He ignored the shoulder-shaking as long as he could. Finally,
sleep-slurred, he muttered, “Wha’d’ya
wan’?”
“Get up, Moyshe. Time to go to work. There’s a
million things to do.”
So. Amy, he thought. Altogether too businesslike for a girl who
thought she should be a wife. He opened an eye, checked the
time.
“Five hours? What the hell kind of rest is that?” he
grumbled. “How the hell did I get here? I was in
Contact.”
“It’s been eleven hours. The clock’s
unplugged. To save power. They brought you down on a stretcher. I
thought you’d been
mind-burned . . . ” She threw herself on
top of him, clinging with desperation. “Moyshe, I was so
scared . . . ”
“All right. All right. I survived,” he grumbled. He
still was not accustomed to the Seiner habit of showing
emotion.
She reached under the sheet, tickled him. “Come on, Grump.
There’re things to do.”
He threw his arms around her and rolled her over, his mouth
seeking hers.
“Moyshe!”
He smothered her protest with a kiss. “It’s been a
week, lady.”
“I know. But . . . ”
“But me no buts, woman. The hump-backed crocodiles of
entropy are gnawing at the underbellies of our allotted spans.
I’m not going to waste an opportunity on tinkering with a
piece of pipe.”
“Moyshe! What kind of talk is that?”
“Shut up.”
“Yes, Boss.”
They dressed hurriedly afterward. Amy decided on a fresh
coverall.
“Now, what’s the hurry?” Moyshe demanded.
“You’ve got to get back to work.
Moyshe . . . We really are desperate this time.
We’re in a decaying orbit around Stars’ End. The
mindsails went in the spillover from whatever killed the Sangaree.
We’ll hit the boundary in two days unless we get the drives
working.”
“Boundary?”
“Limit of approach. Stars’ End starts shooting if a
ship passes it.”
“I wondered why we’re alive.”
“Only the Sangaree violated it. The machine is very
literal. Anyway. We’re due on shift in three hours, and Jarl
needs you to take some tests first.”
“Can’t they wait?”
“He said today.”
“Might as well. I’m awake now. Where’s
Mouse?”
“Hospital block. He’s doing okay.”
Hospital block was fifteen kilometers away. Maybe more if there
were detours. Moyshe knew he had to move fast. “We’ll
go there first.”
“Why?”
“To see Mouse.”
“But the tests!”
“Damn the tests. I want to see Mouse. You
coming?”
“Not anymore. Hey! Wait!”
They ran to a scooter, laughingly fought for the controls.
Moyshe made a point of winning. He did not trust her to take him
where he wanted to go.
He whipped down the passageway, scattering cursing pedestrians.
The wind in his face exhilarated him—till he remembered what
had happened. Memories of what he had done kept him quiet till he
reached the hospital block.
Bluff and bluster got him past nurses who believed they were
running a monastery.
They wandered the ward where Mouse was supposed to be confined,
unable to find him.
Feminine laughter suddenly rippled through the passageway.
“What do you think?” Moyshe asked.
“Wouldn’t bet against it,” Amy replied. Her
good cheer had not faded.
Moyshe followed the laughter to a small private room where he
found Mouse making friends with his nurse. BenRabi began to wonder
why he had come. It did not look as if Mouse needed him. Then he
understood. He had not come for any good, businesslike reason. He
just wanted to see how Mouse was. And that was silly. Landsmen did
not behave that way.
Mouse was fine, needless to say.
“What’re you doing in here?” Moyshe asked,
embarrassed because he was interrupting. “There’s work
to do.”
Mouse grinned, winked. “Moyshe, everybody gets a vacation.
Besides, I had to meet Vickie here. Darling, say hello to my friend
Moyshe.”
“Hello to my friend Moyshe.”
“Isn’t she something? Been trying to find out if
those long lean legs are as fine as they promise to be. Those work
outfits just don’t do a thing for a woman.”
“How are you, Mouse?” benRabi asked.
“Like the man said before they closed the coffin, as well
as can be expected under the circumstances.” He whipped his
top sheet back. His arm and shoulder were heavily bandaged and in a
partial cast. “They’ll have me back on light duty in a
couple of days. Unless I can blow in that dainty ear there and get
somebody to keep me here.”
Vickie giggled.
“Well, good. I just wanted to check. Sorry I interrupted.
Behave.”
“Don’t I always?” Mouse chuckled. “Hey,
Moyshe, go by my cabin and make sure nobody’s run off with
the silverware.”
“All right.”
“See you in a couple days.”
“Yeah.” BenRabi withdrew, Amy on his heels.
“Damn!” he told her. “I feel silly.”
“What? Why?”
He shook his head. He could not explain. Not to her. A Seiner
would never understand what he meant when he said he and Mouse had
passed a point of no return and become genuine friends. Amy did not
have the background to comprehend what that could mean to a
landsman.
She was worried. “Thinking about what Jarl is going to say
when we show up late?” he asked.
“Uhm.” She remained thoughtful as they stalked the
sterile white corridors.
“What’re the tests for?”
“I don’t know. Just some tests.”
He caught a whiff of untruth. He was not supposed to learn their
purpose. He always hated that kind of test, though people were
always taking them back home: IQ, emotional stability, prejudicial
index, social responsiveness, survival index, environmental
response, flexibility, adaptability, the government’s
euphemistically labeled Random Sample
Report . . .
Bureau agents suffered bombardment with them during briefing and
debriefing. They even had a test to test one’s resistance to
testing. His was strong. He did not like having people look inside
him. He did too damned much of that himself.
“Wouldn’t be the famous Warner test, would
it?”
She did not respond. He tried a couple of different tacks, could
not get a rise out of her, so gave up.
They had to make a detour returning to the scooter. Their
planned path was blocked with casualties just in from one of the
dead harvestships.
