding habits.</p>
-
-<p>Herbivorous plants!</p>
-
-<p>Their botanist, Saxon thought, was going quietly insane trying to
-classify the staggering complexity of utterly alien forms of plant
-growth.</p>
-
-<p>"Weird, isn't it?" A woman's rich husky voice addressed Saxon. "It
-sends goose flesh up my spine." Saxon tore his eyes away from the
-window.</p>
-
-<p>The person sitting beside him was Clo-Javel, a black-eyed woman with
-cadmium-yellow hair. There was a sleek disturbing fullness to her
-breasts and hips that was echoed in her red lips and magnificent eyes.
-She must be thirty-five but no one except possibly the T.I.S. knew her
-exact age.</p>
-
-<p>Clo-Javel's first passion was archaeology, Saxon knew. Her second was
-men. He asked, "How many pieces of silver did General Atomic give you?"</p>
-
-<p>Clo-Javel regarded him with an amused tolerant smile. "Don't be rude,
-Jon."</p>
-
-<p>Saxon, looking into the woman's mind, realized that his thrust hadn't
-disturbed her in the least. Clo-Javel apparently had no more honor than
-morals.</p>
-
-<p>There was no question, though, about her archaeological ability. Her
-reconstruction of the New York skyscrapers, which had perished early in
-the Atom Age, were famous.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon was appalled. He had expected to uncover a sense of shame among
-the crew and staff for their treachery. But, if they felt any remorse,
-they never let it rise into the realms of conscious thought. He had
-probed their minds one after another, his hope of persuading some of
-them to return to the Government fold diminished with each one.</p>
-
-<p>At one stroke they had received wealth and better positions with
-General Atomic's research bureau. They were determined not to lose
-them. Furthermore, to a man they were convinced that General Atomic
-would be the next government.</p>
-
-<p>He glanced about the cabin. There were nine of them accompanying Ileth
-to the deserted city. He allowed their thoughts to wash across his
-mind, eager, excited, fearful thoughts like half spoken words.</p>
-
-<p>"Look!" Ileth cried suddenly and pointed ahead. She was piloting the
-helicopter and spoke over her shoulder. "Look! There's the city!"</p>
-
-<p>Saxon saw a maze of towers scintillating like jewels in the combined
-light of the twin suns. He saw endless avenues and squares and parks.
-It was all bright and raw like a city seen in a shimmering mirage.</p>
-
-<p>He swallowed a lump in his throat. He felt.... Why, damn it, he felt as
-if he were coming home after a long time.</p>
-
-<p>Home?</p>
-
-<p>He thought suddenly of his extra-human senses. Maybe this <i>was</i> home!
-Could it be that he was not of Earth at all? Not a mutant of whom his
-parents had been ashamed and who had deserted him at the Institute, as
-he had always believed?</p>
-
-<p>Then Ileth was dropping the helicopter safely into a beautiful square
-ringed with vari-colored translucent buildings.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing moved. Not the faintest echo of a sound reached Saxon's ears.
-He found himself holding his breath as the 'copter landed with a faint
-jar.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon's scalp began to prickle warningly, and such a feel of alienism
-swept over him, exciting his extra-human sixth sense that he felt giddy.</p>
-
-<p>The city wasn't deserted. It was densely populated.</p>
-
-<p>All around him, everywhere, were aliens. He could sense their movements
-along the streets, inside the buildings. Hundreds of them.</p>
-
-<p>He heard Ileth's strangely chastened voice. "It's so uncannily
-deserted. No one. Absolutely no one. What do you suppose happened to
-the&mdash;the things who built this city?"</p>
-
-<p>Saxon had to clench his jaw to keep from shouting, "They're here! You
-fools, let's get away while we've still got a chance! They're all
-around us!"</p>
-
-<p>Instead, he kept silent, little beads of perspiration breaking through
-his prickling skin.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="ph1">VII</p>
-
-<p>Jon Saxon was the first man out of the helicopter. He stood stock-still
-while the others climbed out, his scalp tingling, his eyes sweeping the
-magnificent panorama. The faces of buildings like the sheer fracture of
-tinted ice walled in the square, with here and there a canyon street
-slicing off from it.</p>
-
-<p>Ileth scrambled out last, asked, "Jon, what's wrong? You're pale as a
-ghost."</p>
-
-<p>"I don't know." The tingling in his hair roots was becoming less
-pronounced as his extra-human sixth sense adjusted. He was still aware
-of the aliens but not uncomfortably so.</p>
-
-<p>"You&mdash;you don't feel anything?"</p>
-
-<p>He started. "How did you know I could feel things?"</p>
-
-<p>"I didn't!" Ileth's hazel-green eyes were enormous. "Good Lord, Jon,
-I only thought you could sense their thoughts, maybe, if anything was
-around. I didn't.... Can you feel things? You can, can't you? I should
-have guessed it."</p>
-
-<p>Saxon's expression had grown grimmer with each word. When Ileth asked,
-"What are you?" in a hushed voice, he snapped,</p>
-
-<p>"Homo Superior!"</p>
-
-<p>"Homo Superior?" She looked startled, then raised her eyebrows. "You
-don't fancy yourself much, do you?"</p>
-
-<p>They had drawn gradually away from the others. He looked back. Basil,
-the geographer, and his helper had set up their instruments. They were
-taking readings, making swift notations. They had the three-dimensional
-camera recording impressions, and the automatic mapper was beginning to
-scratch a few tentative lines on its plastic rolls.</p>
-
-<p>"I think we ought to stick together," Saxon volunteered. "I know it'll
-be impossible to keep the geographers by us, but the rest had better
-hang together."</p>
-
-<p>Ileth shivered and asked, "Then there is something here?"</p>
-
-<p>The silence was absolute. Not a breath of air stirred anywhere. Saxon
-hesitated, said at last, "Yes, I think so."</p>
-
-<p>"What?"</p>
-
-<p>"I don't know."</p>
-
-<p>Clo-Javel, approached them, straightening her short kilt-like skirts.
-The archaeologist's costume was brief and practical, but of more
-importance to Clo-Javel's way of thinking, the red skirt disclosed
-a goodly length of her really remarkable legs. Clo-Javel was even
-more proud of her legs than of her reconstruction of the New York
-skyscrapers. She said, "Did you ever see such buildings? What makes
-them look so weird?"</p>
-
-<p>Saxon wrinkled his brow, his eyes returning to the glittering facade
-of cliff-like structures as they waited for the rest of their party to
-come up.</p>
-
-<p>"I think," he said hesitantly, "it's because, it's because everything
-looks so new. As if the city was only finished yesterday and had never
-been used."</p>
-
-<p>"That's it," Ileth burst out.</p>
-
-<p>Mercedes joined them. She too, was wearing kilts, but hers were longer
-than Clo-Javel's and gray and her jacket was a commodious affair with
-many pockets. "What's that?" she asked catching the tail end of the
-conversation.</p>
-
-<p>"The city looks as if it has never been lived in," Ileth explained.</p>
-
-<p>Mercedes lit a cigarette, said, "Nonsense, whoever heard of building a
-city and then not using it."</p>
-
-<p>"No." Clo-Javel agreed with the gray-haired Mercedes. "It's not that
-altogether. Possibly it's built of some material impervious to decay.
-Saxon's a physicist." She gave him a brilliant smile. "He would know
-more about that than I do."</p>
-
-<p>Clo-Javel pursed red lips. "It&mdash;it looks familiar."</p>
-
-<p>There was a silence, then Mercedes said, "So it does. Though I can't
-put my finger on it. But that shouldn't be so strange. The creatures
-who built it might have been very similar to us. If I could lay my
-hands on some of their bones...." She laughed good humoredly. "I could
-tell you in a minute what they were like."</p>
-
-<p>"Were?" Saxon thought, but he didn't express it aloud. He was conscious
-all the time of the presence of the aliens. It was like being in the
-midst of a crowded city street.</p>
-
-<p>The semantics expert, the psycho-historian, and the ethnologist joined
-them in a body. They headed for the nearest building, a towering
-windowless structure of yellow crystal.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon glanced back uneasily.</p>
-
-<p>The helicopter stood silent and deserted in the center of the square.