“It’s bad, Moyshe,” Amy said looking down
that long hallway of stretchers. “They’ve been bringing
people in since the shooting stopped. They may never get them all
out of the wrecks. They’re falling in toward Stars’ End
too.”
“Where are they going to put them? We’ll end up having to
sleep standing up.”
“We’ll find something.”
“Reminds me of my senior year midshipman cruise,” he
said. “There were war scares that summer too. The Shadowline
War and the Sangaree. And somebody had found a McGraw world. The
fleet was tied up. Academy contracted our shipboard astrogation
training to private carriers.”
Memories. That had been the summer he had ended it with
Alyce . . .
“Tell me about it.”
“Eh? Why?”
“Because I don’t know anything about you. You never
talk about yourself. I want to know who you are.”
“Well, I got the worst billet on the list. Some people
didn’t like me. It was a raggedy-ass Freehauler on the Rim
Run from Tregorgarth to The Big Rock Candy Mountain to Blackworld,
then Carson’s, Sierra, and The Broken Wings. Broomstick all
the way, with crazy passengers. The Freehaulers carry some real
weirdos. Between The Broken Wings and Carson’s, coming back,
we got jumped by McGraws. My first taste of action.”
After he had been silent a few seconds, she asked, “What
happened?”
“It was a complete surprise. McGraws don’t usually
bother Freehaulers, but Navy was pushing them hard and we were
carrying weapons for Gneaus Storm . . . ”
Why was he telling her this? It was none of her business.
Still . . . Talking kept his mind off the
upcoming tests.
“Go on, Moyshe.”
He did not doubt that details of the incident were in
Kindervoort’s files.
“Tinker’s Dam—that was the ship—had a
cranky drive. Just a hair out of synch. The Freehaulers
couldn’t afford to tune it till after the run. So the McGraws
couldn’t phase in and pull us into normspace. They tried
putting a warning shot across our nose. The drive did one of its
tricks, phased in with theirs, and dragged us both into the
explosion. The McGraw was destroyed. Tinker’s Dam was hurt pretty
bad, but we kept one section airtight. I was trapped there with
this crazy family from some First Expansion world. They hated
everybody, and Old Earthers and aliens especially. And it was up to
me and a Ulantonid radioman to find out where we were and call for
help. Took three weeks to rig a transmitter, and three more months
before anybody caught our signal. It was miserable. There I was,
nineteen years old, scared to death, and all that on
me . . . Hey! Where are we?”
Chagrined, Amy replied, “I was listening. I guess we took
a wrong turn. We’ll have to go back.”
Back they went till she found a passage that would take them in
the right direction. It led through a women’s intensive-care
ward. The casualties were out where the harried nurses could
examine them at a glance. There were at least three hundred women
crammed into a ward meant for fifty. “It’s really bad,
isn’t it?”
“They’re moving the walking wounded into the
residential blocks.”
Moyshe stopped suddenly, stricken. The face of the final
patient, confined to a burn tank, was one he had not expected to
see again. “Marya!”
She was alive, and inside her tank, amid the jungle of tubes,
she was aware. She met his gaze, tried to communicate her hatred.
Her I.V. monitor fed her a little nembutol.
“Moyshe? What’s the matter?”
He pointed.
“You didn’t know?”
“No. I thought she was dead.”
“She would have died if we hadn’t gotten her here so
quick.”
“But . . . ”
“You used the torch from too far away.”
“I see.”
She dropped the subject, realizing he wanted done with it.
He should have realized that Marya would not go easily.
Did she have a partner? The answer was critical. His life might
depend on it.
And if he survived here, Marya would come after him landside. He
was winning the battles, but the war remained in doubt.
He did not look forward to their next encounter.
“What’s the rush, suddenly?” Amy asked. He was
almost running.
Kindervoort was not pleased with his being late, but he shuffled
Moyshe into a testing room without remonstrance.
“This’s benRabi.”
Psych types took over. Moyshe suffered through the old parade of
idiot questions. Since childhood he had been trying to beat them
with random answers—which was why his test sessions always
lasted so long. The computers needed a big sample to pin him
down.
When the psychs were done they turned him over to regular
medical types who gave him a thorough physical. They were in love
with his head. He told the life story of his migraine three times,
and endured dozens of shallow and area skull scans.
They also wanted to know all about his instel implant.
He developed a sudden muteness. Bureau activities were beyond
discussion.
Just when he was about to scream they turned him loose. The
chief examiner apologized profusely for taking so long. There was
not a hint of sincerity in his tone. Both he and Moyshe knew the
time factor was Moyshe’s fault.
Moyshe was told to get a good night’s rest before going
back to work.
He hoped they had not learned anything, but suspected that they
had. Profile tests were hard to beat.
Time slipped away quickly, almost as swiftly as it did in the
mad, hectic culture groundside. Moyshe returned to Damage Control.
His working hours were gruesome.
Somehow, they got the drives functioning and pushed
Danion into a stable orbit. Then the real work began.
Everyone not engaged in rescue work, or in keeping the ship alive,
began preparing her for a hyper fly to the Yards.
Moyshe’s work was less demanding than he expected.
Danion had suffered more damage to personnel than to
plant, had been hurt more by shark attack than by Sangaree
fire.
He heard rumors claiming half the harvestship’s people had
perished, or had been made as good as dead by mindburn. His
acquaintances had been lucky. He knew no one who had been a victim.
But every day, in the course of work, he encountered new faces, and
missed a lot of old ones.
Every time he wakened Moyshe was amazed to find himself still
alive. The battle of Stars’ End was over and won, but winning
had left the harvestfleet on the brink of disaster. New problems
arose as fast as old ones were conquered.
And the sharks had not given up. They stalked the fleet and herd
still, their numbers growing daily. In a week, or a month, they
would strike again.
The fleet was in a race against time. It had to make the Yards
before the sharks reached critical . . .
Time fled swiftly when sudden death lurked behind the veil of
time, and every day passing brought Moyshe closer to an hour he
dreaded, the moment when he would have to return to Carson’s
and his old life.
He did not want to leave.
The I want had not sipped at the blood of his soul since the
battle, nor had he had visions of imaginary guns. He seemed to have
undergone a spontaneous remission of his mental diseases. In that
way the weeks were close to tranquil. His problems became more
direct and personal.
He had found what he needed, a combination of things to do with
belonging: a woman, a useful occupation, and a place in a society
that considered him something more than a bundle of statistics to
be manipulated. He could not yet quite understand what had
happened, or why, but he knew he belonged here. Even if he was not
yet wholly accepted.
This was what he had been seeking when he had abandoned Old
Earth. Navy had given him some of it, but not enough. This was the
real thing.
He had come home.
But how could he stay? There were prior demands on his
loyalties. He simply could not accept Kindervoort’s terms. He
could not betray the Bureau.
Should he see Jarl and try to arrange
something? . . . He vacillated. He swung this
way and that. He decided and changed his mind a hundred times a
day.
What about Mouse? What would he think? What would he do and
say?
And all the while, like a recording mechanism, he kept making
his notes for the Bureau. Sometimes he worried about getting them
off the ship, but that did not much matter. Writing them down fixed
them in his backbrain, from which the Psychs could dredge them with
narcohypnosis.
Assuming he went home.
Assuming he wanted them recovered. He had not wanted this
mission back when, and wanted it even less now. By carrying it out
he might destroy something that had become dear.
He was in a proper mood for concluding Jerusalem. And he had
found just the quote for summation:
The world was all revenge and thou hadst said:
“It is a seething sea!” Earth had no room
For
walking, air was ambushed by the spears,
The stars began to fray, and time and earth
Washed hands in
mischief . . .
—Firdausi (Abul Kasim Mansur)
All Jerusalem’s characters had perished while trying to
seize their hearts’ desires. Farewell, old companions, he
thought.
So much for that. It had been a pretentious trial of modern
literature anyway. He did not like the thing anymore. Only his
suicidal mood had let him finish quickly, rather than with the
intimate detail he had planned originally. Sometimes he felt so
like his own creations, denied anything but a deadly
end . . .
Ten days remained on his contract when he received the second
summons from Contact. Jarl Kindervoort relayed it personally.
“I’d really rather not do any more mindteching,
Jarl,” he said. “I’m not trained for it, and
I’m perfectly happy where I’m at.”
“I’d rather you didn’t myself.”
Kindervoort seemed caught in a baffled daze. “You know too
goddamned much already. But orders are orders, and these came from
the top.”
A chill breeze swept Moyshe’s cabin. He knew too
much . . . Would they let him go? If they
did . . . Kindervoort was capable of arranging
a deep-space accident that would silence the returning
landsmen.
Would Jarl’s superiors authorize an incident? Starfishers
were feisty, but did not go out of their way to provoke
Confederation.
“What’s going on, Jarl?”
“I don’t know. And I don’t like it.
They’ve shut me out. They want you reassigned to Contact.
That’s all I know. I’m just a messenger boy. Grab
yourself a scooter and go. Here’s your pass.”
“But I don’t want
to . . . ”
“You’re still under contract. You agreed to perform
whatever duties were assigned.”
“Damn. All right. Right now?”
“Right now.”
Moyshe reached Contact a half hour later. He found the same old
man in charge. “You’ll be working with Hans and Clara
again, Mr. benRabi. Strictly basic contact exercises. I don’t
know which fish your rapport will be. They decide that for
themselves.”
“Why am I here? There’s no point in this. I’m
leaving the end of next week.”
The man acted deaf. “You’ll probably link with
several fish during the coming week. They like to get different
perspectives on a mind before they decide on a permanent partner.
Hans. Clara. Mr. benRabi is here. Go ahead with the basic
program.”
“Now wait a goddamned
minute . . . ”
The old man walked away, pursuing a black-uniformed electrician
whose repair work did not please him.
“Good morning, Moyshe,” Clara said. “Good to
have you back. How have you been?”
And the youth, Hans, said, “We’ll be your regular
support team. They’ve given us Number
Fifty-one . . . ”
“Who the hell does that guy think he is? When I speak to
somebody I expect them to answer.”
“Take it easy,” Hans suggested. “He does that
to everybody. You’ll get used to him.”
“He’s a dreadful boss,” Clara said.
“Just dreadful. But we won’t have him much longer.
They’re booting him upstairs. Why don’t you show Moyshe
our station, Hans. I’ll get us all some coffee.”
“What do you think is going on?” benRabi asked Hans.
He sat on the end of the Contact couch. “I’ve got no
business being here.”
Hans shrugged. “I haven’t the faintest. They just
told us you’d be our new mindtech, that we should start
breaking you in. Clara thought you’d decided to stay.
Didn’t you?”
“What’s that?” Clara asked.
“Say that Mr. benRabi decided to stay with
Danion.”
“Yes. Hasn’t he?” She handed Moyshe a cup of
coffee. “Black?”
“That’s fine. No, I’m not staying.”
“I don’t understand.” She seemed confused.
“Neither do I. I tried to tell them somebody screwed up.
Nobody would listen. You know how things go. When their minds are
made up . . . ”
“I’d better check,” Clara said.
“There’s no point going ahead if it’s all a
mixup.”
“Do that.”
She returned fifteen minutes later looking more puzzled than
ever. “They said go ahead.”
“Dammit, why?”
“I don’t know, Moyshe. That’s what they told
me.”
“It just doesn’t make sense.”
“Thought you were a soldier,” Hans said.
“Thought you were used to taking orders you didn’t
understand.”
“I knew they made sense to the man who gave
them . . . ”
Hans smiled. Made sense to the man who gave them. He barely heard Clara when
she said, “We’d better get started. We’re behind
schedule.”
So Beckhartism existed here too. He must have that look of the
born pawn.