-The geographer and his helper were disappearing down one of the
-canyon-like streets with their equipment.</p>
-
-<p>"Look!" commanded Ileth pointing toward the face of the yellow
-structure. "Letters of some sort! There on the building. Maybe it's a
-sign."</p>
-
-<p>They quickened their pace until they could describe the letters clearly.</p>
-
-<p>Ileth gasped, "Oh!" and stopped uncertainly.</p>
-
-<p>The rest of them came to a confused halt beside her, staring up at the
-sign in utter bewilderment. Saxon felt a chill creep up his spine. The
-sign read:</p>
-
-<p class="ph1">TIMES SQUARE</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>For as long as it takes to draw a startled breath there was silence;
-then they all began to babble at once. Clo-Javel made herself heard
-suddenly above the others. "I recognize it!" she cried in her ringing
-husky voice.</p>
-
-<p>"What?"</p>
-
-<p>"It's an exact reproduction of New York II! I knew the city looked
-familiar! I knew it!"</p>
-
-<p>"New York II?" Saxon echoed. He was not strong in history and had only
-a faint recollection of a city by that name having once occupied the
-great Manhattan waste lands.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," Clo-Javel repeated. "It was the world capitol before Adirondaka
-was built. I had to study it when I was doing the reconstruction of New
-York I. There's a scale model of it in the Institute's museum. Isn't
-that right, Rufus?"</p>
-
-<p>The psycho-historian nodded in a bemused fashion.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," he agreed. "New York II was built over the ruins of New York I
-which had been destroyed by the first atomic war. The second atomic war
-completely annihilated New York II as well as all the other big cities
-on Earth. Cities weren't built after that for almost five hundred
-years. Not until the Empire, in fact." He paused uncertainly. "I don't
-understand this."</p>
-
-<p>Ileth asked, "You mean that this city is an exact reproduction of New
-York II, Clo?"</p>
-
-<p>The woman nodded, her black eyes curiously frightened. "This is the
-amusement center. The yellow building housed the Tri-World Theatre."</p>
-
-<p>"But I don't understand...." Ileth gazed helplessly at Saxon. "What
-is a reproduction of New York II doing here on a planet in the Alpha
-Centaurian system? We're over four light years from Sol. No one's ever
-been here before."</p>
-
-<p>Saxon was conscious of bewilderment and fear muddling the girl's
-thoughts. His own mind couldn't quite grasp the fact that here was an
-exact replica of a Terran city. It was inexplicable. It didn't make
-sense. And, more than that, it was impossible!</p>
-
-<p>He could read the same thoughts struggling against the fact in the
-minds of the others. He said, "Let's see what the buildings are like
-inside."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," agreed Ileth. She had edged close to Saxon. "Maybe we can find
-the answer inside."</p>
-
-<p>They started for the impressive entrance of the Tri-World Theatre,
-halted again in near-panic as the doors swung wide.</p>
-
-<p>Ileth gasped, clutched at Saxon's arm, hanging onto it in desperation.</p>
-
-<p>Before any of them could say anything, a voice blared forth. "... a
-thousand Ganymedian natives in the primitive ritualistic orgy of that
-Weird little satellite. Hamura in the mating dance of the Ganymedians.
-Seats: three hundred and seventy-five dollars."</p>
-
-<p>Clo-Javel's voice had lost its rich huskiness. It was a frightened
-quaver when she said, "It's a working model. Automatic, don't you see?"
-She giggled nervously, and paused.</p>
-
-<p>"But the voice?" protested Ileth.</p>
-
-<p>"Advertising," explained the archaeologist. "It's a mechanical voice,
-like the doors."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, I'm not sure how much a dollar was," said Mercedes, "but three
-hundred and seventy-five for a seat seems rather exorbitant."</p>
-
-<p>Rufus, the psycho-historian, was pale as a corpse. He swallowed,
-managed to splutter, "Inflation that followed the first atomic war.
-Inflation...." His voice trailed off as he stared beyond the gaping
-doors into the foyer of the empty theatre.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, I'm not going in that place!" said the ethnologist suddenly. He
-was a goat-bearded little dandy. It was his first speech in some time.</p>
-
-<p>Rufus, the psycho-historian, said, "I don't think I care to either."</p>
-
-<p>"Nonsense!" exploded Mercedes. "There isn't anything in there. You can
-see for yourself. I'm going in."</p>
-
-<p>"I think we should explore the city a bit further," Rufus protested.
-He glanced uneasily toward the helicopter. Basil and his helper were
-nowhere in sight.</p>
-
-<p>Mercedes said, "Humph," gave her plump shoulders a shake, disappeared
-with short sturdy steps through the door.</p>
-
-<p>"She shouldn't go in there alone," said Saxon starting after her. Ileth
-clung to his arm. "I'm coming along." They left the others standing
-huddled outside, watching them nervously.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The foyer was carpeted ankle deep in mauve. Life-like,
-three-dimensional photographs of actors and actresses in every
-conceivable costume from none at all to the cumbersome furs of Titan
-lined the walls.</p>
-
-<p>The magnificent foyer gave the startling impression that just the
-moment before, crowds of theatre goers had been surging across it.
-Saxon could feel the hair lift on the back of his neck.</p>
-
-<p>"Where's Mercedes?" asked Ileth in a small voice.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon glanced around, realized that the anthropologist wasn't in the
-foyer. "She must have gone into the theatre." He lifted his voice,
-called, "Mercedes. Mercedes!"</p>
-
-<p>His voice echoed hollowly. There was no answer. Saxon and Ileth
-exchanged worried glances.</p>
-
-<p>"Our voices probably don't carry beyond the foyer," Saxon reassured the
-girl. "The ancients were clever with sound."</p>
-
-<p>They crossed the floor, their steps cushioned noiselessly in the thick
-mauve carpet. They went through the doors, past the automatic ticket
-taker and paused.</p>
-
-<p>A vast amphitheatre with curving rows of empty seats fell away below
-them like the terribly ancient Roman theatre at Pompeii. The walls by
-some trick of construction trapped the light, shedding it softly over
-the seats, concentrating it in a glowing pillar of illumination on the
-stage.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly, Ileth brought her hand to her mouth, a look of horror
-springing into her features. "Oh, my Lord!" she whispered. "Look!" and
-pointed at the floor at their feet. Saxon glanced down, caught his
-breath.</p>
-
-<p>A puddle of clothes lay on the floor as if the middle-aged, gray-haired
-anthropologist had just stepped out of them.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon dropped to his knees beside the garments, turned them over.
-Sturdy leather walking shoes and heavy gray socks. Gray skirt and
-jacket. A stout brassiere and practical mannish shorts. They were so
-typically Mercedes, that Saxon felt a lump in his throat.</p>
-
-<p>The socks were still in the shoes, brassiere inside the jacket. He
-stood up, feeling his palms begin to sweat. It was as if Mercedes had
-been suddenly dissipated into thin air, her clothes falling in on
-themselves.</p>
-
-<p>He heard Ileth give a dry sob, realized suddenly that he felt no alien
-presence. He and the girl were alone in the theatre, alone as they'd
-been in the street that night in Adirondaka.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon clenched his fist. "Let's get out of here. Quick!"</p>
-
-<p>"But Mercedes?"</p>
-
-<p>"She's gone! We can't help Mercedes now. The others! Hurry!"</p>
-
-<p>They ran through the doorway back across the carpeted foyer, halting at
-the street.</p>
-
-<p>Four little mounds of clothes met their eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon could feel his stomach knot inside himself. He felt the clothes.