Try as he might, he could see no way the Seiners could profit
from training him as a mindtech. Not if he was going back.
“Ready, Moyshe. Same drill as the other day. It
shouldn’t bother you this time. We won’t be drawing
power. Just go out and float. Try to open to the fish and get the
feel.”
Hans slipped the helmet over benRabi’s head. Clara’s
voice came through, warm and gentle.
“Remember, one click down on the right for TSD, Moyshe.
Two for Contact. Up on the left to come back. Go when you’re
ready.”
He pushed the right-hand switch without knowing why.
The womblike comfort of total sensory deprivation enveloped him.
He let it take him, carrying off the aches and fears of reality. He
ran through a mantra several times, trying to take his mind into
the same nirvana his flesh occupied.
This was nice. A man could lower his guard here, could relax his
vigil against the universe. Nothing could reach
him . . .
Wrong. His hindbrain, the ancient brain that had crawled out of
the sea of Old Earth a billion years ago, could not tolerate an
extended absence of stimuli. It became claustrophobic.
“You’re staying in TSD too long, Moyshe,”
Clara said from a thousand kilometers away. “That’s not
good for your mind.”
He depressed the switch again.
Weirdly distorted and colored space formed around him.
He was falling toward a milky scar some cruel god had scratched
on the face of darkness. Logic told him it was the galaxy, that it
looked both solid and fuzzy because his brain was trying to
translate something seen in hyper into conventionalized images.
What was he seeing? Tachyon scatter? Gravitation? The frenzied
dance of the gluons that cement all matter? The scar was most
intense toward the galactic core, which would have been concealed
by dust clouds in norm space.
Long pink streaks, like the fire of ruby lasers, winked past
him, arrowing to a point of convergence centered on the heart of
the galaxy. A barrage of golden tracers skipped along inside the
circle of pink lines. Sharks and starfish skipping along with the
harvestfleet?
He extended his attention till he detected several egg-shapes of
St. Elmo’s fire, with cometary tails, that had to be
harvestships in hyper transit. He searched, but could find no trace
of Stars’ End. The fortress world had been left behind. The
Seiner gamble had failed. That episode had ended.
Payne’s Fleet was running for the
Yards . . .
“Hello, Moyshe man-friend.”
BenRabi felt a rush of elation as he recognized Chub. It became
a feeling of, “I’m home! This is where I
belong.”
“You came back, Moyshe man-friend.”
“Yes. I didn’t think I would. You survived the
battle. I’m glad.” The starfish’s mental fingers
slithered into his mind, bringing comfort. He did not resist.
A feel of laughter accompanied, “Me too, Moyshe
man-friend. You came to learn to be linker?”
“I guess.”
“Good. I teach. Me, starfish Chub, best teacher ever. Make
you best linker of all time. Show Old Ones. We begin. You study
universe around, try to see, tell me what you see.”
Moyshe did as he was told.
“No. No. See everything at once. Forget eyes. Forget
senses of flesh entire, let universe soak in, be one. Forget self.
Forget everything. Just be, like center of universe.”
It was the prime lesson he had to learn, and the most difficult
one for the beginning mindtech. He tried valiantly, hour after
hour, but it was like forcing sleep. The more effort he invested,
the more remote his goal became.
He heard a faint voice calling. “Moyshe? Moyshe? Time to
come out now.”
He did not want to go. This being outside, this being free, this
made everything he had endured worthwhile. At Stars’ End
death had been leaning over his shoulder. Here, unthreatened, he
found himself closer to heaven than anything else he could imagine.
It was almost a religious experience, like a first space-walk EVA,
or a first orgasm.
Reluctantly, he commanded his left hand to lift.
All the aches and pains of mortal flesh crept back into his
consciousness, and for an instant he understood those people who
sought the false nirvana promised by drugs and religion.
Something stung his arm as the helmet slid off his head.
“Just a precaution,” Clara told him. “You
shouldn’t have much of a contact reaction, but we never know
for sure.”
The agonies of the flesh receded. His incipient migraine died
unborn. “That was something,” he said. “I
didn’t want to come back.”
“You’ve got the true linker touch, then,” Hans
told him. “They never want to go and they never want to come
back.”
“Eat big and get a lot of sleep,” Clara said.
“Contact takes more out of you than you think.”
He shared three more extended sessions with Chub, and they
became solid friends—within the limits of two such alien
backgrounds.
His fifth training link brought him in touch with a creature
calling itself a Judge of the Old Ones. The Judge was nothing like
Chub. It was completely and truly alien. It entered his mind as
coldly as a serpent, digging, exploring, till he felt like a bug
under a microscope. It made no effort to teach him, nor did it
chat, nor conceal its task of determining if he was fit to link
with starfish. Moyshe was glad to break that contact, real-world
pains notwithstanding.
He went into contact with the Old Ones twice more, and each was
as chill and phlegmatic as the Judge. These were the passionless
creatures Czyzewski must have had in mind when he had penned
“The Old God.” Their minds were exactly what benRabi
imagined a god’s to be.
Then there were two glorious, rollicking, fun days with Chub,
who had been appointed his “permanent” link.
Irreverent, Chub made the most libelous observations about the Old
Ones Moyshe had encountered. BenRabi countered by trying to teach
the starfish the concept of humor.
And then it was over. The dream came to an end.
“Good-bye, Moyshe man-friend,” Chub said, setting
benRabi’s mind to echoing sadness. “I will think of you
often, stranger than any man-friend.”
“I’ll remember you, too, Chub,” Moyshe
promised. “Try to catch me when I reach out in my
dreams.” He ripped upward on his exit switch.
Clara and Hans thought he was in pain and tried to give him a
second pain shot, but he pushed them away. He let the tears flow.
Then he hugged Clara. “Good-bye.” He took Hans’s
hand. “I’m going to miss you both.”
They stood and watched as, slump-shouldered, he shuffled out of
Contact for the last time.
He ignored the shoulder-shaking as long as he could. Finally,
sleep-slurred, he muttered, “Wha’d’ya
wan’?”
“Get up, Moyshe. Time to go to work. There’s a
million things to do.”
So. Amy, he thought. Altogether too businesslike for a girl who
thought she should be a wife. He opened an eye, checked the
time.
“Five hours? What the hell kind of rest is that?” he
grumbled. “How the hell did I get here? I was in
Contact.”
“It’s been eleven hours. The clock’s
unplugged. To save power. They brought you down on a stretcher. I
thought you’d been
mind-burned . . . ” She threw herself on
top of him, clinging with desperation. “Moyshe, I was so
scared . . . ”
“All right. All right. I survived,” he grumbled. He
still was not accustomed to the Seiner habit of showing
emotion.
She reached under the sheet, tickled him. “Come on, Grump.
There’re things to do.”
He threw his arms around her and rolled her over, his mouth
seeking hers.
“Moyshe!”
He smothered her protest with a kiss. “It’s been a
week, lady.”
“I know. But . . . ”
“But me no buts, woman. The hump-backed crocodiles of
entropy are gnawing at the underbellies of our allotted spans.
I’m not going to waste an opportunity on tinkering with a
piece of pipe.”
“Moyshe! What kind of talk is that?”
“Shut up.”
“Yes, Boss.”
They dressed hurriedly afterward. Amy decided on a fresh
coverall.
“Now, what’s the hurry?” Moyshe demanded.
“You’ve got to get back to work.
Moyshe . . . We really are desperate this time.
We’re in a decaying orbit around Stars’ End. The
mindsails went in the spillover from whatever killed the Sangaree.
We’ll hit the boundary in two days unless we get the drives
working.”
“Boundary?”
“Limit of approach. Stars’ End starts shooting if a
ship passes it.”
“I wondered why we’re alive.”
“Only the Sangaree violated it. The machine is very
literal. Anyway. We’re due on shift in three hours, and Jarl
needs you to take some tests first.”
“Can’t they wait?”
“He said today.”
“Might as well. I’m awake now. Where’s
Mouse?”
“Hospital block. He’s doing okay.”
Hospital block was fifteen kilometers away. Maybe more if there
were detours. Moyshe knew he had to move fast. “We’ll
go there first.”
“Why?”
“To see Mouse.”
“But the tests!”
“Damn the tests. I want to see Mouse. You
coming?”
“Not anymore. Hey! Wait!”
They ran to a scooter, laughingly fought for the controls.
Moyshe made a point of winning. He did not trust her to take him
where he wanted to go.
He whipped down the passageway, scattering cursing pedestrians.
The wind in his face exhilarated him—till he remembered what
had happened. Memories of what he had done kept him quiet till he
reached the hospital block.
Bluff and bluster got him past nurses who believed they were
running a monastery.
They wandered the ward where Mouse was supposed to be confined,
unable to find him.
Feminine laughter suddenly rippled through the passageway.
“What do you think?” Moyshe asked.
“Wouldn’t bet against it,” Amy replied. Her
good cheer had not faded.
Moyshe followed the laughter to a small private room where he
found Mouse making friends with his nurse. BenRabi began to wonder
why he had come. It did not look as if Mouse needed him. Then he
understood. He had not come for any good, businesslike reason. He
just wanted to see how Mouse was. And that was silly. Landsmen did
not behave that way.
Mouse was fine, needless to say.
“What’re you doing in here?” Moyshe asked,
embarrassed because he was interrupting. “There’s work
to do.”
Mouse grinned, winked. “Moyshe, everybody gets a vacation.
Besides, I had to meet Vickie here. Darling, say hello to my friend
Moyshe.”
“Hello to my friend Moyshe.”
“Isn’t she something? Been trying to find out if
those long lean legs are as fine as they promise to be. Those work
outfits just don’t do a thing for a woman.”
“How are you, Mouse?” benRabi asked.
“Like the man said before they closed the coffin, as well
as can be expected under the circumstances.” He whipped his
top sheet back. His arm and shoulder were heavily bandaged and in a
partial cast. “They’ll have me back on light duty in a
couple of days. Unless I can blow in that dainty ear there and get
somebody to keep me here.”
Vickie giggled.
“Well, good. I just wanted to check. Sorry I interrupted.
Behave.”
“Don’t I always?” Mouse chuckled. “Hey,
Moyshe, go by my cabin and make sure nobody’s run off with
the silverware.”
“All right.”
“See you in a couple days.”
“Yeah.” BenRabi withdrew, Amy on his heels.
“Damn!” he told her. “I feel silly.”
“What? Why?”
He shook his head. He could not explain. Not to her. A Seiner
would never understand what he meant when he said he and Mouse had
passed a point of no return and become genuine friends. Amy did not
have the background to comprehend what that could mean to a
landsman.
She was worried. “Thinking about what Jarl is going to say
when we show up late?” he asked.
“Uhm.” She remained thoughtful as they stalked the
sterile white corridors.
“What’re the tests for?”
“I don’t know. Just some tests.”
He caught a whiff of untruth. He was not supposed to learn their
purpose. He always hated that kind of test, though people were
always taking them back home: IQ, emotional stability, prejudicial
index, social responsiveness, survival index, environmental
response, flexibility, adaptability, the government’s
euphemistically labeled Random Sample
Report . . .
Bureau agents suffered bombardment with them during briefing and
debriefing. They even had a test to test one’s resistance to
testing. His was strong. He did not like having people look inside
him. He did too damned much of that himself.
“Wouldn’t be the famous Warner test, would
it?”
She did not respond. He tried a couple of different tacks, could
not get a rise out of her, so gave up.
They had to make a detour returning to the scooter. Their
planned path was blocked with casualties just in from one of the
dead harvestships.