-They were still warm from contact with the men's bodies. He stirred
-the brief red kilt that Clo-Javel had been wearing, saw with a macabre
-flash of humor that where Mercedes' underthings had been eminently
-practical, Clo-Javel didn't wear any at all.</p>
-
-<p>Ileth suppressed a scream. "The helicopter! Look! It's gone, too!"
-Saxon glanced up in consternation.</p>
-
-<p>The square was empty. The twin suns riding high in the sky beat down on
-bare plastic blocks where the helicopter had stood.</p>
-
-<p>"We're hiking back to the ship&mdash;<i>now</i>," Saxon said to the frightened
-girl.</p>
-
-<p>"But it's twenty-five kilometers."</p>
-
-<p>"So it's twenty-five kilometers. We can average four an hour or better.
-That's six hours. How many more hours of daylight have we?"</p>
-
-<p>Ileth bit her lip, studied her chronometer. "The days are short. The
-planet rotates in a little over fourteen hours. Alpha Centauri A sets
-first, in about an hour, I think. Then Alpha Centauri B about three
-hours later. Proxima rises about ten minutes after that but it doesn't
-cast much light."</p>
-
-<p>"Never mind," he said almost roughly. "Come on. We'd better find the
-geographers quick."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>They did, a few minutes later, in one of the side canyons. That is,
-they found implements and two small piles of clothes. "I was afraid of
-this," said Saxon, his heart lowly sinking into his boots.</p>
-
-<p>Ileth began to cry half in fright, half hysterically.</p>
-
-<p>"None of that!" He shook her shoulders, until she stopped with a
-hiccup. Turning her loose, he bent over the instruments, secured a
-compass.</p>
-
-<p>"We're northeast of the ship," he said, "that means if we travel in a
-southwesterly direction, we should hit it square on the nose. Let's
-hike!"</p>
-
-<p>But they found it impossible to keep a true southwesterly course
-through the city. They walked along the deserted, resounding streets,
-their eyes filled with the fantastically lovely architecture of New
-York II, the flowing lines and gleaming planes of apartment houses
-built of a thousand substances from crystal to somber-veined black
-marble.</p>
-
-<p>"To think," said Saxon, "that a people, any people, could have found it
-in their hearts to destroy a work like this."</p>
-
-<p>"I'm glad I've seen it," Ileth replied queerly, "even if I did have to
-come to Alpha Centauri. It's lovely." She shivered.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon said in perplexity, "Why did they let us escape? I don't
-understand it."</p>
-
-<p>"We were in the foyer, alone, when it must have happened," she
-suggested. "Maybe they overlooked us."</p>
-
-<p>"Maybe," agreed Saxon doubtfully and paused.</p>
-
-<p>They had come to the end of the city which stopped abruptly as if it
-had been set down in the middle of the green rolling prairie. Beyond
-the last building, a herd of cannibal plants rolled by, browsing as
-they went.</p>
-
-<p>"It's going to be damned tricky keeping a straight course across this,"
-he said. "There doesn't seem to be a tree on the planet." He sighted
-the compass, picked out a round hill like the dome of a building, to
-the southwest. "We'll keep a little to the left of that hill."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Alpha Centauri A was setting. By the time they had advanced a kilometer
-across the prairie it was gone. The orange light of Alpha Centauri B
-lent a queer unearthly complexion to the scene. It became perceptibly
-cooler, and a breeze sprang up from the east, bringing the faint scent
-of bitter almonds.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon lengthened his stride. "We're not keeping to schedule," he said;
-then, "Look at that!"</p>
-
-<p>A fawn colored creature like a large cat but with four pairs of legs,
-broke from a draw and went undulating across the grass.</p>
-
-<p>"I'm getting tired," said Ileth in a small voice.</p>
-
-<p>He took his eyes from the strange animal, studied the girl. The
-emotional turmoil which they'd been through had drained her of
-strength. Her features were white, drawn, her lids drooping over her
-hazel-green eyes. Her lashes, he thought, were the thickest curliest
-lashes he'd ever seen and black as her lustrous hair. He felt a
-tenderness well up inside him and banished it.</p>
-
-<p>"We've got to make the ship. Walk until you drop. Then I'll carry you.
-But we have to get back as soon as possible."</p>
-
-<p>Her features stiffened at the harshness of his words. He caught a weary
-flash of anger in her thoughts, then she turned and began to plod again
-toward the southwest.</p>
-
-<p>"Faster," said Saxon.</p>
-
-<p>Alpha Centauri B was setting when they reached the domed hill which
-Saxon had lined up with the compass. He left Ileth stretched exhausted
-at the base and climbed to the summit. His eyes swept the horizons with
-the last orange rays of the sun, but the <i>Shooting Star</i> was still not
-in sight.</p>
-
-<p>By the time he rejoined Ileth, it was dark. "Did you see it?" the girl
-asked in a sleepy voice.</p>
-
-<p>"No. We haven't come far enough, I suppose. We'll have to wait until
-Proxima rises before we can go on. That'll give us a chance to rest.
-How long before Proxima comes up?"</p>
-
-<p>"Ten or fifteen minutes." She hesitated. "I'm cold."</p>
-
-<p>Saxon put his arms around the shivering girl, pulled her against him.
-She gave a little sigh, laid her head on his shoulder. He caught her
-sleepy thoughts, "<i>Two times two is four. Three times two is six</i>," and
-chuckled to himself.</p>
-
-<p>The darkness was not dispelled very much when Proxima rose above the
-hills like a sullen red hot drop of metal. The light was red and
-wavering like the shimmering heat waves above a brush fire. Saxon could
-not see very well or very far. Nevertheless he wakened Ileth.</p>
-
-<p>She rubbed her eyes, glanced about her in consternation. The change in
-light had brought about a startling change in the scenery. It looked as
-if it were bathed in blood.</p>
-
-<p>She said, "Oh, Jon, I wish we were home. I wish we'd never come on this
-horrible expedition."</p>
-
-<p>He didn't look up from his compass. "The ship can't be much further."
-He spotted the black gash of a gully a hundred yards ahead. "We'll walk
-to the gully, then pick out another object."</p>
-
-<p>"I'm still tired. I don't feel as if I'd slept at all."</p>
-
-<p>"You didn't&mdash;much. Only about ten minutes. Come on."</p>
-
-<p>They reached the gully and Saxon found a cone-shaped hill looming up
-redly almost a quarter of a mile further on. They set out for it, Ileth
-holding his hand.</p>
-
-<p>Their progress was necessarily slower because Saxon had to stop often
-and consult the compass. Even so, he began to be afraid that they had
-overshot the ship in the dark.</p>
-
-<p>Slowly Proxima Centauri blazed its blood red path across the night sky.</p>
-
-<p>Not far from Proxima a star twinkled faintly, steadily. It was about in
-the position that Sol should be. He wondered if it was.</p>
-
-<p>"It's growing lighter," said Ileth.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon glanced toward the east, recognized the graying darkness that
-heralded the dawn. He said, "Alpha Centauri A's rising. Maybe we can
-see where we are."</p>
-
-<p>The light was quickening fast with dawn. Saxon climbed to the crest of
-a ridge, stared off into the southwest.</p>
-
-<p>All at once his heart stood still. He called, "Ileth! Ileth! Come up
-here!"</p>
-
-<p>The girl ran up the ridge, the urgency in his voice dispelling her
-weariness. "What is it, Jon?"</p>
-
-<p>He pointed ahead. "Aren't those the hills south of the ship?"</p>
-
-<p>She narrowed her eyes, studying the blue outlines in the dawn light.
-"Yes. But, Jon, where is the ship?"</p>
-
-<p>He pointed at a blackened circle in the grass not an eighth of a
-kilometer distant. The circle was almost a thousand yards in diameter.</p>
-
-<p>"That's where our jets burned the grass when we landed. That's where
-the <i>Shooting Star</i> was yesterday!"</p>
-
-<p>In ten minutes they were tramping back and forth across the blackened
-circle of grass, kicking up little puffs of ashes. The mark of the jets
-were there, pressed deep in the soft soil. But those and the charred
-vegetation were the only signs that a ship had ever rested there.</p>
-
-<p>Ileth flung herself dejectedly to the grass at the edge of the circle.
-"I'm so hungry and bone weary and thirsty and disappointed, I could
-cry."</p>
-
-<p>Saxon sat down beside her. "I don't understand it," he said for the
-hundredth time. "I don't understand any of it."</p>
-
-<p>All at once, his scalp began to prickle its warning and Saxon
-recognized the alien feel. At the same instant Ileth screamed, leaping
-to her feet. Saxon felt his mouth go dry, his stomach contract as he
-stumbled erect beside her.</p>
-
-<p>Not ten yards distant, in the path of the rising sun, a naked man was
-materializing before their eyes. Saxon could see the grass and the
-hills and a segment of Alpha Centauri A through the man's body.</p>
-
-<p>A thought struck into Saxon's mind. "<i>So there you are.</i>" It emanated
-from the Alien. "<i>We were afraid you might have gotten clean away.</i>"</p>
-
-<p>Saxon realized the man was quite solid now, standing with bare feet
-planted in the pale green grass. There was an instrument like a watch
-strapped to his wrist. He was holding a small shiny cylinder.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon caught an echo of Ileth's thought. "<i>Oh Lord, he's naked as a
-grape!</i>"</p>
-
-<p>The man leveled the cylinder. There was a brief flash.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon felt an instant's giddiness, a rapid dissolution, then nothing.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="ph1">VIII</p>
-
-<p>Jon Saxon couldn't have been unconscious but a fraction of a second
-because he didn't have time to fall. He came to himself swaying
-dizzily, nauseated as if with space sickness.</p>
-
-<p>He opened his eyes. He was blind!</p>
-
-<p>The shock left him numb. Then gradually, like a flower unfolding its
-petals to the light, he felt his extra-human sixth sense assume control.</p>
-
-<p>He became aware of the grass and the sun and the distant hills.
-Everything registered in varying degrees of grayness. It wasn't
-grayness exactly, but the word came as near to describing the peculiar
-impressions that external objects were registering on his sixth sense
-as his vocabulary could supply.</p>
-
-<p>He didn't picture his environment; he realized it. The burned circle of
-grass, the naked alien....</p>
-
-<p>A second shock rocked Saxon to his heels. The Alien!</p>
-
-<p>Tentatively, almost timidly, he examined the strange figure confronting
-him. The man, for man he appeared to be, stood quietly several paces,
-sizing up Saxon with an equal degree of caution. The analogy to two
-strange dogs eyeing each other belligerently, but each afraid to make
-the first move, was so ludicrous that Saxon chuckled although no sound
-issued from his lips.</p>
-
-<p>He sensed his opponent relax. The fellow was big the way Saxon was big,
-and the same virility radiated from him like a physical force.</p>
-
-<p>The impressions received via his sixth sense were gaining in vividness.
-Saxon had never fully appreciated its scope before.</p>
-
-<p>Then with the force of a blow, Ileth's terrified thoughts penetrated
-sharply to his mind.</p>
-
-<p>"<i>I must be dead! Oh God, I'm dead!</i>"</p>
-
-<p>Saxon could perceive the girl cowering above a small pile of clothes,
-frightened, helpless, blind. She didn't have his extra-human sixth
-sense to substitute for sight. She was trembling violently, a
-slim-naked wraith without substance.</p>
-
-<p>The little pile of clothes at her feet made it suddenly clear what had
-befallen Mercedes and the crew, what had happened to Ileth and himself.
-In some fashion, the Aliens had transmuted them into a space where
-their three-dimensional organs of perception no longer registered.</p>
-
-<p>He moved to the girl, touched her arm.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon was not conscious of a sense of contact, but a vague shock like a
-weak electric current ran up his arm to his brain. Ileth flinched back
-in terror.</p>
-
-<p>Again he touched her arm, thinking, "<i>Ileth, am I getting through?
-Ileth, am I getting through?</i>" over and over again.</p>
-
-<p>"<i>Yes</i>," came the unexpected answer. "<i>Yes. Yes. Is it you, Jon? We're
-dead, you know, Jon.</i>"</p>
-
-<p>"<i>No</i>," he thought. "<i>We're not dead. We've been transmuted but we're
-not dead.</i>"</p>
-
-<p>A command rang sharply in his disembodied mind. "<i>Lead the girl and
-follow me!</i>"</p>
-
-<p>Saxon's attention swung back to the Alien, perceived the man
-threatening him with the cylinder which had blasted them into this
-indeterminate dimension.</p>
-
-<p>"<i>Suppose I refuse?</i>" he thought.</p>
-
-<p>"<i>I'm afraid that you underestimate the range of effect of this
-weapon.</i>" The Alien brandished the cylinder again. "<i>Follow me.</i>"</p>
-
-<p>Saxon capitulated, touched Ileth. "<i>Keep in contact with me. I'll
-guide you.</i>" He began to move after the stranger who was already at a
-distance.</p>
-
-<p>He didn't know how long they walked. Time had no expression in this
-state. Alpha Centauri A hung always in the same spot just above the
-horizon. He thought of Villainowski's inverted formula&mdash;"To travel
-through time during a passage of space." The Little Death must be like
-this, if one were conscious.</p>
-
-<p>He was still turning it over in his mind when he perceived the station.</p>
-
-<p>The station appeared to be a cubical structure like a large plastic
-block, except that the matter of which it was formed wasn't matter at
-all. It was energy, Saxon sensed, pulsating sheets of energy that must
-not be visible in the normal, three-dimensional world.</p>
-
-<p>The Alien stood to one side, motioned them through the shimmering walls.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon was conscious of a throbbing rhythm which swept through him like
-the hum of a dynamo. He experienced the eerie giddiness for the second
-time and groped for Ileth before he blanked out.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>This time Saxon was longer regaining consciousness. He came out from
-under the effects of the pulsation, feeling his flesh solid again. Air
-warmed and caressed his skin. He was materialized, he saw, as he leaped
-to his feet and opened his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>He felt vaguely overwhelmed by the return of his senses. He had never
-before appreciated their infinite variety. The walls were yellow, lemon
-yellow; the floor cool and firm underfoot; the air had a faint odor of
-bitter almonds; and Ileth....</p>
-
-<p>He said, "Open your eyes, Ileth. You'll be able to see better that way."</p>
-
-<p>The girl's eyes popped open. She took one look at Saxon, then at
-herself. Her eyes grew rounder, her throat flamed.</p>
-
-<p>She gasped, "Oh! You should have let me keep my eyes shut," and whipped
-her back to him.</p>
-
-<p>She must have realized instantly that the view she presented was no
-better screened, for she sat down with a thump, saying, "Oh!" again.
-Then, in an embarrassed voice, "This is just like a dream I had once.
-Only everyone but me wore clothes in the dream, and there isn't a fig
-leaf between the three of us."</p>
-
-<p>"The three of us?"</p>
-
-<p>Saxon glanced around, discovered the Alien rummaging in one of the
-cabinets, from which he produced three of the gleaming kilts, tossed
-them each one.</p>
-
-<p>"You humans," he said in an amused tone and perfect English, "have odd
-notions about concealing yourselves. Here."</p>
-
-<p>Saxon gratefully buckled his kilt in place, examined the material. The
-threads were almost weightless and glowed like strands of light. With a
-start, he recalled where he had seen them before.</p>
-
-<p>The man and the woman had been wearing kilts like these in his vision
-during the Little Death. Then....</p>
-
-<p>His mind refused to entertain the possibility. And yet it was a piece
-of everything else. His inability to remember his childhood. The
-development of first a sixth sense at twenty-seven, then a seventh at
-thirty-one.</p>
-
-<p>He strode abruptly to the windows and looked out.</p>
-
-<p>The windows were at an elevation and gave a view of the strangest city
-he had ever beheld.</p>
-
-<p>There were houses, at least they could be houses, spaced entirely
-without relation to each other and surrounded by immense park-like
-grounds. There were no congested areas within his range of vision.