“It’s bad, Moyshe,” Amy said looking down
that long hallway of stretchers. “They’ve been bringing
people in since the shooting stopped. They may never get them all
out of the wrecks. They’re falling in toward Stars’ End
too.”
“Where are they going to put them? We’ll end up having to
sleep standing up.”
“We’ll find something.”
“Reminds me of my senior year midshipman cruise,” he
said. “There were war scares that summer too. The Shadowline
War and the Sangaree. And somebody had found a McGraw world. The
fleet was tied up. Academy contracted our shipboard astrogation
training to private carriers.”
Memories. That had been the summer he had ended it with
Alyce . . .
“Tell me about it.”
“Eh? Why?”
“Because I don’t know anything about you. You never
talk about yourself. I want to know who you are.”
“Well, I got the worst billet on the list. Some people
didn’t like me. It was a raggedy-ass Freehauler on the Rim
Run from Tregorgarth to The Big Rock Candy Mountain to Blackworld,
then Carson’s, Sierra, and The Broken Wings. Broomstick all
the way, with crazy passengers. The Freehaulers carry some real
weirdos. Between The Broken Wings and Carson’s, coming back,
we got jumped by McGraws. My first taste of action.”
After he had been silent a few seconds, she asked, “What
happened?”
“It was a complete surprise. McGraws don’t usually
bother Freehaulers, but Navy was pushing them hard and we were
carrying weapons for Gneaus Storm . . . ”
Why was he telling her this? It was none of her business.
Still . . . Talking kept his mind off the
upcoming tests.
“Go on, Moyshe.”
He did not doubt that details of the incident were in
Kindervoort’s files.
“Tinker’s Dam—that was the ship—had a
cranky drive. Just a hair out of synch. The Freehaulers
couldn’t afford to tune it till after the run. So the McGraws
couldn’t phase in and pull us into normspace. They tried
putting a warning shot across our nose. The drive did one of its
tricks, phased in with theirs, and dragged us both into the
explosion. The McGraw was destroyed. Tinker’s Dam was hurt pretty
bad, but we kept one section airtight. I was trapped there with
this crazy family from some First Expansion world. They hated
everybody, and Old Earthers and aliens especially. And it was up to
me and a Ulantonid radioman to find out where we were and call for
help. Took three weeks to rig a transmitter, and three more months
before anybody caught our signal. It was miserable. There I was,
nineteen years old, scared to death, and all that on
me . . . Hey! Where are we?”
Chagrined, Amy replied, “I was listening. I guess we took
a wrong turn. We’ll have to go back.”
Back they went till she found a passage that would take them in
the right direction. It led through a women’s intensive-care
ward. The casualties were out where the harried nurses could
examine them at a glance. There were at least three hundred women
crammed into a ward meant for fifty. “It’s really bad,
isn’t it?”
“They’re moving the walking wounded into the
residential blocks.”
Moyshe stopped suddenly, stricken. The face of the final
patient, confined to a burn tank, was one he had not expected to
see again. “Marya!”
She was alive, and inside her tank, amid the jungle of tubes,
she was aware. She met his gaze, tried to communicate her hatred.
Her I.V. monitor fed her a little nembutol.
“Moyshe? What’s the matter?”
He pointed.
“You didn’t know?”
“No. I thought she was dead.”
“She would have died if we hadn’t gotten her here so
quick.”
“But . . . ”
“You used the torch from too far away.”
“I see.”
She dropped the subject, realizing he wanted done with it.
He should have realized that Marya would not go easily.
Did she have a partner? The answer was critical. His life might
depend on it.
And if he survived here, Marya would come after him landside. He
was winning the battles, but the war remained in doubt.
He did not look forward to their next encounter.
“What’s the rush, suddenly?” Amy asked. He was
almost running.
Kindervoort was not pleased with his being late, but he shuffled
Moyshe into a testing room without remonstrance.
“This’s benRabi.”
Psych types took over. Moyshe suffered through the old parade of
idiot questions. Since childhood he had been trying to beat them
with random answers—which was why his test sessions always
lasted so long. The computers needed a big sample to pin him
down.
When the psychs were done they turned him over to regular
medical types who gave him a thorough physical. They were in love
with his head. He told the life story of his migraine three times,
and endured dozens of shallow and area skull scans.
They also wanted to know all about his instel implant.
He developed a sudden muteness. Bureau activities were beyond
discussion.
Just when he was about to scream they turned him loose. The
chief examiner apologized profusely for taking so long. There was
not a hint of sincerity in his tone. Both he and Moyshe knew the
time factor was Moyshe’s fault.
Moyshe was told to get a good night’s rest before going
back to work.
He hoped they had not learned anything, but suspected that they
had. Profile tests were hard to beat.
Time slipped away quickly, almost as swiftly as it did in the
mad, hectic culture groundside. Moyshe returned to Damage Control.
His working hours were gruesome.
Somehow, they got the drives functioning and pushed
Danion into a stable orbit. Then the real work began.
Everyone not engaged in rescue work, or in keeping the ship alive,
began preparing her for a hyper fly to the Yards.
Moyshe’s work was less demanding than he expected.
Danion had suffered more damage to personnel than to
plant, had been hurt more by shark attack than by Sangaree
fire.
He heard rumors claiming half the harvestship’s people had
perished, or had been made as good as dead by mindburn. His
acquaintances had been lucky. He knew no one who had been a victim.
But every day, in the course of work, he encountered new faces, and
missed a lot of old ones.
Every time he wakened Moyshe was amazed to find himself still
alive. The battle of Stars’ End was over and won, but winning
had left the harvestfleet on the brink of disaster. New problems
arose as fast as old ones were conquered.
And the sharks had not given up. They stalked the fleet and herd
still, their numbers growing daily. In a week, or a month, they
would strike again.
The fleet was in a race against time. It had to make the Yards
before the sharks reached critical . . .
Time fled swiftly when sudden death lurked behind the veil of
time, and every day passing brought Moyshe closer to an hour he
dreaded, the moment when he would have to return to Carson’s
and his old life.
He did not want to leave.
The I want had not sipped at the blood of his soul since the
battle, nor had he had visions of imaginary guns. He seemed to have
undergone a spontaneous remission of his mental diseases. In that
way the weeks were close to tranquil. His problems became more
direct and personal.
He had found what he needed, a combination of things to do with
belonging: a woman, a useful occupation, and a place in a society
that considered him something more than a bundle of statistics to
be manipulated. He could not yet quite understand what had
happened, or why, but he knew he belonged here. Even if he was not
yet wholly accepted.
This was what he had been seeking when he had abandoned Old
Earth. Navy had given him some of it, but not enough. This was the
real thing.
He had come home.
But how could he stay? There were prior demands on his
loyalties. He simply could not accept Kindervoort’s terms. He
could not betray the Bureau.
Should he see Jarl and try to arrange
something? . . . He vacillated. He swung this
way and that. He decided and changed his mind a hundred times a
day.
What about Mouse? What would he think? What would he do and
say?
And all the while, like a recording mechanism, he kept making
his notes for the Bureau. Sometimes he worried about getting them
off the ship, but that did not much matter. Writing them down fixed
them in his backbrain, from which the Psychs could dredge them with
narcohypnosis.
Assuming he went home.
Assuming he wanted them recovered. He had not wanted this
mission back when, and wanted it even less now. By carrying it out
he might destroy something that had become dear.
He was in a proper mood for concluding Jerusalem. And he had
found just the quote for summation:
The world was all revenge and thou hadst said:
“It is a seething sea!” Earth had no room
For
walking, air was ambushed by the spears,
The stars began to fray, and time and earth
Washed hands in
mischief . . .
—Firdausi (Abul Kasim Mansur)
All Jerusalem’s characters had perished while trying to
seize their hearts’ desires. Farewell, old companions, he
thought.
So much for that. It had been a pretentious trial of modern
literature anyway. He did not like the thing anymore. Only his
suicidal mood had let him finish quickly, rather than with the
intimate detail he had planned originally. Sometimes he felt so
like his own creations, denied anything but a deadly
end . . .
Ten days remained on his contract when he received the second
summons from Contact. Jarl Kindervoort relayed it personally.
“I’d really rather not do any more mindteching,
Jarl,” he said. “I’m not trained for it, and
I’m perfectly happy where I’m at.”
“I’d rather you didn’t myself.”
Kindervoort seemed caught in a baffled daze. “You know too
goddamned much already. But orders are orders, and these came from
the top.”
A chill breeze swept Moyshe’s cabin. He knew too
much . . . Would they let him go? If they
did . . . Kindervoort was capable of arranging
a deep-space accident that would silence the returning
landsmen.
Would Jarl’s superiors authorize an incident? Starfishers
were feisty, but did not go out of their way to provoke
Confederation.
“What’s going on, Jarl?”
“I don’t know. And I don’t like it.
They’ve shut me out. They want you reassigned to Contact.
That’s all I know. I’m just a messenger boy. Grab
yourself a scooter and go. Here’s your pass.”
“But I don’t want
to . . . ”
“You’re still under contract. You agreed to perform
whatever duties were assigned.”
“Damn. All right. Right now?”
“Right now.”
Moyshe reached Contact a half hour later. He found the same old
man in charge. “You’ll be working with Hans and Clara
again, Mr. benRabi. Strictly basic contact exercises. I don’t
know which fish your rapport will be. They decide that for
themselves.”
“Why am I here? There’s no point in this. I’m
leaving the end of next week.”
The man acted deaf. “You’ll probably link with
several fish during the coming week. They like to get different
perspectives on a mind before they decide on a permanent partner.
Hans. Clara. Mr. benRabi is here. Go ahead with the basic
program.”
“Now wait a goddamned
minute . . . ”
The old man walked away, pursuing a black-uniformed electrician
whose repair work did not please him.
“Good morning, Moyshe,” Clara said. “Good to
have you back. How have you been?”
And the youth, Hans, said, “We’ll be your regular
support team. They’ve given us Number
Fifty-one . . . ”
“Who the hell does that guy think he is? When I speak to
somebody I expect them to answer.”
“Take it easy,” Hans suggested. “He does that
to everybody. You’ll get used to him.”
“He’s a dreadful boss,” Clara said.
“Just dreadful. But we won’t have him much longer.
They’re booting him upstairs. Why don’t you show Moyshe
our station, Hans. I’ll get us all some coffee.”
“What do you think is going on?” benRabi asked Hans.
He sat on the end of the Contact couch. “I’ve got no
business being here.”
Hans shrugged. “I haven’t the faintest. They just
told us you’d be our new mindtech, that we should start
breaking you in. Clara thought you’d decided to stay.
Didn’t you?”
“What’s that?” Clara asked.
“Say that Mr. benRabi decided to stay with
Danion.”
“Yes. Hasn’t he?” She handed Moyshe a cup of
coffee. “Black?”
“That’s fine. No, I’m not staying.”
“I don’t understand.” She seemed confused.
“Neither do I. I tried to tell them somebody screwed up.
Nobody would listen. You know how things go. When their minds are
made up . . . ”
“I’d better check,” Clara said.
“There’s no point going ahead if it’s all a
mixup.”
“Do that.”
She returned fifteen minutes later looking more puzzled than
ever. “They said go ahead.”
“Dammit, why?”
“I don’t know, Moyshe. That’s what they told
me.”
“It just doesn’t make sense.”
“Thought you were a soldier,” Hans said.
“Thought you were used to taking orders you didn’t
understand.”
“I knew they made sense to the man who gave
them . . . ”
Hans smiled. Made sense to the man who gave them. He barely heard Clara when
she said, “We’d better get started. We’re behind
schedule.”
So Beckhartism existed here too. He must have that look of the
born pawn.