-Neither was he able to discover roads or sidewalks, fences or walls
-anywhere.</p>
-
-<p>Alpha Centauri A was still just rising, its orange twin not yet above
-the hills, which he could see in the distance.</p>
-
-<p>He turned wonderingly back into the room.</p>
-
-<p>Their guard regarded them in amusement. "Sit down," he suggested,
-indicating a bench.</p>
-
-<p>They seated themselves.</p>
-
-<p>"Ask him what they're going to do with us, Jon." Ileth nudged Saxon in
-the ribs.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon cleared his throat.</p>
-
-<p>Before he could speak, the guard smiled and said, "I haven't the
-faintest idea how they plan to dispose of you. Even if I did, that
-would be for Them to tell you." He nodded toward a closed door on their
-right. "They'll send for you any moment now."</p>
-
-<p>"Who are 'they'?" Saxon asked.</p>
-
-<p>"The Elders."</p>
-
-<p>"What planet is this?"</p>
-
-<p>"Vark." The guard's voice was pleasant. He smiled faintly when he
-talked. "The fourth planet of the sun you call Alpha Centauri A. This
-is the city of Ghibellena." He nodded out the windows.</p>
-
-<p>"How did we get here? Teleportation?"</p>
-
-<p>"Not exactly."</p>
-
-<p>There was a momentary silence while the Alien observed them with that
-amused gleam in his eye. Then Saxon tried again. "Who are you? Why have
-you captured us?"</p>
-
-<p>The man nodded briefly again towards the closed door. "You'll learn
-that in there&mdash;if They see fit to tell you."</p>
-
-<p>"Where are the rest of the crew? Dead? In prison?"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, no. They've been taken to Zara."</p>
-
-<p>"Zara? Where's Zara?"</p>
-
-<p>"Zara is a satellite of the third planet. The one we call Tunis."</p>
-
-<p>"What is that city we saw? The deserted one near the ship?"</p>
-
-<p>Again the man smiled and nodded toward the door. "If They see fit to
-tell you."</p>
-
-<p>Saxon shrugged burly shoulders. "How do you make yourselves invisible?"</p>
-
-<p>Surprisingly enough the man answered.</p>
-
-<p>"It's a refinement of your stellar drive, an excursion into the time
-field. In fact, it was discovered almost a hundred of your years ago by
-a Terran. A Dr. Walter."</p>
-
-<p>Saxon looked disconcerted. Ileth swallowed, her eyes as round as
-saucers. Suddenly her hand squeezed his arm.</p>
-
-<p>"The door! It's opening!"</p>
-
-<p>"You may go in," said their guard. "They're ready for you."</p>
-
-<p>Saxon had risen uncertainly. He looked at the door which was receding
-into the wall. Through the portal, he glimpsed a terrace or a balcony,
-roofless. Beyond and below the terrace was a yellow sea stretching to
-the horizon, its cadmium waves frothing against a beach of black sand.</p>
-
-<p>"They're expecting you," the guard prompted.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon shrugged. Taking Ileth's arm, he went through the opening. The
-door slid shut behind them.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The balcony, Saxon saw, was paved checkerboard fashion with green and
-yellow blocks. At the left, out of sight from the entrance, was a
-twenty foot table of pale green stone. Seven incredibly old men sat
-behind the table.</p>
-
-<p>No one said anything.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon took the initiative, advanced to within six feet of the pale
-green table. His dark gray eyes narrowed. He was vaguely conscious of a
-flow of thought passing among the seven old men like conversation, but
-its content escaped him. His jaw jutted angrily.</p>
-
-<p>"Control your anger, my son," said the old man in the center. "Your
-thoughts should be respectful in the presence of your elders."</p>
-
-<p>Saxon concealed his astonishment, asking, "Might I inquire what this
-mummery is all about?" He became aware again of the hidden thoughts
-flowing between them.</p>
-
-<p>Then the old man in the center said, "I am the moderator, my son. Your
-mind, we have perceived, teems with questions. We have decided that
-from the psychological angle, certain of these questions can now be
-answered."</p>
-
-<p>"Psychological angle?" Saxon felt confused. The deviousness of the
-Aliens, the maddening superiority which they assumed began to get
-under his skin. With an effort, he got a grip on himself, returned
-their curious stares.</p>
-
-<p>The seven old men were wrinkled, emaciated. Once they had been big men
-like Saxon, but the years had wasted their flesh.</p>
-
-<p>"That's better," approved the Moderator, referring to Saxon's change of
-tactics. "Now for your questions," and he seemed to look straight into
-Saxon's mind.</p>
-
-<p>"Very early in our history," began the Moderator after a moment, "we
-learned that we advanced in the physical sciences by trial and error. A
-disheartening process, because only so many combinations can be tried
-in a single life-time...."</p>
-
-<p>"What the hell has this got to do with us?" Saxon interrupted harshly.</p>
-
-<p>"Patience, my son. I'm explaining the relation between our world and
-the third planet of Sol which you call Earth."</p>
-
-<p>A little muscle began to jump in Saxon's jaw.</p>
-
-<p>"Trial and error," the old man began again. "A slow heartbreaking
-process, and one which in its nature is inescapable. At least, so we
-thought until quite recently." He paused, tugged at his lower lip with
-thumb and forefinger.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon mastered an impulse to shout, "Get to the point!"</p>
-
-<p>"Recently," went on the moderator, "we tried an experiment in
-our biological laboratories which we hoped would speed up the
-trial-and-error formula.</p>
-
-<p>"By exposing the germ plasm of a semi-intelligent anthropoid inhabiting
-the fourth planet of this system to hard radiations, we succeeded in
-creating a mutant, a biologic sport who's life span was only an instant
-of time. It matured, mated and died in an incredibly brief period.</p>
-
-<p>"They were startlingly prolific as well; they multiplied like&mdash;like&mdash;"
-he groped for a simile&mdash;"like guinea pigs or rats.</p>
-
-<p>"Furthermore, they early exhibited the most amazing ingenuity. In
-twenty generations they had fire; in thirty, crude implement of stone."</p>
-
-<p>Saxon, unable to restrain his impatience longer, cried, "The point,
-man&mdash;get to the point."</p>
-
-<p>The old man gave Saxon a steely look. "We recognized," he went
-on stiffly, "the significance of our mutation. As soon as the
-semi-intelligent sports developed a science, we could expect the trial
-and error method to be speeded up. A life-time of experiment to them
-was only a moment to us.</p>
-
-<p>"We isolated them on the fifth planet of our sun. But it soon became
-apparent that they constituted a dangerous menace even that close.
-They were so fecund, and their ferocity was appalling. Wars broke out
-between various tribes. They murdered each other by the thousands."</p>
-
-<p>Gradually Saxon's interest had been caught by the history of the
-semi-reasoning mutants whose ferocity and proliferation had constituted
-a menace to their creators. He glanced at Ileth, discovered her
-spellbound.</p>
-
-<p>The Moderator's voice was growing thinner.</p>
-
-<p>"Luckily," he was saying, "stellar travel was accomplished at this
-time. We exported several thousand of the creatures to another star
-system and destroyed the rest.</p>
-
-<p>"The environment on the planet where we transplanted our colony of
-humanoids was ideal for our purpose&mdash;harsh and savage. Several species
-of bipeds with rudimentary intelligence already inhabited the planet,
-but our own culture speedily wiped them out and were happily warring
-among themselves...."</p>
-
-<p>A suspicion began to grow in Saxon's mind. He blurted, "On what planet
-did you introduce this culture?"</p>
-
-<p>The Moderator paused, stared Saxon coolly in the eye.</p>
-
-<p>"Earth!" he said.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Saxon and Ileth looked at each other incredulously, unable to
-comprehend the significance of the Moderator's answer.</p>
-
-<p>"Earth?" repeated Saxon. "I don't understand."</p>
-
-<p>The Moderator wrinkled his brow, and said, "I don't know how to put
-it any more clearly. We transplanted our biological sports to Earth.
-The two sub-human races which our humanoids exterminated were the
-Cro-Magnards and the Neanderthalers."</p>
-
-<p>Saxon's brain reeled. "Do you mean that man as we know him, homo
-sapiens, originated in your laboratories as&mdash;an experiment?"</p>
-
-<p>He heard Ileth laugh hysterically.</p>
-
-<p>"Precisely," replied the Moderator. "And I might add that the
-experiment has proven successful. During the last thousand years they
-have supplied us with hundreds of discoveries and developments. The
-real nature of the space-time continuum, for example.</p>
-
-<p>"The creatures are inordinately clever at the physical sciences&mdash;as was
-to be expected from an emotionally unstable, rationalizing mammal under
-the pressure of such an antagonistic environment. Our own laboratories
-have become, for all practical purposes, unnecessary!"</p>
-
-<p>Ileth was staring at the Moderator with wide horrified eyes. "I," she
-gasped. "I am a humanoid? I don't live but a moment? I'm prolific and
-savage and&mdash;and clever like a monkey? Why, you shriveled up old bag of
-bones, that's the most stupid pack of lies I've ever heard!"</p>
-
-<p>The Moderator regarded her compassionately. "You haven't changed
-because I've told you the truth. Your life expectation is no shorter.
-It's a matter of relativity. To us our ten thousand years seems no
-longer than your three score and ten does to you."</p>
-
-<p>"Ten thousand years?" exploded Saxon. The sum was so staggering that it
-was only a figure to him. "Then&mdash;" he began, but the Moderator answered
-before he could speak.</p>
-
-<p>"No. I was not born when the experiment with the humanoids began. They
-were developed some twenty-five thousand years ago."</p>
-
-<p>Ileth began to laugh crazily, unable to stop. In a moment she would be
-hysterical. Saxon shook her roughly. "Stop it!"</p>
-
-<p>"I&mdash;I&mdash;I can't," she giggled. "Either he's mad or I am." Her words
-ended in a flood of tears.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon put his arm around the girl, turned back to the Moderator. "It
-was done with hard radiations?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes. In the resultant mutants their metabolism had been accelerated
-beyond our wildest expectation. Their life cycle geared to their
-metabolism passed through its different phases like&mdash;like ..." again he
-fished in Saxon's mind for a simile. "Like a meteor. By artificially
-slowing down their metabolism they returned to their normal life span.</p>
-
-<p>"You've been very curious about the replica of New York II which you
-saw when you landed."</p>
-
-<p>Saxon nodded, trying to conceal a thought which had begun to take shape
-in the back of his mind.</p>
-
-<p>"It's just that. A replica of a city built during the Atomic Age by
-the humanoids. Their constant implacable wars are so savage that we've
-found it necessary to duplicate their work here, if we hope to preserve
-any of it for study."</p>
-
-<p>Saxon narrowed his eyes, asked, "You spoke of the menace of having such
-savage neighbors. Just how serious was such a threat?"</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The Moderator smiled and glanced at his constituents. Saxon strained to
-grasp the thoughts flowing between them, but failed utterly.</p>
-
-<p>"Admirable!" the Moderator commented suddenly. "Your reactions, my son,
-are leading us to hope we may turn in the most optimistic report."</p>
-
-<p>Saxon stared at him as if he were crazy. Ileth's tears had subsided to
-a sniffle.</p>
-
-<p>"Now for your question," said the Moderator and coughed again.</p>
-
-<p>"The menace was real, not imaginary. We had created a monster that
-would be either a marvelous scientific instrument, or&mdash;the means of our
-destruction.</p>
-
-<p>"Remember, my son, time is relative. These creatures lived, fought,
-loved, begat children, carried on scientific research and died, all in
-seventy short years. They existed at fever intensity. Their metabolism
-burns them up.</p>
-
-<p>"Our lives are adjusted to a span of ten thousand years. We have a
-total population of little over a million. We are neither a war-like
-people, nor a highly-industrialized people.</p>
-
-<p>"In one of their generations the humanoids accomplish almost as much as
-we do in one of ours. Think, my son, they perform in seventy years what
-it takes us ten thousand to do.</p>
-
-<p>"If it ever came to hostilities between us we'd be doomed, overwhelmed
-almost before we realized what was happening."</p>
-
-<p>Saxon listened in astonishment. The thought in the back of his mind
-kept trying to push to the fore, but he repressed it, afraid that the
-Aliens might see it.</p>
-
-<p>"Their amazing fecundity," the Moderator was saying, "their short life
-spans, their ingenuity and ferocity made them a very real menace even
-isolated outside our stellar system. Fortunately, we also foresaw the
-inevitable crisis and prepared for it."</p>
-
-<p>"Crisis?" Saxon echoed.</p>
-
-<p>"The time when the humanoids would reach our scientific level and
-surpass us," said the Moderator in a grim voice. "That time has
-arrived!"</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="ph1">IX</p>
-
-<p>Somewhere a bell began to ring shrilly. Saxon saw an expression of
-annoyance pass across the Moderator's wrinkled visage. He pressed a
-button set in the table top. The bell stopped ringing. A voice began
-to speak in an alien tongue directly behind Saxon. The burly nuclear
-physicist spun around in surprise.</p>
-
-<p>He was looking into the control room of a small private space yacht!</p>
-
-<p>The deception was so realistic that Saxon gasped before he noticed
-the three beams of light converging from lenses in the wall, focusing
-at a point directly behind him to form the solid appearing image. A
-three-dimensional televisor complete with sound!</p>
-
-<p>Then all speculation was driven from his mind as he recognized the
-figure who was speaking.</p>
-
-<p>Mustapha IX, Supreme Autocrat of the Terran Empire!</p>
-
-<p>The image of Mustapha sat stiffly in an acceleration chair before the
-control panel of the space yacht. His voice, rattling away in the
-strange language, was high, tense, frightened.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon, unable to understand, looked over his shoulder at the seven old
-men. They were all on their feet, staring in disbelief at the three
-dimensional image. The Moderator's hands began to tremble. He sat down
-as if his knees had turned to water.</p>
-
-<p>The voice rattled on and on.</p>
-
-<p>At last Mustapha IX quit talking. The Moderator pressed the button. The
-image dissolved.</p>
-
-<p>A stunned silence followed, as one by one the old men sank back to
-their seats. Saxon, devoured with curiosity, asked, "What was it?"</p>
-
-<p>The Moderator gave him a level glance. "That was the man you know as
-Mustapha IX, Supreme Autocrat of the Terran Empire. He was reporting
-from his private yacht which has just emerged from the time field and
-is decelerating. It'll be a week before he lands on Vark."</p>
-
-<p>"Mustapha IX?" Saxon burst out. "Here on Vark? But that's impossible.