Try as he might, he could see no way the Seiners could profit
from training him as a mindtech. Not if he was going back.
“Ready, Moyshe. Same drill as the other day. It
shouldn’t bother you this time. We won’t be drawing
power. Just go out and float. Try to open to the fish and get the
feel.”
Hans slipped the helmet over benRabi’s head. Clara’s
voice came through, warm and gentle.
“Remember, one click down on the right for TSD, Moyshe.
Two for Contact. Up on the left to come back. Go when you’re
ready.”
He pushed the right-hand switch without knowing why.
The womblike comfort of total sensory deprivation enveloped him.
He let it take him, carrying off the aches and fears of reality. He
ran through a mantra several times, trying to take his mind into
the same nirvana his flesh occupied.
This was nice. A man could lower his guard here, could relax his
vigil against the universe. Nothing could reach
him . . .
Wrong. His hindbrain, the ancient brain that had crawled out of
the sea of Old Earth a billion years ago, could not tolerate an
extended absence of stimuli. It became claustrophobic.
“You’re staying in TSD too long, Moyshe,”
Clara said from a thousand kilometers away. “That’s not
good for your mind.”
He depressed the switch again.
Weirdly distorted and colored space formed around him.
He was falling toward a milky scar some cruel god had scratched
on the face of darkness. Logic told him it was the galaxy, that it
looked both solid and fuzzy because his brain was trying to
translate something seen in hyper into conventionalized images.
What was he seeing? Tachyon scatter? Gravitation? The frenzied
dance of the gluons that cement all matter? The scar was most
intense toward the galactic core, which would have been concealed
by dust clouds in norm space.
Long pink streaks, like the fire of ruby lasers, winked past
him, arrowing to a point of convergence centered on the heart of
the galaxy. A barrage of golden tracers skipped along inside the
circle of pink lines. Sharks and starfish skipping along with the
harvestfleet?
He extended his attention till he detected several egg-shapes of
St. Elmo’s fire, with cometary tails, that had to be
harvestships in hyper transit. He searched, but could find no trace
of Stars’ End. The fortress world had been left behind. The
Seiner gamble had failed. That episode had ended.
Payne’s Fleet was running for the
Yards . . .
“Hello, Moyshe man-friend.”
BenRabi felt a rush of elation as he recognized Chub. It became
a feeling of, “I’m home! This is where I
belong.”
“You came back, Moyshe man-friend.”
“Yes. I didn’t think I would. You survived the
battle. I’m glad.” The starfish’s mental fingers
slithered into his mind, bringing comfort. He did not resist.
A feel of laughter accompanied, “Me too, Moyshe
man-friend. You came to learn to be linker?”
“I guess.”
“Good. I teach. Me, starfish Chub, best teacher ever. Make
you best linker of all time. Show Old Ones. We begin. You study
universe around, try to see, tell me what you see.”
Moyshe did as he was told.
“No. No. See everything at once. Forget eyes. Forget
senses of flesh entire, let universe soak in, be one. Forget self.
Forget everything. Just be, like center of universe.”
It was the prime lesson he had to learn, and the most difficult
one for the beginning mindtech. He tried valiantly, hour after
hour, but it was like forcing sleep. The more effort he invested,
the more remote his goal became.
He heard a faint voice calling. “Moyshe? Moyshe? Time to
come out now.”
He did not want to go. This being outside, this being free, this
made everything he had endured worthwhile. At Stars’ End
death had been leaning over his shoulder. Here, unthreatened, he
found himself closer to heaven than anything else he could imagine.
It was almost a religious experience, like a first space-walk EVA,
or a first orgasm.
Reluctantly, he commanded his left hand to lift.
All the aches and pains of mortal flesh crept back into his
consciousness, and for an instant he understood those people who
sought the false nirvana promised by drugs and religion.
Something stung his arm as the helmet slid off his head.
“Just a precaution,” Clara told him. “You
shouldn’t have much of a contact reaction, but we never know
for sure.”
The agonies of the flesh receded. His incipient migraine died
unborn. “That was something,” he said. “I
didn’t want to come back.”
“You’ve got the true linker touch, then,” Hans
told him. “They never want to go and they never want to come
back.”
“Eat big and get a lot of sleep,” Clara said.
“Contact takes more out of you than you think.”
He shared three more extended sessions with Chub, and they
became solid friends—within the limits of two such alien
backgrounds.
His fifth training link brought him in touch with a creature
calling itself a Judge of the Old Ones. The Judge was nothing like
Chub. It was completely and truly alien. It entered his mind as
coldly as a serpent, digging, exploring, till he felt like a bug
under a microscope. It made no effort to teach him, nor did it
chat, nor conceal its task of determining if he was fit to link
with starfish. Moyshe was glad to break that contact, real-world
pains notwithstanding.
He went into contact with the Old Ones twice more, and each was
as chill and phlegmatic as the Judge. These were the passionless
creatures Czyzewski must have had in mind when he had penned
“The Old God.” Their minds were exactly what benRabi
imagined a god’s to be.
Then there were two glorious, rollicking, fun days with Chub,
who had been appointed his “permanent” link.
Irreverent, Chub made the most libelous observations about the Old
Ones Moyshe had encountered. BenRabi countered by trying to teach
the starfish the concept of humor.
And then it was over. The dream came to an end.
“Good-bye, Moyshe man-friend,” Chub said, setting
benRabi’s mind to echoing sadness. “I will think of you
often, stranger than any man-friend.”
“I’ll remember you, too, Chub,” Moyshe
promised. “Try to catch me when I reach out in my
dreams.” He ripped upward on his exit switch.
Clara and Hans thought he was in pain and tried to give him a
second pain shot, but he pushed them away. He let the tears flow.
Then he hugged Clara. “Good-bye.” He took Hans’s
hand. “I’m going to miss you both.”
They stood and watched as, slump-shouldered, he shuffled out of
Contact for the last time.