-What's he doing&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"There's been civil war," the Moderator interrupted savagely. "General
-Atomic has overthrown Government. General Atomic is the Terran
-Government now!"</p>
-
-<p>"But I don't see ..." protested Saxon.</p>
-
-<p>"Bah! I spoke of controls. Naturally our first necessity has been to
-control the humanoid's government. The Supreme Autocrats have all been
-Varkans, our governors, which we sent to Earth!</p>
-
-<p>"Now Mustapha IX has had to flee for his life. Most of our agents on
-Earth have been murdered. Only a handful escaped with him!"</p>
-
-<p>The Moderator pressed another button, began to speak rapidly,
-tonelessly in the alien language into a microphone. The thoughts of the
-seven old men were flashing back and forth like streaks of light behind
-their mental barrier. The crisis, Saxon realized, had arrived with a
-vengeance!</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly the guard came running through the door in answer to a summons
-by the Moderator. For the first time Saxon intercepted a thought as the
-Moderator directed the guard to take the prisoners away.</p>
-
-<p>"<i>Send the girl to Zara</i>," he commanded the guard. "<i>Confine the man
-here until we can check results!</i>"</p>
-
-<p>"Come along," said the guard in a tight voice to Saxon and Ileth. He
-took hold of Ileth's arm. The girl shrank away from him, frightened by
-the swift and ominous change which had come over their captors.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon's eyes went bleak. The guard jerked back as he caught a glimpse
-of Saxon's intentions, but he wasn't quick enough.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon's balled fist caught him on his left cheek bone, sent him
-sprawling to the checkered pavement. Saxon was on him like a wolf.
-Wrenching the cylinder from the stunned guard's belt, he backed off
-swinging the unfamiliar weapon in a menacing arc.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/illus3.jpg" alt=""/>
- <div class="caption">
- <p><i>He backed off, swinging the unfamiliar weapon.</i></p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p>He saw the withered faces of the Elders blanch. They pressed stiffly
-against the back of their chairs, jaws sagging. The guard scrambled
-to his feet. He shook his head groggily but made no move to attack
-Saxon.</p>
-
-<p>Triumph welled up inside Jon Saxon. He said, "The shoe's on the other
-foot. I don't know how this damned thing works, but there's a button.
-Unless you start answering my questions straight we'll see what happens
-if I press it."</p>
-
-<p>He paused. The seven old men glared at him but said nothing.</p>
-
-<p>"How did General Atomic discover your agents? Why didn't their
-invisibility protect them?"</p>
-
-<p>The Moderator moistened his lips. "The humanoids devised a machine that
-detects us. An adaption of the thought projector, which enabled them to
-detect our telepathic potential. Once they could isolate our thought
-waves, they were able to trace them to their source by a process
-similar to locating the source of a radio beam."</p>
-
-<p>Saxon narrowed his eyes, recalling the thought projector which
-the radiation branch of Government's Bureau of Research had been
-experimenting with. So that's how General Atomic had uncovered the
-Aliens.</p>
-
-<p>"General Atomic," the Moderator was saying, "suspected the existence of
-mutants, telepaths, ever since an agent of theirs by the name of Emil
-turned in a report on you!"</p>
-
-<p>Saxon started.</p>
-
-<p>The Moderator's first fright was over, he realized. The old man was
-regarding him with a faint smile.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon glanced behind him in alarm; but there was nothing there. He
-clenched his fist until the knuckles whitened. "What other methods did
-you use to keep the humanoids in check?"</p>
-
-<p>There was a subtle change in the voice of the Moderator when he
-answered. It was ringing, hard. "As I said, we foresaw this crisis. To
-discourage stellar travel we planted a pathologic fear of deep space in
-the humanoid subconscious.</p>
-
-<p>"Certain of their discoveries we have suppressed. Notably, the
-space-time stellar drive. The Little Death, as you call it, has been
-discovered three separate times in the past thousand years."</p>
-
-<p>"What?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes. Are you surprised? Once by an unknown scientist, once by a
-physicist, Dr. Walter, and lastly by Dr. Villainowski."</p>
-
-<p>Although Saxon still held the alien weapon, he had the uncomfortable
-sensation that a trap had been sprung and the Moderator was only
-waiting for it to close on him.</p>
-
-<p>With a suffocating tenseness, he asked, "What am I?"</p>
-
-<p>"You," said the Moderator, "are a test experiment!"</p>
-
-<p>"What?"</p>
-
-<p>"A test experiment. On your psychological reactions will depend the
-ultimate fate of the humanoids!"</p>
-
-<p>"A test experiment," he repeated dazedly. "What do you mean?"</p>
-
-<p>"Simply this. For some time we've realized that steps must be taken to
-curb the rapaciousness of the humanoids."</p>
-
-<p>"But me...."</p>
-
-<p>The Moderator held up his hand.</p>
-
-<p>"I'm coming to you. If the ruthless savagery of the humanoids was
-instinctive, part of their heredity, there was little that could be
-done except destroy them.</p>
-
-<p>"But if, on the other hand, their natures resulted from the pressure
-of their environment, we might be able to modify that environment and
-salvage our experiment."</p>
-
-<p>"But what the hell am I? What did you mean when you said I was a test
-experiment?"</p>
-
-<p>The Moderator seemed to have forgotten the existence of Saxon's weapon.
-He tugged at his lower lip with thumb and forefinger. "You are not a
-humanoid. You are one of us, a Varkan. We placed you as a baby on Earth
-to be raised as a humanoid."</p>
-
-<p>"I was eleven," protested Saxon.</p>
-
-<p>"A mere baby still, with psychological plasticity." The Moderator
-waved the objection aside. "If your disposition hardened into humanoid
-characteristics, then we would be safe in assuming that the humanoids,
-too, were a product of their environment.</p>
-
-<p>"Of course, there were factors we couldn't control. The natural
-unfolding of your sixth and seventh senses in early childhood&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>Saxon burst out, "But I was twenty-seven when I developed a sixth sense
-and thirty-one&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"My son, that's quite true. But you're only in your adolescence now."</p>
-
-<p>"At thirty-eight," said Saxon in disbelief, "I'm an adolescent?"</p>
-
-<p>The Moderator nodded. "And precocious at that!"</p>
-
-<p>Ileth giggled again nervously.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Saxon gave a short laugh. He had a feeling that he had been stuffed too
-full of information. He couldn't digest it. In spite of the suspicions
-he had entertained concerning his birth, he was unable to really
-believe that he was an Alien!</p>
-
-<p>He glanced suddenly at Ileth. The girl had shrunk away from him as if
-he were a leper. Her hazel-green eyes were horrified. All at once, she
-began to cry.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon tried to pat her shoulder, but she wrenched away. The action
-drove a needle of pain into his heart. He realized in a numbed fashion
-how fond he had grown of the girl.</p>
-
-<p>"Fond, hell!" he thought savagely, "I'm in love with her."</p>
-
-<p>"My son," came the hated voice of the Moderator, "she is not for you."</p>
-
-<p>"What do you mean?" Saxon shouted.</p>
-
-<p>The Moderator regarded him a moment, his eyes veiled. Then, "The
-psychologist is ready to give you his report. As a true human, you have
-the right to hear it."</p>
-
-<p>A shriveled, wrinkled man at the end of the table began to address
-Saxon in a dry voice.</p>
-
-<p>"I've been probing your reactions as the truth was revealed to you.
-You can understand the importance of an accurate judgment, when you
-know that the fate of our experiment rests on the manner in which you
-conformed to a humanoid environment."</p>
-
-<p>"Experiment be damned!" Saxon flung out "What about me?"</p>
-
-<p>The psychologist permitted himself a vague smile. "Your reactions have
-been typically humanoid.</p>
-
-<p>"You have been bewildered, frightened, angry.</p>
-
-<p>"You tried to think first of some way by which you could destroy us.
-Failing that, you cast about in your mind for some compromise which
-would cause us to hold our hand until we could be either conquered or
-wiped out&mdash;preferably wiped out. These are typically humanoid reactions
-to a dangerous foe.</p>
-
-<p>"Under the circumstances we can preserve our experiment if we can
-modify the humanoids' environment."</p>
-
-<p>Saxon felt relief. Whatever the Aliens planned, they weren't going to
-destroy mankind.</p>
-
-<p>The psychologist having delivered his report, the Moderator resumed,
-"It is unfortunate in a way for you, my son, that the test has been so
-favorable to the humanoids.</p>
-
-<p>"They live and die so fast that in a few generations we can correct
-their savage dispositions.</p>
-
-<p>"But you have solidified in the humanoid mould. You will have to
-undergo a dangerous operation. Our psychologist must induce infantile
-retrogression in you. When you have been reduced mentally, to the age
-of eleven, then your re-education can begin.</p>
-
-<p>"I'll be perfectly frank. You have about one chance in ten of retaining
-your sanity. The danger lies in that retrogression once activated in
-your brain cells. It cannot always be halted."</p>
-
-<p>Saxon's laugh was a croak. "You forget I've still the weapon."</p>
-
-<p>The Moderator said, "It's time that this nonsense stopped. We've
-allowed you to retain the cylinder in order to observe your reactions.
-Look around you!"</p>
-
-<p>Saxon spun around.</p>
-
-<p>Materializing like gray wraiths, a dozen figures were taking substance
-behind him. They were all armed with shining cylinders.</p>
-
-<p>"Drop it!" commanded the Moderator.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon's weapon clanged against the pavement.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Ileth suppressed a scream, swayed, half fainting. Saxon caught her
-before she fell. The girl recovered, flung her arms about his neck.</p>
-
-<p>"You can't do it!" she stormed at the Elders. "You can't. I love him. I
-don't care what he is, I love him, I tell you!"</p>
-
-<p>"Take them away!" the Moderator said imperiously.</p>
-
-<p>The wraiths had grown solid. They began to close in.</p>
-
-<p>Saxon's spine stiffened. He said, "Wait a moment!" in a breathless
-voice. "Have you overlooked the five sets of plans for Villainowski's
-stellar drive? The ones that were stolen from Government's Research
-Building?"</p>
-
-<p>The Moderator's face went gray. For the second time Saxon intercepted a
-thought flowing between the seven old men.</p>
-
-<p>A fear thought! Pure funk!</p>
-
-<p>Saxon's heart leaped like an arrow as the realization burst on him
-that the seven old men were terrified of the humanoids. They were so
-badly frightened that for a moment their guard had relaxed and the fear
-thought had escaped past their mental barriers.</p>
-
-<p>If only there was a way to exploit their fear. He felt hope surging
-back through his veins.</p>
-
-<p>"Already," he shouted, "General Atomic must be manufacturing the ships.
-And you can't stop it. The secret of stellar travel is loose among the
-humanoids!"</p>
-
-<p>"We know of the loss of the plans. General Atomic <i>is</i> laying the keels
-of thousands of the new-type ships. But that doesn't affect your fate
-in the least."</p>
-
-<p>"Doesn't it?" said Saxon harshly. "I'm the only Varkan who can compete
-with the humanoids. I'm the only one who's been conditioned to the
-speed of their reflexes."</p>
-
-<p>"You're a dangerous anti-social!" the Moderator snapped. "Your
-auto-reactions approach the humanoid level because you're still a child
-with a child's adaptiveness. When you mature you'll appreciate the
-difference. We wouldn't dare use you even if you could do anything. If
-worst comes to worst we can destroy our experiment!"</p>
-
-<p>Saxon laughed at him. "And how many generations of humanoids would have
-passed away before you could wipe out a culture that's spread to all
-the planets of its solar system? Why, they'll be swarming over Vark
-from pole to pole before you can prepare to repel them."</p>
-
-<p>The Moderator winced, tried to interrupt, but Saxon was inexorable.</p>
-
-<p>"You might have been able to destroy them while you had them isolated
-in their own Solar System. But they're free now. Free to expand through
-the Galaxy!"</p>
-
-<p>Saxon paused. The idea sprouting some time ago had begun to bear
-fruit. He pushed it resolutely out of his mind lest they intercept it.</p>
-
-<p>The Moderator asked with narrowed eyes, "You have an idea, haven't you?"</p>
-
-<p>Saxon could feel the Aliens probing at his thoughts like a scalpel
-laying bare his skull.</p>
-
-<p>"<i>Two times two is four. Three times two is six</i>," he thought hastily
-and realized the seven old men were on the verge of apoplexy.</p>
-
-<p>There was a tense moment of silence as their wills clashed. Then the
-Moderator asked, "What's your price?"</p>
-
-<p>"Freedom for myself and the crew. Hands-off policy for the humanoids."</p>
-
-<p>The silence deepened.</p>
-
-<p>Again Saxon became aware of those flickering baffling thoughts as the
-seven old men conferred behind their mental shields.</p>
-
-<p>At last, grudgingly, the Moderator spoke, "That depends on your
-success."</p>
-
-<p>Saxon didn't relax. He had won only if he had guessed the right answer
-to a question that had been obsessing him. If he was right, he would
-need no guarantee to hold the Aliens to their promise.</p>
-
-<p>"You said that when the metabolism of the humanoids was slowed they
-returned to their normal life span. Does that mean that you can
-actually lengthen their lives to equal yours?"</p>
-
-<p>The Moderator looked puzzled, nodded. "A comparatively simple
-operation, but...."</p>
-
-<p>"But nothing!" Saxon almost shouted. "If their life span is the same
-as yours, then they'll be on the same time scale. Their fecundity is
-the direct result of their shortened life cycle. They'll no longer
-constitute a menace!"</p>
-
-<p>Hope blazed temporarily in the Moderator's eyes, then went out. When he
-spoke next his voice was cold, dead.</p>
-
-<p>"But that takes time. Before we could effect the change several
-generations of humanoids would have lived and died. We'd be conquered!"</p>
-
-<p>Saxon laughed outright. "Of course, you people couldn't effect the
-change quick enough, but other humanoids could. You have Ileth here.
-She's a General Atomic agent. You have the crew and some of the best
-brains on Earth isolated on Zara. They could do it!"</p>
-
-<p>The Moderator drew in his breath sharply. "But would they be willing to
-cooperate?"</p>
-
-<p>"What a question!" roared Saxon. "Would mankind be willing to increase
-their life span ten thousand years? They'll jump at it!"</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Zara was a diminutive green little world, held in thrall by the third
-planet of Alpha Centauri A. A miniature heaven of soft breezes and
-crystal streams and gravity so slight that Saxon felt buoyant as a
-bubble.</p>
-
-<p>He said in rare good humor, "So there it is. The Varkans can't slow the
-metabolic rate of billions of humanoids by force or by themselves in
-time."</p>
-
-<p>He was surrounded by the members of the expedition, to whom he had just
-explained the proposal of the Aliens to extend mankind's normal life
-span to an unthinkable age.</p>
-
-<p>With his arm around Ileth's slim waist, he had watched suspicion give
-way to hope and hope to wild enthusiasm. Only Villainowski appeared
-disgruntled.</p>
-
-<p>"It's more than I can stomach," growled the Chief, "to think of
-perpetuating General Atomic in power practically forever."</p>
-
-<p>Saxon leaned close, said in a lowered voice, "You don't believe that
-if the people have ten thousand years to contemplate the iniquity of
-General Atomic, they'll continue to be duped. It'll be the death blow
-to all the big corporations."</p>
-
-<p>He straightened, returning his arm to Ileth's waist. "There's no reason
-for you to return to Earth with the rest of them, Villainowski. There's
-a lot to see here, a lot to learn. Ileth and I are going to spend...."</p>
-
-<p>He frowned, called, "Hey, Mercedes. You're the anthropologist. What
-was that barbaric custom practiced by newly-married couples during the
-pre-Atom age?"</p>
-
-<p>"The honeymoon." Mercedes chuckled, turned to the faintly pink Ileth,
-pinched her cheek. "Don't look so frightened, child. The first ten
-thousand years are the hardest."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>[Transcriber's Note: Original text had two section VII. Second one
-renumbered to VIII.]</p>
-
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